The Great Water

The Great Water (Macedonian: Γолемата Вода, Latinic: Golemata Voda) is a 2004 Macedonian film starring Saso Kekenovski, Maja Stankovska, Mitko Apostolovski, Meto Jovanovski and Verica Nedeska. It was directed and written by Ivo Trajkov. The music was created by Kiril Dzajkovski.

The Great Water
The Great Water poster
Directed byIvo Trajkov
Produced byRobert Jazadziski
Written byZivko Cingo, Ivo Trajkov
StarringSaso Kekenovski
Maja Stankovska
Music byKiril Dzajkovski
CinematographySuki Medencevic
Edited byAtanas Georgiev
Release date
  • April 30, 2004 (2004-04-30)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryMacedonia
LanguageMacedonian / English

Plot

Based on a children's book written by Živko Čingo in the 1970s, the movie is about the difficult transition in Macedonia after World War II. The film begins in the present as old Lem (Meto Jovanovski), Macedonian politician who is experiencing a heart attack and while he is being wheeled into a hospital and examined and wired, he has memory flashbacks to his childhood in 1945. He is brought to the 'orphanage' where orphans are children of the enemies of the new regime. There he learns how to adjust to the role of obedient brainwashing. He becomes mesmerized by a new kid, Isak, a beautiful and charismatic boy. The struggles quietly underplaying all of the camp surface activity are many: the dichotomy of a Communist ideology removing the Church from existence with a people dependent upon the spiritual values of religion, the Stalin/Tito issue, the adjustments to the policies of Communist regime in a country where fierce national pride had ruled, and the depersonalization of children into political pawns despite the need for role models and the luxury of growing up with friends and confidants.

Awards

The film won the Grand Prize at Valencia Film Festival. It was also Macedonia's submission to the 77th Academy Awards for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, but it failed to make the nominees shortlist.[1]

Reception

The film received positive reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes it has an approval rating of 71% based on reviews from 21 critics.[2] On Metacritic it has a score of 62 based on reviews from 15 critics, indicating "Generally favorable reviews".[3]

References

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