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No Man's Land (Serbo-Croatian: Ničija zemlja, Ничија земља) is a 2001 war film that is set in the midst of the Bosnian War. The film is a parable and marks the debut of Bosnian writer and director Danis Tanović.
No Man's Land: Directed by Danis Tanovic. With Branko Djuric, Rene Bitorajac, Filip Sovagovic, Georges Siatidis. Bosnia and Herzegovina during 1993 at the time of the heaviest fighting between the two warring sides.
- (49K)
- Comedy, Drama, War
- Danis Tanovic
- 2001-09-19
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- 2 min
- 391.8K
- Rotten Tomatoes Classic Trailers
Dec 21, 2001 · No Man’s Land. Action. 98 minutes ‧ R ‧ 2001. Roger Ebert. December 21, 2001. 3 min read. Set in the same place and about the same war, “No Man’s Land” is like the grown-up version of “ Behind Enemy Lines.” It’s a bleakly funny parable that could be titled “Between Enemy Lines.”
Ciki (Branko Djuric) and Nino (Rene Bitorajac), a Bosnian and a Serb, are soldiers stranded in No Man's Land -- a trench between enemy lines during the Bosnian war.
- (98)
- Danis Tanovic
- R
- Branko Djuric
Two wounded soldiers, a Bosniak Ciki (Branko Duric) and a Bosnian Serb Nino (Rene Bitorajac) are caught between their lines in the no man's land, in a struggle for survival. The two soldiers confront each other in a trench (Nino is new and doesn't know the way out of the middle trench.
No Man's Land is a 2001 war film that is set in the midst of the Bosnian War. The film is a parable and marks the debut of Bosnian writer and director Danis Tanović. It is a co-production among companies in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia, Italy, France, Belgium, and the United Kingdom.