Ana Franić

Ana Franić Trailers

South Wind TrailerThe Name of the People TrailerThe Beautiful Blue Danube Trailer

Ana Franić was born and raised in Belgrade, capital city of ex-Yugoslavia (now Serbia). Her mother's name is Olga. Her father Severin Franic is a writer and film critic, also a member of Yugoslav section of FIPRESCI. Ana was graduated at Faculty of dramatic arts in Belgrade. She studied acting with Katarina Radivojević, Sloboda Mićalović, Marija Vicković, Milos Vlalukin. Ana has become popular by taking on the main role in Disi Duboko (2004), first Serbian lesbian movie. For that role she won many awards.

Most Popular Ana Franić Trailers

Total trailers found: 7

Take a Deep Breath Trailer (2004)

08 November 2004

Saša, a Belgrade University law student, tells her parents that she and her boyfriend Stefan are moving to Canada.

Zamfir's Zona Trailer (2002)

31 October 2002

Zona Zamfirova is set in the eastern Serbian city of Niš in the 19th century. The plot follows the story of Zona Zamfirova, a local rich man's daughter, and the vicissitudes of her affair with Mane, an ordinary goldsmith.

The Beautiful Blue Danube Trailer (2008)

02 March 2008

Luxurious Danube river cruiser "Kriemhild", on a 2 day tour from Vienna to Belgrade. The ship "Kriemhild" is a floating sin city.

The Reject Trailer (2007)

17 June 2007

A man whose life is on the verge of collapse looks for new inspiration in this drama from Serbian filmmaker Milos Radivojevic.

The Name of the People Trailer (2020)

12 November 2020

Life of Serbian patriot and intellectual Svetozar Miletic and his family in a fight to free Serbian people from Austria-Hungary.

South Wind Trailer (2025)

17 July 2025

As an intense southern wind rattles Split, the lives of tenants in a four-story building collide in a darkly comedic chain of misunderstandings, schemes, and chaos where even heroes remain villains in the eyes of their neighbors.

Awakening from the Dead Trailer (2005)

02 March 2005

The story takes place at the beginning of the bombing, both in Belgrade and in one small town in Serbia, at the end of March 1999.