Etela Pardo

Etela Pardo Trailers

Baby TrailerDangerous Liaisons TrailerCrime and Punishment Trailer

Etela Pardo is known for The Saint (1997), Berkeley Square (1998) and I Want You (1998).

Most Popular Etela Pardo Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

The Man Who Could Tell North from the South Trailer (1989)

01 January 1989

The plot takes place in pre-war Yugoslavia, and the protagonist, interpreted by Zvonko Lepetic, is Jefto, a prison guard who lives with his family as a tenant in a basement.

Baby Trailer (2010)

25 June 2010

A young woman is followed home by a stranger.

Endeavor Trailer (1982)

30 June 1982

A story about a painter, an unconventional university professor, who has to deal with being haunted by his trouble past during the 2nd World War, while at the same time trying to cope with his university colleagues plotting against him.

Dangerous Liaisons Trailer (2007)

10 May 2007

When detectives investigate a seemingly natural death of an old man, they discover a disturbing tape in his possession which alongside old family memories also features the murder of a woman.

Walter Defends Sarajevo Trailer (1972)

12 April 1972

Sarajevo 1944. The German armies desperately need fuel in the retreat. Walter, the enigmatic and charismatic leader of the resistance movement, can endanger their supplies.

Crime and Punishment Trailer (1998)

11 October 1998

Former student Raskolnikov is pushed to murder when struggling to pay the rent on his apartment. When the murder is being investigated by the police, Raskolnikov struggles between trying to hide his guilt and the pressure to confess.

Two Halves of a Heart Trailer (1982)

17 March 1982

A boy's careless childhood is interrupted when he finds out about his parents' decision to divorce.

Life Is a Mass Phenomenon Trailer (1970)

01 January 1970

Two friends dream of what they will do when they become adults. One friend dreams of travelling to far off places, but stays at home.

Simha Trailer (1975)

24 November 1975

This drama subtly tells the story about the dreams of the shoemaker named Rafael, but also about the life of the Sarajevo Jews, whom Samokovlija painted with a lot of love for their suffering and a lot of literary and psychological persuasiveness.