Aliens are to Blame for Everything (Serbo-Croatian: Svemirci su krivi za sve, Serbian: Свемирци су криви за све) is a 1991 Yugoslav film by Zoran Calica starring Bata Živojinović, Boro Stjepanović, Nikola Simić and others. The film is also known as Cao inspektore, III deo.
, 1h42 GenresWar, Comedy ThemesPolitical films ActorsDragan Nikolić, Bora Todorović, Bata Živojinović, Olivera Marković, Radko Polič, Branko Cvejić Rating77% A madcap comedy featuring a band of roving musicians whose music is just a cover for the fact that they are actually con men. They find ample opportunity to ply their trade amidst all the confusion as people flee the invading Nazis. They tour the country and vie with each other for how much they can pilfer, scam, con, or lift from the unsuspecting citizenry. Their talents are put to the test when a German Captain falls for the singer in the group, and they decide to use him to obtain important ID papers for everyone. When a 10-year-old Jewish girl needs help in hiding from the Germans in order to escape being sent to a concentration camp, the group of thieves not only decide to protect the girl, but join forces with the underground resistance fighters to get rid of several German officers at the same time.
, 1h27 GenresDrama, Comedy, Adventure ThemesPolitical films ActorsPavle Vuisić, Dragan Nikolić, Danilo Stojković, Taško Načić, Boro Stjepanović, Aleksandar Berček Rating86% On Saturday, April 5, 1941, one day before the Nazi invasion of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, a colourful group of random passengers on a country road deep in the heart of Serbia board a dilapidated Krstić & Son bus, headed for the capital Belgrade: two Gypsy musicians, a World War I veteran, a Germanophile, a budding singer, a sickly looking man, and a hunter with a rifle. The bus is owned by Krstić Sr., and driven by his impressionable son Miško.