Search a film or person :
FacebookConnectionRegistration
Lost Homeland is a film of genre Drama directed by Ante Babaja with Ivo Gregurević

Lost Homeland (1980)

Lost Homeland
If you like this film, let us know!
Directed by
Genres Drama
Rating68% 3.4351353.4351353.4351353.4351353.435135

Lost Homeland (Croatian: Izgubljeni zavičaj) is a 1980 Croatian film directed by Ante Babaja. It is based on Slobodan Novak's novel of the same name.

In 1999, a poll of Croatian film critics found it to be one of the best Croatian films ever made.

Actors

Trailer of Lost Homeland

Bluray, DVD

Streaming / VOD

Source : Wikidata

Comments


Leave comment :

Suggestions of similar film to Lost Homeland

There are 45 films with the same actors, 5 films with the same director, 61554 with the same cinematographic genres, to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.

If you liked Lost Homeland, you will probably like those similar films :
The Birch Tree, 1h32
Directed by Ante Babaja
Genres Drama
Actors Bata Živojinović, Fabijan Šovagović, Nela Eržišnik, Stane Sever, Hermina Pipinić
Rating77% 3.8840253.8840253.8840253.8840253.884025
Une belle fille mais malade est mariée à un homme dur qui ne se soucie pas d'elle. Ce n'est qu'après sa mort qu'il se rend compte qu'il l'aime réellement.
Isadora
Isadora (1968)
, 2h48
Directed by Karel Reisz
Origin United-kingdom
Genres Drama, Biography, Historical, Musical, Romance
Themes Dance films, La provence
Actors Vanessa Redgrave, James Fox, Jason Robards, John Fraser, Bessie Love, Zvonimir Črnko
Rating68% 3.443633.443633.443633.443633.44363
In 1927, Isadora Duncan has become a legend as the innovator of modern dance, a temperamental bohemian, and an outspoken advocate of free love. Now past 40, she lives in poverty in a small hotel on the French Riviera with her companion Mary Estelle Dempsey/Mary Desti (named only as Mary in the film) and her secretary Roger, to whom she is dictating her memoirs. As a young girl in California, Isadora first demonstrates her disdain for accepted social standards by burning her parents' marriage certificate and pledging her dedication to the pursuit of art and beauty. In 1896, she performs under the name of Peppy Dora in a rowdy music hall in Chicago and publicly embarrasses the theatre manager into paying her $300 so that she can take her family to England. Modeling her free-form style of dance and costume after Greek classicism, she rapidly acquires international acclaim.