Monday, 25 August 2008

Croatian film wins Sarajevo film festival

A Croatian film about two Bosnian immigrants wHO left the country during the 1992-95 war for a new life in the United States was chosen on Saturday as the best movie at the 14th Sarajevo picture festival.



The jury, chaired by Turkish film director Nuri Bilge Ceylan, awarded "Buic Riviera" by director Goran Rusinovic and based on a novel by Bosnian author Miljenko Jergovic with the 25,000 euro ($NZ52,400) Heart of Sarajevo award.


The cinema tells the story of a Bosnian Muslim and a Bosnian Serb wHO meet on a derelict road in the United States. They spend the next 24 hours together, engaging in a psychological game of mutual accusations which volition change their lives for good, just like the war they had both fled.


"To receive this award is a great accolade both for the work party and the festival itself," Rusinovic said.


"Buic Riviera" was selected from 10 films from Austria, Bosnia, Croatia, Hungary, Serbia, Slovenia and Turkey which competed at the Balkan's largest picture show forum.


Leon Lucev and Slavko Stimac were chosen as best actors for their role in the film. The topper actress award went to Ayca Damagaci for her role in "My Marlon and Brando" by Turkish director Huseyin Karabey.


The nine-day festival showed 174 films and documentaries.


The Sarajevo Film Festival was launched nigh the ending of the war and grew into the biggest regional film competition.







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Friday, 15 August 2008

Likely Cause Of Postpartum Blues And Depression Identified

�Unique biochemical crosstalk that enables a fetus to get nutrition and oxygen from its mother's blood just may cause common postpartum blues, researchers say.


That xT allows the mother's origin to flow out of the uterine artery and get just a single cell stratum away from the fetus' blood, says Dr. Puttur D. Prasad, biochemist in the Medical College of Georgia School of Medicine.


That controlled exchange between the

Thursday, 7 August 2008