The story follows Luka (played brilliantly by Nikola Đuričko), a young man living in Belgrade who receives news that his father has passed away in their home village in Banat. Reluctantly, Luka must travel from the capital to the provincial backwater to organize the funeral. The title itself is a play on words— "Mrtav 'ladan" translates roughly to "Dead Cold," a phrase often used to describe something unequivocally finished or someone undeniably dead, yet it also hints at the absurdity to follow.
Their "solution" is to dress the corpse, put him on a train, and pretend he is simply sleeping. The chaos escalates when: Mrtav --Ladan -2002- Domaci Film
If you have a dusty shoebox of old discs, or an external hard drive from 2003 labeled "Filmovi," look inside. You might find a file named . If you do, do not delete it. Upload it. Let the dead, domestic film live again. The story follows Luka (played brilliantly by Nikola
If that is the case, the actual film might be a known entity. For instance, the 2002 domestic film Mrtav 'ladan (a pun on "dead cold") might have been a micro-budget production by the Škola Filma i Medija in Subotica. Alternatively, it could be a lost episode of the Televizija Novi Sad documentary series Ličnosti (Personalities) profiling a deceased artist named Ladan. Their "solution" is to dress the corpse, put
: Features heavyweights like Srđan "Žika" Todorović , Nenad Jezdić , Nikola Đuričko , Milorad Mandić-Manda , and the legendary Velimir "Bata" Živojinović .
The "Domaci Film" scene in 2002 was bifurcated:
To understand the object of our search, we must first translate and parse the query.