Eva Rohrman

Filmes

The Parade
Producer
Limun é um sérvio que vive na capital Belgrado. Ele é o dono de uma academia de Judô que funciona como uma agência de guarda-costas. O homem é um homofóbico convicto, mas vai ter que aprender a ser mais tolerante para salvar seu relacionamento com a bela Biserka. O caminho dos dois cruza com o do organizador de casamentos Mirko Dedijer e seu namorado Radmilo. Radmilo realiza uma operação que salva a vida do amado pitbull de Limun. Simultaneamente, Biserka vai procurar Mirko para planejar seu casamento. Porém, após Limun manifestar seu preconceito de maneira violenta, Biserka o deixa. Para se redimir, Limun aceita oferecer seus serviços para garantir a segurança da Parada Gay daquele ano.
Landscape No. 2
Producer
The burglars Sergej and Polde steal a valuable painting, Landscape No.2. By coincidence Sergej also takes a mysterious document dating back to the end of the World War II. Instructor is ordered to recover the stolen painting and the document, which triggers a diabolic mechanism of the past.
Suburbs
Producer
After his wife's death a middle-aged man and his friends become increasingly agitated and violent towards the suburbs they inhabit.
Menhir
Producer
Urbanity is finally erased by mythical rituals, which is determined by the very title of the video film: menhir, an upright stone block from the Neolithic, which was used for sacral rites. Man and woman are Adam and Eve, created in front of us by electronic transformation (morphing) and marked by blood. This element also marks all other elements of the video image: the murder of an individual by the menhir or trinity (politics, church, army), the bodies of the dancer. Blood, murder and death are overcome by only the second basic element: the stone, which is flooded with blood the very next moment. The fight of natural elements is also served by electronic tricks that turn power holders from flesh and blood into stone and wrong.
The Visitor
Producer
The author constantly depicts the duality of human nature: the same horror occurs in both the mythical and the real world. She illustrates all this with the use of electronic tricks that can, for example, petrify a human face or wall up a human being in just a few seconds. With an electronic trick, even human figures dressed in extravagant costumes return to nature: a man in a costume reminiscent of a bird turns into a real bird. At the same time, the scenes are shot from a bird's eye view, which, as always, emphasizes man's smallness and his loss in his own world and nature.