Ivan Velisavljević

Filmes

Porno Story
Writer
A cashier and a plumber come up with the idea to make the first Serbian artistic porn film and thus solve the problem of existence forever. The main actors are a professional prostitute and a very “gifted” local priest. As the shooting progresses, the film becomes a hilarious comedy.
Jenga, a Strange Game
Writer
Boris a prudish biology student loses his room in the dorm and has to leave the campus. After realizing that he can't afford living by himself in an apartment he reluctantly looks for a roommate. That way he meets outgoing and nonchalant guy Marko who happens to love alone in s huge apartment. At first flat sharing with Marko seems like a perfect match but soon enough Boris is introduced to Marko's buddy Nenad who is a bonafide prankster and an internet star whose claim to fame is punking people.
Occupied Cinema
Himself
The "Occupied Cinema" follows young activists and events surrounding the takeover of "Zvezda", one of 14 extinguished cinemas from the privatized company "Beograd Film".
An Amp and a Guitar
A punk rock Kafka story: the disabled Son buys an amp and a guitar. He meets a girl and starts a punk band with her. At the same time, the Father finds out he has lung cancer. Being brutally cynical, one could say that while Father is fading out in the other room, the son is playing him a punk lullaby. Sense of guilt and misunderstanding prepares the final conflict…
An Amp and a Guitar
Writer
A punk rock Kafka story: the disabled Son buys an amp and a guitar. He meets a girl and starts a punk band with her. At the same time, the Father finds out he has lung cancer. Being brutally cynical, one could say that while Father is fading out in the other room, the son is playing him a punk lullaby. Sense of guilt and misunderstanding prepares the final conflict…
Fanzines from Mars
Ivan Velisavljević
Serbia in the 1990s had an underground scene with different characters mingling, roaming around, walking and talking. They were comic book authors, serious hard core punk fans, relatively young writers, freedom fighters, as well as intellectuals, loud NGO or Christian activists, hobos and underground posers, and probably a couple of fakers and ego-maniacs, to be honest. Everyone wrote something, cut 'n' pasted 'n' copied, reviewed concerts of their own friends, draw comics, made collages and then xeroxed all that and forwarded by mail to as many people possible. In short, it was social networking. But in those days, before Internet, the name was: fanzine-making.