Melita Jurišić

Filmes

Anatomia de um Julgamento
Rosa Segev
Baseado na história real do julgamento contra o respeitado político Franz Murer, na Áustria em 1963. Em seu passado, Murer fez parte de um organização militar nazista e foi o responsável pelo gueto de Vilnius de 1941 a 1943, onde seus residentes o chamavam de O Açougueiro de Vilnius. Apenas 600 dos 80 mil judeus que originalmente viviam lá sobreviveram ao domínio nazista. Durante o julgamento, sobreviventes vieram de todo o mundo para testemunhar, deixando poucas dúvidas sobre a culpa de Murer e resultando em um dos mais graves escândalos do governo austríaco
Mad Max: Estrada da Fúria
The Vuvalini
Em um mundo apocalíptico, Max Rockatansky acredita que a melhor forma de sobreviver é não depender de ninguém. Porém, após ser capturado pelo tirano Immortan Joe e seus rebeldes, Max se vê no meio de uma guerra mortal, iniciada pela imperatriz Furiosa que tenta salvar um grupo de garotas. Também tentando fugir, Max aceita ajudar Furiosa. Dessa vez, o tirano Joe está ainda mais implacável pois teve algo insubstituível roubado.
Kotlovina
Mimi
A big family reunion at the weekend cottage around traditional food preparation "kotlovina" (pig on a spit and lots of drinking) with quaintly amusing and earnest situations revealing what is stronger: ties of blood and background or culture and the way of living.
The Sound of One Hand Clapping
Maria
Tasmania, 1954: Slovenian migrant Melita abandons her husband and young daughter, Sonja. Sonja's distraught father perseveres with his new life in a new country, but he is soon crushed into an alcoholic despair, and Sonja herself abandons him at the earliest opportunity. Now, nearly 20 years later, a single and pregnant Sonja returns to Tasmania's highlands and to her father in an attempt to put the pieces of her life back together.
Transatlantic
Zorka
A young man flees to the United States searching for the American dream.
The Tale of Ruby Rose
Ruby Rose
The year is 1933. Ruby Rose (Melita Jurisic) is an Australian woman living with her Welsh immigrant husband Henry (Chris Haywood) in the Tasmanian highlands. Cut off from her superjudgmental family, for whom Henry had once worked as a humble farm hand, Ruby remains isolated in her tiny house. Superstitiously terrified of the dark, she begins developing her own folklore about the inky blackness that surrounds her each night; this folklore eventually develops into Ruby's own personal religion, created to ward off the evils that she imagines lurk in every corner. Only by venturing out of her house and rekindling her relationship with her embittered father is Ruby able to exorcise her fears. Almost hypnotic in its stark beauty, Tale of Ruby Rose is proof enough that writer/director Roger Scholes deserves to be far better known.