House on the Sand (Kuća na pijesku) is the only feature film directed by Ivan Martinac, one of the key figures of Croatian avant-garde and underground film scene.[1]

Kuća na pijesku
Directed byIvan Martinac
Written byIvan Martinac
StarringDušan Janićijević
Branko Ðurić
CinematographyAndrija Pivčević
Edited byIvan Martinac
Music byMirko Krstičević
Production
company
Marjan film
Release date
  • 19 December 1985 (1985-12-19)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryCroatia
LanguageCroatian

Plot

edit

A middle-aged archaeologist, Josip Križanić, returns from fieldwork in Ampurias on coast of Catalonia to his home in Split. Josip is a divorced father of a teenage girl living a monotonous and solitary life. A few months later he commits suicide. His friend, district court judge Jakov Kostelac, finds an tape, an audio diary, and tries to solve the mystery of his friend’s act.

Cast

edit
  • Dušan Janićijević as archaeologist Josip Krizanić
  • Branko Ðurić as district court judge Jakov Kostelac
  • Dijana Zulim as Josips's daughter Katarina
  • Marina Nemet as Laura Neumann, Josip's wife
  • Jadranka Stilin as Jakov's sister Mirjana Kostelac
  • Vasja Kovačić as Ivan
  • Josip Genda as Luka
  • Branko Karabatić as Petar

Production

edit

Martinac, highly decorated and influential author of some 70 short films, unsuccessfully searched for funding of various feature film projects since 1969. Finally in 1983 production company Marjan film approved funding for his fourth feature film project House on the Sand.[2] Gian Maria Volonté was Martinac's first choice to play Josip Krizanić,[3] and while actor accepted the role in February 1984, collaboration ultimately failed to materialize due to scheduling issues.[4] As a result Dušan Janićijević was selected for the lead role. Martinac's long a longtime associate and Cine Club Split colleague Andrija Pivčević was selected as cinematographer and founder of the defunct rock band Metak, Mirko Krstičević, was selected to compose the film score. Trio previously collaborated on several short films, most notably the celebrated Exile (Izgnanstvo, 1979-1981).[5] Most of the filming was done during winter and autumn in the family home of the artist Vasko Lipovac in Split.

Reception

edit

At the time of its release film received mixed reviews and it had only 22 public screenings between 1985 and 1990,[6] but over the years it has come to be considered a classic.[7][8][9][10] Italian film critic Sergio Grmek Germani (it) considers it the most important Croatian feature film of all time and is of the opinion that while it could have been formally incomprehensible at the time of its creation, today it is easily recognized as an example of slow cinema two decades before the emergence of this trend in art film.[11]

References

edit
  1. ^ Vidović, Boris (2019–2020). "Eksperimentalni film". In Peterlić, Ante (ed.). Filmska enciklopedija. Vol. 1. Zagreb: Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža. ISBN 978-86-7053-016-4. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  2. ^ Čelan, Joško (February 5, 1984). "Kuća na pijesku". Nedjeljna Dalmacija. Slobodna Dalmacija d.d. p. 16.
  3. ^ Čelan, Joško (February 5, 1984). "Kuća na pijesku". Nedjeljna Dalmacija. Slobodna Dalmacija d.d. p. 16.
  4. ^ Martinac, Ivan (2001). 41 godina filmskog stvaralaštva : 1960-2001. Hrvatski filmski savez. p. 93.
  5. ^ Vukašinović, Višnja (2020-09-07). "Never-ending pictures – The passing of Andrija Pivčević and the resurrection of Martinac's House on the Sand". Zona Filma. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  6. ^ Martinac, Ivan (December 22, 1990). "Struktura Golgote". Slobodna Dalmacija (Interview). Interviewed by Joško Čelan. Split. p. 47.
  7. ^ Šakić, Tomislav. "HFS: Kuca na pijesku". hfs.hr. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  8. ^ Vukašinović, Višnja (2019-12-03). "Vizionarski pristup filmskoj slici". Kulturpunkt. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
  9. ^ Pantenburg, Volker (April 2010). "Whatever Happens to Someone, Happens to Everyone: Film Mutations: Third Festival of Invisible Cinema – Senses of Cinema". Senses of Cinema. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  10. ^ Vukašinović, Višnja (2020-09-07). "Never-ending pictures – The passing of Andrija Pivčević and the resurrection of Martinac's House on the Sand". Zona Filma. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
  11. ^ Ciancetta, Tiziana; Oselladore, Tiziana; Apicella, Isabella; Grmek-Germani, Sergio (1998). Incontri con il cinema dell'Europa centro-orientale (Meetings with the central and eastern european cinema), Alpe Adria Cinema, X edizione, Trieste, 1998/1999. Associazione Alpe Adria Cinema. OCLC 955378867.

Further reading

edit

Vrvilo, Tanja (Autumn 2009). "Films by Ivan Martinac: Tactility in Splices". Frakcija (51/52): 77–87. ISSN 1331-0100.

edit