Bal-Kan-Kan; black crime comedy, Macedonia / Italy / UK, 2005; D: Darko Mitrevski, S: Vlado Jovanovski, Adolfo Margiotta, Zvezda Angelovska, Branko Đurić, Dejan Ačimović, Nikola Kojo, Jelisaveta Sablić, Veronika Zakovska
During the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia, Trendafil Karanfilov wants to dodge being drafted in the army, so he flees with his wife Ruža and his mother-in-law Zumbula for a Bulgarian city along the Black Sea. However, Zumbula dies, and since he cannot find a grave for her since she is a foreigner, Trandafil and Ruža decide to smuggle her wrapped up in a carpet back to Macedonia. But, when they stop at a store, the carpet is stolen. they call Trendafil's Italian blood-brother Santino Genovese for help. Their trail leads them across Belgrade, Sarajevo, and finally to Kosovo, where they find it is in possession of criminal Sefket, whose gang wants to kill kidnapped children in an abandoned storage to be used for organ theft. In a shootout, Santino and a Russian woman named Nadya die, but Sefket is also killed, by Nadya's daughter. Trendafil retrieves the carpet and saves the children.
One of the most popular Macedonian movies, black comedy "Bal-Can-Can" uses its story of a search for a dead grandma wrapped up inside a stolen carpet just for an excuse as a giant allegory that depicts countries of South Balkan and their mentality, each having their own flaw and vice. The film abounds with unusual ideas, quirky jokes (smugglers trying to smuggle Italian clothes through Yugoslav customs by wearing five layers of clothes on them) and fast pacing, which ensured it cult status, but it was an unnecessary decision to have the character Santino speak in Italian for the entire film, when the rest of the movie is in Macedonian language, whereas the first third of the film is so brilliant, but the rest, revolving around the vague goose chase across Balkan countries, is of lesser inspiration and creativity, since its dynamic pacing overshadows its quality.
The first twenty minutes are genius: the idea that toes of Santino's corpse in a morgue are narrating the story (!) is so bizarre and yet so unique at the same time, whereas one amusing montage shows how the protagonist Trendafil's major life events are always marked by the outbreak of a war somewhere (the Six-Day War started when he was born; he met the love of his life on the day the Slovenian War started; his first day of work was when the Bosnian War started; he got married when the NATO started bombing Serbia...). His mother-in-law, Zumbula, also has some funny dialogue: "If your father were alive, he would have died instantly of shame!" The main plot is a lot weaker, though. A lot of episodic character from Belgrade, Sarajevo and other locations are shown, but they feel rather random, arbitrary and too primitive at times, indulging more in the banal attempts at Balkan humor than trying to continue the high level from the start of the film. Nonetheless, the director Darko Mitrevski managed to make this Macedonian film look international and modern, making it more appealing than it was expected.
Grade:++



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