White Button

Synopsis:

What The Beatles mean for global popular culture is what “Bijelo Dugme” means for ex Yugoslavia and Balkans. “Bjelo Dugme” (White Button) were the most famous rock and roll stars of the C20th in Eastern Europe. The leader of the band was Goran Bregovic - today a globally acclaimed composer of film scores and world music. This documentary film delves into the effects Western popular culture had on a very particular communist country - this being the former Yugoslavia. Rock and Roll was accepted on a massive scale thanks to them. Their concerts gathered hundreds of thousands of fans from Belgrade to Moscow, their albums was released in the millions of copies, their bend members were the first to scandalize region with stories of drugs and decadence… The fate of a “Bijelo Dugme”, it is unambiguously linked to the fate of former Yugoslavia. “Bijelo Dugme” has created the 1974th, the year when the Yugoslav Constitution was adopted on the basis of which would later break up of Yugoslavia… and broke up in 1989th, less than a year prior to the final dissolution of the state. This is an emotional and politically engaged documentary that is metaphorically linked the fate of a country and its biggest pop art symbols. An epic story of sex, drugs, rock and roll and of course, the politics of the last 15 years of Yugoslavia.

Title
White Button
Original Title
Bijelo Dugme
Year of Production
Country
Genre
Language
Serbian
Duration
85
Director
Cinematographer
Art Director
Editor
Production
Visual Effects
Distributor
Approximate Budget
€65K






















With the support of the Eurimages Fund of the Council of Europe


Movie poster
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