Accidental Life
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''Accidental Life'' (''Slučajni život'') is a 1969 Yugoslav drama film directed by
Ante Peterlić Ante Peterlić (18 May 1936 – 12 July 2007) was a Croatian film scholar, screenwriter and film director. He is best known for his film '' Accidental Life'' (, 1969), his debut feature film. Peterlić was a prominent young film critic, and a pro ...
, starring
Dragutin Klobučar Dragutin (Cyrillic: Драгутин) is a Croatian and Serbian masculine given name. Those bearing it include: * Stephen Dragutin of Serbia * Dragutin Topić * Dragutin Dimitrijević * Dragutin Mitić * Dragutin Tadijanović * Dragutin Šur ...
, Ivo Serdar,
Ana Karić Ana Karić (; 13 May 1941 – 9 October 2014) was a Croatian actress. She started acting in the early 1960s even before graduating from the Zagreb Academy of Dramatic Art in 1963. Although primarily a television actress, she also appeared in num ...
and
Zvonimir Rogoz Zvonimir Rogoz (10 October 1887 – 6 February 1988) was a Croatian actor who played in German, Croatian, Slovenian, Czech and Slovak, on stage and in cinema, during a career lasting 81 years. A native of Zagreb, Rogoz started his actor ...
. An existential study of ordinary lives led by two alienated urban white collar workers whose friendship gets unsettled by a woman, ''Accidental Life'' was the only feature film of Ante Peterlić, Croatian film theorist and film critic. The film received mediocre reviews and went largely unnoticed after its release, but has been reevaluated decades later as one of the best Croatian films ever made.


Plot

Filip (Dragutin Klobučar) and Stanko (Ivo Serdar) are two young clerks who share an office in a nondescript company. The two are also amateur rowers who train together. Their personalities are quite different: while Filip is fastidious, serious in relationships with women, and somewhat introverted and sensitive, Stanko is a womanizer and prone to shirking his duties at work. Still, they spend most of their time together, rowing on the
Sava The Sava, is a river in Central Europe, Central and Southeast Europe, a right-bank and the longest tributary of the Danube. From its source in Slovenia it flows through Croatia and along its border with Bosnia and Herzegovina, and finally reac ...
river in the morning, collaborating in the office during the day, and going out in the evening looking for female company - all trying desperately to escape from the tedium of everyday life. They see their senior colleague Jurak (Zvonimir Rogoz) as a dinosaur, dreading the possibility of becoming like him as they grow older. Filip falls in love with an attractive female coworker and, as the events gradually unfold, differences in character between the two men create a simmering conflict...


Background and production

By the time
Ante Peterlić Ante Peterlić (18 May 1936 – 12 July 2007) was a Croatian film scholar, screenwriter and film director. He is best known for his film '' Accidental Life'' (, 1969), his debut feature film. Peterlić was a prominent young film critic, and a pro ...
set out to direct ''Accidental Life'', his debut feature film, he was already well known as a prominent young film critic, and a professor of
film theory Film theory is a set of scholarly approaches within the academic discipline of film or cinema studies that began in the 1920s by questioning the formal essential attributes of motion pictures; and that now provides conceptual frameworks for und ...
at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Zagreb. In the 1960s he directed his first short TV drama, and was active as an assistant director in several feature films and documentaries, working also as a
script doctor A script doctor is a writer or playwright hired by a film, television, or theatre production company to rewrite an existing script or improve specific aspects of it, including structure, characterization, dialogue, pacing, themes, and other elemen ...
. The role of Stanko was initially intended for Zvonimir Črnko, but he was busy shooting a TV series, so Peterlić opted for Dragutin Klobučar. However, he felt that Klobučar was better suited for the character of Filip, the more introverted protagonist, so Stanko's role ultimately went to Ivo Serdar. Due to budget constraints, the film was shot quickly, with a small crew. Peterlić likened the near-amateur filming conditions to those prevalent in the
French New Wave The New Wave (, ), also called the French New Wave, is a French European art cinema, art film movement that emerged in the late 1950s. The movement was characterized by its rejection of traditional filmmaking conventions in favor of experimentat ...
, his main influence at the time. Still, he saw ''Accidental Life'' as a work that, rather than being a New Wave film ''per se'', projected a New-Wave-like atmosphere by "striving to tell the truth about its times and about my generation by using a more modern way of storytelling".


Themes and style

Croatian film critic
Jurica Pavičić Jurica Pavičić (born 2 November 1965 in Split) is a writer, columnist and film critic. Pavičić's screenplay for ''Witnesses'' (''Svjedoci''), Vinko Brešan's 2003 film, won the Golden Arena for Best Screenplay in the 2003 Pula Film Festiv ...
describes ''Accidental Life'' as typical in many respects for the Croatian cinema of the late 1960s, which was increasingly moving away from historical, rural settings and adopting urban themes and sensibilities. The two protagonists are members of the "lost generation" who are urban loners with no ambition or direction in life. They are also - as noted by film critic Slaven Zečević - uprooted people with no past, which makes them an oddity in a still traditional society which highly values family background and kinship. The film's portrayal of a faceless, dehumanized workplace is highly reminiscent of ''
Il Posto ''Il posto'', English titles ''The Job'' or ''The Sound of Trumpets'', is a 1961 Italian comedy-drama film directed by Ermanno Olmi, his second feature film. Screened at the 1961 Venice Film Festival, it received numerous national and internation ...
'', a 1961 film by
Ermanno Olmi Ermanno Olmi (24 July 1931 – 7 May 2018)Lane, John Francis (May 7, 2018).Ermanno Olmi obituary. ''The Guardian''. theguardian.com. Retrieved 11 May 2018. was an Italian film director and screenwriter best known for directing '' Il Posto'' ( ...
. ''Accidental Life'' thus largely reflected the modernist sensibilities of its era, but opted for a classicist visual approach. As a fan of
Howard Hawks Howard Winchester Hawks (May 30, 1896December 26, 1977) was an American film director, Film producer, producer, and screenwriter of the Classical Hollywood cinema, classic Hollywood era. Critic Leonard Maltin called him "the greatest American ...
and
John Ford John Martin Feeney (February 1, 1894 – August 31, 1973), better known as John Ford, was an American film director and producer. He is regarded as one of the most important and influential filmmakers during the Golden Age of Hollywood, and w ...
, Peterlić preferred the subtle, "invisible" style of directing - using simple, functional shots - over the more extravagant modernist film techniques.


Reception

''Accidental Life'' was shown at the
Pula Film Festival Pula Film Festival () is an annual Croatian film festival, established in 1954. It is held in a Roman amphitheater known as the Pula Arena. Pula Film Festival is the oldest Croatian film festival and is usually held in the summer, in July or Aug ...
, receiving mediocre reviews from the critics. During its five-week theatrical run in Grič Cinema in Zagreb, the film's earnings recovered its budget. It went largely unnoticed in Yugoslavia, despite receiving multiple recommendations in '' Cahiers du cinéma'', the renowned French film magazine. A possible reason for the film's tepid reception is because it did not really belong to any of the established movements in cinema of the era: it was far from populist storytelling, yet - with its absence of pronounced symbolism, original motifs, or more extravagant camera and editing work - seemed too bland for the proponents of modernist cinema. Peterlić's student and fellow film theorist
Hrvoje Turković Hrvoje Turković (born 4 November 1943) is a Croatian film theorist, film critic and university professor. With 14 books and more than 700 articles on film, ranging from essayistic criticism to scientific works on film theory, Turković establishe ...
found some reactions to the film to be malicious, arguing that Peterlić's earlier work as a film critic motivated many to use the opportunity to "get even". Peterlić did not return to directing, and ''Accidental Life'' remained his only feature film. As his academic career was taking off, he felt that it made no sense to pursue film directing, a field in which his contributions were not appreciated. Ultimately, Peterlić came to be best known for his scholarly work, which earned him the title of the "father of Croatian film studies". Largely forgotten for decades, ''Accidental Life'' has been reevaluated in a much more favorable light in the 1990s, when it began to appear in several critics' all-time top lists of Croatian films. In a 1999 poll among 44 Croatian film critics and film historians, ''Accidental Life'' placed 17th in the list of all-time best Croatian films. In 2008 the film was released on DVD.


References


External links

* {{IMDb title, id =0065001 1969 films 1969 drama films Croatian drama films Croatian black-and-white films Yugoslav black-and-white films Films set in Zagreb Yugoslav drama films 1969 directorial debut films Films set in Yugoslavia