Institute History
Description
The violence and intensity in many films about inner-city gangs or even the Mafia do not hold a candle to Srdjan Dragojevics’ The Wounds, which portrays two of the most horrifically memorable underage criminals ever captured on celluloid.
Amidst the devastating backdrop of the war in Bosnia, Pinkie and Trout quickly learn that unethical behavior reaps more tangible benefits than obedience or patriotism. In a country
devastated by political and moral upheaval, chaos seems to be in charge. Within this framework, the boys begin their violent path to power and fame.
What begins as small-time drug running for the local dealer and doing lines with Grandma quickly escalates to cold-blooded assassination. Despite their horrible deeds, the boys are not presented as one-dimensional killers; they become a frightening dichotomy of childish innocence and unbridled evil, laughing at both silly pranks and reprehensible crimes. An early infatuation with a local talk show host divides the boys as their infamy lands them a spot on her show, where they put on a graphic display of how far they are willing to take their perverse antics.
The wounds in the title become both literal and figurative as Pinkie and Trout turn on each other while their country turns on itself. Paralleling the moral and physical destruction of individuals and a country, Dragojevic creates an extremely dark, yet disturbingly hilarious, portrait of an all-too-real world and its humanity, or lack thereof.
Srdjan Dragojevic, Director
Srdjan Dragojevic was born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and has bachelor’s degrees in both clinical psychology and film and television directing. He has published three books, including a volume of poetry. His films include a short, All WomenoAre Named Kiki in 1991; We Are Not Angels, which won nine Yugoslavian Academy Awards in 1992; and Pretty Village Pretty Flame, which won awards at several international film festivals in 1996. The Wounds won the Grand Prize at Stockholm and the FIPRESCI at Thesalloniki.