Enclave, a film by Goran Radovanović, is available to Netflix viewers in Great Britain, Germany, Sweden and Belgium. Goran Radovanović, screenwriter and director of this award-winning production, recalls that Enclave had cinema distribution in Italy, Poland and Germany five or six years ago, and that it was sold in China, Scandinavia, Brazil, the United States of America and other markets.

Radovanović adds: “It seems that the presence of Enclave on Netflix in Germany, Great Britain, Sweden and Belgium has brought this film back into focus, and therefore the problem of Kosovo and Metohija from the Serbian point of view. It is obvious that the Serbian national theme is not in conflict with universal and global values! Of course, the aesthetic of the art is crucial.”

Enclave is a Serbian-German co-production, and it was screened at several domestic and international festivals, winning numerous awards, and was also the Serbian representative in the race for the Oscar in the category of films from a non-English speaking area for 2015. The realization, which had its world premiere at the 43rd Fest, tells the story of the Serbian community that remained living in Kosovo in enclaves. Forced into this kind of life, limited to living in a confined space, the Serbs who remained in Kosovo and Metohija live their lives in a very difficult way. What happens when someone dies in an enclave, and the cemetery is outside it, in enemy territory?

In this story, with many vicissitudes, an eighty-year-old man will be buried thanks to his grandson, a ten-year-old boy who dared to do something impossible for both communities in Kosovo, both Serbian and Albanian: to find love and make a friend on the opposite side. The main roles in this production were played by: boys Filip Šubarić, Denis Murić, Nenad Stanojković, Milan Sekulić, as well as Nebojša Glogovac, Anica Dobra, Miodrag Krivokapić, Nenad Jezdić, Meto Jovanovski, Milena Jakšić and Goran Radaković.