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Former Yugoslavia’s brutalist architecture shines in new Star Wars fan film

The Monument to the Unknown Hero atop Mount Avala became a Jedi shrine

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At the end of last year, a Star Wars fan film with a difference enjoyed its online premier.

Breaking Point: A Star Wars Story is a 25-minute short movie made by a volunteer crew composed of around fifty professional filmmakers, film students and members of Serbia’s Star Wars fan community.

It is written and directed by the award-winning Serbian filmmaker Stevan Filipović.

The film was shot on locations near the Serbian capital Belgrade.

The futuristic Monument to the Fallen Soldiers of the Kosmaj Partisan Detachment from World War II atop Mount Kosmaj and the Monument to the Unknown Hero of World War I atop Mount Avala were both successfully transformed into Jedi landmarks.

The apocryphal story is set before the real Star Wars movie The Force Awakens and depicts the demise of the Jedi order perpetrated by Kylo Ren.

Meta.mk’s content partner Global Voices got in touch with Filipović to talk about the movie.

Global Voices (GV): Your movie received very positive media reviews, and was lauded by local StarWars fans. Fan fiction rarely sees this level of production. How did you manage it? 

Stevan Filipović (SF): I think one can easily underestimate how much Star Wars means to people around the globe. It’s a crucial part of our identities, much more than some local cultural phenomena, at least for a lot of people of my generation. I think we could never do something like this, get a completely professional film crew, and such amazing actors, for a non-profit fan film, if we all didn’t share a lot of love and respect for this fictional universe George Lucas has created.

Left to right: Darko Ivić, Stevan Filipović and Slaven Došlo on the set of Breaking Point: A Star Wars Story. Photo by Tamara Antonović. Used with permission.

But, the other key was – the story. I didn’t set out to make a fan film, I wanted to make this really personal story, that happens to be set in the Star Wars universe. I think people reacted to that, saw the raw emotions and the potential of it, very early on. Darko Ivić, who plays Nol in the film, was there with me from the very start when I started dreaming about this film. So, Nol Dust, a Jedi student of Luke Skywalker, and one of the films protagonists, is a mix between Darko’s and mine personal “demons” that we wanted to explore in this short film form. We’re joking that we’re like some really weird brothers, separated after birth, so different and yet so similar, and many of our shared traits ended up in Nol.

And then Slaven Došlo went to Disneyland, and brought me a gift – Yoda’s lightsaber, and I knew I wanted him to portray the youger brother, Kess. He has this mix of naïveté and pain that I thought was integral to the character. Also, Darko and Slaven really worked well as these yin and yang brothers, especially since they knew each other for such a long time – they both debuted in my previous feature film, Next to Me (2015). It was fun to reverse roles, and have Darko play the “good” brother, and let Slaven be “evil”, for once.

Jana was selected in a casting process, but the moment she walked in, we thought – that’s Mala. Again, we needed something very primal, almost animalistic with that alien character, something both emotional and fierce, a wounded soul who was really inspired by this new ideology that Ben Solo is promoting in secret to the selected few of his uncle’s students.

The rest of the crew was something of a filmmaker’s dream, to begin with Isidora Bulatovic who was both the backbone of the production team, and the assistant director, who directed on of the toughest scenes – where young Ben Solo turns to the Dark Side. We had great support from Hypnopolis, the company that produced all of my films, and producers Branislav Jevic, Ivica Vidanovic and Dusan Medic, as well as Marcus Agar (who also did the making of featurettes in English and worked as the dialogue coach) and Natalija Atanackovic (who did the Serbian version of making of video). Basically, everybody who volunteered to help was listed as co-producer, since we didn’t have a budget. Even a famous Serbian folk singer, Marko Bulat, who is a huge fan of Star Wars, helped us make this film – and he appeared in a cameo role, as the Zabrak cantina owner Vorq.

So, in the end – with almost no resources, shared love for Star Wars, and connections from my previous 3 feature films, we got quite literally the top Serbian film crews in all fields: from Slaviša Ivanović and his SKA Team stunts (who worked with Nick Gillard, the stunt master from the Star Wars prequels, who invented Darth Maul’s fighting style), world-class visual effects from DigitalKraft (Ivan Pribičević and Ana Pakljanac), professional color grading from Living Pictures (Filip Orlandić), two great young DoPs (Djordje Stojiljković and Matej Milenković), award-winning sound designer Ognjen Popić, to the amazing creatures and prosthetic make-up effects by Branislav Crvenković and his team, insane music (available on our YouTube channel) by Aleksandar Randjelović, Nemanja Rančić and Chris Schutze, and, of course, great help from the students of the Academy of Arts (where I teach).

A scene from Breaking Point: A Star Wars Story. Photo by Tamara Antonović. Used with permission.

GV: Artists from the Balkans, like Zoran Cardula from North Macedonia, have in the past explored visual similarities between Star Wars iconography and the brutalist architecture of former Yugoslavia. Your film has brought this connection to a whole new level and through a completely new medium. How did you decide on those particular monuments?

SF: There is something very deeply ‘Star-Wars-esque’ in the stories and legends of former Yugoslavia(s), or, rather – vice versa. The epic exodus and rebirth of WWI, and then – chaos, civil war, Tito’s rebel partisans from all nations who overcome their differences to fight a great evil, the Nazis, their victory, peace, the creation of this New Republic, which leads to another rise of nationalism and the fall of the Republic…  It’s hard to separate our actual history from what is the synopsis of the entire Skywalker saga!

Jedi Temple in Breaking Point: A Star Wars Story, photo by Tamara Antonović. Used with permission.

So, these relics from our past were perfect to create the atmosphere of Luke Skywalker’s Jedi Academy – built after the wars, on the ruins of the bygone era, they represent the history from which Nol and Dust never had a chance to learn, and that has, yet, shaped their destinies. Since the name of Luke’s Jedi Academy’s location is never mentioned in the films, I thought he would choose a planet of some significance to the old Jedi Order, with at least some archaeological remains not devastated by the Empire. So, Ivan Meštrović’s masterpiece, the Mount Avala Monument to the Unknown Hero became a Jedi Shrine, with robed figures from our nations eerily similar to some ancient Jedi Knights, and Mount Kosmaj WWII monument — dubbed for ancient Jedi ruins.

From a filmmaker’s perspective, the Brutalist ex-Yugoslavia architecture was very modern, created in an age where we were looking to the stars, to the future, for inspiration, and that makes it stand out today. Both these locations had mystery and majesty, and I really feel they add something unique to the film. We were very fortunate to get the permissions to film there.

So, these relics from our past were perfect to create the atmosphere of Luke Skywalker’s Jedi Academy – built after the wars, on the ruins of the bygone era, they represent the history from which Nol and Dust never had a chance to learn, and that has, yet, shaped their destinies. Since the name of Luke’s Jedi Academy’s location is never mentioned in the films, I thought he would choose a planet of some significance to the old Jedi Order, with at least some archaeological remains not devastated by the Empire. So, Ivan Meštrović’s masterpiece, the Mount Avala Monument to the Unknown Hero became a Jedi Shrine, with robed figures from our nations eerily similar to some ancient Jedi Knights, and Mount Kosmaj WWII monument — dubbed for ancient Jedi ruins.

From a filmmaker’s perspective, the Brutalist ex-Yugoslavia architecture was very modern, created in an age where we were looking to the stars, to the future, for inspiration, and that makes it stand out today. Both these locations had mystery and majesty, and I really feel they add something unique to the film. We were very fortunate to get the permissions to film there.

GV: The main characters of Breaking Point are commoners. In the official Star Wars movies, members of two ‘genetically superior royal families’ (to paraphrase David Brin) and their entourages tend to run the show. Rogue One (2016) is perhaps an exception. Do you consider your short a part of a trend anticipating ‘democratization’ of that universe, with stories that explore wider social issues through the experiences of people from all social classes?

SF: Yes, well, there’s that famous quote from Clerks, about all the workers who built the Death Star and their untold stories. But, seriously, I think Star Wars mythology is now so rich and detailed that it can be compared to many of the existing, historical, myths around the globe, at least in scope and the sheer level of detail. The place of the pop-culture in our modern societies is yet to be analyzed by historians and social anthropologists, but, I think it’s safe to say that these modern pop-cultural myths occupy a very important place in our lives. In that respect, I feel that Star Wars is now more than just another franchise, it’s an integral part of world’s cultural heritage.

So, it was interesting to me to try to find a local angle, to try to add to this mythology from our own point of view. And, if it was going to be a “Serbian” story, or an “ex-Yugoslav” story, let’s face it – it wasn’t gonna be a story about royalty. We could never make something like The Crown here, but that doesn’t mean we don’t have amazing stories of our own to tell, and we sure as hell can make a film like Dirty Dozen or Rogue One. And class is an important part of the reason why that is as it is. So we made the entire backstory of Breaking Point about class, in a way. It was interesting to me to imagine – could a poor kid, with no education, and no family, who grew up in the mean streets of Serbia in the 90s become a Jedi Knight, this zen warrior-monk? Or the wounds that we all have, from the wars, the politics, crime, make us emotionally unstable, unfit? How can we escape that?

Jana Milosavljević as Mala in Breaking Point: A Star Wars Story. Photo by Tamara Antonović. Used with permission.

The protagonists of our film, the Dust Brothers, are Corellian – and their characters had a really tough childhoods. They were separated, the older one, Nol, became a drug dealer to survive, and younger, Kess, was sold to slavery to the same Dickensian crime boss who once owned Han Solo – Lady Proxima. Mala, the Twi’lek girl, was a sex worker, since her early teens.

They were then rescued by Luke Skywalker, first Nol, then the rest of them, and now they are training to be Jedi, but they have these gaping wounds in their hearts, all of them. These wounds are the weaknesses that the Dark Side exploits. And we all have them, we all can relate, that’s why it’s so compelling and scary. I wanted Ben Solo, future Kylo Ren, to be the one who was already under the influence of the Dark Side – he was putting ideas into Mala and Kess’ heads about “killing the past” and the future where they will forever be free from their past.

But, it’s not Ben Solo who turns them against each other – it’s their own fears and weaknesses and old wound that lead to brothers going at each others throat – in short, they represent the history of the conflicts that led to the breakup of former Yugoslavia.

Brothers, killing each other, over past wounds and revived nationalism. That rise of toxic nationalism in the former Yugoslav countries has a striking resemblance to the revival of the Empire that Ben Solo was rooting for, and that is a major political point in the sequel trilogy, and I’m sorry they didn’t elaborate of this backstory as seriously as George Lucas did when he was creating Star Wars films. Especially in the contemporary world, where we see the rise of politics that we all thoughts were defeated so many years ago, and that have caused so much pain and suffering.

Final scenes of Breaking Point: A Star Wars Story. Photo by Tamara Antonović. Used with permission.

GV: Critiques of Breaking Point focused on length of the film. They wanted more. Do you plan any sequels?

SF: The ending was supposed to be mysterious, poetic, kind of elusive, like a dream. Kess dies, finding his faith again, because of the only pure thing in his life — his love for Mala. So, it’s a completed story for us, and we don’t plan to make a sequel. But making a prequel would be really interesting — Nol, Kess and Mala living on Corellia, before Luke Skywalker rescued them. On the other hand, perhaps it would be too dark for Star Wars. I don’t know… We’ll see. Difficult to see, the future, as Yoda once said.

GV: Science fiction and fantasy had been integral parts of mainstream culture in former Yugoslavia, currently very few authors from the region work in these genres. As a feature film director, you have been an outlier in this sense, with the successful fantasy film Shaitan’s Warrior in 2006. In Next to Me (2015), you tackled the intersection between new technologies and society. Do you see potential for more sci-fi production in Serbia, or the wider the Balkans region?

SF: I don’t care much about “genre” or “sci-fi” or other labels. I think the obsession with “genre vs. arthouse” is a very weird European phenomenon (much like the formulaic obsession with genres is a weird American phenomenon), and it kinda makes us lose focus on what really matters — telling good stories, writing from the heart, creating compelling characters that matter to the audiences.

I think we have here the potential to dream about anything we want, but we often choose not to dream, and rather to create films made to fit European financing strategies and schemes. This results in movies that feel more like a product than your average Hollywood fare, minus the virtue of being watchable. And this is the reason people are more inspired by quality TV and games than movies these days. So, in short, yes — I think we can do pretty much whatever we want, but we need to fight for a different financing system to enable it and different standards to realise the potential of thinking “outside the box”.

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