Native Name: | Senke nad Balkanom |
Alt Name: | Shadows over the Balkans |
Genre: | Crime drama Historical fiction |
Creator: | Dragan Bjelogrlić |
Story: | Stevan Koprivica |
Screenplay: | Danica Pajović Dejan Stojiljković Vladimir Kecmanović Dragan Bjelogrlić |
Director: | Dragan Bjelogrlić (main, seasons 1, 2 and 3) |
Starring: | Dragan Bjelogrlić Andrija Kuzmanović Marija Bergam Nenad Jezdic |
Composer: | Robert Peršut |
Country: | Serbia |
Language: | Serbian Russian Macedonian German |
Num Seasons: | 2 |
Num Episodes: | 20 |
Producer: | Cobra film (seasons 1 and 2) RTS (season 1) United Media (season 2) |
Runtime: | ~60 min |
Company: | Cobra film (main, seasons 1, 2 and 3) |
Network: | RTS1 (season 1) Nova S (season 2) |
Shadows over the Balkans (Serbian: Сенке над Балканом|Senke nad Balkanom), also known as Balkan Shadows and Black Sun, is a Serbian period crime television series created by Dragan Bjelogrlić. The series is set in the Kingdom of Slovenes, Croats, and Serbs during the Interwar period and follows the story of two Belgrade police department inspectors. The first season takes place during the period just before the 6 January Dictatorship and follows attempts by the pair to solve a string of sacrificial murders shaking Belgrade. The first season ran from 22 October to 24 December 2017 on the RTS1 channel, as well as on many other television channels in the former Yugoslavia. A second season was released on 8 November 2019, and a third is being written as of April 2024.[1]
In addition to Bjelogrlić, contributors to the screenplay include Danica Pajović, Dejan Stojiljković and Vladimir Kecmanović. The screenplay is based on a story by Stevan Koprivica. Dragan Bjelogrlić, Andrija Kuzmanović, Marija Bergam, Goran Bogdan, Aleksandr Galibin, Nenad Jezdić star, with Gordan Kičić, Nebojša Dugalić, Branimir Brstina, Srđan Todorović, Dragan Petrović, Nikola Đuričko, Bogdan Diklić, Voja Brajović, Sebastian Cavazza and Toni Mihajlovski also appearing. The series is an international co-production involving Cobra Film, Radio Television of Serbia, Skopje Film Studio, Iskra, Radio Televizija Republike Srpske, Macedonian Radio Television, and the North Macedonia Film Agency.
The first season was received very well by audience and critics alike, some controversy notwithstanding. The production, acting, editing and costume design have all received praise, as have the themes the series deals with.
The series is divided into three seasons and encompasses the period between 1928 and 1940.[2] The first season covers the period just before the assassination of the Croatian Member of the National Assembly Stjepan Radić at the National Assembly of the Serbs, Croatians and Slovenians and the subsequent establishment of the 6 January Dictatorship.
The main setting for the series is Belgrade in between the two world wars. Lead characters are fifty-year-old police inspector Andra "Tane" Tanasijević and his new associate, a young forensic pathologist by the name of Stanko Pletikosić. Belgrade is a city suffering from robbery and murder, but whose biggest problems are wars between opium cartels, which use the city as a route for smuggling the drug further into Europe and the United States. The first season starts with a peculiar and brutal murder occurring at a costume ball at which most of the Belgrade social elite is gathered.[3] Inspector Tanasijević soon discovers that the cause of the eerie events, which multiply by the day, is an ancient relic: namely, the Holy Lance Jesus was pierced with on the cross, which seems to possess mystical powers.[4] The Inspector discovers people ready to do anything to acquire the Lance, and is sucked into a tangled web of crime involving a range of interest groups: the Russian White Army under General Vrangel, the Soviet OGPU and later NKVD secret police, the Serbian Black Hand movement, Bulgarian revolutionaries, the Yugoslav League of Communists, elements of the Belgrade underbelly and, not least, a secret society going by the name of Thule.[5] Hot on the crime trail, the Inspector looks for the relic with one aim in mind: to transport it out of Belgrade and thereby prevent further death.
The series is set to run over three seasons. The second season also has ten episodes, and deals with the period before the assassination of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia in Marseilles. The third season will be set just before the start of World War II in Yugoslavia.
Dragan Bjelogrlić first became interested in the setting of the series while filming Montevideo, God Bless You! He had known very little of the period and he also thought that the Serbian public in general wasn't well informed about it: "Our destiny was such that we never learned much about that time period, it was almost never talked about. And those were important and in a way intense times, especially in Yugoslavia."[12] [13] The fact that Yugoslavia was called the "Colombia of Europe" between the two Wars also served as inspiration.
In an article for Blic he wrote that he didn't want to compromise on any part of the show's creation: "Shadows over the Balkans is a piece for which I tried to make no compromises. There were no compromises on any level and in any phase of the show's production. From the screenplay, story, themes, national divisions, aesthetics, direction to the budget and cost. I didn't want to concern myself with the acquired taste of the RTS audience, ratings, political correctness, puritan moral principles, conservative historians, "first" and "second Serbia", and the like..." He seriously doubted in the success of the show, because "in aesthetic, dramaturgic and narrative aspects" it was different than everything else he worked on in the past.[12] [14] He was inspired by a number of American, German, Italian, Scandinavian and Eastern European TV series, and as the main source of inspiration he cited Boardwalk Empire. He was also inspired by the connection between crime and corruption saying how "when he put some things in order, he came to the conclusion that there exists a historic constant which affects this region, because it is of utmost importance that when you are working on a piece of art which deals with the past, it is important to focus on the moment from which you are doing it."[15]
Along with Bjelogrlić, the screenplay was written by Danica Pajović, Dejan Stojiljković, and Vladimir Kecmanović, adapted from a film story by Stevan Koprivica.[16] Koprivica worked on some of the early episodes, and according to Pajović, "the story was a Arthur Conan Doyle-type mystical drama about two inspectors who are working on resolving a series of sacrificial murders in Belgrade set between the two Wars. Bjelogrlić then expanded the theme to the Belgrade underbelly and opium trade in Yugoslavia and convoluted the story to such an extent that Dejan Stojiljković and I had to join the screenwriters team, with Vladimir Kecmanović also joining us later."[17] According to Stojiljković himself, this was his first screenplay for film or television.
The filming of the first season took place between 1 October 2016 and the end of July 2017.[18] [19] The series was shot on many different locations in Belgrade, Macedonia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a new film studio was also built in Baranda.[20] The Baranda studio housed the sets depicting the Savamala neighborhood of Belgrade and the contemporaneous slum of Jatagan Mala, including several fictional kafanas. According to Bjelogrlić, 30% of the filming took place in Baranda.[21] Some scenes were shot on location in Zrenjanin, including street exteriors and Zrenjanin City Hall.[22] [23] Some scenes were also supposed to be filmed in Slovenia with the support of RTV Slovenija, but this plan was abandoned due to financial reasons.[11]
The second season was shot in Novi Sad. Freedom Square and the surrounding buildings were used as a substitute for Vienna. Scenes depicting a restaurant where Ante Pavelić stayed were shot at the northeastern side of the square. Some scenes were also shot at the Hotel Leopold I at Petrovaradin Fortress.[24]
As of April 2024, Bjeloglić said that season 3 was being written, and would begin filming at the end of that summer.[1] The third season will begin with Milan Stojadinović's calls for elections in 1939, "a very significant year, when it was clear to everyone that a great war was coming, that the world would not look like it did before and that everyone had some plans of their own," according to Bjeloglić.[1] The plot will also involve mysterious developments around the mountain Rtanj, which Bjeloglić said "is interesting because of the legends, because of the population that lives there and believes in all kinds of things, and because there were some mines there."[1]
"Magnifico" (Robert Pešut), with whom Bjelogrlić already collaborated on Montevideo, worked on the soundtrack for the series. Ognjen "Ogi" Radivojević sang the song in the title sequence, and he was chosen by Magnifico and Bjelogrlić "because of his specific tone of voice and emotions which emerge from his vocal range."[25] Other notable musicians also took part in the series, including Nikola Pejaković and Ksenija Kuljača.
The series debuted in Macedonia at the 38th Manaki Brothers Film Festival in Bitola on 25 September 2017, with Dragan Bjelogrlić, director Igor Ivanov Izi, and actors Marija Bergam, Jana Stojanovska, Pero Arsovski and Petar Atanovski addressing the audience.[26] The show's pre-premiere screening in Serbia took place on 17 October 2017 at the Yugoslav Film Archive.[27] The series premiered in Serbia on RTS on 12 October 2017 with an 8pm timeslot, which has long been the default time slot for all Serbian and Yugoslav TV series.[28] [29] The first episode in Serbia was watched by more than 2,123,000 viewers and was the most watched media on that channel.[30] The premiere in Bosnia and Herzegovina was at the 23rd Sarajevo Film Festival, where two episodes were screened to applause.[31] The first season aired on RTRS, RTCG 1 in Montenegro, and MRT 1 in Macedonia.
Croatian media was criticized for not airing the first season, and it was speculated that the program was not shown was due to the character of Ante Pavelić and because Dragan Bjelogrlić himself forbade it. Bjelogrlić dismissed these claims and said that the main reason for the series not airing in Croatia was because no channel acquired the rights to air.
The name of the series was translated into English as "Black Sun" in reference to the eponymous symbol frequently seen in the series.[32] As of June 2024, the program was available to stream in the United States through Fubo TV.[33]