Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo
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Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo | |
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Directed by | John Zaritsky |
Written by | John Zaritsky |
Produced by | Rainer Hoffmann Steve Milosevic Mark Starowicz Virginia Storring CBC NFB WDR |
Starring | Damir Andrei Nancy Beatty Amos Crawley |
Narrated by | Will Lyman |
Cinematography | Michael Savoie |
Edited by | Eric Goddard Richard Wells |
Music by | Mason Daring |
Production company | |
Distributed by | PBS Distribution |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo is an international documentary about the deaths of Admira Ismić (born May 13,[1] 1968) and Boško Brkić (Cyrillic: Бошко Бркић; born August 11,[2] 1968). The couple were natives of Bosnia and Herzegovina living in the city of Sarajevo. She was a Bosniak, and he a Bosnian Serb.[3] They were killed by sniper fire on 19 May 1993, while trying to cross the Vrbanja bridge to the Serb-controlled territory of Grbavica. Mark H. Milstein's photograph of their dead bodies was used by numerous media outlets, and a Reuters dispatch about them was filed by Kurt Schork. The documentary was co-produced by PBS's Frontline, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the National Film Board of Canada and WDR Germany. It was directed by John Zaritsky.
Synopsis
The 1992–96 Siege of Sarajevo by the Bosnian Serb Army (VRS) caused drastic deterioration in living conditions for its inhabitants. In 1993, Bosniak Admira Ismić and Bosnian Serb Boško Brkić, a couple with connections across different ethnic groups, decided to escape the conflict. On 19 May 1993, the pair attempted to cross Vrbanja Bridge, part of Sniper Alley, hoping for a safe passage due to an alleged informal agreement that no one would fire during their crossing.
Accounts differ regarding the exact sequence of events. According to some sources, the couple approached the bridge at 17:00, when Boško was shot first, dying instantly. Admira, although wounded, managed to crawl to him, embrace him, and died moments later.
The two bodies remained in no man’s land for several days, with Serb and Bosnian forces arguing over responsibility for their deaths and recovery. After eight days, Serb forces retrieved the bodies using Bosnian POWs, and the couple was later buried together in Lion Cemetery.
Kuniomi Asai, a war correspondent who accompanied soldiers at the front lines, recalls events differently. He reported that Sarajevo's Bosnian government initially restricted access to the front for foreign journalists. However, through his connections, Asai joined a platoon heading to the front and encountered photographer Mark Milstein, a stringer for Reuters, who pleaded to accompany them, desperate to capture compelling images.
Upon reaching a building overlooking the bridge, Asai claims they saw the bodies of the young couple, appearing as if the man had been shot first, and the woman had collapsed while trying to help him. Local soldiers identified the snipers as Serbian forces and described the couple as high school sweethearts attempting to escape the war.
Milstein’s photographs of the tragic scene were widely circulated by international media and used in Kurt Schork’s article, which turned the couple into a symbol of the senseless violence during the siege.
Reflecting on the media’s influence, Asai expressed frustration with the Japanese news agency’s delayed interest in the footage he had captured, noting that they only pursued the story after it gained traction in Western media outlets.
To this day, the identities of the snipers remain unconfirmed, as no formal investigation was conducted. The deaths of Boško and Admira continue to symbolize the devastating human impact of the Bosnian War, remembered both as an emblem of love transcending conflict and as a tragic outcome of war.
Cast
- Damir Andrei as Translation voice
- Nancy Beatty as Translation voice
- Amos Crawley as Translation voice
- Cynthia Eastman as Translation voice
- Louis Ferreira as Translation voice (as Justin Louis)
- Soo Garay as Translation voice
- Michael Hogan as Translation voice
- Charmion King as Translation voice
Awards
For this film, director Zaritsky received the Alfred Dupont Award from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism as well as an Emmy Award nomination.[4]
See also
- Bill Madden – Bosko and Admira, from the 2008 album Child of the Same God
- Kurt Schork - The original dispatch by Kurt Schork, whose ashes are interred next to Bosko and Admira, telling the moving story of Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo.
- Inela Nogić – Miss Sarajevo 1993
- Jill Sobule – "Vrbana Bridge"
- Vedran Smailović – known as the "Cellist of Sarajevo"
- "薩拉熱窩的羅密歐與茱麗葉", exact translation in Cantonese of "Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo", from Hong Kong singer Sammi Cheng's 1994 album Ten Commandments
References
- ^ "Nezaboravljeni: 20 godina od pogibije sarajevskih Romea i Julije (VIDEO)". 14 May 2021.
- ^ Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo (Television Broadcast). 1994. Event occurs at 1:17:31.
- ^ TRANSCRIPTS:Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo
- ^ "NFB - Portraits". Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-07-06.
External links
- Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo at IMDb
- NFB Web page
- Mark H. Milstein's image on Flickr with notes about making the world-famous photo of Boško and Admira
- Mark H. Milstein's images with notes about making the world-famous photo of Boško and Admira
- Article includes mention of Mark H. Milstein, photojournalist who made the famous photos of Boško and Admira
- Article includes mention of Mark H. Milstein, photojournalist who made the famous photos of Boško and Admira
- PBS Transcript "Romeo and Juliet of Sarajevo"
- The Journal for MultiMedia History
- CNN Mission: Peace "Bodies of Sarajevo's 'Romeo and Juliet' come home"
- Kurt Schork’s signature dispatch from siege of Sarajevo
- 1994 films
- English-language Canadian films
- Reuters
- Canadian documentary films
- National Film Board of Canada documentaries
- Documentary films about war
- Documentary films about the Siege of Sarajevo
- Films directed by John Zaritsky
- Frontline (American TV program)
- 1990s English-language films
- 1990s Canadian films
- Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award winners
- English-language documentary films