''The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent", directed and written by Nebojša Slijepčević won the Golden Palm for Short Film at the Cannes Film Festival. The film is produced by Croatia, France, Slovenia and the Bulgarian National Film Center. It is based on a true story.
The film dramatizes the Štrpci massacre of 1933 when 24 Bosniak Muslims were pulled off a train by the White Eagles paramilitary group and massacred. The film centres on Tomo Buzov (Dragan Mićanović), the sole non-Bosniak passenger on the train who tried to stand up against the attackers.
"The Way of the Musicians" (Musicorum Via) is the name of the joint initiative of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Music (NMA), which opens in the "Professor Marin Drinov" Hall of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. "During..
The Symphony Orchestra of Vratsa – Simfonieta, has become a haven for violinist Alena Chekhova. She was born in the Russian city of Tyumen /Western Siberia/, raised in Ukrainian Crimea and lived in Moscow for more than 10 years, where..
European Days of Artistic Crafts are starting today in Bulgaria's Antonovo . The motto of this year's edition is "The Golden Thread", which is why it will begin with workshops on wool felting. Every day until the end of the week, residents and..
A thirty-six-hour theater and film marathon will be presented to audiences in Sofia by the students of the National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts..
With Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead , young Boyan Kracholov - one of the most compelling contemporary Bulgarian theatre directors - makes his debut..
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