Some films haunt you. Not with ghosts, but with the smell of burning plastic, the jingle of coins in a dirty palm, and the awkward flapping of a pigeon tied to a string. Emir Kusturica’s Time of the Gypsies —winner of the Best Director award at Cannes—is one such film. It is a two-hour-and-forty-minute fever dream that marries Balkan folk magic with brutal social realism, creating a tragicomic opera about how innocence travels one way and returns another. The story follows Perhan (Davor Dujmović, in a heartbreaking debut), a Romani teenager living in a ramshackle Yugoslav village. He lives with his grandmother (a wonderfully stoic Ljubica Adžović) and his bedridden, bitter sister. Perhan possesses a peculiar gift: telekinesis. He can move spoons, stop a speeding ambulance, and command household objects—not through anger, but through intense, silent will.
His idyll of stealing geese and courting the flighty Azra (Sinolička Trpkova) is shattered by the arrival of Ahmed (Bora Todorović), a slick, silver-tongued gangster. Ahmed promises Perhan’s grandmother that he will take the boy to Milan, Italy, to make an honest living. Of course, Milan is a mirage. The honest living is child exploitation, pickpocketing, and organ harvesting. What follows is a descent into a criminal underworld where the magic of childhood curdles into desperate bargaining with fate. Kusturica’s signature visual language is in full, chaotic bloom. The film looks like a wedding that turns into a funeral that turns into a brawl. Cinematographer Vilko Filač paints the first half in sun-baked, dusty golds and sickly greens—the river is sluggish, the geese are fat, and the weddings are raucous affairs with accordions bleeding into the soundtrack. Download Time of the Gypsies
The film’s most stunning magical sequence involves Perhan trying to rescue his sister from a curse. He floats a table laden with bread and coins. It is absurd, beautiful, and utterly devastating. Kusturica understands that for a people stripped of political power, magical thinking isn’t a delusion—it’s a weapon. No review can ignore the brass band. Composer Goran Bregović (of the White Button band) doesn’t write a score; he writes a pulse. The music is a frantic, melancholy collision of Romani scales, Bulgarian choirs, and distorted electric guitars. The track “Ederlezi” (the spring festival song) recurs like a prayer. By the time it swells during the final, hallucinatory wedding scene, you will feel like your chest is being crushed by a tuba. It is the sound of a people celebrating because crying takes too long. Performances: The Tragedy of the Child Davor Dujmović was 19 playing a 14-year-old, and his face is a map of the film’s contradictions. He has the smooth cheeks of a cherub but the tired eyes of a man who has already seen too much. Watch his transformation: the first time he uses his telekinesis to steal, he smiles. The last time he uses it, he is crying. His descent from dreamer to enforcer to vengeful ghost is the film’s engine. Some films haunt you
In the end, Time of the Gypsies asks a simple, terrible question: What happens when a boy who can move mountains is only asked to move stolen Rolexes? The answer is a wedding, a funeral, and a pigeon finally cut loose from its string. It is a two-hour-and-forty-minute fever dream that marries
You love the messy, magical realism of Gabriel García Márquez; you think Pixote needed more accordions; or you want to understand how poverty is not a lack of things, but a lack of choices.