Critique : Otter
- Dans son nouveau film, Srđan Vuletić essaie de se glisser dans la peau d'une adolescente à un moment crucial de sa vie

Cet article est disponible en anglais.
The kids are not okay. Or, in other words, we do not know whether they are or are not, because we live in two different worlds. The best we can do is to pass down our own “wisdom” and experiences to them, hoping they will mean something in their world, and to encourage them to have and pursue an agenda that might differ from our own.
A teenager pressured by the problems coming from both worlds stands at the centre of Srđan Vuletić’s newest film, Otter, the first shown in the main competition of this year’s Sarajevo Film Festival. Only a week later, Otter will move on to open the Herceg Novi Film Festival in Montenegro, and other festivals, either in the region or in the youth-films niche, could follow suit.
Our protagonist, Hana (newcomer Maša Drašler), usually does what she is told. She cannot express any interest in the pseudo-celebrity guy from her school, Balša (Savin Perišić), as her friends deem his podcast partner, the self-centred bodybuilder Luka (Pavle Marković), hotter. At home, she feels neglected by her mother, Olga (Nada Vukčević, glimpsed in How I Was Stolen by the Germans), who devotes her time to caring for Hana’s dying father.
Hana is completely out of luck, as her first intended date with Balša coincides with the day of her father’s death. After witnessing her mother submitting to the influence of the father’s brother (Serbian actor Marko Janketić), who thinks that the dying man’s last wish was to be buried in a space suit (as he was a pilot who dreamt of space flight), Hana sneaks away from the flat to meet with Balša and Luka, and to go with them on a trip to the lake to watch and film the solar eclipse.
The trip does not go as planned, and owing to the boys’ fragile egos, a circle of jealousy and insecurity between the three of them emerges. For the first time in her life, Hana has to make a decision and take action, even if it means defying figures of authority in a patriarchal and traditional environment such as Montenegro, where the film is set, and breaking the rules regarding the roles imposed on her as a woman and a young person by family and society.
At the beginning of the film, Vuletić shows his class as a director, since he manages to achieve a rare thing in today’s movies: the young characters are “allowed” to appear, sound and act like authentic teenagers. On top of that, he uses Filip Tot’s camerawork, Vladimir Gojun’s expectedly sure-handed editing, and the moody, ethereal electronic original music by Giorgio Giampà and Marta Cucchesini as pieces of a puzzle intended to leave a pretty strong impression.
However, halfway through, the characters’ actions, some of them drastic, start feeling abrupt, lacking proper motivation and appearing not so well timed. The source of the problem might be found in cutting some of the original script by Stefan Bošković (who made his name on TV both in Montenegro and in Serbia), or maybe in the young actors’ limited experience. Once the emotional stakes for them get higher, Vuletić somehow loses control, and the film becomes a bit chaotic.
On the other hand, that kind of chaos is significant both for the teenagers’ inner lives and for life itself, so, in the end, Otter, whose title comes from a scene depicting Hana’s ultimate cognition that she has to stand up for herself, can pass as more of an introspective movie. Ultimately, it motivates viewers to get introspective as well.
Otter is a co-production between Montenegro, Italy, Croatia, Kosovo, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, staged by Artikulacija Film, Redibis Film, 365 Films, Realstage and Buka Production, with the participation of Radio-Television Montenegro.
(Traduit de l'anglais)
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