The Load

    The Load
    2019

    Synopsis

    Vlada works as a truck driver during the NATO bombing of Serbia in 1999. Tasked with transporting a mysterious load from Kosovo to Belgrade, he drives through unfamiliar territory, trying to make his way in a country scarred by the war. He knows that once the job is over, he will need to return home and face the consequences of his actions.

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    Cast

    • Leon LučevVlada
    • Pavle ČemerikićPaja, autostoper
    • Tamara KrcunovićMilica Stefanović
    • Ivan LučevIvan Stefanović
    • Igor Benčina
    • Kosta Bekrić
    • Novak Bilbija
    • Tadija Čaluković
    • Branislav Ćirić
    • Radoje Čupić

    Recommendations

    • 100

      RogerEbert.com

      This is one of the year’s best films.
    • 80

      Variety

      It requires a degree of commitment on the part of the viewer to join the sparsely placed dots of Glavonić’s harshly intelligent and uncompromisingly spare story, especially when the picture they form is so harrowing. But the elements that frustrate can also devastate.
    • 80

      The New York Times

      The gray skies under which Glavonic shoots, the unhurried takes in which he chronicles the drive, they put us with Vlada in an unmitigated way, the better to compel viewers to ask themselves what they would do in his position.
    • 80

      Los Angeles Times

      The overtly graphic isn’t Glavonic’s visual style, but rather a cold, more powerful image seepage — what a man’s physicality says about complicity, and what a shot of the muddied ground near a hosed-down truck says about what war does to the ground, a land and the soul.
    • 75

      The A.V. Club

      As intelligently crafted as the film is, Glavonić’s directorial strategies do end up limiting the film’s observational power.
    • 75

      Slant Magazine

      Chromatically, The Load makes Saving Private Ryan look like The Band Wagon. Yet Glavonic still manages to convey the devastation and numbness that results from atrocity without resorting to exploitation. Trauma is approached obliquely, more a subliminal fact of life than a single psychological rupture to be confronted and mended.
    • 72

      TheWrap

      It’s like we’re front-seat passengers, and though it induces much anxiety, “The Load” compels us to keep both eyes forward lest we miss whatever might happen next.
    • 70

      Screen Daily

      If any colour represents the long-term impact of war, it’s the blend of beige and grey that fills The Load’s quietly powerful frames.