Serbia Released in mid March 2009 in Serbia and Republika Srpska (March 11 in Belgrade, March 12 in
Banja Luka, and March 13 in
Niš) to much media coverage, the movie received mostly lukewarm reviews. Many of the reviewers underscored the opinion that the finished product failed to live up to the hype that surrounded it. After two weeks of theatrical release, the film sold 67,032 admission tickets in Serbia. By the end of its theatrical run in Serbia, the film sold 125,000 admission tickets, grossing $325,265 in the country, all of which was far less than expected.
Other Subsequent Western critical reviews have been a bit more positive. After seeing it at the 2009
Montreal World Film Festival,
Variety's Dennis Harvey penned a lukewarm review, somewhat praising Dragojević for "directing the noisy, sprawling tale in colorful, confident fashion, at times recalling the rambunctious grotesquerie of
Emir Kusturica's
Underground (a more successful Kovačević adaptation, also starring Ristovski)" while pointing out that the whole thing still "seems schematic rather than felt" and identifying the movie's biggest problem to be its central romance, which is "neither convincing nor appealing". Stephen Farber writing for Reuters, says, "As the film morphs into a penetrating anti-war drama, it becomes considerably more potent. Director Srđan Dragojevic, who made
Pretty Village, Pretty Flame in 1996, demonstrates undeniable talent. The battle scenes capture the chaos and brutality of trench warfare, and the finale builds a mournful power. Cinematography is rich, and the score adds to the movie's impact. Although it's easy to grow impatient during ''St. George's'' early scenes, the haunting conclusion stays with you." The film was selected as the Serbian entry for the
Best Foreign Language Film at the
82nd Academy Awards, but it did not make the final shortlist. ==Notes==