Panama (2015) Poster

(2015)

User Reviews

Review this title
14 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Serbian Tale of Love Jealousy and Intrigue.
t-dooley-69-3869168 November 2016
Jovan is a trainee architect who acts like a middle class playboy – his best mate is obsessed with scoring with 'the ladies' and likes nothing more than to compare conquest notes with Jovan. Then Jovan meets Maja who works in a bookshop and seems interesting, demur and very attractive so they get it on and he tells her he wants, the classic, 'open relationship'.

Well soon he starts to find out there is more to Mija than meets the eye and thanks to the intrigues afforded through social media he starts to suspect that she may be not telling him everything.

Now this is actually a very good film, it is well acted and directed and the story is compelling - the suffocation that jealousy causes is very well realised and the tensions get slowly ramped up like the turning of a screw. It does seem to get a bit confused towards the end – but that may have been deliberate – to say any more is running the old plot spoiler risk. In Serbian with good sub titles this is a modern day tale that will have you thinking about social media and the new dimensions that it can bring on your love life.
7 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
The things to avoid in an open relationship!
Reno-Rangan24 October 2016
A film about an open relationship and one losing it in the way to find himself trapped inside filled with jealousy. Really a great idea, I have seen similar films from the European and Hollywood, but this one had potential to be different and it could not. It is very confusing. Not just for the viewers, seems even the writers did not know how to end the tale after great initiation. Actually, I was not expecting any clever twist towards the end, but this story failed to deliver even a normal ending. So I'm very disappointed with how it finishes it off without proper reasoning.

The title was a mislead. You have to wait till the finale to understand it, it was also not that effective. The story was, actually there's nothing, or maybe you can say it's a one liner. When two young people make a deal to keep their relationship open, one could not cope with it after some time together and that brings the mistrust, eventually doubts arise on what kind of affair they are having. At some point it could get ugly, but what stops them, especially the future of them decided in the final segment of the tale.

So I kind of liked the first half, the real problem was the following half. I know the film character had confused over something, but why should the filmmaker confuse us as well. Should have detailed that part to come out clear. Though it was different, and still not the best solution for a tale like this. The actors were good, and decently made film, I mean the production, which I think is okay for a watch, yet it is not for everybody. Particularly for having the adult contents, it suits better for the grown ups.

4/10
6 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Is she really in Panama?
againstmoth17 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I didn't understand if she really went there or it was just a lie to keep him away from her. Can anyone help me understand this? Nowadays, i see people around, they are constantly with their phones and i don't think it is cool anymore. So, these movie made me think about this age we are living, about the individualism we are facing too. Social media is available for everyone, but some people lose their mind with these social information because they can not handle it at once. So, I strongly believe social networks are not for everyone. Sometimes, people are carried away by the media without thinking if it is positive for them or not. I wait for your answers, thanks.
4 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
The biggest script disaster since "Dude, where's my car"
djolisa88829 May 2016
I'll admit, I was hooked until the last 20 minutes of this movie. Right up until 15 minutes before the end the movie turns from bad relationship and a chick flick sexual teenage story to a CSI: Missing Victims. The main character suddenly turns from a concerned boyfriend to a prime investigator who finds - nothing (I s*** you not). This piece has the youngest generation of actors, and I was amazed by some of the scenes and disgusted with others. Sometimes, male actors would fall out of their characters and besides acting, the scenario was a total disaster - absolutely inconstant. If you like to see hot sex scenes and nothing else, this is a movie for you. I'm only giving this movie a two because Jovana Stojiljkovic played her role for a 10!
16 out of 28 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
provocative
Kirpianuscus9 July 2016
its theme, its manner to use sexuality, the precise portrait of dominated society by internet and pornography, the spirit of a special age, the levels of a love story are arguments who defines a remarkable film. a film with good script, inspired performances, the right atmosphere, who has the virtue to be provocative not for the sex scenes but for the many open windows. because it is a film about Serbia, about career, importance of studies and jealousy. about insecure states and about masks. about illusory forms of truth and about the fear to loss the other. but its basic gift is to be reflection of its public. because it propose not the ordinary recipes of teenager films. because it has few traces of XIx Century Russian literature. and the final preserves touching form of poetry. short, a provocative film.
10 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Interesting but not entirely engaging or conclusive
grantss20 June 2016
Jovan is an architecture student at university. He doesn't believe in monogamy, instead just having one-night stands and multiple short- term relationships. His view is reinforced and encouraged by his friend, Milan, who is even more free-wheeling than him. They even have a monthly game, the winner being the one who has the most sexual encounters. Then Jovan meets Maja. They are attracted to each other and start sleeping together. Jovan makes it clear from the start that he believes in an open relationship, and Maja is fine with that. However, while he is free to see other women, he starts to suspect that Maja is seeing other men, gets jealous and starts cyber-stalking her. After a while he discovers that he loves her and starts to see her exclusively. Will the relationship survive his jealousy, paranoia and obsessiveness?

An interesting examination of relationships, particularly among young adults, in an age of social media, pornography, instant satisfaction and non-commitment. Also looks at darker issues, especially jealousy and obsession.

Some interesting twists in the tale. At many points in the story the relationship can go in many directions, and a word or action here or there can change everything.

Good, but not great. The characters are a bit too one-dimensional, and I was expecting something more dramatic towards the end. Ending, while poetic, feels too vague.
6 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Nice try, but...
rinakarinaka3 March 2021
A dull, boring and pretentious attempt to make a movie on open relationship. Unimaginative approach to the subject results in painfully boring film.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Bravo Jovana and Slaven
saletehnolog4 November 2017
Jovan (Slaven Doslo) and Maja (Jovana Stojiljkovic) are in an open relationship - the starting point. And then what happens is that standard - she falls in love with him, but he also in it, although he will not confess to himself. After all, Jovan acknowledges that he is in love with Maja and one, one might say, a self-confident guy becomes a person who drinks the ground beneath his feet. He becomes someone who keeps the girl.

Sex in this movie is over. The actors are Maja and Jovan. Sex is passionate, dirty and convincingly portrayed.

The film has imposed several topics in the story, without further elaboration of the same and without adequate answers. At the same time,films unnecessarily burden scenes that have no significance. For example, for several minutes, Jovan was at dinner with another girl. She was also the parents of that girl. There's also Jovan's faculty professor who just disappeared from the film without explanation.

In the end, praise deserves the main actors, young actors Slaven Doslo and Jovana Stojiljkovic. Slaven played a very successful role. Particularly expired in moments of paranoia. Jovann was exceptional. In many situations her face spoke more than every word. Scenes of sex played at an enviable level.

This movie can not give a higher score than 6. Simply, there are too many defects and inconsistencies. The mentioned actors have drawn this score.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
never go for open relationship...
afterdarkpak12 February 2020
Movie is good but i didnt understand the ending .

its about a couple having open relationship, even the movie confuse sometimes concept of open relationship + love + jealousy + social media frustration .

by the way , that russian or serbian girl jovan is soo hot n pretty. guy shoulda treat her like a princess but he was obsessed with her relationship.

anyhow this movie is also about never ever trust or go way behind using social media. he was keep tracking and FEELING Or THINKING that she is with someone else , which is all in his mind or maybe the movie doesn't show much.

in last, Open relationship or open marriage never ever works. no matter how much honest are partner with each other.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Open or close
kosmasp11 July 2020
An open relationship may sound like a dream come true for some ... but in the age of social media and everything being out there, it easily can become a nightmare. Also the movie once again shows us how mens view of that is: I can have whatever I want - but not my girl. Now call this double standard or hypocrisy or anything else that seems fitting.

The movie is quite straightforward in telling us and conveying what it is to be a teenager or young person in love. Well if you can call it that. There is so much input, there is so much stuff to digest .. and there is almost complete "control" or at least the possibility of tracking what your significant other is doing - social media you know? Having said that, the performances are nice to say the least, even if you cannot completely sympathize with him. Maybe it is easier to feel for her, but we do not get much from where she is coming from (we'll know where she is going to by the end of course, no pun intended) - she is mysterious after all!
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Sexual desire leads to obsession in Serbian film "PANAMA"
sinnerofcinema23 May 2015
Milan (Milos Pjevac) wages periodic bets with his buddy Jovan ((Slaven Doslo) to see how many sexual conquest they can acquire in short periods of time. However when he meets Maja (Jovana Stojiljkovic) what originally begins as another score for Jovan, after several heavy sexual encounters, suddenly his conquest turns into an "open relationship". Maja accepts his conditions, but it seems Jovan has problems dealing with his own rules as he becomes obsessed with Maja's every move on social media.

Obsession leads to jealousy and to Jovan attempts to try to re-categorize his relationship with Maja as he follows her every move. Jovan find it increasingly difficult to deal with his own rules he implemented in the relationship causing Maja to denounce his contemptuous treatment of her on several occasions. His temper progressively turns volatile and his feelings for Maja makes Jovan paranoid that everyone in her surroundings is either a culprit in hiding the affairs he thinks she's having or they are having an affair with her themselves.

This situation becomes unbearable for Maja and it does turn Jovan into a walking mess as he's unable find answers amidst his continuous accusations of Maja's infidelities. There is something to be said about Jovan's allegations, for Maja's demeanor is very withholding and vague towards Jovan's claims, giving him more ammunition to doubt her credibility. His increasingly paranoid scenarios regarding Majas affairs with whomever may be chummy with her on her social media leads Jovan to a borderline nervous breakdown. A once carefree player is now on the other side of his game, and the results take a toll on his daily existence for he trails and follows Maja's every move online with unconvincing results. The intelligence of "Panama" comes as a result of the way the social media information is gathered by Jovac and the way it makes him borderline manic, as he strategizes how to conduct his surveillance of Maja to mixed results and to the detriment to his relationship with her.

The Panama connection becomes apparent as Jovac is lead to believe that Maja has departed to Panama under mysterious circumstances never to be seen again, or did she?. A riveting cause and effect tale, all the subplots of Majas whereabout tie in nicely with the progressively self destructive behavior of Jovan. Jovan's obsession is acquired as a results of his apparent self projecting insecurities of Maja due to the standards and lifestyle he lives by.

The film's beautifully crafted explicit sex scenes complements the story visually as it tacitly explains a darker addiction to pornography & social media. The radical changes that leads the Jovan into a tailspin of self deception grows in apparent misplaced distrust of his friends and surroundings.

Panama is a very thought provoking film as it begs to question the role social media is having on relationships and how misplaced trust in this media can prove destructive if not checked against reality.
30 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
The Perils of Scoring Low
EdgarST14 May 2016
When a work of cultural consumption makes references to technological development, through gadgets that rapidly go out of fashion every time a new formula, measure or chip appears, the work runs the risk of quickly becoming obsolete, unless its dramatic basis is sustained on prevailing reflections on human beings and, even better, if it is done with honesty, so it can become a valid testimony of what people thought and how they behaved in a given time of human evolution. Serbian director Pavle Vuckovic based his first feature "Panama" in his own experiences as well as those of acquaintances to tell a story about how social communications and pornography have contributed to exacerbate narcissism among people and, consequently, to deteriorate human relationships. The protagonist is Jovan (Slaven Doslo), a graduating senior of Architecture that leads the life of any upper middle class young man in the mid-2010s, with access to social networks, nightclubs, private university and employment. Jovan proposes an open relation to Jana (Jovana Stojiljkovic), a humble girl who consumes the same things offered by the market economy of our times. The drama soon develops when Jovan begins to suspect that Jana leads a double life, through his cell phone and computer. Although the target audience of the film may be the young, "Panama" tells us, the elderly crowd, many things that perhaps Vuckovic were unaware of or not: this is neither a romantic comedy nor a passionate drama, but a loveless portrait of everyday neurosis about compulsive sex and how it can destroy a relationship in the absence of the creative potential that defines its opposite, personalized sex (see Dane Rudhyar). Eloquently, the erotic formula that Jovan and Jana repeat in their sexual encounters is sodomy, the "derisory grin" of life, as De Sade called that reversal of the procreative act, where the "pearls of life" (as Buddhists call semen) end in a "rotting zone"... My viewing of "Panama" also coincided with my reading of Ernesto Sabato's "The Writer and His Ghosts", in which he says, give or take a word or two, that in our time the human body has been denied its rich metaphysical dimension and it has been deprived of its capacity to make us reach knowledge through it. Thus, the other person's body is a mere object and sex is almost an onanistic act, because only through the association with a personalized body and its energy, we humans can transcend our egos and solitude, and achieve communion... which social networks will never give us. "Pure sex is sad," says Sabato, because it leaves us back in the solitude where we started, but now also with a failed attempt at communication. In the end, in his futile search for love through the "negative way", Jovan looks for a Panama (where Jana apparently has gone without notice) in social networks, streets and abandoned buildings of his city, while Jana may be perhaps in the global corruption of a paper-made Panama. As limitations, "Panama" could (and should) have been more graphic in its depictions of arid sex and, like many first works, it tries to say too many things. However, it is a sincere drama, with suggestive visual and musical metaphors of our mind tunnels, as we search for happiness, which makes us reflect on many things beyond its story, and long after the projection ends.
15 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Serbian heartthrob Slaven Doslo thrills in Panama
Marcus_Agar20 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
In an age when quantity trumps quality and lives can be judged on the number of Facebook likes, commitment-averse teens have reduced sex to a numbers game.

That is a premise for Panama, the debut feature from Serbian director Pavle Vucković, starring Serbia's hottest screen star Slaven Došlo.

The film, which screened to positive reviews at this year's Cannes Film Festival and has attracted attention for its steamy sex scenes, receives its premiere in Belgrade, this week (Wednesday, 21 October).

Slaven, aged 24, takes the lead in this dark look at a hedonistic whirl of porn-fuelled experiences and no-ties sex replacing genuine interest in other people.

But while social media can be the conduit to these self-gratifying hook-ups, it can also waken age-old vices such as jealousy, pride and greed.

Slaven plays Joven, a good-looking young man for whom sex is a score and the idea of any commitment, whether to his studies or a relationship, is still an unfathomable concept.

Even though Jovan has returned to university after dropping out, he is not so committed to his studies that he cannot go clubbing, clocking up nightly notches on his bedpost.

In a contest of cheeky charm versus chiselled good looks, Jovan and his irresponsible best friend Milan (Milos Pjevac) keep detailed score of their sexual conquests, with a monthly award their only endgame. And Jovan is often the loser.

Slaven does not have any such problem in his own life, as he experiences the increased attentions delivered by his standout role in Stevan Filipovic's box office smash Pored Mene (Next to Me).

Undeniably, the camera loves Slaven, and Pavle Vucković makes full use of that in Panama.

From the washed-out pastels of lake-side summers to the convincing sex scenes, Slaven's self-assured performance leaves a lasting impression that will cement his new-found fame.

One slight niggle is Jovan's stream of prominently branded sports shirts, which he switches in almost every scene. If there was a drinking game linked to how often he changes his clothes, I wouldn't have made it to the end of the film.

During one of his regular nights on the pull, Jovan moves in on his latest hook-up Maja (Jovana Stojiljkovic). What he does not count on is that great sex with this one-night stand should take a dark turn.

Despite Maja agreeing, if a little reluctantly, to a no-ties sexual relationship, Jovan believes that she has other ideas. Unable to express his feelings, Jovan opens the door to the green-eyed monster.

What starts out as a glance over Maja's shoulder to see a text message soon descends into spying on her social media accounts and other stalker-like behaviour. When he can't get Maja out of his system, Slaven's attentions veer towards obsession and he tracks her movements via social media, with inevitable consequences.

While the thriller elements of the film kick in, it never really commits to a particular genre. Coupled with some under-realised story elements, it is easy to feel that illuminating footage was left on the cutting room floor.

These are relatively minor issues, though, and should not detract from general enjoyment of the film, largely thanks to acting that holds it all together.

This should ensure that Panama does well on the festival circuit and, with a release that is timed perfectly to capitalise on Slaven's current popularity and the success of Pored Mene, it should perform well in Serbian cinemas, too.
9 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Boring...
A1l9i8m615 December 2018
If you like to see hot sex scenes and nothing else, this is a movie for you.
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed