Native Name: | Podne |
Director: | Puriša Đorđević |
Producer: | Boško Savić Petar Gojšina |
Starring: | Ljubiša Samardžić Neda Arnerić Faruk Begoli |
Cinematography: | Bogić Risimović-Risim |
Editing: | Mirjana Mitić |
Music: | Miodrag Ilić |
Studio: | Avala film Dunav film |
Runtime: | 82 min |
Country: | Yugoslavia |
Language: | Serbo-Croatian |
Noon (Serbo-Croatian: Podne, Serbian Cyrillic: Подне) is a 1968 Yugoslav film written and directed by Serbian director Puriša Đorđević.[1] It is the final entry in Đorđević's wartime tetralogy, the first three being The Girl (1965), The Dream (1966) and The Morning (1967).[2] The film belongs to the Yugoslav Black Wave movement.
The film is about a love story between a Russian who is an employee of the Soviet embassy in Yugoslavia and a Yugoslav girl. On the first night after their wedding, the radio broadcasts news about the conflict between the communist parties of their countries. They are forced to part with little hope of meeting again.