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・ Aleksandar Paločević
・ Aleksandar Panev
・ Aleksandar Pantić
・ Aleksandar Pantić (footballer born 1978)
・ Aleksandar Pantić (footballer, born 1992)
・ Aleksandar Paunov
・ Aleksandar Pavlović
・ Aleksandar Pejanović
・ Aleksandar Pejović
・ Aleksandar Petaković
・ Aleksandar Petrovic (extreme athlete)
・ Aleksandar Petrović
・ Aleksandar Petrović (basketball coach)
・ Aleksandar Petrović (basketball)
・ Aleksandar Petrović (basketball, born 1987)
Aleksandar Petrović (film director)
・ Aleksandar Petrović (footballer born 1983)
・ Aleksandar Petrović (footballer, born 1914)
・ Aleksandar Petrović (footballer, born 1985)
・ Aleksandar Pešić
・ Aleksandar Ponjavić
・ Aleksandar Popov
・ Aleksandar Popović
・ Aleksandar Popović (1920s tennis player)
・ Aleksandar Popović (athlete)
・ Aleksandar Popović (footballer)
・ Aleksandar Popović (politician)
・ Aleksandar Popović Sandor
・ Aleksandar Popovski
・ Aleksandar Poprecica


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Aleksandar Petrović (film director) : ウィキペディア英語版
Aleksandar Petrović (film director)

Aleksandar "Saša" Petrović (14 January 1929 – 20 August 1994) was an acclaimed Yugoslav film director who was one of the leading European directors in the 1960s and one of the major figures of the Yugoslav Black Wave. Two of his films were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film : ''Three'' in 1966 and ''I Even Met Happy Gypsies'' (''Feather Gatherers'') in 1967. “I Even Met Happy Gypsies” (“Skupljaci perja”) is the first movie that presents the existence of Gypsies in society and in everyday life. It is also the first full-feature film where Gypsies speak their own language, Roma. Most roles are interpreted by real Gypsies; this is their movie. “As a child, I observed them and saw in these people faith and irrationality,” said Petrović “I Even Met Happy Gypsies” won the FIPRESCI Prize and the Grand Prize of the Jury at the Cannes Film Festival. It also received a nomination for a Golden Globe. In 1967 Petrović was a member of the jury at the 17th Berlin International Film Festival.
One of his most famous films is ''It Rains in My Village''. Petrović found inspiration for this film in Fyodor Dostoyevsky's novel ''The Possessed''.〔:hr:Bit će skoro propast svijeta〕 The film was nominated for a Palme d'Or (Golden Palm) at the 1969 Cannes Film Festival〔http://www.festival-cannes.fr/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/2548/year/1969.html〕
In 1973, Petrović was forced to leave his post at the Belgrade Film Academy after being accused of holding anti-communist views by the communist government of Yugoslavia. In late December 1989 he joined the founding committee of the Democratic Party in Serbia, the first opposition anti-communist party in Serbia.〔Vlastimir Sudar, "A Portrait of the Artist as a Political Dissident: The Life and Work of Aleksandar Petrović" (Bristol: Intellect, 2013; ISBN 978-1-84150-545-9)〕
==Filmography==


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