SEEfest 2025 - Save the Date! April 30 - May 7

A SPECIAL SCREENING: Bosnia’s Oscar Entry BLUM: MASTERS OF THEIR OWN DESTINY

BLUM: MASTERS OF THEIR OWN DESTINY
Bosnia and Herzegovina official Oscar entry 

Directed by Jasmila Žbanić

Best known for her Berlin Festival winner “Grbavica, The Land of My Dreams” 
and European Film Academy Best Film and Oscar nominated “Quo Vadis, Aida”?

Distributed in the U.S. by Icarus Films.

Laemmle Monica Film Center
1332 2nd St, Santa Monica 

December 3, 2025 @ 7:00 PM

Running time: 76 min

Q&A with special guests!

This screening is dedicated to the memory of the film’s producer,
Damir Ibrahimović, who died in Sarajevo a few weeks ago. 

Part of  Worldwide Wednesdays film series at the Laemmle Theaters! 


Synopsis:

Emerik Blum.

Born in Sarajevo in 1911 into a family of Hungarian Jews, and an electronic engineering student in Prague in the late 1930s, Blum survived the most notorious concentration camp of Jasenovac, established and operated by the governing Ustaše regime, Europe’s only Nazi collaborationists that operated extermination camps for Serbs, Romani, Jews, and political dissidents during World War II.

Blum thrived during the early postwar years of Marshal Tito’s Yugoslavia by ascending to top ministerial positions in the power sector, leading him to become the founding director of Energoinvest, one of Europe’s largest (and still-preeminent) engineering conglomerates, which grew over time from 70 to 42,000 employees, becoming one of the first Yugoslav industrial conglomerates.

Fascinating archival footage and contemporary testimonials in Žbanić’s film reveal Blum to have been a humane boss and a shrewd diplomat, bringing technological advancements and efficiencies together with an understanding of how Yugoslavia’s non-alignment policies could serve his company’s international success. In doing so, Blum also helped open the nation to a world caught in the geopolitical rivalries of the Cold War.

Blum succeeded in what today seems like a contradiction: he built a massive corporate energy and engineering conglomerate in a socialist state. Žbanić captures the dizzying sense of a democratic model of worker self-management that could beat capitalists at their own game, while providing workers with free meals, housing and medical care. The film is a lively testament to the unwavering power of Blum’s vision, and a reminder that business can thrive under models very different from today’s rapacious capitalism.

SEEfest program and activities are supported, in part, by ELMA Foundation for European Movies in America, UCLA Center for European and Russian Studies , the California Arts Council, a state agency; Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Department of Arts and Culture; by a grant from the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles, Center for Slavic, Eurasian, and East European Studies, UNC-Chapel Hill, and with support from California Humanities, a non-profit partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities. We are deeply grateful for their past and current support of our programs. The Dutch film program is supported by Dutch Culture USA of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.