A SPECIAL THEATRICAL SCREENING: THE LAST SERB IN CROATIA
Join Screamfest & SEEfest for a Special Fears & Beers Screening of
THE LAST SERB IN CROATIA

February 12, 2025
7:30pm
Lumiere Cinema at the Music Hall 3
Doheny Drive & Wilshire Blvd.
9036 Wilshire Blvd, 90211
BUY TICKETS HERE.
Screamfest Fears & Beers, in collaboration with SEEfest (South East European Film Festival),
proudly presents “The Last Serb in Croatia,” a hilarious Balkan zombie comedy!
Free complimentary beer to everyone 21+ years old with a screening ticket!
Synopsis: Croatia, seven years after bankruptcy. There is a fight going on in the world – water has become more precious than oil! In order to get hold of it, the powerful are ready to start wars, conquer, destroy, and even plant a zombievirus! Mićo, a bon viveur from Zagreb, whose daily routine includes massage parlours, restaurants and cinemas, where he watches a movie series featuring his favourite actress Franka Anić, is caught completely off guard by the zombie-epidemics. Nevertheless, he boldly embarks on an Odyssey accompanied by his movie heroine, with one highly unattainable, goal: to survive!
Director: Predrag Licina
Producer: Anika Juric Tilic
Cast: Kresimir Mikic, Hristina Popovic, Tihana Lazovic, Iva Babic,
Dado Cosic, Bojan Javojec, Marina Redzepovic, Serget Trifunovic



Parking
Laemmle’s Music Hall does not have a Parking lot. Metered parking is free after 6pm. Monday-Friday there is NO STOPPING on Wilshire Blvd from 3pm-7pm. On Saturdays the meters on Wilshire Blvd are free after 3pm, and on Sunday the parking meters are free all day. There are several 2 hour parking zones located a block or two off Wilshire Blvd.
After 5PM parking is available at 140 Doheny Drive and at 135 Doheny Drive for a flat rate of $5.00. On Saturday it is a $5.00 flat rate all day.
Disability Services
• Complimentary assistive listening devices available at the box office. Driver’s License or State ID required for deposit.
• Disabled seating and accessible restrooms available.
BUY TICKETS HERE.
SEEfest program and activities are supported, in part, by ELMA Foundation for European Movies in America; Romanian Cultural Institute, New York; UCLA Center for European and Russian Studies; Goethe-Institut Los Angeles; Blue Heron Foundation; Austrian-American Council West, Los Angeles 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 Arts Project Grant from the City of West Hollywood's Arts Division.
