Roula 1995: Mokru
Seeking a fresh start and a way to break his creative paralysis, Leon takes his daughter on a summer holiday to Denmark, renting a house in a scenic, remote area. It is here that he meets Roula (Anica Dobra), a young woman who manages the local holiday home rental agency. The Character of Roula
: The story follows Leon, a writer of children's books, who travels to Denmark for a vacation with his daughter. He falls in love with a woman (Roula) whose traumatic past and relationship with her father lead to tragic consequences. Music: 20 Fingers feat. Roula by the production group 20 Fingers featuring the singer : Released in early (with some mixes dating to late 1994). : House, dance-pop, and Eurodance.
Roula * Martin Enlen. * Writers. Martin Enlen. Bernd Mollenhauer. * Anica Dobra. Felicitas Grimm-Luck. Martin Umbach. roula 1995 mokru
The word (and its variants like mokro ) has distinct meanings in Slavic languages:
Look for any existing guides, manuals, or documents that might explain the concept, product, or phenomenon you're interested in. Seeking a fresh start and a way to
The search results indicate that " " (1995) typically refers to a German drama film or a prominent house/dance-pop song from that year Roula (1995) : A German drama film (also known as Dunkle Geheimnisse ) directed by Martin Enlen.
Roula plays with the audience's perception, questioning what is real and what is a manifestation of the protagonist's traumatized memory. 3. Production and Reception Director: Martin Enlen Writers: Martin Enlen and Bernd Mollenhauer Genre: Drama / Psychological Thriller Release Year: 1995/1996 Stars: Anica Dobra, Martin Umbach, Felicitas Grimm-Luck He falls in love with a woman (Roula)
Critics praised Enlen’s ambition and his willingness to tackle highly taboo subjects directly. Reviewers noted that the performance by Serbian actress Anica Dobra provided a grounded, deeply tragic anchor to an otherwise difficult subject matter. However, mainstream Western media noted that the film's pacing sometimes lagged, occasionally adopting a tonal structure more suited for European television dramas of the mid-1990s rather than a major cinematic thriller.
Instead of a warm, inviting vacation spot, Denmark's coast is depicted as vast, cold, windy, and damp. The crashing gray waves and misty shorelines act as a physical manifestation of Leon's grief and Roula’s internal trauma.
The Serbian actress delivers a highly demanding performance, capturing a seething neurosis and a regression into extreme childlike vulnerability as her character's defense mechanism cracks.