Živojin "Žika" Pavlović (15 April 1933 – 29 November 1998) was a Yugoslav and Serbian film director, writer, painter and professor. In his films and novels, Pavlović depicted the cruel reality of small, poor and abandoned people living in the corners of society. He was one of the major figures of the Black Wave in Yugoslav cinema in the 1960s, a movement which portrayed the darker side of life rather than the shiny facades of communist Yugoslavia.
Pavlović was born in Šabac in 1933. When he was 19, he started writing about film and art for Belgrade newspapers. He graduated in painting at the Academy of Applied Arts, University of Belgrade, and directed his first professional film, Žive Vode (Living Water) in 1961. The film received a special jury award at the Pula Film Festival. He died in Belgrade.
Pavlović received numerous awards, including the Andrić Prize, two NIN Prizes for his novels, Isidora Sekulić Award, one Silver Bear of the Berlin International Film Festival and several Golden Arenas of the Yugoslavia's most prestigious Pula Film Festival.
Directing
40
Male
1933-04-15
Šabac, Serbia, Yugoslavia
Žika
Man Is Not a Bird
National Class Category Up to 785ccm
Censored without Censorship
Gazija
Deserter
When I Am Dead and White
The Enemy
See You in the Next War
The Ambush
Raindrops, Waters, Warriors
The City
Manhunt
The Rats Woke Up
The Return
The Bet
Triptych on Matter and Death
On the Road to Katanga
Tattoo
The Flight of Dead Bird
Red Wheat
Wild Wind
The Warrior's Talent
Body Scent
The Border
The State of the Dead
Traces of a Black Haired Girl