Adam Cuttler came into existence in 1977, the same year Werner Herzog released his masterpiece film Stroszyk, one of Adam’s top 10 films of all time. Though born in Connecticut his longing for peninsula living could not be contained, so at the age of 1 he took his 3 year-old sister Stephanie, and his Father and Mother (Gary and Edie) and moved his family to Long Island, New York. There he would live until the age of 27 when he would make the journey westward to the golden City of San Francisco, where he currently resides with his beautiful woman, Kristiana. Adam has written several screenplays but has yet to show them to anyone who owns their own camera. He also once killed a rat named Peanut with a frying pan, but that’s another story.
Adam’s favorite films in no order whatsoever:
Stroszyk
Paris, Texas
Wages of Fear
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
Dr. Strangelove
12
There Will Be Blood
The Good The Bad and The Ugly
Monty Python and The Holy Grail
O’ Brother Where Art Thou?
Coffee and Cigarettes.

Wow, and all this time I thought your Mom and Dad took you to Long Island, I should have realized it was the other way around!. This is a great site with great undiscovered writers. You all should be on, at the very least the radio, cable? Your reviews are honest, entertaining and insightful. Woe am I to live where going down the block to see some of these films is not possible. One can only hope cable will cough up some of these films. Truth be told thoough I will skip the Chainsaw movies. Keep the reviews coming…
Adam here is the greatest movie ever.
Ko To Tamo Peva.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Who’s Singin’ Over There? is a 1980 Serbian film written by Dušan Kovačević and directed by Slobodan Šijan. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival.
Plot
On April 5, 1941, one day before the Nazi invasion of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, a colourful group of random passengers on a country road deep in the heart of Serbia board a dilapidated Krstić & Son bus, headed for the capital Belgrade: two Gypsy musicians, a World War I veteran, a Germanophile, a budding singer, a sickly looking man, and a hunter with a rifle. The bus is owned by Krstić Sr., and driven by his impressionable son Miško.
Along the way, they are joined by a priest and a pair of young newlyweds who are on their way to the seaside for their honeymoon, and are faced with numerous difficulties: a flat tire, a shaky bridge, a farmer who’s ploughed over the road, a funeral, two feuding families, Krstić Jr.’s recruitment into the army, and a lost wallet. All these slow the bus down and expose rifts among the travelers.
During the early morning of Sunday, April 6, amid rumours of war, they finally reach Belgrade only to be caught in the middle of Luftwaffe’s raid (Operation Punishment). The only surviving passengers are two Gypsy musicians who sing the film’s theme song before the end.
Basic Information
.Release Date 1980
Source
.Description above from the Wikipedia article Ko To Tamo Peva, licensed under CC-BY-SA full list of contributors here. Community Pages are not affiliated with, or endorsed by, anyone associated with the topic.