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For the price of a movie ticket, escapist options for people here include a perfect storm, three crime-fighting angels, a nutty professor and being bombed all over again by NATO.

It is hard to see why anyone who survived 78 traumatic days of airstrikes in 1999 would want to relive the experience in a theater, bringing back memories as well of a murderous decade that ended in October with the fall of President Slobodan Milosevic.

Yet Yugoslavia’s feature-film industry has done little else in the past year but turn out NATO war movies — five of them, with at least two more in production and who knows how many scripts being shopped around, said Aleksandar Kostic, one of the country’s leading movie critics.

“I think they’re just trying to find the topic that will sell,” he said. “In a way, cinema people are reacting too fast for me, because there is no distance. No one really knows what happened to us.”

But Djordje Milosavljevic — author of the recent “Sky Hook” — argues that subtlety can be a sharp weapon. He says films such as his have begun to cut through the national facade that Milosevic’s propagandists had more than 10 years to build.

“We could say what we wanted to say but not directly,” said the 31-year-old screenwriter, noting that producer-director Ljubisa Samardzic had his eyes on the box office and cut parts of the script that could have caused trouble with distributors. When Milosevic was in power, a few phone calls would have guaranteed that the movie bombed.

“We had a fear of being accused of treason. And the producer had a very simple fear of not being allowed to advertise in the state-run media,” Milosavljevic said. “So it wasn’t a problem with direct censorship but some kind of boycott by very powerful regime media who wouldn’t speak about the movie.”

Even as NATO’s bombs sent fireballs into the night during the spring of 1999, he was already crafting a script by candlelight in his sixth-floor apartment. Soon after the last air-raid siren fell silent, the director shouted “Action!” on the set of “Sky Hook.”

The most successful of the NATO war genre so far, “Sky Hook” is a new twist on the basketball buddy film. It tells of Serbian men who had lost all purpose until they teamed up, on a bet, to clear the rubble from their neighborhood basketball court. Then alliance warplanes blow it up again.

Shot for about $250,000, it is a big-budget movie by local standards and has sold almost 400,000 tickets at 120 theaters across the country, a huge commercial success here. Another 400,000 people have seen it in neighboring Croatia and Slovenia and at European festivals, where it has won several awards.

“Sky Hook” is Yugoslavia’s entry in the foreign-film category for the Academy Awards. The film’s U.S. premiere will be Jan. 20 at the Palm Springs Film Festival.

The title comes from a shot in basketball, but it also appears in stenciled letters on the tail of a missile that the men discover in the rubble of their basketball court: “LET’S HAVE A BALL!” it reads. “SKY HOOK. NBA AIR FORCE!”

To find his characters, Milosavljevic needed only to look outside his apartment block, where the emotional casualties of Milosevic’s rule didn’t let the air raids disturb their favorite pastime: drinking beer and working the grill. The bombed-out court also was real.

In the final script, NATO is mentioned by name only once and Milosevic not at all. The audience recognizes him through a well-known code phrase repeated throughout the film, just as it is in everyday life: “the last 10 years.”

Kosovo — the province of Yugoslavia’s main republic, Serbia, where the repression of ethnic Albanians during a war for independence led to NATO intervention — never comes up in the film. Milosavljevic said it is still too soon to confront such sensitive issues head on, as the public reaction to a short scene in “Sky Hook” made frightfully clear.

In the scene, a grandmother played by one of the country’s favorite actresses, Milena Dravic, is on the phone with her daughter after another night of bombing.

“It wasn’t that bad last night,” she says. “They’ve only hit the transformer. They say these are some `soft bombs.’ I would hang all of them at [Belgrade’s] Terazije Square. Both them and our guys. I would hang them from piano wire so that they can swing together. God forgive me.”

It wasn’t long after the first audience heard those words during the summer that Dravic was labeled a traitor by Serbian nationalists. The ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party used its weekly TV program, “Radicals’ Waves,” to attack Dravic, who was placed on what Milosavljevic called the show’s “pillar of shame.”

“She was very afraid at that time,” he said.

Still, Kostic, the critic, says “Sky Hook” and most of Serbia’s NATO war genre lack courage. The only one of the films he hasn’t panned is a no-budget picture called “Land of Truth, Love and Freedom,” made by volunteers with donated video equipment.

It enters the shellshocked mind of a bombing victim who sees nothing in a psychiatrist’s inkblot tests but assassins, prostitutes and lowlifes.

The film’s hero is Boris, a young film editor for state-run Radio Television Serbia, the main voice of Milosevic’s propaganda machine. NATO bombed the station’s studios, killing 16 civilians. The fictional Boris, who is editing propaganda clips when the bombs strike, spends the rest of the war in a psychiatric ward.

Milutin Petrovic wrote, directed and stars in the film, which was made in 11 days. He had to wait until his director of photography, CNN cameraman Predrag Bambic, had some free time before they could start shooting.

Petrovic, 39, said the core of the film came from his own life. He spent three weeks in a military psychiatric ward in Croatia, where he met the haunted assassin portrayed in the film.

Petrovic himself pretended to be crazy after being drafted into the Yugoslav People’s Army in 1989, when Croatia was still part of this nation. Petrovic could smell what was coming as Milosevic set the course that led to Yugoslavia’s destruction.

“I was freed and got papers saying that I am not fit for military service,” he said. “That’s the only reason why I am still in this country. Otherwise, I would be in Canada by now. Or they would have caught me and I would be lying dead in [the Croatian city of] Vukovar.”