
Dragomir Felba
Acting
Biography
Dragomir Felba was a Serbian and Yugoslav film, theater and television actor.He studied the law school, and later the Film School in Belgrade, which he finished 1950th. He made his debut at the National Theatre of Kragujevac but in 1952. he moved to the Yugoslav Drama Theatre. Since 1956. he was a freelance artist. The first film role was played in 1948. in the film "Sofka" is a famous role in "Barba Zvane." For the role in "Kozara" at the Pula Film Festival, was awarded a special diploma.
Born: July 7, 1921
Place of Birth: Skopje, Macedonia, Yugoslavia
Known For

The Written Off
"The Written Off" is a famous Serbian TV miniseries, that was very popular in former Yugoslavia, originally airing in 1974. Due to its popularity, Radio Television of Serbia has shown reruns of the series ten times, the last re-run starting in 2012. The series has achieved something of a cult status among its audience and still attracts an estimated 3 million viewers with its last rerun. Idea of series derives from exploits of freedom fighters in Belgrade during World War II, and all the characters and events are fictitious.

Truckers
The adventures of Paja and Jare, the two honest and good-natured truck drivers and partners in business. They meet various people while on the road, which mostly turns out bad for them, but at the end it's their friendship that saves the day.

Lone Wolf
The film follows a young boy named Ranko who discovers a large German Shepherd in the mountains, a remnant of the recent war. After freeing the dog from a trap, Ranko befriends the animal and, based on an inscription on its collar, names him Hund. However, the local villagers mistake the dog for a dangerous wolf, a "lone wolf," and resolve to kill it. Fearing for his new companion's safety, Ranko secretly brings food to Hund in the mountains. In a turn of events, the dog saves Ranko from a real wolf attack. The villagers, convinced that this "lone wolf" is responsible for killing sheep, organize a hunt. In a climactic moment, Ranko manages to save his loyal friend from the hunting party, solidifying their bond.

Destination Death
A group of West German men on a stag party find themselves stranded in a Montenegrin village inhabited only by vengeful women since all their men were shot during the war.

Red Zora and Her Gang
In the Croatian coastal town of Senj , orphans living on the fringes of society come together under the leadership of a girl who, because of her red hair , is called Rote Zora . The citizens of the city treat the destitute children like outcasts. Wild pranks are the reactions of the troops. In order to survive, the children become criminals, but within their community they adhere to fixed rules. Your top priority is solidarity. They call themselves Uskoks . The only one who feels connected to them is the old fisherman Gorian. The children help him to assert himself against the big fishing companies.

Red Zora and Her Gang
In the Croatian coastal town of Senj , orphans living on the fringes of society come together under the leadership of a girl who, because of her red hair , is called Rote Zora . The citizens of the city treat the destitute children like outcasts. Wild pranks are the reactions of the troops. In order to survive, the children become criminals, but within their community they adhere to fixed rules. Your top priority is solidarity. They call themselves Uskoks . The only one who feels connected to them is the old fisherman Gorian. The children help him to assert himself against the big fishing companies.

In the Storm
Rose is a young woman who lost her husband in WW2, leaving her and their daughter behind. She gets close with his good-natured brother Drago. However, an unscrupulous smuggler Vincenzo is always around him, and things get tough for the couple.

Boris Godounov
A possible impostor torments a newly crowned medieval czar who may have ordered the real successor's death.

We'll Go to the City
"Andremo in città" (We'll Go to the City) is a 1966 Italian drama film directed by Nelo Risi. It is based on the novel of the same name by Edith Bruck, Risi's wife. Bruck, a Hungarian concentration camp-survivor, settled in Italy after the Second World War and wrote about her experiences in autobiographical and fictional formats.[1] The film stars Geraldine Chaplin and Nino Castelnuovo.

Great Transport
This WW2 epic was one of the last movies of that kind made in former Yugoslavia. It tells the true story of great transport of Partizans from Vojvodina to Bosnia in 1943.
Filmography
as Himself (archive footage)
as Ribar
as Starac
as Lokführer
as Seljak Mato
as Mihajlo
as Deda Milašin
as Deda u vozu
as deda Jova
as Naum
as Ratimir Spasić
as Tima
as Tima
as Deda Ivan
as Pripovjedač
as Seljak
as deda Mika
as Iguman Makarije
as Mane
as Noćni čuvar u pozorištu
as Urednik u štampariji
as Gorian
as Gorian, der alte Fischer
as čika Rade
as Tamarin otac
as Šef samoposluge
as Ozren, Bojanov otac
as Gligor
as Šofer
as Seljak koji živi u pojati
as Vidoje
as Slobin otac
as Deda Vukajlo
as seljak iz Ribnice
as Striko
as Chicha
as Hadži Sinanudin
as Striko
as Mušterija 1
as Mušterija
as Daneša
as Jovin kolega
as Deda Mladen
as Vidoje, vodeničar
as Božidar
as Milicioner
as Dad
as Topolovački
as Seljak sa volom
as Uroš
as Crusader 1
as Marko
as Đorđe
as Orhan
as Gazda Steva
as (uncredited)
as Seljak
as Sheriff Martin Miller
as Brown (uncredited)
as (uncredited)
as Šjor Bartol / Ivov brat
as Ratni drug
as Nikola
as Krste
as Mihin pomoćnik
as Obrad
as Inžinjer Živa
as Šarac
as Serafin
as Komandir milicije
as Čeda
as Gregori
as Palić
as Vojin
as Marko
as Gvozden
as Drago
as Đura Ličanin
as Suri
as Rade