‘SANDBAG DAM’ (Berlinale 2025) A heart-piercing coming-of-age love story.

Berlinale-Film-Festival-Berlin-2025SANDBAG DAM 

sandbag dam 5Čejen Černić Čanak profound Berlinale drama SANDBAG DAM follows Marko, an athletic young man navigating his younger brother, school, sports, and girlfriend, Petra. His life upends when Slaven returns home for his father’s funeral. With the threat of flooding in his small Croatian village, his long-lost feelings for Slaven threaten everything.

sandbag dam 2Marko exists in a traditionally masculine environment. His father is a mechanic, training him to take over the business and compete in an upcoming arm wrestling competition. His free time consists of drinking at parties and attending to his eager-to-please girlfriend. Then, his seemingly easy life suddenly halts when Slaven returns after three years and no goodbye.

sandbag dam 3The story slowly reveals itself with an innocent bitterness and longing. If you go into the film blind, nothing is spoonfed to the audience. It is beautifully paced. The homophobia in Sandbag Dam is excruciating. The weaponization of hurt and ignorance is devastating.

sandbad dam 1The performances are spectacular. Leon Grgić is endearing as younger brother Fićo. He has a genuine star quality. His purity will make your heartache. Andrija Žunac gives Slaven an authenticity that is calming. His unapologetic aura is sensational. Lav Novosel delivers a pitch-perfect turn as Marko. Torn between the life he yearns for and the one he feels forced to accept, Novosel brings us on an emotional roller coaster we have no control over. You feel the conflict in your soul.

sandbag dam 4The film has a similar energy to Brokeback Mountain. Its restrained tension is waiting to burst at any moment. There is no denying the double entendre of the title. As the floodwaters rise, so do the tensions of secrets and feelings. Screenwriter Tomislav Zajec provides stunning metaphors. SANDBAG DAM is an important story. It is one that so many LGBTQ youth must endure. The final moments will have you talking about this film long after the credits roll.


  • by Čejen Černić Čanak (Director), Tomislav Zajec (Screenplay)
  • with Lav Novosel, Andrija Žunac, Leon Grgić, Franka Mikolaci, Tanja Smoje
  • 88′
  • Croatia, Lithuania, Slovenia 2025
  • Colour
  • Croatian
  • Subtitles: English
World premiere, recommendation: 14 years and up

The film follows Marko and Slaven living in a small Croatian village as they reunite and rekindle their love.


Remaining screenings of SANDBAG DAM:

Thu Feb 2016:00

HKW 1 – Miriam Makeba Auditorium

SatFeb 2215:45

Filmtheater am Friedrichshain

For more Berlinale coverage, click here!

About Liz Whittemore

Liz grew up in northern Connecticut and was memorizing movie dialogue from Shirley Temple to A Nightmare on Elm Street at a very early age. She will watch just about any film all the way through (no matter how bad) just to prove a point. A loyal New Englander, a lover of Hollywood, and true inhabitant of The Big Apple.

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