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Welcome to Sarajevo
Based on the book 'Natasha's Story' by Michael Nicholson, the film follows a group of US and UK journalists, who go and report the Bosnian war in Sarajevo. There, they encounter and soon become impressed by dedicated woman who runs an orphanage to help 200 children during the war, ending up with devoting their entire life to support the orphanage and heal the war.

















1974, Rijeka, Croatia, Yugoslavia [now Croatia]

29 July 1949, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia




30 October 1974

17 June 1958, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada






March 24, 2002
A blistering docudrama, as refreshing as it is horrifying.
January 01, 2000
Messy and visceral, with an articulate, pointed anger that's recognizably British, "Welcome to Sarajevo" hits with an impact that's not diminished by the fact that Sarajevo's uneasy peace has held.
January 26, 2006
A crisp, rigorously unsentimental director, Winterbottom was a good choice for this project.
December 23, 2006
A documentary would have more powerfully captured the horror of the Bosnian conflict than this synthetic, if well-acted and -intentioned, drama.
January 01, 2000
Too often we sense that the actors are drifting and the story is at sea.
June 17, 2004
Good set-up; less pay-off than I'd hoped.
January 01, 2000
Loosely structured, it keeps its focus despite lots of dramatic wiggle room.
June 18, 2002
Winterbottom takes a recent history the rest of the world already was beginning to forget and throws it into a sharp, human focus.
January 01, 2000
However closely they mirror the real experience of Mr. Nicholson and others, some of the shocks here are too sadly predictable.
June 05, 2002
It's an extraordinarily affecting, personal, and at times uplifting tale.
July 19, 2014
By turns darkly comical and passionately angry
June 18, 2002
A compelling but jumbled film that examines the line between journalistic detachment and passion.