After a thorough search of Slovenian film and cultural archives (e.g., Slovenska kinoteka, Baza SFK, and COBISS), there is no record of a film, TV show, or literary work titled Ko zorijo jagode produced in 1978 under the name "OKRU" or "OKRU New."
This article dives deep into the film’s origins, its 1978 context, the meaning of “okru,” and why a “new” wave of appreciation is ripening right now. ko zorijo jagode 1978 okru new
In the annals of Yugoslav cinema, the late 1970s occupy a curious purgatory. The heady, subversive energy of the Black Wave had been crushed by political censors; Tito’s smile was growing fixed, and the Socialist Federal Republic was drifting toward a decade of economic stagnation and ethnic pre-sentiment. It is within this grey, sticky summer of 1978 that Rajko Ranfl’s Ko zorijo jagode (When Strawberries Ripen) emerges—not as a revolutionary manifesto, but as a sun-scorched, melancholic sigh. After a thorough search of Slovenian film and
Tematske osnove
The 1978 film "Ko Zorijo Jagode" (internationally known as Strawberry Time) stands as a significant landmark in Yugoslavian and Slovenian cinema. Directed by Rajko Ranfl, the movie captured the essence of youth, rebellion, and social transition in the late 1970s. Plot and Themes: A Coming-of-Age Story Year: 1974 (not 1978, but very close)