Synopsis:
Dejan Savićević was the football’s purest, most untamed vision. His career began in Titograd, on the fringes of a vast country, and rose through Red Star Belgrade. Playing with an ease that defied effort, he became a central figure in the team that won the European Cup in 1991, the first and last time a club from Yugoslavia would lift that trophy. But it was also the year Yugoslavia began to break apart, not just as a state, but as a story in which millions believed. Due to the war, the national team he belonged to was expelled from the 1992 European Championship, and the socialist country that had shaped him descended into chaos. Already the recipient of the Silver Ball award, Savićević signed for AC Milan, whose owner, Silvio Berlusconi, had begun radically reshaping the very nature of football, just after he had radically reshaped the TV landscape of Italy. Savićević abruptly became part of a different system. His clash with coach Fabio Capello turned into an open battle of spirit versus mechanical perfection. Berlusconi protected him in a conflict that lasted two years, believing that players like Dejan could create a true emotional bond with the public. Berlusconi’s instinct proved right: even with limited playing time, Savićević earned the nickname Il Genio. Before the decisive Champions League final in Athens 1994, Berlusconi told him: “If you are a genius, show it.” The opponent was Barcelona, led by the legendary Johan Cruyff – and in that match, Savićević would define his status forever. This film follows Savićević as a figure who survives eras collapsing and transforming while remaining true to himself. Through archival footage, personal narratives, and a dramatic wider social context, it intertwines the story of Yugoslavia’s disintegration, where football was becoming a tool for nationalistic propaganda, with the parallel rise of Berlusconi’s Italy – a country its most powerful man was remaking in his own image, using the game for his political uprise.