Mario Drmac
Acting
Known For

One of the first post-Independence Bosnian sitcoms. Production started on June 22, 2001 in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The final episode was filmed in Sarajevo on August 25, 2008 and aired in October. It eventually became one of the region's most popular sitcoms.
Visa for the Future

Daily routine of the public procurement agency in Bosnia-Herzegovina manned by terminally lazy socially awkward clerks with messy emotional lives.
Tender

In the 1990s, the Yugoslavia Federation falls apart in bloody wars. Perpetual student Milan, a Serb from a patriarchal community, and Kenan, a Muslim cellist, are a gay couple living in Sarajevo. Their lives, intimate and public, are shaken up by the aggression in Bosnia and Herzegovina, whose devastating consequences unfold in inter-ethnic hatred.
Go West

Sarajevo, 1992. They are called Ahmed, Lana, Sado, Saba, Sahbey, Beba, Nemanja, Marx, Matan. They live in and between wartimes. They have "nafaka", the destiny which was bestowed on them by God Almighty. They have enough gallows humor and courage to believe in freedom and happiness.
Nafaka

Follows the story of several characters whose life constantly interact and in their very own way mutually influence each other.
Rhythm of Life

Nine characters gathered around their own bog, live their virtual lives, fostering the illusion that they are somebody else.
Nine Positions of Loneliness
Captain comes back from war only to find his beloved in hospital, suffering from syphilis.
Bed No. 29

It shows the arrival of 600 Bosnian expatriates who traveled over Croatia to fight in the SAO Bosanska Krajina, a short-lived entity occupied by Serbian enemy forces.