Culture Cinema & Tv Movie reviews

Surviving Earth

Surviving Earth
Surviving Earth | Movie review

There’s a dreamlike quality to Thea Gajic’s debut feature, Surviving Earth, which was partly inspired by the life of her father. It’s an appropriate tone that mirrors the idealism of its central protagonist, a Serbian immigrant who soothes his trauma through music.

A recovering addict, Vlad (Slavko Sobin), works as a 12-step mentor in Bristol. He plays the harmonica in a Balkan pub band, which is comprised of his fellow addiction counsellors, and dreams of the group making it big. A man firmly living in the past, he refuses to use self-service machines, insisting on the importance of human connection during a supermarket outing with his daughter, Maria (Olive Gray), an art student. Though poor, the altruistic Vlad digs out spare change for a homeless man, with whom he’s on first-name terms, and his voice is filled with nostalgia as he recalls Yugoslavia under communism.

A film about the unhealthy coping mechanisms that men often adopt in lieu of openly talking about their feelings, we also see the darker side of Vlad. He exhibits a disregard for adult responsibilities and enters bouts of rage, resulting in his daughter becoming parentified. Sobin gives a moving, naturalistic performance as Vlad, whose personal demons are rooted in his conscription during the Yugoslav Wars. Gray is similarly compelling as a young woman who idolises her father, yet is all too aware of his mental and emotional fragility

Beautifully shot, the vibrant cinematography doesn’t align with its realist ethos, making it a unique spin on cinema verité. It eschews the grainy documentary style of, say, Ken Loach, for a lush palette. The colours have a coherence to them, more akin to the distinct, painting-esque films of Peter Greenaway.

The feature does fall a little flat. At times, it resorts to clichéd narratives, some muddled and others undeveloped. That said, Gajic shows immense promise as a young director, with a unique visual style that elevates the film.

Gajic’s big screen debut is a heartfelt meditation on what it means to be an immigrant who’s in limbo between their adopted culture and the culture they left behind. Surviving Earth explores fractured identity, toxic masculinity and trauma, and is ultimately a tale of creativity as a force of emancipation for the marginalised.

Antonia Georgiou

Surviving Earth is released nationwide on 24th April 2026.

Watch the trailer for Surviving Earth here:

More in Movie reviews

The Christophers

Thomas Messner

Mortal Kombat II

Guy Lambert

Remarkably Bright Creatures

Andrew Murray

Billie Eilish – Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour (Live in 3D)

Antonia Georgiou

Kokuho

Andrew Murray

Hokum

Guy Lambert

The Devil Wears Prada 2

Antonia Georgiou

The Sheep Detectives

Antonia Georgiou

Ultras

Andrew Murray