
Between Days
Abdulah Kadenic and his wife Sehaveta fled Bosnia in the early 1990s as the Yugoslavian war tore the country apart, eventually settling in Norway. The film follows their years building a life there, learning the language and adapting to a new country, while never quite shaking the sense that Norway isn't home. Interviews with the couple trace the pull back toward Bosnia, weighing the safety and stability of their adopted country against the ties of place and memory that never let go. Their eventual decision to return to Bosnia forms the film's center, a choice that runs against the usual immigrant narrative of settling permanently in the West. Told through the couple's own voices rather than outside narration, the film stays close to their daily reasoning and doubts, treating displacement not as a single event but as a condition that persists for decades after the war that caused it has ended.