In 1990s Kosovo, best friends Oki and Petrit are inseparable — cycling through their village, trading mischief, sharing dreams. When Serbian forces arrive and begin systematically targeting the Albanian population, their friendship faces an impossible test. Based on true events, the film follows the boys as the conflict transforms everything they know.
Editorial Perspective
Jamie Donoughue’s Shok (“Friend” in Albanian) opens with a seemingly normal friendship and slowly tightens the vise until you can barely breathe. The decision to tell a war story through children’s eyes is well-worn territory, but Donoughue earns it through specificity — these are real places, real names, real events. The two young leads deliver performances of startling naturalism, and the film’s final moments will stay with you far longer than many feature-length war films.
Where to Watch
Available on YouTube (official upload). Also included in the 2016 Oscar-nominated shorts compilation.
Historical data reconstructed from archive.org snapshots of the Manhattan Short Film Festival website.