Plays / Drama Objavljeno: 11/16/2025

The Frog

The Frog

It tells the story of recognisable individuals who struggle to adapt to a world of inverted values. The drama takes place in a barbershop on Christmas Eve, further emphasising the loneliness and personal struggles of the four men who meet there. The lack of communication and empathy, alienation in a world of superficiality and false success, and the battle to find closeness are condensed into a masterfully written drama, which, through unexpected twists, turns into a psychological thriller.

The Frog – A Restorative Dream Without Dreams

The Frog (Orig. Žaba) by Dubravko Mihanović is a contemporary text that not only retains its relevance over time but also deepens it. It primarily addresses war and post-war trauma in a time of inverted values, where war takes on a mythical status as a dividing force. The play vividly exposes the demons and traumas deeply etched into the characters' faces. Three friends in a barbershop, a symbolic place of masculinity, will open up their fractured souls on Christmas Eve—a time when families and friends gather, striving, even if momentarily, to forget the harsh reality. This narrative, set in a time of societal upheaval, resonates with the challenges we face today.

But can fractured souls be mended? Souls exhausted by unimaginable traumas and daily struggles, deeply scarred with wounds that never heal, isolated in their inner battles. The almost classical structure of the play, with its unity of time, space, and action, and its tragic guilt, demands a cinematic acting style—sharp, fast, and direct in the vein of psychological realism —that constructs the mental space of each character. In what resembles a hostage situation, Zeko, Toni, and Grga are trapped in the barbershop, but most of all, they are trapped within their skin, unable to escape. In the atmosphere of Christmas Eve, which calls for an attempt at peace and tranquillity, a "small evening prayer" is invoked to strengthen our protagonists and return them, fortified, to the cruel reality. The appearance of a young man selling books offers us a glimpse of hope and salvation.

Is it possible to change one's life? Is it possible to overcome trauma? Is it possible to change oneself? These are the profound questions that The Frog grapples with. While we may wish to believe in the possibility of change, the truth is that the answer lies deep within fractured souls, who, in the solitude of their introspection, make their own decisions. This is why The Frog, like a “small evening prayer,” is more necessary than ever in its simplicity, warmth, precision, and even humour—as a restorative dream without dreams.

— Aida Bukvić