Characters
- Nikola Milojević (Nikola Kojo) is a Belgrade playboy who has slept with almost every girl in town. He is a 20-year old literature student, and lives with his friend Marta. He has one problem: due to his regular morning hangovers he can never remember the girl he slept with the night before. Marina's pregnancy makes Nikola insecure and frightened, but he finally falls in love with Marina. They get a baby girl, named Sofija.
- Marina (Milena Pavlović) is an 18-year old honor student. Nikola is the first guy she's slept with, but she gets pregnant. She decides to keep the baby, and falls in love with Nikola, wanting him all for herself. Her friend Buba has many plans of how to do it, and Marina's not always all right with her plans but still carries through with them. At the end of the movie, Marina gives a birth to a beautiful baby girl, Sofija.
- Ljubinka Buba Prodanović (Branka Katić) is Marina's best friend, an 18-year old pupil of the High School of Beauty Care. She is the world's biggest fan of Barbara Sidney (a fictional author), and also the author of the book The most famous playboys of Belgrade. Buba tries to get Marina and Nikola together, basing her plans on Barbara Sidney's novels. She is helped by Raca, who she constantly spurns until the end of the movie.
- Devil (Srđan Todorović) and Angel (Uroš Đurić) - the two act like enemies, but in fact they are best friends. They're playing a game - if Nikola falls in love with Marina and takes care of their baby, Angel wins in the game. If Nikola refuses to take the responsibility, Devil wins. They both have their tricks, but, in the end, Angel wins. But, Angel says that it's just a game, and he's not acting like he's won.
Read more about this topic: We Are Not Angels
Famous quotes containing the word characters:
“For the most part, only the light characters travel. Who are you that have no task to keep you at home?”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“Socialist writers are made of sterner stuff than those who only let their characters steeplechase through trouble in order to come out first in the happy ending of moral uplift.”
—Christina Stead (19021983)
“What makes literature interesting is that it does not survive its translation. The characters in a novel are made out of the sentences. Thats what their substance is.”
—Jonathan Miller (b. 1936)