Little Hands is an Australian film directed by Claire McCarthy .
9-440: Little Hands may refer to: Film [ edit ] Little Hands (2011 film) , an Australian film directed by Claire McCarthy Little Hands (2017 film) , a French/Belgian short film directed by Rémi Allier Music [ edit ] Little Hands (album) , by Charlie Simpson, or the title song, 2016 Little Hands , an album by Jonathan Edwards , 1987 "Little Hands",
18-444: A song by BMX Bandits , 1993 "Little Hands", a song by Mother Mother from Touch Up , 2007 "Little Hands", a song by Sarah Vaughan from Pop Artistry of Sarah Vaughan , 1966 "Little Hands", a song by Skip Spence from Oar , 1969 Other uses [ edit ] Little Hands (manga) , a 2021 sports manga Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with
27-1240: The Academy of Performing Arts in Sarajevo at the University of Sarajevo , where he earned an M.A. degree in acting. Since 1996, he has performed in more than 60 plays on the main stage of the Sarajevo National Theatre . He starred in almost 40 feature films in US, Bosnian, Croatian, German, Austrian, Italian, Irish, Polish, Turkish, Macedonian, Australian and Canadian productions. He starred as Bogdan in Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol , Mitar in Remake , Goran in The Hunting Party , Mustafa in Halima's Path . Grbić starred in television shows such as American Horror Story , S.W.A.T. , Santa Clarita Diet , Gang Related , Ruža vjetrova , Lud, zbunjen, normalan , Viza za budućnost , etc. From 2010 to 2014, he
36-525: The American Cinematheque to a positive reception. Set in the war-torn medieval province of Bosnia and Herzegovina , Little Hands is the story of a young Australian tourist, Mia ( Dinka Džubur ), her journey to bridge the gap between her unwilling separation from her younger sister, Sofia and the trauma of her experiences during the Balkan war. Utilising the backdrop and grace of the city Mostar ,
45-403: The children and becomes suspicious. As Mia grapples with the decision to expose her true relationship to her sister and whether or not to return with her to Australia, Marsel starts to form a plan of his own. The trio go horse riding one afternoon. Mia and Sofia connect for the very first time. In the beautiful and tranquil terrain, everyone is in good spirits. Until Marsel confronts Mia with
54-513: The story follows Mia's return home after an absence of ten years. Encouraged by news that her sister has returned from a former foster home, Mia finds her sister at an orphanage, withdrawn and incommunicative. Not ready to reveal her true motives, Mia conceals her identity to the orphanage carers and attempts to connect to the children, in particular her sister. Hapless social worker Marsel ( Miraj Grbić ), initially flirting with Mia as an Australian tourist, overhears her speaking in native tongue to
63-520: The title Little Hands . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Little_Hands&oldid=1147390511 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Little Hands (2011 film) The film stars Dinka Džubur and Miraj Grbić , and
72-450: The truth of who she really is. Mia, accepting that love and family is worth fighting for, finds the courage to return home to Australia and start a life together with her new family. This article related to an Australian film of the 2010s is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Miraj Grbi%C4%87 Miraj Grbić (born 17 July 1976) is a Bosnian–American film, television and theater actor. Grbić graduated from
81-731: Was an Official Selection in 2011 Pula Film Festival in Pula, Croatia and 2012 Flickerfest in Sydney, Australia. Dinka Džubur won the International Award for Best Actress in a leading role for her portrayal of Mia in Little Hands. Little Hands was also awarded an Innovation in Film and Leadership Award from the Australian Embassy of Bosnia & Herzegovina and screened to American audiences at
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