Enver Petrovci, born in 1954 in Kosovo, is an Albanian actor known for his dynamic performances. He appears in Forbidden Sun (1988), where he brings a compelling presence to the film's exploration of desire and danger. A graduate of acting school in Belgrade, Petrovci has also made significant contributions to the theater, co-founding the Dodona Theatre and the Acting School in Pristina. His work in Forbidden Sun exemplifies the intersection of European art and cult cinema, making him a noteworthy figure in the genre.
Forbidden Sun
A couple of Texans manage a school in Crete, to train girls in Olympic gymnastics and learn some Ancient Greek History. Charles and Francine Lake are helped by an English teacher, a local gym coach and a janitor, all three single, and apparently sexually repressed. The twelve young women try to escape the rigorous discipline of the school, to mingle with the locals on the mainland where there is rock music by a visiting band. When one of the girls is sexually assaulted, the janitor Ulysses, a peeping tom, is suspected - and four girls vow revenge, in the form of a Cretan ritual named the Bulldance. The revenge goes wrong, and it is found that Ulysses was not the culprit. More people were hiding secrets in the small island. One of the girls, dejected in love, goes on to further violence - including on herself, going alone in an arena with a bull 1400+ lbs.