Karlovy Vary 2026 review: Petty Thieves (Mate Ugrin)

“A film that is less about crime, and more about the quiet architecture of necessity.”

Mate Ugrin’s Petty Thieves unfolds like a slow bruise rather than a sudden wound — a film that observes how survival quietly erodes morality, and how intimacy can grow inside the cracks of economic desperation. At its core, the story is deceptively simple. Rio, an introverted young man drifting along the Croatian coast, survives by stealing small amounts from restaurants and resorts. His thefts are not framed as spectacle or thrill; they feel almost procedural, like breathing in a system that has already excluded him. The coastal tourist economy, with its polished surfaces and seasonal rhythms, becomes less a backdrop and more a machine that determines who gets to remain visible and who becomes invisible.

Everything shifts when Andrea enters the narrative. A young Serbian part-time worker, she is not written as a mere catalyst but as a parallel force — someone who understands the same economic suffocation but responds to it with sharper intent. Their decision to escalate from petty theft to planning a larger heist inside the hotel where Andrea works is not treated as a genre pivot into crime-thriller territory. Instead, it feels like an emotional decision disguised as a practical one: two people trying to create agency in a world that keeps shrinking their options.

What makes Petty Thieves compelling is how it refuses the temptation of glamorizing crime. The ‘heist’ is not staged as adrenaline or spectacle; it is built from silence, hesitation, and the awkward trust between two people who barely know how to trust anything. The film is far more interested in what happens between the plans than in the plans themselves. The tension is internal — how Rio and Andrea gradually begin to project their loneliness onto each other, mistaking proximity for stability.

This is where Mate Ugrin’s direction reveals its strength. He constructs a world that feels observational rather than judgmental. The coastal resorts are shown not as postcard beauty but as liminal spaces: half-empty restaurants after tourists leave, corridors of hotels that feel temporarily inhabited, beaches that look beautiful but emotionally distant. The film constantly reminds us that this is a place designed for movement, not permanence.

A crucial element in shaping this atmosphere is the cinematography by Ivan Marković, whose work here is quietly extraordinary. Marković develops a visual language that resists obvious beauty even when the landscape is inherently picturesque. The Adriatic coast is not romanticized; instead, it is filtered through a muted, patient gaze. Light often feels slightly diffused, as if the sun itself is exhausted. Interiors carry a soft, observational stillness — not dramatic shadows, but gentle separations of space that keep the characters emotionally apart even when they are physically close. Marković’s camera often holds back. It lingers in medium distance, allowing gestures to complete themselves without emphasis. This restraint creates a sense of ethical distance: we are not being guided to judge or empathize in a forced way, but to simply observe the slow accumulation of choices. When the camera does move closer, it feels earned — as if the film has finally decided that emotional proximity is necessary. There is also a subtle rhythm in how space is treated. The resorts feel geometric, almost algorithmic in their design, while the natural landscape outside them remains open but indifferent. Marković uses this contrast not just aesthetically, but emotionally: the more the characters attempt to plan control (through theft, through partnership), the more the environment suggests how little control actually exists.

What lingers after Petty Thieves is not the outcome of the heist, but the fragility of the bond between Rio and Andrea. Their relationship never fully stabilizes into romance, friendship, or partnership — it exists in a liminal moral space, just like the world they inhabit. The film understands that in precarious economies, even affection can feel transactional, and yet still remain deeply human. In the end, Mate Ugrin delivers a film that is less about crime, and more about the quiet architecture of necessity.