Branko Marjanović
Branko Marjanović (Zagreb, 12 May 1909 - Zagreb, 13 February 1996) was a Yugoslav film director and editor.
He graduated from drama school in Zagreb, gained movie experience in Prague and worked on educational filming in Zagreb.
During World War II, he led the Croatian production, directed, wrote, produced and edited the film, and after the war he continued with the director and editor work even on a feature film.
Marjanovic directed the film Ciguli Miguli, a 1952 Yugoslav political satire. It was meant to be the first satirical film of the post-World War II Yugoslav cinema, but its sharp criticism of bureaucracy was politically condemned by the authorities and the film was banned as "anti-socialist".
Giving up film making, he devoted himself to documentaries about nature ("Small Miracles of nature big", "Marmot," Griffon Vulture "). He received the Vladimir Nazor Croatian State Award.
Sources
- Polimac, Nenad. "Branko Marjanović – The Great Documentarist". kinotuskanac.hr. Croatian Film Association. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- Zečević, Slaven (2009). "Put do Opsade – dugometražni igrani filmovi Branka Marjanovića" [A way to Opsada – Branko Marjanović's feature films] (PDF). Hrvatski Filmski Ljetopis (in Croatian). 15 (57–58). Zagreb: Croatian Film Association, Croatian State Archives and Croatian Society of Film Critics: 124–130. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- v
- t
- e
- Oktavijan Miletić (1967)
- Branko Marjanović (1970)
- Fedor Hanžeković (1973)
- Branko Blažina (1974)
- Antun Nalis (1975)
- Rudolf Sremec (1976)
- Branko Majer (1977)
- Obrad Gluščević (1978)
- Branko Belan (1979)
- Branko Bauer (1980)
- Aleksandar Marks (1981)
- Mate Relja (1982)
- Krešo Golik (1983)
- Fadil Hadžić (1984)
- Nikola Tanhofer (1985)
- Vatroslav Mimica (1986)
- Ante Babaja (1987)
- Tomislav Pinter (1988)
- Frano Vodopivec (1989)
- Antun Vrdoljak (1990)
- Fabijan Šovagović (1991)
- Zvonimir Berković (1992)
- Radojka Tanhofer (1993)
- Pavao Štalter (1994)
- Željko Senečić (1995)
- Mia Oremović (1996)
- Tea Brunšmid (1997)
- Boris Dvornik (1998)
- Ante Peterlić (1999)
- Duško Jeričević (2000)
- Ernest Gregl (2001)
- Borivoj Dovniković (2002)
- Ilija Ivezić (2003)
- Vladimir Tadej (2004)
- Zoran Tadić (2005)
- Krsto Papić (2006)
- Arsen Dedić (2007)
- Bogdan Žižić (2008)
- Veljko Bulajić (2009)
- Božidarka Frajt (2010)
- Hrvoje Turković (2011)
- Ivica Rajković (2012)
- Nedeljko Dragić (2013)
- Ivo Štivičić (2014)
- Eduard Galić (2015)
- Božidar Smiljanić (2016)
- Rajko Grlić (2017)
- Rade Šerbedžija (2018)
- Vera Zima (2019)
- Branko Ivanda (2020)
- Petar Krelja (2021)
- Dubravka Premar (2022)
- Branko Schmidt (2023)