Kreso Golik
Kreso Golik was born in Fužine, Primorje-Gorski Kotar County, Croatia on May 20th, 1922 and is the Director. At the age of 74, Kreso Golik biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Kreimir "Kreo" Golik (1922 – 20 September 1996), a Yugoslav and Croatian film and television producer and screenwriter, was born in 1922.
Golik produced a number of critically acclaimed feature films, short films, and television series during his five-decade career between the late 1940s and the late 1980s. Golik, who works almost exclusively with Zagreb-based production companies, is known as one of Croatia's most influential directors, and his 1970 film One Song a Day Takes Mischief Away is widely distributed as the best Croatian film ever made.
Life and career
Golik was born in Fu'ine, where he obtained his primary education. He attended the Gymnasium and graphic design academy in Senj and Zagreb. He worked as a sports reporter on Radio Zagreb and as a director of newsreels in Jadran Film. Golik began his career in 1947 as a film director. Plavi 9 was his first feature film (Blue 9, 1950). The film is a strange blend of Soviet-style industrial epic, romantic comedy, and football film. It is well-known for its spectacularly arranged football sequences. After being announced, it became the first big hit of then-young Yugoslav cinema.
Golik supervised also Djevojka hrast (The Young Girl and the Oak, 1955) during the 1950s. One scholar mistakenly announced that Golik served as a reporter during the Ustashe Nazi period, at a time when he was a student. Golik had been barred from directing for nearly a decade, but he continued as an assistant as a result of the revelation. Od 3 do 22 (from 3 to 22, 1966), one of the best documentaries of the Yugoslav "black wave).
His melodramatic comedy films I Have Two Mothers and Two Fathers (1968) and One Song a Day Takes Mischief Away (1970) were the pinnacle of his career, humorously portraying the Zagreb middle class under communism and between the world wars. Both critics and audiences have consistently ranked these two films (especially the latter) in the top ten Croatian films of all time, both for critics and audiences. "He Who Sings" is the most well-known film about Zagreb, and its success is so widespread that the McDonald's chain retained the name of the movie's characters.
On television, Golik was extremely popular. He made television shows and dramas. Gruntovani, a documentary about villagers in Podravina, Croatia, was his highest TV success. It was shot in a kajkavian dialect of Northwestern Croatia. The series's success aided in the revival of the use of dialects in contemporary Croatian history.
He taught film direction at the Zagreb Academy of Dramatic Art from 1979 to 1989. He was given the Vladimir Nazor Award for his lifetime work. In September 1996, Kreo Golik died in Zagreb.
Though he had produced some of the more sophisticated works, Kreko Golik is best known for his lightweight, entertaining films, and seria. That's why he's often compared to Billy Wilder and Lubitsch. Golik is an excellent entertainer, master of humour, and director who portrayed his characters with humour and humour, atypically for an Eastern European author. He is Croatia's most popular film director, and he is often regarded as the best exemplator of the Croatian middle class.