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Ciguli Miguli

Ciguli Miguli
Ciguli Miguli poster.jpg
Directed by Branko Marjanović
Screenplay by Joža Horvat
Starring Ljubomir Didić
August Cilić
Viktor Bek
Martin Matošević
Zvonko Tkalec
Joža Šeb
Ljubo Dijan
Milivoj Arhanić
Olga Klarić
Boris Buzančić
Đokica Milaković
Music by Ivo Tijardović
Cinematography Nikola Tanhofer
Edited by Radojka Ivančević
Production
company
Release date
1952 (private screening)
30 April 1977 (public release)
Running time
104 minutes
Country Yugoslavia
Language Croatian

Ciguli Miguli is a 1952 Yugoslav political satire film directed by Branko Marjanović and written by Joža Horvat. 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".

Ivan Ivanović, a party functionary, arrives in a provincial town as a temporary replacement for a cultural official. The newcomer is fanatically eager to reform the town's cultural life in accordance with socialist ideals. He abolishes all five music societies and orders a monument of the town's most revered native, late composer Ciguli Miguli, removed from the main square. Ivanović's actions, however, meet stiff resistance from the townspeople, especially the youth.

Prior to Ciguli Miguli, director Branko Marjanović and writer Joža Horvat had collaborated on Zastava (1949), a socialist realist war film that won several awards. This time, however, Horvat wanted something different, hoping that a satire of Soviet-type bureaucracy would mesh with the wave of liberalization of cultural life in Yugoslavia set in motion by Tito's breakup with Stalin in 1948. Moreover, Horvat believed that this new climate would be the beginning of substantial democratic changes in the country, initiated from within the Communist Party of Yugoslavia itself.

Marjanović took over Ciguli Miguli only after his proposal for Nikola Tesla, a biography of the famous engineer and inventor, had been rejected by Jadran Film. As a non-party intellectual, he was not an ideal choice for directing a politically risky film, but it was believed that Joža Horvat's impeccable reputation and his good standing with the authorities would be sufficient.

Ciguli Miguli was a significantly more complex project than Zastava, but the shooting - which began in August 1951 - was finished in six months. That was considered normal for standards of Yugoslav cinema of the era, in contrast with chaotic and protracted shooting of Zastava that lasted for fifteen months.


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