Obrad Gluščević
Writing
Born 1913-01-17 · Metković, Kingdom of Dalmatia, Austria-Hungary · Died 1980-09-05
Obrad Gluščević (17 January 1913 – 5 September 1980) was a Croatian film director. He wrote and directed around twenty documentaries, five feature films and two television series. Born in Metković, Gluščević first began acting in theatres in nearby Dubrovnik. His first notable works were documentary and live-action shorts made in the 1950s and 1960s, some of which won awards at film festivals in Venice, Cannes, Oberhausen and Belgrade. In the mid-1960s Gluščević turned to making feature films, and made three comedies which depict life in rural Dalmatia: Lito vilovito (1964), Čovik od svita (1965) and Goli čovik (1968). After that he directed two children's films (Vuk samotnjak in 1972 and Kapetan Mikula Mali in 1974). Mikula Mali was later expanded into a television series aired in 1976. Gluščević also authored the popular Yugoslav children's TV series Jelenko in 1980 produced by the Radiotelevision Zagreb. Gluščević was honoured with the Vladimir Nazor Award for life achievement in film in 1978, two years before his death in September 1980.
Acting
Crew

Baby Deer
Director

Baby Deer
Writer

Captain Mikula the Kid
Director

Captain Mikula the Kid
Writer

The Organ and the Firemen
Writer
Earth (A Group of Painters)
Director

Lone Wolf
Writer

Lone Wolf
Director

The Naked Man
Story

The Naked Man
Director

People of the Neretva River
Director

People of the Neretva River
Writer

Man of the World
Writer

Man of the World
Director

Mad Summer
Writer

Mad Summer
Director

Wolf
Writer

Wolf
Director

Under the Summertime Sun
Writer

Under the Summertime Sun
Director
