His fields of interest were most usually Yugoslav film, cinematographic animation, comics, documentary film, artistic fantasy, television, acting and actors.
He was also a film and television screenwriter, director, host and producer.
He met Zorica Jevremović (a director, dramatist, theorist of media and culture) at the amateur film festival "Mala Pula", on 24 June 1968. The two of them married in Belgrade on 1 May 1971, where Zorica added the surname Munitić to hers, then they went to Zagreb. In November of the same year, they return to Belgrade, where they lived together until the end of March 2009 (when Munitić died).
Work
Munitić first article was published in high school magazine Polet in May 1961.[2] He published first professional article in the magazine for art and culture Telegram, in November 1962. Since then he publishes critiques, essays, bigger studies and was an author of more than 70 monographs. His fields of interest were most commonly Yugoslav film, cinematographic animation, comics, documentary film, artistic fantasy, television, acting and actors.
First time he appeared as a scenarist in film "Traveling Cinema" (1964). He wrote screenplays for animated and documentary movies, television shows, and he cooperated on several screenplays for featured movies. Also wrote a screenplay for Dejan Šorak film "Officer with a Rose" (1987).[3]
As a member of the board of directors of ASIFA (International Animated Film Association) he participated in the seventies and eighties in the global enterprise of popularization and promotion of cinematographic animation. He was a member of juries and committees at about twenty festivals of short and animated films all around the world. He edited hundreds of retrospectives of Yugoslav films abroad, especially of Zagreb School of Animated Films and Belgrade school of documentary films.
Since 1960s he participates in the main TV shows on films in Zagreb and Belgrade, and since 1980s he created, for TV studio of Novi Sad, eighty one-hour portraits of leading actors in his own series "Night with Stars" ("Veče sa zvezdama").
Ethnically, he sometimes called himself a Hrbin ("Croat-Serb"). About his personal identity he said:
"My father was from Trogir and mother from Zagreb. My father's father was also from Trogir, while grandmother was of Italian origin. Mother's father was Slovenian and her mother was countess from Vienna. That's why it was always difficult for me to define my nationality because I am a little bit of everything. I never had understanding for discrimination by nation, faith, race..."
"By nationality I am a sea-man, by party membership I am a film-fan, by vocation a criticus vulgaris, by conviction an alternative, and by status a freeman i.e. a marginal. (…) A man who believes in the right of his own choice and in life until death."
Since December 2011 in Belgrade was open the Media Center "Ranko Munitić" founded by Zorica Jevremović Munitić. Since April 2012 the Center establishes award "Twinkler from Trogir" ̶ "Trepetalo iz Trogira – Regional award for the media Ranko Munitić".[6] Since then it was awarded to Nedeljko Dragić, Puriša Đorđević, Dušan Makavejev, Lordan Zafranović and Karpo Aćimović Godina.
Within the Center, since December 2012, a quarterly multilingual regional magazine for media and culture Mediantrop, targeting the South European region, is being published.[7]
Bibliography (books)
Yugoslav / Serbian film
Prometheus from Viševica Island (Prometej s otoka Viševice), Zagreb, 1965.
Battle of Neretva (Bitka na Neretvi), Zagreb, 1969.
This People Will Live Forever (Živjet će večno ovaj narod), Zagreb, 1974.
Those sweet movies' lies (Te slatke filmske laže), Belgrade, 1977.
207 Festival Days in Pula (207 festivalskih dana u Puli), Pula, 1978.
Stages of Yugoslav Film (Obdobja jugoslavenskoga filma), Ljubljana 1978
Yugoslav Film's Case (Jugoslavenski filmski slučaj), Split, 1980.
Serbian Century of Film (Srpski vek filma), Belgrade, 1999.
Belgrade Film Critic's Circle I (Beogradski filmski kritičarski krug I), Niš, 2002.
Cinema Club Belgrade or Trojan Horse of Yugoslav Modern Film (Kino klub Beograd ili Trojanski konj jugoslovenskog modernog filma), Belgrade, 2003.
Belgrade Film Critic's Circle II (Beogradski filmski kritičarski krug II), Niš, 2005.
Aleksandar Berček – Film Accomplishments (Aleksandar Berček – filmska ostvarenja), (2002)
Bora Todorović – Film Accomplishments (Bora Todorović – filmska ostvarenja) (2003)
Night with stars – Veče sa zvezdama (complete author)
TV documentary series of 80 one-hour episodes dedicated to important Serbian actors and actresses, a kind of Critique Pantheon, Hall of Glory of our actors' scene. Production and broadcasting: TV Novi Sad 1990–1997.
Velimir Bata Živojinović, recorded 12. 4. 1988, broadcast 1990.
^"Twinkler from Trogir" ("Trepetalo iz Trogira"), Centar za medije "Ranko Munitić", Beograd, zvanična prezentacija
^Jevremović, Zorica. "On MediantropArchived 29 December 2013 at archive.today" (Jevremović, Zorica."O Mediantropu"), Mediantrop, regionalni časopis za medije i kulturu, Beograd, zvanična prezentacija
External links
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