Filmski Grad
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Filmski Grad
Филмски Град | |
|---|---|
Arčibalda Rajsa Street | |
| Coordinates: 44°45′N 20°26′E / 44.750°N 20.433°E | |
| Country | |
| Region | Belgrade |
| Municipality | Čukarica |
| Time zone | UTC+1 (CET) |
| • Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CEST) |
| Area code | +381(0)11 |
| Car plates | BG |
Filmski Grad (Serbian Cyrillic: Филмски Град) is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in Belgrade's municipality of Čukarica.
Filmski Grad is a small neighborhood (sub-neighborhood of Košutnjak, actually), comprising several streets, located along the right side of the Kneza Višeslava Street, between the Košutnjak park on the north and east, Skojevsko Naselje on the south and Cerak-Cerak Vinogradi on the west.
History
Mitra Mitrović Đilas, Serbian minister of education, summoned Yugoslav army's liaison officer Dejan Obradović in 1945 and notified him that he was selected to organize film making in the state. After his response that he knew nothing about it, Mitrović Đilas said that was exactly the reason he was selected, and gave him a list of duties. The first was to select a locality in Belgrade for the "film city". Obradović left the meeting uncertain whether he had been tasked to find a place where films are shot, or where the film crew dwells.[1]
Seven days later, Milovan Đilas, Đilas's husband at the time and one of the top state officials, called Obradović and asked him about the selected location. On learning that Obradović hadn't chosen it yet, he picked him up in a jeep and they spent the entire day criss-crossing the city. In the end, Đilas parked in Košutnjak, next to the forest along the road, and said to Obradović, "I don't have time anymore. I have to go. And you can, there, build that film city of yours". Known as Avala Film, Filmski Grad or simply Košutnjak, the film studio was the first of its kind in Serbia and Yugoslavia, and Obradović was appointed as the manager of the "Jugoslavija Film" company.[1]