Robert Thalheim
Robert Thalheim | |
---|---|
Thalheim in 2011 | |
Born |
1974 (age 42–43) Berlin, Germany |
Occupation | writer and director |
Robert Thalheim (born July 2, 1974 in Berlin) is a German stage and film director and screenwriter.
Thalheim was an assistant director at the Berliner Ensemble in 1997/98. He then studied modern German literature, history and politics at the Free University of Berlin until the year 2000; during this period he edited the first issues of the culture magazine Plotky. In 2000 he began to study film directing at the Filmhochschule (film school) in Potsdam-Babelsberg.[1] His teacher there was Rosa von Praunheim, who monitored his work on his first films.
Robert Thalheim returned to the theatre in 2003, staging his own play, Wild Boys at the Maxim Gorki Theater in Berlin. In 2004 his debut film Netto was awarded the Art of Film Award at the Festival of German Film. In 2006 he finished his film for the diploma exam, And Along Come Tourists (Am Ende kommen Touristen). The film was shot on location at the International Youth Meeting Center in Oświęcim/Auschwitz, where Thalheim was a volunteer in 1996–97, and near the Auschwitz concentration camp. This documentary film, produced by Hans-Christian Schmid and Britta Knöller, was presented at the Cannes Film Festival in 2007 and was released in Germany in August 2007.
Awards
- Best Script Award at the Berlinale 2005 for the feature film Netto
- German Cinemaprize 2005 for Netto
- German film critic-prize 2006, “best film debut” for Netto
- German "Kritikerpreis" 2008
References
- ↑ "Robert Thalheim - Director". Above the Line. Retrieved 2014-06-02. Short biographical listing by an agency.
Further reading
- Gansera, Rainer (August 16, 2007). "Zur Disco am Lagerzaun vorbei" [To the disco over the camp fence]. Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). Interview with Robert Thalheim, Hans-Christian Schmid and Britta Knöller about And Along Come Tourists.
- Charlon, Fabien. "Et puis les touristes…" [And Along Come Tourists]. La Gazette de Berlin (in French).