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Fred Breinersdorfer

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Name
  
Fred Breinersdorfer


Role
  
Screenwriter


Children
  
Leonie-Claire Breinersdorfer, Julian Breinersdorfer

Awards
  
German Film Award for Best Feature Film, German Film Award - Audience Award for Best Film

Nominations
  
European Film Award for Best Film, German Film Award for Best Screenplay

Movies
  
Sophie Scholl – The Final, 13 Minutes, Die Spielerin

Similar People
  
Marc Rothemund, Christian Friedel, Oliver Hirschbiegel, Katja Roder, Julia Jentsch

Fred Breinersdorfer (born 6 December 1946 in Mannheim) is a prominent German screenwriter, producer and film director.

Contents

Fred Breinersdorfer Interview Fred Breinersdorfer Screenwriter and Director SAA

Meisterklasse mit fred breinersdorfer


Life

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Fred Breinersdorfer, born 1946 in Mannheim, Germany, studied law and sociology from the universities in Mainz and Tübingen and received a PhD from the University of Tübingen. As a young lawyer, Breinersdorfer started a practice as an attorney at law, specializing in constitutional and administration law in Stuttgart. In 1980, he started his writer's career with crime novels and film scripts. Breinersdorfer lost a close political race, running for Bundestag, the German Federal Parliament as a SPD candidate for the party of Willy Brandt. Until today he is fighting for author’s rights on the national and European level. Not only in this field, Breinersdorfer became one of the most politically influential writers in Germany. 2015 he was honoured with the Federal Cross of Merit. After the race for office in 1994 and ready for a change, he closed his law practice to become a full-time professional writer. He lives in Berlin, Germany and has two children, Leonie, a lawyer and writer, and Julian, an architect.

Work

He wrote his first crime novel in 1980, which developed into a successful detective book and movie series about French attorney Jean Abel. His credits include 12 novels, a formidable list of short stories, theatrical productions, radio plays, and now 75 movies, prime-time TV movies, series and shorts. "Tatort" is in Germany for 45 years the most successful crime show with an average 9 million spectators every Sunday on prime time. Fred Breinersdorfer created more than 20 episodes. His own law crime series "Anwalt Abel" was brought on air by ZDF/ARTE between 1988 and 2001. Since 2006 he also works as a film producer and director. He became world renown as a writer and co-producer for "Sophie Scholl: The Final Days" when the movie was nominated for the 2006 Academy Award (Foreign Language Film). His newest feature as writer and producer, "13 Minutes", directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel, was released at the Berlinale 2015 and is already sold around the world and released in the US 2017 by Sony Classics. On the 2016 Berlinale his recent feature "The Diary of Anne Frank" has got its premiere. With this film Breinersdorfer has completed his trilogy about victims of the Nazi regime in Germany. Fred Breinersdorfer was the president of the German Writer's Association (VS) and is currently a member of the German P.E.N. and the Deutsche Filmakademie. He was among others awarded the "German Film Award", the "Adolph Grimme Preis mit Gold" (known as the German TV Oscar), and nominated for several other prices.

Selected filmography

  • 1984: Tatort – Zweierlei Blut – directed by Hajo Gies
  • 1989: Quarantäne – directed by Nico Hofmann
  • 1990: Der Hammermörder – directed by Bernd Schadewald
  • 1994: Der Mann mit der Maske – directed by Peter Schulze-Rohr
  • 1996: Tatort – Schneefieber – directed by Peter Schulze-Rohr
  • 1999: Duell der Richter – directed by Jobst Oetzmann
  • 1999: Tatort – Mordfieber – directed by Ulrich Stark
  • 2001: Die Hoffnung stirbt zuletzt – directed by Marc Rothemund
  • 2001: Tatort – Gewaltfieber – directed by Martin Eigler
  • 2002: Nachts, wenn der Tag beginnt – directed by Christian Görlitz
  • 2003: Tatort – Der Schächter – directed by Jobst Oetzmann
  • 2005: Tatort – Die Spieler – directed by Michael Verhoeven
  • 2006: Feature - Sophie Scholl - The Final Days, directed by Marc Rothemund
  • 2005: The Player (after the novel by Fjodor Dostojewski – directed by Erhard Riedlsperger
  • 2007: Tatort – Der Tote vom Straßenrand – cowriter: Léonie-Claire Breinersdorfer, directed by Rolf Schübel
  • 2008: Short - Summersunday – directed by Fred Breinersdorfer und Sigi Kamml
  • 2008: Feature - Between Tomorrow and Today – directed by Fred Breinersdorfer
  • 2009: Documentary - Andula – Besuch in einem anderen Leben – directed by Fred Breinersdorfer und Anne Worst
  • 2011: Der Chinese (after the novel by Henning Mankell) – cowriter: Léonie-Claire Breinersdorfer, directed by Peter Keglevic
  • 2012: Tatort – Borowski und der freie Fall – directed by Eoin Moore
  • 2012: Tatort – Ein neues Leben – cowriter: Léonie-Claire Breinersdorfer, directed by Elmar Fischer* Sophie Scholl - The Final Days (2006)
  • 2015: Feature - 13 Minutes, directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel
  • 2017: Feature - The Diary of Anne Frank
  • Awards

  • 1985 Walter-Serner-Preis for Pack schlägt sich (shortstory)
  • 1991 Adolf-Grimme-Preis Best Writing, for Der Hammermörder
  • 2003 Adolf Grimme Award, Best Writing, for Hope Dies Last
  • 2003 ver.di Fernsehpreis Best Writing, for Hope Dies Last
  • 2005 Bavarian Film Awards, Best Producing, for Sophie Scholl – The Final Days
  • 2005 German Film Awards, Best Producing, for Sophie Scholl – The Final Days
  • 2005 German Film Awards, Nomination Best Writing, for Sophie Scholl – The Final Days
  • 2005 European Film Awards, Nomination Best Producing, for Sophie Scholl – The Final Days
  • 2006 Academy Award (Foreign Language Film) Nomination for Sophie Scholl – The Final Days
  • 2007 The 58th Annual Christopher Award, Feature Film, for Sophie Scholl – The Final Days
  • 2008 Ostfriesischer Kurzfilmpreis Best Directing, Shortfilm Summersunday
  • 2008 Murnau Kurzfilmpreis Best Directing, Shortfilm Summersunday
  • 2010 Bernd Burgemeister Fernsehpreis Best Producing, for Der verlorene Sohn
  • 2012 Order of Merit of Baden-Württemberg
  • 2012 Eyes & Ears Award Best Writing, for Filmmakers in Prison der Deutschen Filmakademie
  • 2014 Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
  • 2015 Bavarian Film Awards, Best Producing, for 13 Minutes
  • References

    Fred Breinersdorfer Wikipedia