The German film and TV industries were mourning on Monday the death of director, writer and producer Helmut Dietl from lung cancer. He was 70.
Once described as “the German answer to Woody Allen”, Dietl was known to international audiences largely for his send-up of the fake Hitler diaries saga in the 1992 film Schtonk!, which was subsequently nominated for a best foreign language film Academy Award.
Bavarian-born Dietl had already made a name for himself before Schtonk! on German TV with critically praised audience favourites such as Münchner Geschichten (1974/5), Der Ganz Normale Wahnsinn (1979/80), Monaco Franze and the six-part series Kir Royal, a biting satire on Munich high society and tabloid journalism.
According to the late TV commissioning editor Jörn Klamroth of Cologne’s Wdr, the inspiration for Kir Royal came to Dietl in 1984 when he and the director saw a photo in a cafe showing Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict) sitting together with the conservative Bavarian politician...
Once described as “the German answer to Woody Allen”, Dietl was known to international audiences largely for his send-up of the fake Hitler diaries saga in the 1992 film Schtonk!, which was subsequently nominated for a best foreign language film Academy Award.
Bavarian-born Dietl had already made a name for himself before Schtonk! on German TV with critically praised audience favourites such as Münchner Geschichten (1974/5), Der Ganz Normale Wahnsinn (1979/80), Monaco Franze and the six-part series Kir Royal, a biting satire on Munich high society and tabloid journalism.
According to the late TV commissioning editor Jörn Klamroth of Cologne’s Wdr, the inspiration for Kir Royal came to Dietl in 1984 when he and the director saw a photo in a cafe showing Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict) sitting together with the conservative Bavarian politician...
- 3/31/2015
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
The German film and TV industries were mourning on Monday the death of director, writer and producer Helmut Dietl from lung cancer. He was 70.
Once described as “the German answer to Woody Allen”, Dietl was known to international audiences largely for his send-up of the fake Hitler diaries saga in the 1992 film Schtonk!, which was subsequently nominated for a best foreign language film Academy Award.
Bavarian-born Dietl had already made a name for himself before Schtonk! on German TV with critically praised audience favourites such as Münchner Geschichten (1974/5), Der Ganz Normale Wahnsinn (1979/80), Monaco Franze and the six-part series Kir Royal, a biting satire on Munich high society and tabloid journalism.
According to the late TV commissioning editor Jörn Klamroth of Cologne’s Wdr, the inspiration for Kir Royal came to Dietl in 1984 when he and the director saw a photo in a cafe showing Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict) sitting together with the conservative Bavarian politician...
Once described as “the German answer to Woody Allen”, Dietl was known to international audiences largely for his send-up of the fake Hitler diaries saga in the 1992 film Schtonk!, which was subsequently nominated for a best foreign language film Academy Award.
Bavarian-born Dietl had already made a name for himself before Schtonk! on German TV with critically praised audience favourites such as Münchner Geschichten (1974/5), Der Ganz Normale Wahnsinn (1979/80), Monaco Franze and the six-part series Kir Royal, a biting satire on Munich high society and tabloid journalism.
According to the late TV commissioning editor Jörn Klamroth of Cologne’s Wdr, the inspiration for Kir Royal came to Dietl in 1984 when he and the director saw a photo in a cafe showing Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict) sitting together with the conservative Bavarian politician...
- 3/31/2015
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
Amy Berg's Deliver Us From Evil, which examines the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic church, and James Longley's Iraq in Fragments, in which Iraqis recount life during wartime, are among the films nominated for the International Documentary Assn.'s 22nd annual IDA Distinguished Documentary Achievement Awards.
The five nominated feature documentaries, announced Wednesday, are: Frank Popper's Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore? from PBS' Independent Lens; Deliver Us From Evil, a Lionsgate release; Iraq in Fragments from Typecast Releasing and HBO Documentary Films; Dori Berinstein's Showbusiness: A Season to Remember, from Regent Entertainment; and Zach Niles and Banker White's Sierra Leone's Refugee All Stars, from PBS' P.O.V./American Documentary.
The short documentaries nominated are: The Blood of Yingzhou District, The Diary of Immaculee, Angel's Fire (Fuego de Angel), The Short History of Sweet Potato Pie & How it Became a Flying Saucer, and The Wild Sheep, and the Fox and Love.
"The purpose of the IDA awards is to recognize these filmmakers' successful quests for excellence. They deserve to be in the limelight," IDA president Diane Estelle Vicari said.
The winners will be announced live for the first time during the IDA Awards Benefit Gala on Dec. 8 at the DGA Theatre in Hollywood.
The five nominated feature documentaries, announced Wednesday, are: Frank Popper's Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore? from PBS' Independent Lens; Deliver Us From Evil, a Lionsgate release; Iraq in Fragments from Typecast Releasing and HBO Documentary Films; Dori Berinstein's Showbusiness: A Season to Remember, from Regent Entertainment; and Zach Niles and Banker White's Sierra Leone's Refugee All Stars, from PBS' P.O.V./American Documentary.
The short documentaries nominated are: The Blood of Yingzhou District, The Diary of Immaculee, Angel's Fire (Fuego de Angel), The Short History of Sweet Potato Pie & How it Became a Flying Saucer, and The Wild Sheep, and the Fox and Love.
"The purpose of the IDA awards is to recognize these filmmakers' successful quests for excellence. They deserve to be in the limelight," IDA president Diane Estelle Vicari said.
The winners will be announced live for the first time during the IDA Awards Benefit Gala on Dec. 8 at the DGA Theatre in Hollywood.
- 11/2/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
BERLIN -- Production company Teamworx said Thursday that German television celebrity Harold Schmidt will star as former German chancellor Helmut Schmidt in the big-budget miniseries Storm Tide for leading commercial broadcaster RTL. The two-part series from producer Nico Hofmann (The Tunnel) follows the real-life story of a catastrophic 1962 flood in Hamburg. Schmidt will star alongside Gotz George, Ottfried Fischer, Hannelore Elsner, Elmar Wepper, Nadja Uhl and Heiner Lauterbach. Schmidt, often called Germany's David Letterman, wrapped up his critically acclaimed eponymous late-night talk show in December. Schmidt is currently shooting the romantic comedy Vom Suchen Und Finden Der Liebe (Looking and Finding Love) with director Helmut Dietl. Schmidt's feature film debut as an actor was Dietl's 1999 satire Late Show.
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