Filip Remunda - Selected Filmography

Selected Filmography

  • NEW NAMES FOR OLD FRIENDS, 1999, Betacam, 40’, What Ever Production
  • HILARY AND CHRIS ON THE WAY, 1999, 16mm, 16’, FAMU, Czech Television
  • VILLAGE B., 2002, 35mm, 30’, FAMU, Czech Television
  • A.B.C.D.T.O.P.O.L., (2003) Betacam, 73’, Simply Cinema, CT
  • CZECH DREAM, together with Vit Klusak, 2004, 35mm, 87’, Hypermarket Film, Czech Television, Studio Mirage, FAMU,official thetrical trailer (core version)
  • FILM ENCOUNTERS, 40 min, S16mm/DIGIBETA, Jihlava International Documentary Film Festival, 2007
  • THE TADPOLE, THE RABBIT AND THE HOLLY GHOST, download the film, 26 min, Digi Beta, Czech Television - (Jihlava IDFF 2007 Audience Award, Pavel Koutecky Award for the Best Czech Authorial Dox of 2007

Czech Dream Awards - selection:

  • 48th annual San Francisco International Film Festival, USA 2005: Golden Gate Award for best feature-length documentary film
  • 2005 Zolotoy Vityaz Čeljabinsk, Russia: Best Director Award
  • International Film Festival Poslanije k člověku St. Petersburg, Russia 2005: Special Jury Prize
  • Traverse City Film Festival (film festival director, Michael Moore), USA 2005: Best Documentary Award
  • Aarhus Film Festival, Denmark 2004: First Prize for Best Documentary Film
  • 2005 Jeonju International Film Festival, South Korea: JJ-Star Award
  • 45th annual Cracow Film Festival 2005, Poland: People’s Choice Award
  • FFFB.be Filmfestival Brussel 2005, Belgium: Be TV Award for Best Film
  • Lubuskie Film Summer, Lagow, Poland 2005: Silver Grape Award
  • International Film Festival Ljubljana, Slovenia 2004: FIPRESCI Award (Critics’ Prize)
  • FAMUFEST 2004, Czech Republic: Maxim–Best Film of the Festival and Audience Award

Read more about this topic:  Filip Remunda

Famous quotes containing the word selected:

    The best history is but like the art of Rembrandt; it casts a vivid light on certain selected causes, on those which were best and greatest; it leaves all the rest in shadow and unseen.
    Walter Bagehot (1826–1877)