Robert Gliński
Polish film director
Robert Gliński | |
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Born | (1952-04-17) 17 April 1952 (age 72) Warsaw, Poland |
Occupation | Film director |
Years active | 1985–present |
Robert Ignacy Gliński (born 17 April 1952 in Warsaw) is a Polish film director and screenwriter. A graduate of the National Film School in Łódź. He won the Golden Lions at the Gdynia Film Festival in 1992 with his film Wszystko, co najważniejsze[1] and in 2001 with Cześć, Tereska.[2] In 2002 he received an Eagle, the Polish Film Award for his film Cześć, Tereska.[3][4]
Robert Gliński served as the Rector of the National Film School in Łódź from 2008 to 2012. He is the brother of Piotr Gliński.
Selected filmography
- 2017: Misery[5]
- 2014: Kamienie na szaniec (Stones For the Rampart)
- 2009: Świnki (Piggies)
- 2005: The Call of the Toad
- 2001: Cześć Tereska (Hi, Tereska)
- 1997: Kochaj i rób co chcesz (Love Me and Do Whatever You Want)
- 1996: Matka swojej matki (Mother of Her Own Mother)
- 1992: Wszystko, co najważniejsze (All That Really Matters)
- 1983: Niedzielne igraszki (Sunday Pranks)
References
External links
- Robert Gliński at IMDb
- Robert Gliński at the Culture.pl
- Robert Gliński at the Filmpolski Database (in Polish)
- v
- t
- e
- Dorota Kędzierzawska (1999)
- Krzysztof Krauze (2000)
- Krzysztof Zanussi (2001)
- Robert Gliński (2002)
- Roman Polański (2003)
- Andrzej Jakimowski (2004)
- Wojciech Smarzowski (2005)
- Feliks Falk (2006)
- Krzysztof Krauze/Joanna Kos-Krauze (2007)
- Andrzej Jakimowski (2008)
- Jerzy Skolimowski (2009)
- Wojciech Smarzowski (2010)
- Jerzy Skolimowski (2011)
- Wojciech Smarzowski (2012)
- Roman Polański (2013)
- Paweł Pawlikowski (2014)
- Łukasz Palkowski (2015)
- Małgorzata Szumowska (2016)
- Wojciech Smarzowski (2017)
- Piotr Domalewski (2018)
- Paweł Pawlikowski (2019)
- Jan Komasa (2020)
- Jan Holoubek (2021)
- Jasmila Žbanić (2022)
- Jerzy Skolimowski (2023)
- Paweł Maślona (2024)