Rolf Hädrich
Rolf Hädrich  | |
|---|---|
| Born | 24 April 1931 Zwickau, Germany  | 
| Died | 29 October 2000 (aged 69) Hamburg, Germany  | 
| Occupation(s) | Film director Screenwriter  | 
| Years active | 1958-1989 | 
Rolf Hädrich (24 April 1931 – 29 October 2000) was a German film director and screenwriter. He directed 39 films between 1958 and 1989.[1] His film Verspätung in Marienborn (US title: Stop Train 349) was entered into the 13th Berlin International Film Festival.[2]
Selected filmography
Film
- Stop Train 349 (1963)
 - Among the Cinders (1983)
 
Television
- Der Dank der Unterwelt (1958) — (remake of Berkely Mather's Tales from Soho: Slippy Fives, 1956)
 - Die Abwerbung (1958) — (screenplay by Erich Kuby)
 - Das Rennen (1959) — (based on the play Sammy by Ken Hughes)
 - Ein unbeschriebenes Blatt (1959) — (based on a play by Jean-Pierre Conty)
 - Kopfgeld (1959) — (screenplay by Horst Mönnich)
 - Die Gerechten (1959) — (based on The Just Assassins)
 - Die Stimme aus dem Hut (1959) — (based on a play by Berkely Mather)
 - Wer überlebt, ist schuldig (1960) — (screenplay by Axel Eggebrecht)
 - Bedienung, bitte! (1960) — (based on Room Service)
 - Die Friedhöfe (1960) — (based on The Graveyard by Marek Hłasko)
 - Parkstraße 13 (1960) — (based on a play by Axel Ivers)
 - Brennpunkt (1961) — (based on Focus)
 - Karol (1962) — (based on a play by Sławomir Mrożek)
 - Nachruf auf Jürgen Trahnke (1962) — (screenplay by Dieter Meichsner)
 - Der Gefangene (1962) — (remake of Bridget Boland's The Prisoner, 1955)
 - Child of the Revolution (1962) — (based on a non-fiction book by Wolfgang Leonhard)
 - Der Schlaf der Gerechten (1962) — (based on Das Brandopfer by Albrecht Goes)
 - Warten auf Godot (1963) — (based on Waiting for Godot)
 - Haben (1964) — (based on a play by Gyula Háy)
 - Murke's Collected Silences (1964) — (based on Murke's Collected Silences)
 - Nach Ladenschluss (1964) — (screenplay by Dieter Meichsner)
 - Die Schlinge (1964) — (remake of Marek Hłasko's Noose, 1958)
 - Der neue Mann (1965) — (based on Patterns)
 - Die Grenzziehung (1966) — (based on a play by Sławomir Mrożek)
 - Unser Sohn Nicki (1966, TV miniseries)
 - Herr Puntila und sein Knecht Matti (1966) — (based on Mr Puntila and his Man Matti)
 - Zuchthaus (1967) — (based on a novel by Henry Jaeger)
 - Heydrich in Prag (1967) — (screenplay by Peter Adler, docudrama about Operation Anthropoid)
 - Kraft des Gesetzes (1968) — (based on a play by Henri Debluë)
 - Mord in Frankfurt (1968)
 - Von Mäusen und Menschen (1968) — (based on Of Mice and Men)
 - Count Oederland (1968) — (based on a play by Max Frisch)
 - Alma Mater (1969) — (screenplay by Dieter Meichsner)
 - Jana (1970) — (screenplay by Manfred Bieler)
 - Biografie: Ein Spiel (1970) — (based on a play by Max Frisch)
 - Kennen Sie Georg Linke? (1971) — (screenplay by Dieter Meichsner)
 - Die Stimme hinter dem Vorhang (1971) — (based on The Voice Behind the Screen by Gottfried Benn)
 - Memories of a Summer in Berlin (1972) — (based on You Can't Go Home Again)
 - The Fish Can Sing (1973) — (based on The Fish Can Sing)
 - Der Stechlin (1975, TV miniseries) — (based on Der Stechlin)
 - Jauche und Levkojen (1978, TV series, co-directors: Günter Gräwert, Rainer Wolffhardt) — (based on a novel by Christine Brückner)
 - Mach's gut, Florian (1978) — (screenplay by Michael Juncker)
 - Nirgendwo ist Poenichen (1980, TV series, co-directors: Günter Gräwert, Rainer Wolffhardt) — (based on a novel by Christine Brückner)
 - Das wiedergefundene Paradies (1980, TV miniseries) — (based on a novel by Halldór Laxness)
 - Bergpredigt (1983) — (screenplay by Dieter Meichsner)
 - Backfischliebe (1985) — (based on Calf Love by Vernon Bartlett)
 - Friedenspolka (1987) — (screenplay by Matthias Esche)
 - Langusten (1989) — (based on a play by Fred Denger)
 
References
- ^ "Rolf Hädrich". Film Portal. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
 - ^ "13th Berlin International Film Festival". Film Affinity. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
 
External links
- Rolf Hädrich at IMDb