Fred Kelemen Net Worth

Fred Kelemen Net Worth is
$500,000

Fred Kelemen Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Fred Kelemen (born 1964, Berlin) is a European film and theater director, cinematographer and writer. [1]The late Susan Sontag helped to promote Kelemen's work in the mid-1990s, comparing it to the likes of Alexander Sokurov, Béla Tarr and Sharunas Bartas. [2]Fred Kelemen studied painting, music, philosophy, science of religions and theater before attending the German Film & TV Academy in Berlin from 1989 to 1994. His debut film Fate in 1994 received the German National Film Award. He has also directed Frost (1997/98), Nightfall (1999) and Fallen (2005), each drawing international attention and numerous awards.Kelemen has served as cinematographer for film directors including Béla Tarr (Journey to the Plain, 1995, The Man from London, 2007, The Turin Horse, 2011), Rudolf Thome (The Visible and the Invisible, 2006), Gariné Torossian (Stone, Time, Touch, 2005), Joseph Pitchhadze ("Sukaryot / Sweets", 2012/2013). and others.Since 2000 he has also directed several plays, including an adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 at the Schauspielhaus in Hanover, and Eugene O'Neill's Desire Under The Elms at Volksbühne in Berlin. In addition, Kelemen has worked as a teacher at film and media institutes and universities at several locations.With his production company Kino Kombat Filmmanufactur, Kelemen produced his film Krisana/Fallen (co-producer: Laima Freimane/Screen Vision, Latvia, 2005) and he produced or co-produced the films Moskatchka by Annett Schütze (co-producer: Laima Freimane/Screen Vision, Latvia, 2005), "Girlfriends" by Jana Marsik (co-producers: Laima Freimane/Screen Vision, Latvia, jana Marsik) and Fragment by Gyula Maár (producer: Béla Tarr/TTFilmműhely, Hungary, 2007).

Date Of BirthJanuary 6, 1964
Place Of BirthBerlin, Germany
ProfessionCinematographer, Editor, Director
Star SignCapricorn
#Quote
1The problem is that there is a lot of money but this money goes to the same films. For sure these films are very commercial and there is not so much space for films which do things differently. And that's a very sad thing for sure because I think film is a very rich art and so there must be many kinds of films because they are possible. But I think the whole film culture will die, if the money only goes to the films which are commercially orientated or are part of a very capitalist free market. That's for sure a very sad fact because a rich garden is one with many flowers, different flowers, different plants and a garden with only one plant after a time will die. [1999]
2I think in Germany it is getting worse because there are only a few distributors who handle films which are not strictly commercially orientated, and some of them are giving up or are being bought by big companies who then turn them into a department for art films. But these art films are not the same art films that were distributed before. Jim Jarmusch is an art film for them, and for me it is not an art film any more, for example. I think he is much more commercial than the films which they were dealing with before they got bought up. These art films they show are already accepted in the commercial market, and not much different from it. - just smaller budgets. They don't have a different form, for example, or difficult subjects. (...) I think the situation that I have described is very bad and very difficult, but I think it would be worse if filmmakers gave up. So, this comes back to your first question, if I was a pessimist, I would give up immediately, because the situation is so horrifying and depressing that any normal reasonable person would give up and not start making films. So that is why I think it is a very optimistic attitude to make a film which is not just commercially orientated. I think it is worth doing because film is a very young art, just 100 years old, and it would be so sad if it would die so young. I think it is the most beautiful thing that this century has invented. It shouldn't be given up and thrown away or lost to the industry or to something like the market or the capitalist ideal. [1999]
3[on casting Abendland (1999)] ...the actors are professional, but most had no experience of film. So Abendland was the first feature for the main actress, Varena Jasch, but she has done a few theatre things before. (...) I don't have any fixed ideas about it. For example, the main actor, Wolfgang Michael, was for many years one of the important actors of the Schaubühne Theatre in Berlin. So he is a really experienced actor in theatre, but this was the first feature film he has made. I just liked him a lot. But for sure, if someone is comes from a completely different background like theatre, there are many things you have to destroy. For example, the overacting, which is very pronounced normally in theatre actors. It's hard work to reduce the acting to minimalise their gestures. [1999]
4Every film which is about human beings, human relationships and human feelings is universal and can happen anywhere in the world. But we don't live in abstract areas, we live in very concrete places - both concrete and universal at the same time. The city which is shown in Abendland (1999), for sure it is Germany, but it doesn't have to be Germany. [1999]
5I know before how much money I will have, and then I make the film which is possible with that money, but on the other hand I know the film I want to make and then I look for the money to make it. I just wanted to do it this way this time [on Abendland (1999). Next time I'll do it differently. When I made Verhängnis (1994) I was very interested in shooting the whole film on video and then to transferring it to film, doing it all handheld and doing it very rough. This time I was very interested in making these very long sequences which are all done with the dolly and very smooth and I didn't want to repeat myself. In every film there are some things I want to discover. And also to tell the people I don't know if these things will work - we just have to try. It was like this for the video images in the film and the inter-cutting of close ups, it was an idea I had but I wasn't so sure it would work, but I had the feeling it would work. [1999]
6[on teaching] It is interesting for me because it forces me for two months (because the years I do it I am there for two months) to think very carefully about film and to be confronted with all the problems you have when you start, to rethink them again and again and again. And it helps me to avoid falling into some sort of automatism. Every problem a student has questions my own methods. It always opens my conceptions about film. And it helps me also to bring my ego down to size, because for two months a year I have to serve others, to help them, to bring out what they want to do and to help them to be strong to keep their ideas. And that's a big help to be the servant of other people's creations. [1999]
7[why he shot part of Abendland (1999) in Portugal] We were in a very old abandoned factory in east Germany while looking for shooting locations, and in one office there was an old calendar from years ago hanging on the wall and the first image on the calendar was a bridge, a very famous bridge in Portugal. I had the idea that it was a sign, let's go to Portugal. We had to go to Portugal because we found this image and we believed very strongly that this image was there and it was. It was a good decision. So we went to Portugal looking for places and we really found beautiful places in one city in Portugal in Porto in the north and we wanted very much to shoot there, since I couldn't find anywhere else. Then I tried to find a co-producer in Portugal and I found one, but before that the first idea was just going there and looking for places. [1999]
8I think film can never change anything, but the film can focus somebody's view on some special problems or points, and a starting point for thought, for reflection. But a film can never change anything. The person themself has to change, the change has to come from inside. [1999]
9[on Abendland (1999)] Some of the long scenes were done in two or three days. The first day was only arranging the lighting and camera rehearsals, because there are many lamps in some scenes and because when you do a very long travelling shot, you see the whole room, you cannot just light a corner or a face and then cut, and then light another corner, the whole room is to be there, illuminated, completely ready and without any lamp in shot. The real place actually looked like it looked on the screen. It has to be done, because film is something very practical and everything you want to have on screen you have to realise before. The second day I worked with the actors, and maybe we shot it immediately if everybody was completely present or it was not too exhausting. If we had been working too long we came back the next day and shot the scene the next day. And maybe I change some little things after rehearsal, so it's really a process of creation during the shooting. It's never like here is something on the paper and then just doing it like it was written. [1999]
10For me there is a very strong difference between hope and vision, for example, hope is something you wait for. While you hope you are waiting - you are sure it will come, so you wait and wait and wait, but you don't do anything while you are waiting. I think in our society, when you look at culture, the arts or television or the theatre, music and so on, there is really an ideology of hope. People are forced to hope, to be happy and not to give up their belief that something really good, but it is a way of exploiting people, a way of making keeping people down and making them tolerate misery. But I think that exactly the opposite is what we need. Not to wait until something will happen, but to make it happen. And to me that's why the idea of having a vision is much more active. Hope is something very passive. So when you have a vision you fight for it and you are willing to do something for it. When somebody is really starting to do something, fight for what he wants to be real, then, maybe, hope is something that comes out of this, because then I can hope that really something can change. But hope just without this very active element of fighting for a vision or dream is nothing, completely empty. [1999]
11[on Abendland (1999)] Yes, there is a lot improvisation in the film There's a script, but in the script I never write dialogues. But there are some parts where it is written what the characters talk about without saying how they have to talk about it. That's something I develop with the actors. The script was written before I knew all the actors, and after knowing who will be in the film I changed a lot of things because the people who are acting in the film are a big influence on it. We sit and talk with the actors about the whole thing before we shoot. But I never make rehearsals out of the shooting or after the shooting, just the shooting day, the day of creation. So, it's really work I do together with them. Being an actor in this film is very creative thing for them. Even in the shooting I change things - I take scenes away and make new scenes because maybe I have an idea in the morning which is much better than what I had written. It would be stupid to shoot just what is written and not to change it. [1999]
12I think as long as someone is doing something, and especially something as difficult as film-making, they cannot be a pessimist. It is a very optimistic thing to make a film, because when I make a film it means I believe that there will be people there to watch the film. If I were a pessimist, I wouldn't make be making films. [1999]
13For me the quality of Europe is the diversity of cultures - the different languages and peoples, the absence of homogeneity. Europe is a very heterogeneous place with different languages and backgrounds and climates, and all this diversity creates a richness which I believe is important. And then Europe has a strong background in wars. I think what unites different European cultures is the experience of pain. Which is different from, say, the United States, where a war never happened because of the invasion of a foreign force.
#Fact
1Since 2013 Fred Kelemen is a member of the 'Cinematographers Branch' of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS).
2Retrospective at the 5th Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema. [2003]

Cinematographer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Sarajevo Songs of Woe2016
Sukaryot2013
A torinói ló2011
Das Sichtbare und das Unsichtbare2007
A londoni férfi2007
Stone Time Touch2007Documentary
Krisana2005
Tatau Samoa2000Documentary
Abendland1999
Frost1997
Utazás az Alföldön1995Short
Verhängnis1994
Kalyi - Zeit der Finsternis1993

Editor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Sarajevo Songs of Woe2016
Krisana2005
Abendland1999
Frost1997
Das dritte Leben der Lya de Putti1996Documentary
Verhängnis1994
Kalyi - Zeit der Finsternis1993

Director

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Sarajevo Songs of Woe2016
Krisana2005
Abendland1999
Frost1997
Verhängnis1994
Kalyi - Zeit der Finsternis1993

Writer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Sarajevo Songs of Woe2016
Krisana2005
Abendland1999writer
Frost1997
Verhängnis1994
Kalyi - Zeit der Finsternis1993writer

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Sarajevo Songs of Woe2016producer
Töredék2007co-producer
Krisana2005producer
Moskatchka2004Documentary producer

Production Designer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Krisana2005
Frost1997

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Novak2009Fred Kelemen

Sound Department

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Donnerstag um vier2000Short sound recordist

Thanks

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Papagajka2016thanks
Gelem2014Short special thanks
Sollbruchstelle2008Documentary thanks

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Tarr Béla, I Used to Be a Filmmaker2013DocumentaryHimself
Die Akademie bin ich - People i met on my 40th Birthday2006TV Movie documentaryHimself
Freedom2speak v2.02004DocumentaryHimself - Director, Germany

Won Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2011Golden Camera 300Brothers Manaki International Film FestivalA torinói ló (2011)
2011Golden Camera 300Brothers Manaki International Film FestivalA torinói ló (2011)
2005FIPRESCI PrizeLecce Festival of European CinemaKrisana (2005)
2005Best CinematographyLecce Festival of European CinemaKrisana (2005)
2000Aurora Special AwardTromsø International Film FestivalAbendland (1999)
1999Grand Prix AsturiasGijón International Film FestivalBest FeatureAbendland (1999)
1999FIPRESCI PrizeThessaloniki Film FestivalParallel SectionsAbendland (1999)
1998FIPRESCI PrizeRotterdam International Film FestivalFrost (1997)
1998Silver CharybdisTaormina International Film FestivalFrost (1997)
1995Golden Precolumbian CircleBogota Film FestivalBest DirectorVerhängnis (1994)
1995Audience AwardMax Ophüls FestivalVerhängnis (1994)
1994International Critics' Award (FIPRESCI)Toronto International Film FestivalVerhängnis (1994)

Nominated Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2013ICS AwardInternational Cinephile Society AwardsBest CinematographyA torinói ló (2011)
2013INOCAInternational Online Cinema Awards (INOCA)Best CinematographyA torinói ló (2011)
2011Carlo di Palma AwardEuropean Film AwardsEuropean CinematographerA torinói ló (2011)
1999Tokyo Grand PrixTokyo International Film FestivalAbendland (1999)
1998Tiger AwardRotterdam International Film FestivalFrost (1997)

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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