Petr Václav

Petr Václav (born 11 June 1967) is a Czech film director and screenwriter whose films have received many awards, both in the Czech Republic and internationally. He has lived in Paris since 2003 and holds both French and Czech citizenship.

Petr Václav
Background information
Born (1967-06-11) June 11, 1967
Prague, Czechoslovakia
Occupation(s)film director and screenwriter
Years active1993present

Life and Works

Václav was born in Prague and graduated from FAMU. His short documentary Paní Le Murie (Madame Le Murie) of 1993 was nominated for FAMU's Student Academy Award and won a prize for best documentary at the Internationales Festival der Filmhochschulen (Filmschoolfest) in Munich. Václav´s first feature film, Marian (1996) won the Silver Leopard and FIPRESCI Award at the Locarno International Film Festival and other prizes at film festivals in Angers, Thessaloniki, Belfort, Cottbus, Bratislava and Tehran. His second feature, Paralelní světy (Parallel Worlds) of 2001 was written in collaboration with the French screenwriter Marie Desplechin[1] and selected for presentation at the San Sebastián International Film Festival.

The film Cesta ven (The Way Out), released in France as Zaneta, premiered at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.[1][2] It won seven Czech Lion awards for the year 2014, including best film, best director, and best screenplay.[3]

Václav's film Nikdy nejsme sami (We Are Never Alone) opened at the 2016 Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) in the Forum category and won the Tagesspiel Readers' Jury Award. He is finishing a new French-Italian co-production, Skokan, which is now in post-production.[4]

His documentary Zpověď zapomenutého (Confession of the Vanished), which portrays the life of the Czech-Italian composer Josef Mysliveček, was shown at the FIPA International Competition in Biarritz in 2016 and won the gold prize in its category (the FIPA d'or). It is also the winner of the 2016 Trilobit Award.[5]

A biographical film based on the life of Mysliveček with the title Il Boemo is in development, in collaboration with the Czech conductor Václav Luks, artistic director of the early music ensemble Collegium 1704,[6] with a planned release in 2020.[7]

Václav is a member of the European Film Academy of Berlin and the Czech Film and Television Academy. He was a pensioner of the French Academy in Rome at the Villa Medici in 2010-11.

gollark: You want those to look like... numbers... and not have messy `x.add(y).sub(z)` all over the place.
gollark: Complex numbers, bignums, vectors, whatever else.
gollark: But what if you have extra, say, number types?
gollark: streams' >> is dumb.
gollark: I mean, for random stuff like C++ does, yes.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.