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[[Category:German women film directors]]
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[[Category:Best Director German Film Award winners]]
[[Category:Best Director German Film Award winners]]
[[Category:Officers Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany]]


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Revision as of 17:01, 3 October 2018

Caroline Link (born 2 June 1964 in Bad Nauheim, West Germany), is a German film director and screenwriter.

Life and work

Caroline Link is the daughter of Jürgen and Ilse Link. From 1986 to 1990 she studied at the Munich Academy of Film and Television (HFF), and then worked as an assistant director and script writer.

Link's early work includes the short film Bunte Blumen, from 1988. She was a co-director on the documentary film Das Glück zum Anfassen (1989). For Bavaria Film, she wrote two screenplays to the detective series Der Fahnder (The Investigators).

Link's first feature film, Jenseits der Stille (Beyond Silence, 1996) was nominated for the Academy Award as Best Foreign Language Film,[1] and attracted attention for its portrayal of a family with deaf parents.[2] Her second feature film was Annaluise and Anton (1999), based on a novel by Erich Kästner. Her third feature film, Nirgendwo in Afrika (Nowhere in Africa, 2001), adapted by Link from the autobiographical novel by Stefanie Zweig and shot on location in Kenya,[3] received the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film as well as five German Film Prizes (Deutscher Filmpreis), including Best Feature Film.

Link lives with her partner, the film director Dominik Graf, and their daughter, who was born in 2002.[4]

Awards

Filmography

Further reading

  • Jörn Glasenapp (ed.), Caroline Link. Film-Konzepte 42 (edition text + kritik, 2016).

References

  1. ^ "The 70th Academy Awards (1998) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  2. ^ Dinitia Smith (1998-06-11). "Families Joined or Divided by Silence; Film Shed Light on Emotional Issues of the Deaf". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-22.
  3. ^ Stefanie Zweig (2003-02-23). "Strangers in a Strange Land". The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-01-22.
  4. ^ Laura Winters (2003-03-21). "In the African Sun While Dark Came Over Europe". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-22.

External links