Halina Daugird

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Halina Daugird is a German film editor who edits documentaries and feature films . She lives and works in Berlin .

life and work

Halina Daugird completed the assembly course at the University of Film and Television "Konrad Wolf" in Potsdam.

Before that she studied theater, film and television studies at the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Nürnberg-Erlangen.

Her first feature film work, which achieved greater fame, was Hunting Dogs by director Ann-Kristin Reyels , which premiered in the Forum section of the Berlinale 2007 and was awarded the FIPRESCI prize from the international film critics association .

The international co-production she edited The Other Side of Sleep (Director: Rebecca Daly ) premiered in 2012 at the Quinzaine des Réalisateurs in Cannes. Starring Antonia Campbell-Hughes and Sam Keeley.

She continued her collaboration with Rebecca Daly a few years later with Mammal (2016). This celebrated its premiere in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition category of the Sundance Film Festival . Starring Rachel Griffiths and Barry Keoghan .

Furthermore, she created the montage of films such as Ants go other ways by the director Catharina Deus , which was shown at the Hof International Film Festival 2011, or Formentera by Ann-Kristin Reyels, which was shown in the Forum of the Berlinale 2012 . She also worked with Reyels on the film Wir only played together, which premiered in 2018 at the Munich Film Festival in the category "New German Cinema".

She was involved in the montage of LOMO - The Language of Many Others (directed by Julia Langhoff ) and The Beginner (directed by Alexandra Sell ). For LOMO - The Language of Many Others , she and Thomas Krause were nominated for the editing award in the feature film category in 2019 .

With filmmaker Christian von Borries , she wrote the two essay documentaries Desert of the Real and AI is the Answer - What was the Question? assembled.

Halina Daugird is a member of the Bundesverband Filmschnitt Editor eV (BFS) .

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Editing Awards 2019. In: Filmuni Potsdam. Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
  2. FIPRESCI Prize for “Hunting Dogs”. In: Kino Arsenal Berlin. Retrieved February 22, 2020 .
  3. Halina Daugird. Projects as editor. In: crew-united.com. Retrieved February 23, 2020 .