Martina Fluck

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Martina Fluck (* 1963 in Düsseldorf ) is a German author and director .

Life

Martina Fluck studied documentary film directing at the University of Television and Film in Munich. In 1989 she founded YUCCA Filmproduktion together with cameraman Jürgen Hoffmann, which initially produced documentaries, reports and magazine articles for television and cinema and later expanded its spectrum to include industrial and advertising films. Fluck has been organizing the Dithmarscher short film festival KUNSTGRIFFROLLE since 2005 . Since 2015 she has been a cultural mediator in the federal state of Schleswig-Holstein as part of the project "Culture meets school - school meets culture" .

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For the documentary film My Dream, My Love, My Hope - Memoirs of Eva Sioa , she received the Hessian Film Prize in 1993 for ideas, research and scripts . The author portraits Erna Weißenborn - A woman writes her way (2000), Klaus Groth - A poet's life (2007), James Krüss or The Search for the Happy Islands (2007), the feature documentary Theodor Storm - So Come, Was Da were created with public support may come! (2011) and the documentary film Traumbilder about the life of Friedrich Hebbel . Important documentaries were made in cooperation with the Nordfriesland Museum. Nissenhaus Husum - The great storm surge of 1962 on Schleswig-Holstein's North Sea coast as well as the documentary about the emigrant Ludwig Nissen - the namesake and founder of the museum. Another emigrant film focuses on the story of the brothers Rudolph and Gus Dirks Katzenjammer gibberish , who come from Schleswig-Holstein and who played a key role in inventing modern comics at the beginning of the 20th century. The film premiered at the 61st Nordic Film Days Lübeck 2019.

A series of documentaries in the post-reunification period, several portraits of women living abroad and a feature film script supported by the Lower Saxony Film Funding about the life of the artist Paula Modersohn-Becker ( love song for Mathilde 1994) are other works by Martina Fluck.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilfried Hippen: Real crime and Katzenjammer. In: taz. the daily newspaper. October 24, 2019, accessed March 10, 2020 .