Roland Gießer

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Roland Gießer (born November 26, 1971 in Biberach an der Riss ) is a German photographer and location scout .

Life

Roland Gießer grew up in Baden-Württemberg and completed his training as a photographer from 1990 to 1993 at the Johannes Gutenberg School in Stuttgart , in Studio 19 in Kirchheim unter Teck and in the Buchter advertising studio in Wendlingen am Neckar . After completing his civilian service he could 1994 internships in film scoring, documentary , film production and - imparting make. From 1995 to 1998 he worked as a production operator for cinema productions and as a manager working for commercials.

In 1997 he produced his first short film die later , for which he wrote the screenplay and directed. Minute 13.5 to 16 mm - black and white film in 4: 3 format, he got the "flicker and noise" -Filmfestival in Munich awarded the Audience Award.

In 1999 he received from FilmFernsehFonds Bayern a young talent for its literary adaptation of Böll - short story is something happen . The 15-minute 35 mm short color film with Rufus Beck in the lead role, for which he also wrote the script and directed, was produced by Michel Morales at the Munich production company Haifisch Entertainment GmbH and on November 1, 2003 at the Biberacher Film Festival Premiered. Gießer was awarded the Murnau Short Film Prize 2004 by the Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Foundation for the work .

From 1998 to 2007 he mainly worked as a production manager for film documentaries , image and industrial films and mainly commercials. Since then as a location scout .

Gießer's photos were shown in 2013 in the exhibition of the Freising Art Association in the old prison in Freising .

Gießer has his main residence in Munich.

Web links

Remarks

  1. Spelling also Giesser

Individual evidence

  1. Roland Gießer Production at Crew United . Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  2. All FFF funded projects 1996–2006. In: 10 Years of FilmFernsehFonds Bayern 1996–2006. FFF Bayern, 2006, SV
  3. 11th Short Film Prize Winner 2004. Murnau Foundation; accessed on September 7, 2017.
  4. The appeal of analog photography. Münchner Merkur, February 19, 2013.