Boštjan Hladnik

Directing 1929-01-30 Kranj, Slovenia, Yugoslavia

Boštjan Hladnik (30 January 1929 – 30 May 2006) was a Yugoslav/Slovene filmmaker. Hladnik was born in Kranj. He started with amateur short films after acquiring a projector and a 8mm camera in 1947. From 1949 he studied at the Academy for Theatre, Radio, Film and Television in Ljubljana and made a name for himself with several highly acclaimed short films. In 1957, Hladnik moved to Paris to apprentice under French filmmakers such as Claude Chabrol, Philippe de Broca, and Robert Siodmak. Hladnik's early-'60s features, Ples v dežju (Dance in the Rain) (1961) and Peščeni grad/Sand Castle (1962), influenced the course of Yugoslav cinema, through integrating influences from the nouvelle vague into it. Hladnik has an obsession with eroticism. He made many films dealing openly with sex and his Erotikon [de] (1963), with its openly sensual approach to taboo sexual relationships, not only triggered angry protests in the press, but it also led to it being banned in some Yugoslav republics. Western European critics and public however, supported Hladnik enough for him to find foreign backing for his even more provocative feature film on sexuality, Maškarada/Masquerade (1971). Hladnik died in Ljubljana in 2006.

代表作

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全部作品

2006 Herself
2000 The Customer
1992 Himself
1989
1988 Govornik
1988 Director
1986 Director
1986 Writer
1979 Director
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1978 Njemački časnik s fotoaparatom
1976 Director
1974 Director
1974 Writer
1972 Director
1971 Director
1968 Director
1968 Writer
1962 Director
1962 Writer
1961 Director
1961 Writer
1958 Director