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Thomas Halaczinsky : ウィキペディア英語版 | Thomas Halaczinsky
Thomas Halaczinsky (born 3 October 1958, in Germany) is a filmmaker and producer.〔(Thomas Halaczinsky at IMDb )〕 He is the youngest child of composer and painter Rudolf Halaczinsky. As a filmmaker, Halaczinsky earned his first critical acclaim as an associate producer for ''Calling the Ghosts'' (1996),〔(IMDb about "Calling The Ghosts" )〕 for which in 1997 he won an ACE award for International Informational Special or Series.〔Ray Richmond. ("HBO leads CableAces with 32 nods" ) ''Variety'' 16 November 1997. Retrieved on 22 October 2013.〕 The documentary details the experience of Nusreta Sivac and Jadranka Cigelj at the Bosnian Serb-run Omarska camp in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Bosnian War. In 2004, his film "Don't Call it Heimweh" about Holocaust survivor Margot Friedlander〔Donald Snyder. ("Try to make a life': 92-year-old Holocaust survivor moves back to Berlin" ) NBC News Berlin, 28 September 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.〕 premiered at the Woodstock Film Festival.〔(Woodstock Film Festival schedule 2004 )〕 In 2005, it was chosen as the opening film〔("Alles auf Suppe! ) Berliner Morgenpost Berlin, 19 Juni 2005. Retrieved 22 October 2013.〕 at the Jewish Film Festival in Berlin.〔(Jewish Film Festival schedule 2005 )〕 The film also got attention by American psychoanalyst Roger Frie, who cites Halaczinsky's view in an essay in "Psychoanalytic Psychology" in 2012.〔Roger Frie. ("Memory and Responsibility" ) Psychoanalytic Psychology 2012, Vol. 29, No 2.〕 Halaczinsky revisited the film's subject and protagonist a couple of years later, resulting in the follow-up documentary "A long Way home" (2010), which the international broadcaster Deutsche Welle〔(Deutsche Welle )〕 first aired in 2010, simoultaneously in German, English, Spanish and Arabic. == References ==
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