Mirko Pivčević (born 8 August 1975) is a Croatian cinematographer.
Mirko Pivčević | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation | Cinematographer |
Years active | 1998–present |
Pivčević's career began in the late 1990s, with a string of short documentary films and music videos.[1] His first feature film was Alone (Sami, 2001), which won him his first Golden Arena for Best Cinematography award at the 2001 Pula Film Festival,[2] the Croatian national film awards festival. His next feature film was A Wonderful Night in Split, a 2004 black-and-white film directed by Arsen Anton Ostojić, which earned him his second Golden Arena and a nomination for the Golden Frog Award at the Camerimage cinematography film festival.[3]
Pivčević graduated from the Zagreb Academy of Drama Arts in 2007, submitting A Wonderful Night in Split as his graduation work,[1] and that same year he won his third Golden Arena for the World War II film The Living and the Dead (Živi i mrtvi). His next project was Antonio Nuić's drama film Donkey (Kenjac) which earned him his fourth Golden Arena in 2009.[3]
Selected filmography
edit- Alone (Sami, 2001)
- A Wonderful Night in Split (Ta divna splitska noć, 2004)
- The Living and the Dead (Živi i mrtvi, 2007)
- Donkey (Kenjac, 2009)
- Josef (2011)
- The Priest's Children (Svećenikova djeca, 2013)
- Number 55 (Broj 55, 2014)
References
edit- ^ a b "Mirko Pivčević" (in Croatian). Filmski-programi.hr. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
- ^ "48. Festival igranog filma u Puli" (in Croatian). Pula Film Festival. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
- ^ a b "Mirko Pivcevic - Awards". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
External links
edit- Mirko Pivčević at IMDb
- Mirko Pivčević biography at hrfilm.hr (in Croatian)