Fred Breinersdorfer

Weitere Namen
Prof. Dr. Fred Breinersdorfer (Weiterer Name) W. Anders (Pseudonym)
Director, Screenplay, Producer
Mannheim

Biography

Fred Breinersdorfer was born in Mannheim on December 6, 1946. After studying law and sociology in Mainz and Tübingen, he worked as a lawyer in Stuttgart for seventeen years. In 1980, he published his first crime novel featuring the character of attorney-at-law Abel as protagonist. He went on the publish numerous more Abel stories as well as other fiction novel, and also founded his own media companies Factor and Delphi-Medien.

The script for the 1984 TV thriller "Zweierlei Blut" marked Fred Breinersdorfer's debut as a screenwriter, and from 1988 on, he adapted his own Abel novels for the successful TV series "Anwalt Abel". His script for the 1990 TV drama "Der Hammermörder", based on a real-life case Breinersdorfer previously covered in a book, became a critical success that garnered him a Grimme Award.

Throughout the 1990s, Breinersdorfer continued to write for television, and among his memorable works are the scripts for "Angst" (1994), "Zaubergirl" (1995), "Der Kindermord" (1997) and "Duell der Richter" (1999).

In 2001, he and director Marc Rothemund got rave reviews for the TV production "Die Hoffnung stirbt zuletzt" ("Hope Dies Last"), which won him another Grimme Award. In 2004, Rothemund and Breinersdorfer founded their production company Broth Film, through which they produced the feature film Sophie Scholl – Die letzten Tage" ("Sophie Scholl – The Final Days, 2004). The film, which chronicles the last days of German WWII resistance fighter Sophie Scholl who was murdered by the Nazi regime, was a critical and commercial success, went on to win numerous national and international awards, and was nominated as Best Foreign Language Film at the 2006 Academy Awards.

Together with his daughter Léonie-Claire Breinersdorfer, he next developed characters for a new branch of the popular "Tatort" TV series. In 2007, Breinersdorfer made his directorial debut with the short "Sommersonntag" ("Summer Sunday"), which won the Murnau Kurzfilmpreis. The same year, he directed the feature-length drama "Zwischen heute und morgen" (2007), and in 2009, he helmed the documentary "Andula - Besuch in einem anderen Leben" (2009), which he also co-wrote and produced.

Following the acclaimed TV production "Der verlorene Sohn" – again co-written by Léonie-Claire Breinersdorfer –, Breinersdorfer co-produced the theatrical releases  "Hilde" (2009), "Der Mann, der über Autos sprang" ("The Man Who Jumped Cars, 2010) and und "Wo es weh tut" (2010). After he and his daughter adapted the Henning Mankell novel "Der Chinese" for TV, Breinersdorfer wrote screenplays for the "Tatort" entries "Borowski und der freie Fall" (2012) and "Ein neues Leben" (2012).

Fred and Léonie Breinersdorfer again collaborated on the script for the feature film "Elser" (13 Minutes", 2015), which chronicles the failed attempt of Georg Elser to assassinate Adolf Hitler and received seven nominations at the German Film Awards. Breinersdorfer next wrote the screenplay for Hans Steinbichler's "Das Tagebuch der Anne Frank" (The Diary of Anne Frank, 2016), a dramatic adaptation of Anne Frank's diary that received mostly positive reviews upon its theatrical release.

In addition to his work as a writer, Breinersdorfer is an active member of several organizations, including VG Wort, PEN as well as the Deutsche Filmakademie. At the latter, he initiated the project "Filmmakers in Prison" in cooperation with Amnesty International and the Berlin IFF.

Fred Breinersdorfer lives in Berlin.

 

Filmography

2022/2023
  • Screenplay
2020/2021
  • Screenplay
2020/2021
  • Screenplay
2018/2019
  • Screenplay
2017
  • Screenplay
2015/2016
  • Screenplay
2015/2016
  • Screenplay
2014/2015
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
2012
  • Screenplay
2009-2011
  • Co-Producer
2010/2011
  • Screenplay
2010/2011
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
2009
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
2008/2009
  • Screenplay
2008/2009
  • Screenplay
2007/2008
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Co-Producer
2007
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
2006/2007
  • Screenplay
2006/2007
  • Screenplay
2006
  • Screenplay
2004-2006
  • Screenplay
2005
  • Screenplay
2004
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
2003/2004
  • Screenplay
2003/2004
  • Screenplay
2004
  • Screenplay
2003
  • Screenplay
2003
  • Screenplay
2003
  • Screenplay
2001
  • Screenplay
2000
  • Screenplay
2000
  • Screenplay
1999
  • Screenplay
1999
  • Screenplay
1999
  • Screenplay
1998
  • Screenplay
1996/1997
  • Screenplay
1996/1997
  • Screenplay
1996
  • Screenplay
1995
  • Screenplay
1993/1994
  • Screenplay
1992
  • Screenplay
1989/1990
  • Screenplay
  • based on