“Sorry for Kung fu” 2003 75 min, Croatia
Premiere: Berlinale, Forum of new cinema 2004
Grand Prix Warsaw film festival 2004
“Armin” 2007, 84 min, Croatia, Germany, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Premiere: Berlinale, Forum of new cinema 2007
FIPRESCI prize, best foreign film Palms Springs 2008
East of the west award, Karlovy Vary 2008
“These are the Rules” 2014, 78 min Croatia, France, Serbia, North Macedonia
Premiere: Venice, Orrizonti, 2014
Best Actor Venice Orrizonti, 2014
Best director Warsaw 2015
Best director Les Arcs 2015
“The Voice” 2019, 80 min Croatia, Serbia, North Macedonia
Premiere. Busan 2019
Ognjen Sviličić (born 1971 in Split) is a screenwriter and film director, based in Berlin, noted for his critically acclaimed 2007 films Sorry For Kung Fu, Armin and These Are the Rules.
Career
Sviličić was born 1971 in Split, in a family of journalists.[1] He started his career with a series of TV features which had a mixed critical response. At the beginning of the 2000s, Sviličić often worked as a co-writer or script doctor on films by other directors (What Iva Recorded by Tomislav Radić, The Melon Route by Branko Schmidt).[2][3] Many of the directors with whom he worked made significantly better films than usual while co-working with Sviličić. Sviličić was therefore sometimes nicknamed "Mabuse of Croatian cinema", who "resurrects [directors] from the dead".[1][4]
Sviličić's first international success was the comedy Sorry for Kung Fu,[1] in which a young woman from the Dalmatian highlands comes back from Germany to her native village. Girl (Daria Lorenci) is pregnant, but does not reveal the identity of the father. Their old-fashioned parents try to find a husband for her, but she stubbornly refuses. The film was screened in a Forum program of Berlinale.
Sviličić's next film, Armin, was also screened in Berlin Forum. That is the story about a teenage musician and his simpleton father who travel from Bosnia to Zagreb to audition for a German coproduction film. Son is skeptical and bitter, and father is naive and overtly enthusiastic for anything that is "Western" and "European".[5]
His next internationally recognised film was These Are the Rules, premiered in the Orrizonti section at the Venice Film Festival, where it won the award for the best actor.[2]
Sviličić is continually working as a script writer, he wrote the script for "The Father" together with director Srdan Golubović (Premiere Berlinale 2020, Panorama audience award).[6][7]
He was working as a script consultant for many European script development platforms like First Film First, EAVE or Nipkow Program. At the Academy of Dramatic Art in Zagreb, he works as a screenwriting tutor.[8]