Vladislav "Vlado" Kristl (24 January 1923, Zagreb, Croatia – 7 July 2004, Munich, Germany) was a filmmaker and artist, best known for his animations and short films.
Vladislav "Vlado" Kristl was born 24 January 1923 in Zagreb, Croatia.[citation needed] Kristl first came to international prominence for his formally challenging and rigorous animations, particularly Don Kihot (freely inspired by Cervantes' Don Quixote). The film is a "graphical and abstract masterpiece which went beyond all existing conventions" and was awarded the main prize at the Oberhausen International Short Film Festival. Kristl regarded this film, which was not his first, as the one where he "was finally given a free rein".
In 1962 Kristl made General i resni clovek (The General and the real man), a satirical live action short film which got him into trouble with the board of censors.
He died in 2004, aged 81, in Munich, Germany. With his partner Jelena he had two children, Madeleine (b. 1966) and Pepe Stephan (b. 1968).
He published two books of poetry: Neznatna lirika (Insignificant lyrics, 1959), and Pet bijelih stepenica (Five white steps, 1961) in Croatian, and several books in German.
Directing
60
Male
1923-01-24
Zagreb
Vladislav "Vlado" Kristl, Vladislav Kristl
The Dam
Poor People
The Letter
Car Race
Neuer Deutscher Film Report
The General
...Geist und ein wenig Glück
The Pot
Don Quixote
The Last Clone
Conference of the Homeless
One Half of Wealth for One Half of Beauty
School of the Postmodern
Art Is Only Outside Human Society
When People Were Still Living for Personal Reasons
Italian Capriccio
Tiger Cage
Film or Power
Prometheus
The Film of the Authority
Utopia
Films That Last Seconds
A Pad of 100 Leaves
All the Drawings of the Town
Shagreen Leather
Madeleine, Madeleine
Theft of Jewels
Tod dem Zuschauer
Die Verräter des Jungen deutschen Films schlafen nicht!