Michael Glawogger (3 December 1959 – 23 April 2014) was an Austrian film director, screenwriter and cinematographer.
From 1981 to 1982, Glawogger studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, and from 1983 to 1989 at the Vienna Film Academy. Like fellow Austrian director Ulrich Seidl, with whom he collaborated several times, he was mainly known for his documentary films, such as Megacities (1998), Workingman's Death (2005) and Whores' Glory (2011). In 2008 he was a member of the jury at the 30th Moscow International Film Festival.
In 2013, Glawogger contributed one chapter to "Cathedrals of Culture", a 3-D film on architecture produced by Wim Wenders.
Four days after incorrectly being diagnosed with typhus, he died from malaria on 22 April 2014 shortly before midnight in Monrovia, Liberia during a movie production. In February 2015, a book of stories entitled 69 Hotelzimmer was released. The stories used hotel rooms Glawogger had visited (or in some cases only heard about in passing) as a departure for stories that reflect the visual richness for which his films are celebrated.
Directing
59
Male
1959-12-03
Graz, Austria
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Same Same But Different
Carl Andersens Underground der Liebe
Megacities
Slugs
Contact High
Workingman's Death
Kill Daddy Good Night
Slumming
Whores' Glory
State of the Nation
About Water (Uber Wasser)
Ant Street
Cathedrals of Culture
The Whore's Son
The Woman with One Shoe
France, Here We Come!
Hotel Rock'n'Roll
Untitled
Kino im Kopf
Loss Is to Be Expected
The Mozart Minute
War in Vienna
Street Noise
60 Seconds of Solitude in Year Zero
Haiku
Lovable Lies
Die Stadt der Anderen
Pacific Motion
Tod eines Lesenden