Geir Hartly Andreassen
Appearance
Geir Hartly Andreassen | |
---|---|
Born | Geir Hartly Andreassen 22 November 1971 |
Awards | Guldbagge Award for Best Cinematography 2007 Darling |
Geir Hartly Andreassen, FSF (born 22 November 1971) is a Norwegian cinematographer based in Stockholm, Sweden. His work includes The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones (2013), Kon Tiki (2012), Max Manus (2008), Lange Flate Ballær I and II (2006, 2008), and Darling (2007).
Andreassen has won several awards, including the Amanda Award (2009) for best cinematography for Max Manus,[1] Guldbagge Award in (2007) for best cinematography for Darling.[2]
Filmography
[edit]Features
[edit]- The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones (2013)
- Kon-Tiki (2012)
- Max Manus (2008)
- Lange Flate Ballær 2 (2008)
- Majken (2008)
- Darling (2007)
- Babas bilar (2006)
- Lange flate ballær (2006)
- Boban hockeystjärnan (2003)
- Cuba libre (2002)
- Barnsäng (2001)
- Nöd ut (1996)
Shorts
[edit]- Innesluten (Fredrik Edfeldt) Pinguinfilm, 2004
- Boban Hockeystjärnan (Miko Lazic) Filmkreatörerna, 2003
- Cuba Libre (Kristina Humle) Filmbolaget, 2002
- Barnsäng (Fredrik Edfeldt) Pinguinfilm, 2001
- Unce Upon a Time (Miko Lazic) Filmkreatörerna, 2000
- Fly (Matias A. Jordal) Paradox, 2000 (Winner of Norway shortfilm festival)
- Nöd Ut (Geir Hansteen Jörgensen), 1996
- Monument (Kristin Seim Buflod), 1996
Documentary
[edit]- Einstein (Karin Wegsiö), 2004. Commissioned by the Nobel Museum in Stockholm
Education
[edit]- Bachelor of arts, Cinematography, University College of Film (Dramatiska Institutet). Professor: Sven Nykvist, ASC, FSF
- Technician of Telecommunication, Technical school (Stavanger Tekniske Fagskole)
Memberships
[edit]- The Swedish Society of Cinematographers (FSF)
Awards
[edit]- Amanda Award (2009) Best cinematography for Max Manus.[1]
- Guldbagge Award (2007) Best cinematography for Darling.
- George Eastman Award (2007)[3]
- Dolby Laboratories Sound Award for the film A modest psychological blowout, 1992
- Amandus for best short film Verdens herlighet, 1989
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Amanda Award". Den Norske filmfestivalen. Archived from the original on 2009-07-06. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
- ^ Swedish Film Institute
- ^ sfi.se
External links
[edit]- Geir Hartly Andreassen at IMDb
- ghfilm.com – Official Site