Ágnes Hranitzky
Known for: Editing
Born: July 3, 1945 in Derecske, Hungary
Ágnes Hranitzky is a Hungarian film editor and director best known for her long-standing collaborations with her spouse Béla Tarr. Hranitzky began working in the 1970s as a film editor on Hungarian films. She began collaborating with director Béla Tarr in 1981, editing his film The Outsider. She has edited all of Tarr's films since then. In 2000, with the film Werckmeister Harmonies Hranitzky began to be credited as a co-director on Tarr's films. The credit developed as Tarr is known for his long takes, the length of which forced Hranitzky to be on set during production in order to assist Tarr with knowing how things would develop in the editing room and which takes would match others. She co-directed The Man from London in 2007, again with Tarr as lead director. The film premiered In Competition at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. In 2011 she again co-directed The Turin Horse, which premiered in 2011 at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival, where it received the Jury Grand Prix. Description above from the Wikipedia article Ágnes Hranitzky, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known for
Showing 21 of 21 titles
Tarr Béla: I Used to Be a Filmmaker
Herself
The Turin Horse
Editor
Autumn Almanac
Editor
The Last Boat
Editor
Journey on the Plain
Editor
Rumbling Silence
Editor
Az utolsó tánctanár
Editor
Stratagem
Editor
Satantango
Editor
The Myth-Makers
Editor
Visions of Europe
Assistant Director
Damnation
Editor
The Prefab People
Editor
The Man from London
Editor
A Mother, a Daughter
Editor
Werckmeister Harmonies
Editor
The Outsider
Editor
Fragment
Editor
Cinemarxism
Editor
György Fehér's Films According to Béla Tarr
Editor
Diplomafilm
Editor