Jurica Pavičić
Jurica Pavičić (born 2 November 1965 in Split) is a writer, columnist and film critic.
Pavičić's screenplay for Witnesses (Svjedoci), Vinko Brešan's 2003 film, won the Golden Arena for Best Screenplay in the 2003 Pula Film Festival. The screenplay, co-written with Živko Zalar, is based on Pavičić's debut novel Alabaster Sheep (Ovce od gipsa). His novels and short story collections have been translated to English, German, Italian, French and Bulgarian.[1]
Pavičić was, with Nenad Polimac, one of two Croatian film critics who participated in the British Film Institute's Sight & Sound Greatest Films of All Time poll in 2012.[2]
In 2014, Pavičić received the Croatian Journalists' Association's Journalist of the Year Award.[3]
In 2017, Pavičić has signed the Declaration on the Common Language of the Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks and Montenegrins.[4]
Works
Novels
- Ovce od gipsa (1997)
- Nedjeljni prijatelj (2000)
- Minuta 88 (2002)
- Kuća njene majke (2005)
- Crvenkapica (2006)
- Žena s drugog kata (2015)
- Crvena voda (2017)
Plays
- Trovačica (2000)
Short story collections
- Patrola na cesti (2008)
- Brod u dvorištu (2013)
- Skupljač zmija (2019)
Non-fiction
- Vijesti iz Liliputa (2001)
- Postjugoslavenski film: Stil i ideologija (2011)
- Klasici hrvatskog filma jugoslavenskog razdoblja (2017)
- Knjiga o jugu (2018)
Sources
- ^ Jurica Pavičić: Skupljač zmija.
- ^ "Sight & Sound 2012 Poll - all voters". explore.bfi.org.uk. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 19 August 2012. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
- ^ "KOLUMNIST JUTARNJEG JE NOVINAR GODINE 'Jurica Pavičić je na strani slabijih, poštenijih naspram uzurpatora, nasilnika..'". jutarnji.hr (in Croatian). HINA. 6 May 2014. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
- ^ Signatories of the Declaration on the Common Language, official website, retrieved on 2018-08-16.
External links
- Official website(in Croatian)
- Jurica Pavičić at booksa.hr (in Croatian)
- Jurica Pavičić at mvinfo.hr (in Croatian)
- v
- t
- e
(1955–90)
- Slavko Janevski (1955)
- Ratko Đurović (1956)
- Slavko Kolar (1957)
- Zvonimir Berković & Tomislav Butorac (1958)
- Veljko Bulajić, Ivo Braut, Stjepan Perović & Elio Petri (1959)
- Zora Dirnbach (1960)
- Dragoslav Ilić, Radenko Ostojić & Veljko Bulajić (1961)
- Arsen Diklić (1963)
- Ivan Ribič (1964)
- Zvonimir Berković / Simon Drakul (1966)
- Puriša Đorđević (1967)
- Branimir Šćepanović (1968)
- Staša Borisavljević (1969)
- Puriša Đorđević (1970)
- Miroslav Antić (1971)
- Slavko Janevski, Pande Toškovski & Vatroslav Mimica (1972)
- Branimir Šćepanović (1973)
- Branko Šomen (1974)
- Arsen Diklić & Branko Bauer (1975)
- Zdravko Velimirović, Mladen Oljača & Đurica Labović (1976)
- Slavko Goldstein & Dušan Vukotić (1977)
- Dragoslav Mihailović (1978)
- Petrit Imami (1979)
- Puriša Đorđević (1980)
- Abdulah Sidran (1981)
- Mirza Idrizović (1982)
- Živojin Pavlović & Slobodan Golubović (1983)
- Branko Gradišnik (1984)
- Abdulah Sidran (1985)
- Gordan Mihić (1986)
- Dejan Šorak (1987)
- Žarko Dragojević (1988)
- Dušan Kovačević (1989)
- Ferenc Deak (1990)
(1992–present)
- Lada Kaštelan & Zrinko Ogresta (1992)
- Zvonimir Berković (1993)
- Lukas Nola (1995)
- Nino Škrabe (1996)
- Branko Schmidt (1997)
- Snježana Tribuson (1998)
- Zrinko Ogresta & Goran Tribuson (1999)
- Ivo Brešan & Vinko Brešan (2000)
- Josip Cvenić (2001)
- Goran Tribuson (2002)
- Jurica Pavičić & Živko Zalar (2003)
- Antun Vrdoljak (2004)
- Dejan Šorak (2005)
- Antonio Nuić (2006)
- Ognjen Sviličić (2007)
- Goran Rušinović & Miljenko Jergović (2008)
- Antonio Nuić (2009)
- Nevio Marasović (2010)
- Tomislav Radić (2011)
- Vlatka Vorkapić (2012)
- Bobo Jelčić (2013)
- Ivan Pavličić (2014)
- Josip Mlakić (2015)
- Mate Matišić & Zrinko Ogresta (2016)
- Rajko Grlić & Ante Tomić (2017)
- Sara Hribar (2018)
- Mate Matišić (2019)
- Lana Barić (2020)
- Sandra Antolić & Branko Schmidt & Ognjen Sviličić (2021)
This article about a Croatian writer or poet is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e