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Movies & TV Shows
- Fabian: Going to the Dogs2021
- Beloved Sisters2014
- Germany 09: 13 Short Films About the State of the Nation2009
- In the Face of Crime2010
- The Cat1988
- Father's Day1996
- A Map of the Heart2002
- Doomed Love: A Journey through German Genre Films2019
- Danni1983
- München - Geheimnisse einer Stadt2000
- Der Mädchenkrieg1977
- Die Freunde der Freunde2002
- 1+1=31979
- Gesetz der Straße1994
- Father's Day1997
- Sophie: Schlauer als die Polizei1997
- Was heißt hier Ende?2015
- Es werde Stadt!2014
While he has directed several theatrically released feature films since the 1980s, he more often finds work in television, focussing primarily on the genres police drama, thriller and crime mystery, although he has also made comedies, melodramas, documentaries and essay films.
Director. Writer. Actor. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. Dominik Graf was born on 6 September 1952 in Munich, Bavaria, West Germany. He is a director and writer, known for Fabian: Going to the Dogs (2021), Dreileben (2011) and Der Felsen (2002). More at IMDbPro.
- January 1, 1
- Director, Writer, Actor
- Munich, Bavaria, West Germany
- Dominik Graf
Jan 31, 2023 · Interviews. Issue 104. Dominik Graf is one of Germany’s most important – and prolific – filmmakers of the last half century. Since his debut, the short film Carlas Briefe (Carla’s Letters, 1975), and his first feature, Der kostbare Gast (The Precious Guest, 1979), he has directed almost 80 films, most of them for German television. 1 ...
- Marco Abel
Over the course of his career Graf has directed almost 80 works of various lengths and genres – feature films, TV movies, episodes for various series, as well as contributions to omnibus films – of which only ten were made for theatrical release.
Mar 1, 2021 · To tackle it in cinema would seem like an impossible task, and while Dominik Graf ’s “Fabian – Going to the Dogs” is to be commended for getting quite a lot right, the movie is blowsy where...
- Jay Weissberg
Jan 17, 2022 · Kino Lorber. One of the breakout films at the 2021 Berlinale was Dominik Graf’s “Fabian: Going to the Dogs,” a three-hour, Weimar Germany–era bildungsroman that’s way more exhilarating...
Mar 1, 2021 · By Ryan Lattanzio. March 1, 2021 2:05 pm. "Fabian - Going to the Dogs" Berlinale. Germany is on its postwar sickbed, and perched on the edge of self-destruction, in Dominik Graf ‘s epically...