
Željko Senečić
Art
Born 1933-01-18 · Zagreb, Croatia · Died 2018-01-01
Željko Senečić was a Croatian film and television production designer, film director and screenwriter. Senečić studied painting at the Zagreb Academy of Fine Arts and scenography at the Zagreb Academy of Drama Arts. His career in filmmaking and production design began in the early 1960s. His most memorable films include the Palme d'Or and Academy Award-winning The Tin Drum (Die Blechtrommel, 1979; directed by Volker Schlöndorff and partially filmed in Zagreb, with Senečić credited as production co-designer) and classics of Croatian cinema such as Rondo (1966), One Song a Day Takes Mischief Away (Tko pjeva zlo ne misli, 1970). Senečić won four Golden Arena for Best Production Design awards, making him one of the most decorated production designers in Croatian cinema. He also co-wrote screenplays for films An Event (Događaj, 1969; directed by Vatroslav Mimica) and The House (Kuća, 1975; directed by Bogdan Žižić). Senečić also started directing short films in the late 1970s and then proceeded to make several feature films in the 1990s, such as Delusion (Zavaravanje, 1998) and Dubrovnik Twilight (Dubrovački suton, 1999).
Acting
Crew

Sucks
Writer

Sucks
Director
Red and Black
Writer
Red and Black
Director
Dubrovnik Twilight
Director
Dubrovnik Twilight
Writer

Delusion
Director

Delusion
Writer

Pont Neuf
Director

Pont Neuf
Writer

Charuga
Production Design

Project Alien
Production Design

The Dirty Dozen: The Fatal Mission
Art Direction

The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission
Art Direction

Suicider
Production Design

Premeditated Love Letters
Production Design

Inspector Vinko
Writer

Die Nacht der vier Monde
Art Direction

Cyclops
Production Design

Ana and Nives
Production Designer
