Rolf Saxon was born on July 7, 1955 in Alexandria, Virginia, USA. He is known for Mission: Impossible (1996), Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) and Broken Sword: The Shadow of the Templars (1996).
Rolf Steinmann is a wildlife cameraman whose work is featured predominantly in BBC natural history documentaries such as Planet Earth 2, The Hunt, Seven Worlds or A Perfect Planet. He has filmed in very remote locations like East Antarctica, the Canadian Arctic or the high altitude steppes of Tibet. In the last years he contributed increasingly to Disney features and streaming productions.
Rolf Vogler is an actor, known for Straight Shooter (1999), Real Buddy (2014) and Nikola (1997).
Rolf Zacher was born on March 28, 1941 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Endstation Freiheit (1980), Heidenlöcher (1986) and Verbotene Liebe (1995). He was previously married to Gisela Getty. He died on February 3, 2018 in Seniors Residence "Am Park", Büdelsdorf, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
Rolf de Heer was born on May 4, 1951 in Heemskerk, Noord-Holland, Netherlands. He is a producer and director, known for Bad Boy Bubby (1993), Ten Canoes (2006) and Charlie's Country (2013).
Rolf van Eijk, born December 28, 1983, is a Dutch screenwriter and film director. Rolf's films often explore the twists and turns of the human psyche, with a preference for highly complex and emotional personalities in a strained environment. The nuanced and sensitive way that Rolf portrays these extreme and complex characters enables the audience to gradually warm to them so that they eventually get under the viewers' skin. Rolf began writing stories after his aunt took him to the movie theater when he was nine. In that same period he discovered an attic full of VHS movie tapes at his uncle's home. Captured by the magical realm of cinema he secretly started to use his mother's Hi8 camcorder to shoot his stories. From that time on, he knew he wanted to become a filmmaker. In 2007 Rolf graduated from the University of the Arts Utrecht with his film 'Heaven Above Holland'. The film tells the true story of Mohammed B., the murderer of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh. Rolf's subtle self-penned psychoanalytical portrayal of Mohammed's two-year transformation from welfare worker to terrorist caused controversy due to its honest, human portrayal of van Gogh's murderer. The film wins the HKU Award for best graduating film, got several international festival selections and wins the Silver Mikeldi for best fiction in Bilbao, Spain. Rolf's fascination for people who cross socially accepted lines resulted in the sociological thriller 'Vast' (Inside). This film tells the story about an alienated teenage girl and her inability to overcome a childhood trauma. The film is set entirely in a youth detention center for girls. The film won the Golden Calf for Best Television Drama, the Prix Genève for best screenplay by a newcomer at the European Broadcasting Festival and was selected for Forum of Independents Karlovy Vary. In 2012 Rolf wrote, directed and produced the short 'Code One', a drama about senseless violence against ambulance personnel. The film was selected for over ten festivals worldwide and was used in a government program to educate teenagers about this new phenomenon in modern day society. In 2014 Rolf made his first feature: 'T.I.M. - The Incredible Machine'. In this magical adventure film a bullied boy travels to the end of the world to save his dying robot friend. Nearly 40 festivals worldwide selected the film (TIFF Toronto, Filmfest Munich, BIFAN Bucheon, SIFF Shanghai). It won Best Feature at Vittorio Veneto in Italy, Best Feature at IFF Karelian in Russia, Best Director and Best Cinematography at Other Worlds in the USA. In that year Rolf also directed an episode of the popular Dutch crime television series 'Van God Los' (The Godless) that was voted best television series in the world by Twitch Film. In 2015 Rolf teamed up with Roelof Jan Minneboo writing 'My Foolish Heart', a neo-noir jazz film about the last day of legendary jazz trumpeter Chet Baker. 'My Foolish Heart' is Rolf's theatrical feature debut. Rolf is also an international director of television commercials and social media ads, including films for BMW, Samsung and Startpage.
Rolf von Nauckhoff was born on May 15, 1909 in Stockholm, Stockholms län, Sweden. He was an actor, known for Herrin der Welt (1960), Liane, das Mädchen aus dem Urwald (1956) and Duell mit dem Tod (1949). He was married to Maria Herbot. He died on June 25, 1968 in Munich, Bavaria, West Germany.
Rolf-Dieter Heuer was born on May 22, 1948 in Boll, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. He is known for Particle Fever (2013), 60 Minutes (1968) and Quarks & Co. (1993).
Rolfe Kanefsky grew up in the suburbs of New York and attended Hampshire college where he studied Film. He began writing stories at a young age after his childhood dream of becoming a clown took the backseat to his interest in film. He has thus far written and directed 27 feature films and authored another 38 produced screenplays over the last 30 years. The cult flick "There's Nothing Out There" was his debut at the age of twenty. Since then, Rolfe has continued to work in the horror genre with "The Black Room" starring Natasha Henstridge and Lin Shaye, "Party Bus To Hell" with Tara Reid, "The Hazing" starring Brad Dourif and Tiffany Shepis, "Jacqueline Hyde", "Corpses", and "Nightmare Man". He was the winner of two Best Director awards for his horror flick, "Nightmare Man" at the Horror, Sci-Fi, Fantasy and The Supernatural Film Festival in Las Vegas & at the I.F.F.Y.N.T.X. Festival in Texas before the film went on to be picked up by After Dark and Lions Gate as one of the "8 Films To Die For: Horrorfest 2007. Branching out into other genres, Rolfe wrote "Blonde & Blonder", a comedy with Pamela Anderson and Denise Richards, "A Dog & Pony Show" with Mira Sorvino and Ralph Macchio, the western "Doc Holliday's Revenge" starring Tom Berenger, thrillers such as "Tomorrow By Midnight" starring Carol Kane and Alexis Arquette and "1 In The Gun" with Steven Bauer and Robert Davi. Recent family fare include the animated "Space Dogs: Adventures To The Moon" with the voice of Alicia Silverstone "A Tiger's Tail", "Timber; The Treasure Dog", "Puppy Swap" with Margo Kidder, "Jimmy's Jungle", the period crime story "Bonnie & Clyde: Justified", and the musical "Adventures Into The Woods". Rolfe has also been making a name for himself in the Lifetime thriller world and has authored seven female-driven thrillers including "Killer Photo" aka "Watch Your Back" starring Annalynne McCord. "Deadly Sorority" with Greer Grammer and Moira Kelly, "The Wrong Babysitter" starring Daphe Zuniga, "Deadly Vows", "Intensive Care" and "The Wrong Vacation". With 65 produced credits, Rolfe is a very active filmmaker/writer who continues to work in almost every genre in the business.