[2][3][4] His award winning films as producer/director have included Just one Kid and It's a Lovely Day Tomorrow (writer Bernard Kops, true stories set in London's East End, Associated Television), as director Spend, Spend, Spend[5][6] (starring Susan Littler, writer Jack Rosenthal, about football pools winner Viv Nicholson, BBC Television) and The Devil's Lieutenant (starring Ian Charleson and Helmut Griem, writer Jack Rosenthal, mini series set in Vienna during the last years of the Habsburg monarchy and based on the novel by Maria Fagyas, Channel 4, ZDF, Rai 1 & France 3), A Crime of Honour (aka A Song for Europe,[7] starring David Suchet and Maria Schneider, writer Peter Prince, a true story inspired by the whistle blower Stanley Adams, Channel 4, ZDF, SRG, France 2 & RAI), Maschenka[8] (writer John Mortimer, based on Nabokov's first novel C4 & ZDF).
Goldschmidt's award winning films as producer include Utz[9] ( Armin Mueller-Stahl, Brenda Fricker and Paul Scofield, script by Hugh Whitemore based on novel by Bruce Chatwin) for BBC Films & NDR), Deadly Voyage [10] starring Omar Epps, written by Stuart Urban (for HBO Pictures & BBC Films).
His German language drama-documentary films as director include Egon Schiele [14][15] starring Felix Mitterer (also co-writer, ORF & ZDF) and Der Narr von Wien[16] (aka The Fool from Vienna writer Felix Mitterer, about Peter Altenberg, ORF & ZDF).
He co-wrote (with Michael Radford) the report which proposed Channel 4's involvement in theatrical films, recently co-wrote (with Don Boyd) The Director's Guild of Great Britain's[26] report[27] to the British government on the UK tax credit for feature film production and has been a member of the board of Directors UK and of the Directors UK film committee.
[citation needed] Goldschmidt directed Dough in London and Budapest in 2015, starring Jonathan Pryce.