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Cinema of Germany

The film industry in Germany can be traced back to the late 19th century. German cinema made major technical and artistic contributions to early film, broadcasting and television technology. Babelsberg became a household synonym for the early 20th century film industry in Europe, similar to Hollywood later.

Cinema of Germany
No. of screens4,803 (2017)[1]
 • Per capita6.2 per 100,000 (2011)[2]
Main distributorsWarner (19.5%)
Walt Disney (11.5%)
Sony Pictures (11.1%)[3]
Produced feature films (2011)[4]
Fictional128 (60.4%)
Animated5 (2.4%)
Documentary79 (37.3%)
Number of admissions (2017)[1]
Total122,305,182
 • Per capita1.48 (2017)
National films28,300,000 (23.1%)
Gross box office (2017)[1]
Total€1.06 billion

Germany witnessed major changes to its identity during the 20th and 21st century. Those changes determined the periodisation of national cinema into a succession of distinct eras and movements.[5]

History edit

1895–1918 German Empire edit

 
The Berlin Wintergarten theatre, here in 1940, was the site of the first cinema screening ever, with 8 short films presented by the Skladanowsky brothers on 1 November 1895.

The history of cinema in Germany can be traced back to the years shortly after the medium's birth. On 1 November 1895, Max Skladanowsky and his brother Emil demonstrated their self-invented film projector, the Bioscop, at the Wintergarten music hall in Berlin. A 15-minute series of eight short films were shown – the first screening of films to a paying audience.[6] This performance pre-dated the first paying public display of the Lumière brothers' Cinematographe in Paris on 28 December of the same year, a performance that Max Skladanowsky attended and at which he was able to ascertain that the Cinematographe was technically superior to his Bioscop. Other German film pioneers included the Berliners Oskar Messter and Max Gliewe, two of several individuals who independently in 1896 first used a Geneva drive (which allows the film to be advanced intermittently one frame at a time) in a projector, and the cinematographer Guido Seeber.

In its earliest days, the cinematograph was perceived as an attraction for upper class audiences, but the novelty of moving pictures did not last long. Soon, trivial short films were being shown as fairground attractions aimed at the working class and lower-middle class. The booths in which these films were shown were known in Germany somewhat disparagingly as Kintopps. Film-makers with an artistic bent attempted to counter this view of cinema with longer films based on literary models, and the first German "artistic" films began to be produced from around 1910, an example being the Edgar Allan Poe adaptation The Student of Prague (1913) which was co-directed by Paul Wegener and Stellan Rye, photographed by Guido Seeber and starring actors from Max Reinhardt's company.

 
The Babelsberg Studio near Berlin was the first large-scale film studio in the world (founded 1912) and the forerunner to Hollywood. It still produces global blockbusters every year.

Early film theorists in Germany began to write about the significance of Schaulust, or "visual pleasure", for the audience, including the Dada movement writer Walter Serner: "If one looks to where cinema receives its ultimate power, into these strangely flickering eyes that point far back into human history, suddenly it stands there in all its massiveness: visual pleasure."[7] Visually striking sets and makeup were key to the style of the expressionist films that were produced shortly after the First World War.

Cinemas themselves began to be established landmarks in the years immediately before World War I. Before this, German filmmakers would tour with their works, travelling from fairground to fairground. The earliest ongoing cinemas were set up in cafes and pubs by owners who saw a way of attracting more customers. The storefront cinema was called a Kientopp, and this is where films were viewed for the most part before the First World War broke out.[8] The first standalone, dedicated cinema in Germany was opened in Mannheim in 1906, and by 1910, there were over 1000 cinemas operating in Germany.[8] Henny Porten and Asta Nielsen (the latter originally from Denmark) were the first major film stars in Germany.[9]

Prior to 1914, however, many foreign films were imported. In the era of the silent film there were no language boundaries and Danish and Italian films were particularly popular in Germany. The public's desire to see more films with particular actors led to the development in Germany, as elsewhere, of the phenomenon of the film star; the actress Henny Porten was one of the earliest German stars. Public desire to see popular film stories being continued encouraged the production of film serials, especially in the genre of mystery films, which is where the director Fritz Lang began his illustrious career.

The outbreak of World War I and the subsequent boycott of, for example, French films left a noticeable gap in the market. By 1916, there already existed some 2000 fixed venues for movie performances and initially film screenings were supplemented or even replaced by variety turns. In 1917 a process of concentration and partial nationalisation of the German film industry began with the founding of Universum Film AG (UFA), which was partly a reaction to the very effective use that the Allied Powers had found for the new medium for the purpose of propaganda. Under the aegis of the military, so-called Vaterland films were produced, which equalled the Allies' films in the matter of propaganda and disparagement of the enemy. Audiences however did not care to swallow the patriotic medicine without the accompanying sugar of the light-entertainment films which, consequently, Ufa also promoted. The German film industry soon became the largest in Europe.

1918–1933 Weimar Republic edit

 
UFA Studios in Berlin-Tempelhof, 1920

The German film industry, which was protected during the war by the ban on foreign films import, became exposed at the end of the war to the international film industry while having to face an embargo, this time on its own films. Many countries banned the import of German films and audiences themselves were resisting anything that was "German".[10] But the ban imposed on German films involved commercial considerations as well – as an American president of one of the film companies was quoted, "an influx of such films in the United States would throw thousands of our own... out of work, because it would be absolutely impossible for the American producers to compete with the German producers".[11] At home, the German film industry confronted an unstable economic situation and the devaluation of the currency made it difficult for the smaller production companies to function. Film industry financing was a fragile business and expensive productions occasionally led to bankruptcy. In 1925 UFA itself was forced to go into a disadvantageous partnership called Parufamet with the American studios Paramount and MGM, before being taken over by the nationalist industrialist and newspaper owner Alfred Hugenberg in 1927.[12]

 
1927's Metropolis by Fritz Lang was the first feature length science fiction film in history.[13] It was produced at Studio Babelsberg, Germany.

Nevertheless, the German film industry enjoyed an unprecedented development – during the 14 years which comprise the Weimar period, an average of 250 film were being produced each year, a total of 3,500 full-feature films.[10] Apart from UFA, about 230 film companies were active in Berlin alone. This industry was attracting producers and directors from all over Europe. The fact that the films were silent and language was not a factor, enabled even foreign actors, like the Danish film star Asta Nielsen or the American Louise Brooks, to be hired even for leading roles. This period can also be noted for new technological developments in film making and experimentation in set design and lighting, led by UFA. Babelsberg Studio, which was incorporated into UFA, expanded massively and gave the German film industry a highly developed infrastructure. Babelsberg remained the centre of German filmmaking for many years, became the largest film studio in Europe and produced most of the films in this "golden era" of German cinema.[12] In essence it was "the German equivalent to Hollywood".[14]

Films about an exaggerated version of Japanese culture that included "geishas, samurai, and Shinto shrines" were popular in Germany during this era.[15]

Due to the unstable economic condition and in an attempt to deal with modest production budgets, filmmakers were trying to reach the largest audience possible and in that, to maximize their revenues. This led to films being made in a vast array of genres and styles.[10]

 
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920), directed by Robert Wiene

One of the main film genres associated with the Weimar Republic cinema is German Expressionism which was inspired by the expressionist movement in art. Expressionist movies relied heavily on symbolism and artistic imagery rather than stark realism to tell their stories. Given the grim mood in post-World War I, it was not surprising that these films focused heavily on crime and horror. The film usually credited with sparking the popularity of expressionism is Robert Wiene's The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920), produced by Erich Pommer. The film tells the story of a demented hypnotist who is using a sleepwalker to perform a series of murders. The film featured a dark and twisted visual style – the set was unrealistic with geometric images painted on the floor and shapes in light and shadow cast on walls, the acting was exaggerated and the costumes bizarre. These stylistic elements became trademarks of this cinematic movement. Other notable works of Expressionism are Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau's Nosferatu (1922), a classic period-piece horror film that remains the first feature-length film adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula, Carl Boese and Paul Wegener's The Golem: How He Came Into the World (1920), a Gothic retelling of the Jewish folktale, and Metropolis (1927), a legendary science-fiction epic directed by Fritz Lang. The Expressionist movement began to wane during the mid-1920s, but perhaps the fact that its main creators moved to Hollywood, California, allowed this style to remain influential in world cinema for years to come, particularly in American horror films and film noir and in the works of European directors such as Jean Cocteau and Ingmar Bergman.[16]

Despite its significance, expressionist cinema was not the dominant genre of this era.[16] Many other genres such as period dramas, melodramas, romantic comedies, and films of social and political nature, were much more prevalent and definitely more popular.

The "master" of period-dramas was undoubtedly Ernst Lubitsch. His most notable films of this genre were Madame DuBarry (1919) which portrayed the French Revolution through the eyes of the King of France's mistress, and the film Anna Boleyn (1920) on the tragic end of King Henry VIII's second wife. In these films, Lubitsch presented prominent historic personalities who are caught up by their weaknesses and petty urges and thus, ironically, become responsible for huge historical events. Despite modest budgets, his films included extravagant scenes which were meant to appeal to a wide audience and insure a wide international distribution.

As the genre of expressionism began to diminish, the genre of the New Objectivity (die neue Sachlichkeit) began to take its place. It was influenced by new issues which occupied the public in those years, as the rampant inflation caused deterioration in the economic status of the middle class. These films, often called "street films" or "asphalt films", tried to reflect reality in all its complexity and ugliness. They focused on objects surrounding the characters and cynically symbolized the despair felt by the German people, whose lives were shattered after the war. The most prominent film maker who is associated with this genre is Georg Wilhelm Pabst in his films such as: Joyless Street (1925), Pandora's Box (1929), and The Loves of Jeanne Ney (1927). Pabst is also credited with innovations in film editing, such as reversing the angle of the camera or cutting between two camera angles, which enhanced film continuity and later became standards of the industry.[12]

Pabst is also identified with another genre which branched from the New Objectivity – that of social and political films. These filmmakers dared to confront sensitive and controversial social issues which engaged the public in those days; such as anti-Semitism, prostitution and homosexuality. To a large extent, Weimar cinema was playing a vibrant and important role by leading public debate on those issues.[17] Pabst, in his film Diary of a Lost Girl (1929), tells the story of a young woman who has a child out of wedlock, is thrown out into the street by her family and has to resort to prostitution to survive. As early as 1919, Richard Oswald's film Different from the Others portrayed a man torn between his homosexual tendencies and the moral and social conventions. It is considered to be the first German film to deal with homosexuality and some researchers even believe it to be the first in the world to examine this issue explicitly.[18] That same year, the film Ritual Murder (1919) by Jewish film producer Max Nivelli came to the screen. This film was the first to make the German public aware of the consequences of anti-Semitism and xenophobia. It portrayed a "pogrom" which is carried out against the Jewish inhabitants of a village in Tsarist Russia. In the background, a love story also evolves between a young Russian student and the daughter of the leader of the Jewish community, something that was considered a taboo at the time. Later on, in an attempt to reflect the rapidly growing anti-Semitic atmosphere, Oswald confronted the same issue with his film Dreyfus (1930), which portrayed the 1894 political scandal of the "Dreyfus affair", which until today remains one of the most striking examples of miscarriage of justice and blatant anti-Semitism.

The polarised politics of the Weimar period were also reflected in some of its films. A series of patriotic films about Prussian history, starring Otto Gebühr as Frederick the Great were produced throughout the 1920s and were popular with the nationalist right-wing, who strongly criticised the "asphalt" films' decadence. Another dark chapter of the Weimar period was reflected in Joseph Delmont's film Humanity Unleashed (1920). The film was an adaptation of a novel by the same name, written by Max Glass and published in 1919. The novel described a dark world consumed by disease and war. The filmmakers decided to take the story to a more contemporary context by reflecting the growing fear among the German public of political radicalization. They produced what was to become the first fictional account of the events of January 1919 in Berlin, the so-called "Spartacist Uprising". This film is also considered one of the anti-Bolshevik films of that era.[19]

Another important film genre of the Weimar years was the Kammerspiel or "chamber drama", which was borrowed from the theater and developed by stage director, who would later become a film producer and director himself, Max Reinhardt. This style was in many ways a reaction against the spectacle of expressionism and thus tended to revolve around ordinary people from the lower-middle-class. Films of this genre were often called "instinct" films because they emphasized the impulses and intimate psychology of the characters. The sets were kept to a minimum and there was abundant use of camera movements to add complexity to the rather intimate and simple spaces. Associated with this particular style is also screenwriter Carl Mayer and films such as Murnau's Last Laugh (1924).

Nature films, a genre referred to as Bergfilm, also became popular. Most known in this category are the films by director Arnold Fanck, in which individuals were shown battling against nature in the mountains. Animators and directors of experimental films such as; Lotte Reiniger, Oskar Fischinger and Walter Ruttmann, were also very active in Germany in the 1920s. Ruttman's experimental documentary Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis (1927) epitomised the energy of 1920s Berlin.

The arrival of sound at the very end of the 1920s, produced a final artistic flourish of German film before the collapse of the Weimar Republic in 1933. As early as 1918, three inventors came up with the Tri-Ergon sound-on-film system and tried to introduce it to the industry between 1922 and 1926. UFA showed an interest, but possibly due to financial difficulties, never made a sound film.[20] But in the late 1920s, sound production and distribution were starting to be adopted by the German film industry and by 1932 Germany had 3,800 cinemas equipped to play sound films. The first filmmakers who experimented with the new technology often shot the film in several versions, using several soundtracks in different languages. The film The Blue Angel (1930), directed by the Austrian Josef von Sternberg and produced by Erich Pommer, was also shot in two versions – German and English, with a different supporting cast in each version. It is considered to be Germany's first "talkie" and will always be remembered as the film that made an international superstar of its lead actress Marlene Dietrich. Other notable early sound films, all from 1931, include Jutzi's adaptation to Alfred Döblin's novel Berlin Alexanderplatz, Pabst's Bertolt Brecht adaptation The Threepenny Opera and Lang's M, as well as Hochbaum's Raid in St. Pauli (1932). Brecht was also one of the creators of the explicitly communist film Kuhle Wampe (1932), which was banned soon after its release.

In addition to developments in the industry itself, the Weimar period saw the birth of film criticism as a serious discipline whose practitioners included Rudolf Arnheim in Die Weltbühne and in Film als Kunst (1932), Béla Balázs in Der Sichtbare Mensch (1924), Siegfried Kracauer in the Frankfurter Zeitung, and Lotte H. Eisner in the Filmkurier.

1933–1945 Nazi Germany edit

The uncertain economic and political situation in Weimar Germany had already led to a number of film-makers and performers leaving the country, primarily for the United States; Ernst Lubitsch moved to Hollywood as early as 1923, the Hungarian-born Michael Curtiz in 1926. Some 1,500 directors, producers, actors and other film professionals emigrated in the years after the Nazis came to power. Among them were such key figures as the producer Erich Pommer, the studio head of Ufa, stars Marlene Dietrich and Peter Lorre, and director Fritz Lang. Lang's exodus to America is legendary; it is said that Metropolis so greatly impressed Joseph Goebbels that he asked Lang to become the head of his propaganda film unit. Lang fled to America instead, where he had a long and prosperous career. Many up-and-coming German directors also fled to the U.S., having a major influence on American film as a result. A number of the Universal Horror films of the 1930s were directed by German emigrees, including Karl Freund, Joe May and Robert Siodmak. Directors Edgar Ulmer and Douglas Sirk and the Austrian-born screenwriter (and later director) Billy Wilder also emigrated from Nazi Germany to Hollywood success. Not all those in the film industry threatened by the Nazi regime were able to escape; the actor and director Kurt Gerron, for example, perished in a concentration camp.

 
The Titania-Palast in Berlin-Steglitz, an Art Deco style movie theater opened in 1928

Within weeks of the Machtergreifung, Alfred Hugenberg had effectively turned over Ufa to the ends of the Nazis, excluding Jews from employment in the company in March 1933, several months before the foundation in June of the Reichsfilmkammer (Reich Chamber of Film), the body of the Nazi state charged with control of the film industry, which marked the official exclusion of Jews and foreigners from employment in the German film industry. As part of the process of Gleichschaltung all film production in Germany was subordinate to the Reichsfilmkammer, which was directly responsible to Goebbel's Propaganda ministry, and all those employed in the industry had to be members of the Reichsfachschaft Film. "Non-Aryan" film professionals and those whose politics or personal life were unacceptable to the Nazis were excluded from the Reichsfachschaft and thus denied employment in the industry. Some 3,000 individuals were affected by this employment ban. In addition, as journalists were also organised as a division of the Propaganda Ministry, Goebbels was able to abolish film criticism in 1936 and replace it with Filmbeobachtung (film observation); journalists could only report on the content of a film, not offer judgement on its artistic or other worth.

With the German film industry now effectively an arm of the totalitarian state, no films could be made that were not ostensibly in accord with the views of the ruling regime. However, despite the existence of anti-semitic propaganda works such as The Eternal Jew (1940)—which was a box-office flop—and the more sophisticated but equally anti-semitic Jud Süß (1940), which achieved commercial success at home and elsewhere in Europe, the majority of German films from the National Socialist period were intended principally as works of entertainment. The import of foreign films was legally restricted after 1936 and the German industry, which was effectively nationalised in 1937, had to make up for the missing foreign films (above all American productions). Entertainment also became increasingly important in the later years of World War II when the cinema provided a distraction from Allied bombing and a string of German defeats. In both 1943 and 1944 cinema admissions in Germany exceeded a billion,[21] and the biggest box office hits of the war years were Die große Liebe (1942) and Wunschkonzert (1941), which both combine elements of the musical, wartime romance and patriotic propaganda, Frauen sind doch bessere Diplomaten (1941), a comic musical which was one of the earliest German films in colour, and Vienna Blood (1942), the adaptation of a Johann Strauß comic operetta. Titanic (1943) was another big-budget epic that arguably inspired other films about the ill-fated ocean liner.[22] The importance of the cinema as a tool of the state, both for its propaganda value and its ability to keep the populace entertained, can be seen in the filming history of Veit Harlan's Kolberg (1945), the most expensive film of the Nazi era, for the shooting of which tens of thousands of soldiers were diverted from their military positions to appear as extras.

Despite the emigration of many film-makers and the political restrictions, the period was not without technical and aesthetic innovations, the introduction of Agfacolor film production being a notable example. Technical and aesthetic achievement could also be turned to the specific ends of the Nazi state, most spectacularly in the work of Leni Riefenstahl. Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will (1935), documenting the 1934 Nuremberg Rally, and Olympia (1938), documenting the 1936 Summer Olympics, pioneered techniques of camera movement and editing that have influenced many later films. Both films, particularly Triumph of the Will, remain highly controversial, as their aesthetic merit is inseparable from their propagandising of Nazi ideals.

1945–1989 East Germany edit

East German cinema initially profited from the fact that much of the country's film infrastructure, notably the former UFA studios, lay in the Soviet occupation zone which enabled film production to get off the ground more quickly than in the Western sectors.[23] The authorities in the Soviet Zone were keen to re-establish the film industry in their sector and an order was issued to re-open cinemas in Berlin in May 1945 within three weeks of German capitulation.[24] The film production company DEFA was founded on 17 May 1946, and took control of the film production facilities in the Soviet Zone which had been confiscated by order of the Soviet Military Administration in Germany in October 1945.[25] A joint-stock company on paper, the majority interest in DEFA was actually held by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) which became the ruling party of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) after 1949, formally placing DEFA as the state-owned monopoly for film production in East Germany.[26] A sister "company", Progress Film, had also been established as a similar monopoly for domestic film distribution, its principal "competition" being Sovexportfilm, which handled distribution of Soviet films.[27]

In total, DEFA produced some 900 feature films during its existence as well as around 800 animated films and over 3000 documentaries and short films.[23][28] In its early years, production was limited due to strict controls imposed by the authorities which restricted the subject-matter of films to topics that directly contributed to the Communist project of the state. Excluding newsreels and educational films, only 50 films were produced between 1948 and 1953.[citation needed] However, in later years numerous films were produced on a variety of themes. DEFA had particular strengths in children's films, notably fairy tale adaptations such as Drei Haselnüsse für Aschenbrödel (Three Hazelnuts for Cinderella) (1973),[29] but it also attempted other genre works: science-fiction, for example Der schweigende Stern (The Silent Star) (1960),[30] an adaptation of a Stanisław Lem novel, or "red westerns" such as The Sons of the Great Mother Bear (1966)[31] in which, in contrast to the typical American western, the heroes tended to be Native Americans. Many of these genre films were co-productions with other Warsaw Pact countries.

Notable non-genre films produced by DEFA include Wolfgang Staudte's adaptation of Heinrich Mann's Der Untertan (1951); Konrad Wolf's Der geteilte Himmel (Divided Heaven) (1964), an adaptation of Christa Wolf's novel; Frank Beyer's adaptation of Jurek Becker's Jacob the Liar (1975), the only East German film to be nominated for an Oscar;[32] The Legend of Paul and Paula (1973), directed by Heiner Carow from Ulrich Plenzdorf's novel; and Solo Sunny (1980), again the work of Konrad Wolf.

However, film-making in the GDR was always constrained and oriented by the political situation in the country at any given time. Ernst Thälmann, the communist leader in the Weimar period, was the subject of several hagiographical films in the 1950s (Ernst Thälmann, 1954), and although East German filmmaking moved away from this overtly Stalinist approach in the 1960s,[33] filmmakers were still subject to the changing political positions, and indeed the whims, of the SED leadership. For example, DEFA's full slate of contemporary films from 1966 were denied distribution, among them Frank Beyer's Traces of Stones (1966) which was pulled from distribution after three days, not because it was antipathetic to communist principles, but because it showed that such principles, which it fostered, were not put into practice at all times in East Germany.[34] The huge box-office hit The Legend of Paul and Paula was initially threatened with a distribution ban because of its satirical elements and supposedly only allowed a release on the say-so of Party General Secretary Erich Honecker.[citation needed]

In the late 1970s, numerous film-makers left the GDR for the West as a result of restrictions on their work, among them director Egon Günther and actors Angelica Domröse, Eva-Maria Hagen, Katharina Thalbach, Hilmar Thate, Manfred Krug and Armin Mueller-Stahl. Many had been signatories of a 1976 petition opposing the expatriation of socially critical singer-songwriter Wolf Biermann and had had their ability to work restricted as a result.[35]

In the final years of the GDR, the availability of television and the programming and films on television broadcasts reaching into the GDR via the uncontrollable airwaves, reduced the influence of DEFA productions, although its continuing role in producing shows for East German television channel remained.[citation needed] Following the Wende, DEFA had ceased production altogether, and its studios and equipment was sold off by the Treuhand in 1992, but its intellectual property rights were handed to the charitable DEFA-Stiftung (DEFA Foundation) which exploits these rights in conjunction with a series of private companies, especially the quickly privatized Progress Film GmbH, which has issued several East German films with English subtitles since the mid-1990s.[25][27]

1945–1989 West Germany edit

1945–1960 Reconstruction edit

The occupation and reconstruction of Germany by the Four Powers in the period immediately after the end of World War II brought a major and long-lasting change to the economic conditions under which the industry in Germany had previously operated. The holdings of Ufa were confiscated by the Allies and, as part of the process of decartelisation, licences to produce films were shared between a range of much smaller companies. In addition, the Occupation Statute of 1949, which granted partial independence to the newly created Federal Republic of Germany, specifically forbade the imposition of import quotas to protect German film production from foreign competition, the result of lobbying by the American industry as represented by the MPAA.

Amidst the devastation of the Stunde Null year of 1945 cinema attendance was unsurprisingly down to a fraction of its wartime heights, but already by the end of the decade it had reached levels that exceeded the pre-war period.[21] For the first time in many years, German audiences had free access to cinema from around the world and in this period the films of Charlie Chaplin remained popular, as were melodramas from the United States. Nonetheless, the share of the film market for German films in this period and into the 1950s remained relatively large, taking up some 40 percent of the total market. American films took up around 30 percent of the market despite having around twice as many films in distribution as the German industry in the same time frame.[36]

Many of the German films of the immediate post-war period can be characterised as belonging to the genre of the Trümmerfilm (literally "rubble film"). These films show strong affinities with the work of Italian neorealists, not least Roberto Rossellini's neorealist trilogy which included Germany Year Zero (1948), and are concerned primarily with day-to-day life in the devastated Germany and an initial reaction to the events of the Nazi period (the full horror of which was first experienced by many in documentary footage from liberated concentration camps). Such films include Wolfgang Staudte's Die Mörder sind unter uns (The Murderers are among us) (1946), the first film made in post-war Germany (produced in the soviet sector), and Wolfgang Liebeneiner's Liebe 47 (Love 47) (1949), an adaptation of Wolfgang Borchert's play Draußen vor der Tür.

Despite the advent of a regular television service in the Federal Republic in 1952, cinema attendances continued to grow through much of the 1950s, reaching a peak of 817.5 million visits in 1956.[21] The majority of the films of this period set out to do no more than entertain the audience and had few pretensions to artistry or active engagement with social issues. The defining genre of the period was arguably the Heimatfilm ("homeland film"), in which morally simplistic tales of love and family were played out in a rural setting, often in the mountains of Bavaria, Austria or Switzerland. In their day Heimatfilms were of little interest to more scholarly film critics, but in recent years they have been the subject of study in relation to what they say about the culture of West Germany in the years of the Wirtschaftswunder. Other film genres typical of this period were adaptations of operettas, hospital melodramas, comedies and musicals. Many films were remakes of earlier Ufa productions.

Rearmament and the founding of the Bundeswehr in 1955 brought with it a wave of war films which tended to depict the ordinary German soldiers of World War II as brave and apolitical.[37] The Israeli historian Omer Bartov wrote that German films of the 1950s showed the average German soldier as a heroic victim: noble, tough, brave, honourable, and patriotic while fighting hard in a senseless war for a regime that he did not care for.[38] The 08/15 film trilogy of 1954–55 concerns a sensitive young German soldier who would rather play the piano than fight, and who fights on the Eastern Front without understanding why; however, no mention is made of the genocidal aspects of Germany's war in East.[37] The last of the 08/15 films ends with Germany occupied by a gang of American soldiers portrayed as bubble-gum chewing, slack-jawed morons and uncultured louts, totally inferior in every respect to the heroic German soldiers shown in the 08/15 films.[37] The only exception is the Jewish American officer, who is shown as both hyper-intelligent and very unscrupulous, which Bartov noted seems to imply that the real tragedy of World War II was the Nazis did not get a chance to exterminate all of the Jews, who have now returned with Germany's defeat to once more exploit the German people.[37]

In The Doctor of Stalingrad (1958) dealing with German POWs in the Soviet Union, Germans are portrayed as more civilized, humane and intelligent than the Soviets, who are shown for the most part as Mongol savages who brutalized the German POWs.[39] One of the German POWs successfully seduces the beautiful and tough Red Army Captain Alexandra Kasalniskaya (Eva Bartok) who prefers him to the sadistic camp commandant, which as Bartov comments also is meant to show that even in defeat, German men were more sexually virile and potent than their Russian counterparts.[39] In Hunde, wollt ihr ewig leben? (Dogs, do you want to live forever?) of 1959, which deals with the Battle of Stalingrad, the focus is on celebrating the heroism of the German soldier in that battle, who are shown as valiantly holding out against overwhelming odds with no mention at all of what those soldiers were fighting for, namely National Socialist ideology or the Holocaust.[40] This period also saw a number of films that depicted the military resistance to Hitler. In Des Teufels General (The Devil's General) of 1954, a Luftwaffe general named Harras loosely modeled after Ernst Udet, appears at first to be cynical fool, but turns out to an anti-Nazi who is secretly sabotaging the German war effort by designing faulty planes.[41] Bartov commented that in this film, the German officer corps is shown as a group of fundamentally noble and civilized men who happened to be serving an evil regime made up of a small gang of gangsterish misfits totally unrepresentative of German society, which served to exculpate both the officer corps and by extension Germany society.[42] Bartov wrote that no German film of the 1950s showed the deep commitment felt by many German soldiers to National Socialism, the utter ruthless way the German Army fought the war and the mindless nihilist brutality of the later Wehrmacht.[43] Bartov wrote that German film-makers liked to show the heroic last stand of the 6th Army at Stalingrad, but none has so far showed the 6th Army's massive co-operation with the Einsatzgruppen in murdering Soviet Jews in 1941.[44]

Even though there are countless film adaptations of Edgar Wallace novels worldwide, the crime films produced by the German company Rialto Film between 1959 and 1972 are the best-known of those, to the extent that they form their own subgenre known as Krimis (abbreviation for the German term "Kriminalfilm" (or "Kriminalroman"). Other Edgar Wallace adaptations in a similar style were made by the Germans Artur Brauner and Kurt Ulrich, and the British producer Harry Alan Towers.

The international significance of the West German film industry of the 1950s could no longer measure up to that of France, Italy, or Japan. German films were only rarely distributed internationally as they were perceived as provincial. International co-productions of the kind which were becoming common in France and Italy tended to be rejected by German producers (Schneider 1990:43). However a few German films and film-makers did achieve international recognition at this time, among them Bernhard Wicki's Oscar-nominated Die Brücke (The Bridge) (1959), and the actresses Hildegard Knef and Romy Schneider.

1960–1970 cinema in crisis edit

 
Klaus Kinski

In the late 1950s, the growth in cinema attendance of the preceding decade first stagnated and then went into freefall throughout the 1960s. By 1969 West German cinema attendance at 172.2 million visits per year was less than a quarter of its 1956 post-war peak.[21] As a consequence of this, numerous German production and distribution companies went out of business in the 1950s and 1960s and cinemas across the Federal Republic closed their doors; the number of screens in West Germany almost halved between the beginning and the end of the decade.[citation needed]

Initially, the crisis was perceived as a problem of overproduction. Consequently, the German film industry cut back on production. 123 German movies were produced in 1955, only 65 in 1965. However, many German film companies followed the 1960s trends of international co-productions with Italy and Spain in such genres as spaghetti westerns and Eurospy films with films shot in those nations or in Yugoslavia that featured German actors in the casts.

The roots of the problem lay deeper in changing economic and social circumstances. Average incomes in the Federal Republic rose sharply and this opened up alternative leisure activities to compete with cinema-going. At this time too, television was developing into a mass medium that could compete with the cinema. In 1953 there were only 1,000,000 sets in West Germany; by 1962 there were 7 million (Connor 1990:49) (Hoffman 1990:69).

The majority of films produced in the Federal Republic in the 1960s were genre works: westerns, especially the series of movies adapted from Karl May's popular genre novels which starred Pierre Brice as the Apache Winnetou and Lex Barker as his white blood brother Old Shatterhand; thrillers and crime films, notably a series of Edgar Wallace movies from Rialto Film in which Klaus Kinski, Heinz Drache, Karin Dor and Joachim Fuchsberger were among the regular players. The traditional Krimi films expanded into series based on German pulp fiction heroes such as Jerry Cotton played by George Nader and Kommissar X played by Tony Kendall and Brad Harris. West Germany also made several horror films including ones starring Christopher Lee. The two genres were combined in the return of Doctor Mabuse in a series of several films of the early 1960s.

At the end of the 1960s softcore sex films, both the relatively serious Aufklärungsfilme (sex education films) of Oswalt Kolle and such exploitation films as Schulmädchen-Report (Schoolgirl Report) (1970) and its successors were produced into the 1970s. Such movies were commercially successful and often enjoyed international distribution, but won little acclaim from critics.

1960–1980 New German Cinema edit

In the 1960s more than three-quarters of the regular cinema audience were lost as consequence of the rising popularity of TV sets at home. As a reaction to the artistic and economic stagnation of German cinema, a group of young film-makers issued the Oberhausen Manifesto on 28 February 1962. This call to arms, which included Alexander Kluge, Edgar Reitz, Peter Schamoni and Franz-Josef Spieker among its signatories, provocatively declared "Der alte Film ist tot. Wir glauben an den neuen" ("The old cinema is dead. We believe in the new cinema"). Other up-and-coming filmmakers allied themselves to this Oberhausen group, among them Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Volker Schlöndorff, Werner Herzog, Jean-Marie Straub, Wim Wenders, Werner Schroeter and Hans-Jürgen Syberberg in their rejection of the existing German film industry and their determination to build a new cinema founded on artistic and social measures rather than commercial success. Most of these directors organized themselves in, or partially co-operated with, the film production and distribution company Filmverlag der Autoren established in 1971, which throughout the 1970s brought forth a number of critically acclaimed films. Rosa von Praunheim, who formed the German lesbian and gay movement with his film It Is Not the Homosexual Who Is Perverse, But the Society in Which He Lives (1971), also plays an important role.[45]

Despite the foundation of the Kuratorium Junger Deutscher Film (Young German Film Committee) in 1965, set up under the auspices of the Federal Ministry of the Interior to support new German films financially, the directors of this New German Cinema were consequently often dependent on money from television. Young filmmakers had the opportunity to test their mettle in such programmes as the stand-alone drama and documentary series Das kleine Fernsehspiel (The Little TV Play) or the television films of the crime series Tatort. However, the broadcasters sought TV premieres for the films which they had supported financially, with theatrical showings only occurring later. As a consequence, such films tended to be unsuccessful at the box office.

This situation changed after 1974 when the Film-Fernseh-Abkommen (Film and Television Accord) was agreed between the Federal Republic's main broadcasters, ARD and ZDF, and the German Federal Film Board (a government body created in 1968 to support film-making in Germany).[46] This accord, which has been repeatedly extended up to the present day, provides for the television companies to make available an annual sum to support the production of films which are suitable for both theatrical distribution and television presentation. (The amount of money provided by the public broadcasters has varied between 4.5 and 12.94 million euros per year. Under the terms of the accord, films produced using these funds can only be screened on television 24 months after their theatrical release. They may appear on video or DVD no sooner than six months after cinema release. Nevertheless, the New German Cinema found it difficult to attract a large domestic or international audience.

The socially critical films of the New German Cinema strove to delineate themselves from what had gone before and the works of auteur film-makers such as Kluge and Fassbinder are examples of this, although Fassbinder in his use of stars from German cinema history also sought a reconciliation between the new cinema and the old. In addition, a distinction is sometimes drawn between the avantgarde "Young German Cinema" of the 1960s and the more accessible "New German Cinema" of the 1970s. For their influences the new generation of film-makers looked to Italian neorealism, the French Nouvelle Vague and the British New Wave but combined this eclectically with references to the well-established genres of Hollywood cinema. The New German Cinema dealt with contemporary German social problems in a direct way; the Nazi past, the plight of the Gastarbeiter ("guest workers"), and modern social developments, were all subjects prominent in New German Cinema films.[47]

Films such as Kluge's Abschied von Gestern (1966), Herzog's Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972), Fassbinder's Fear Eats the Soul (1974) and The Marriage of Maria Braun (1979), and Wenders' Paris, Texas (1984) found critical approval. Often the work of these auteurs was first recognised abroad rather than in Germany itself. The work of post-war Germany's leading novelists Heinrich Böll and Günter Grass provided source material for the adaptations The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum (1975) (by Schlöndorff and Margarethe von Trotta) and The Tin Drum (1979) (by Schlöndorff alone) respectively, the latter becoming the first German film to win the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The New German Cinema also allowed for female directors to come to the fore and for the development of a feminist cinema which encompassed the works of directors such as Margarethe von Trotta, Helma Sanders-Brahms, Jutta Brückner, Helke Sander and Cristina Perincioli.

German production companies have been quite commonly involved in expensive French and Italian productions from Spaghetti Westerns to French comic book adaptations.

1980–1989 popular productions edit

 
Bernd Eichinger "star" at the Boulevard of Stars in Berlin

Having achieved some of its goals, among them the establishment of state funding for the film industry and renewed international recognition for German films, the New German Cinema had begun to show signs of fatigue by the 1980s, even though many of its proponents continued to enjoy individual success.

Among the commercial successes for German films of the 1980s were the Otto film series beginning in 1985 starring comedian Otto Waalkes, Wolfgang Petersen's adaptation of The NeverEnding Story (1984), and the internationally successful Das Boot (1981), which still holds the record for most Academy Award nominations for a German film (six). Other notable film-makers who came to prominence in the 1980s include producer Bernd Eichinger and directors Doris Dörrie, Uli Edel, and Loriot.

Away from the mainstream, the splatter film director Jörg Buttgereit came to prominence in the 1980s. The development of arthouse cinemas (Programmkinos) from the 1970s onwards provided a venue for the works of less mainstream film-makers like Herbert Achternbusch, Hark Bohm, Dominik Graf, Oliver Herbrich, Rosa von Praunheim or Christoph Schlingensief.

From the mid-1980s the spread of videocassette recorders and the arrival of private TV channels such as RTL Television provided new competition for theatrical film distribution. Cinema attendance, having rallied slightly in the late 1970s after an all-time low of 115.1 million visits in 1976, dropped sharply again from the mid-1980s to end at just 101.6 million visits in 1989.[21] However, the availability of a back catalogue of films on video also allowed for a different relationship between the viewer and an individual film, while private TV channels brought new money into the film industry and provided a launch pad from which new talent could later move into film.

1990–Modern Germany edit

 
John Rabe (2009), directed by Florian Gallenberger, filming on location in Shanghai harbour

Today's biggest German production studios include Babelsberg Studio, Bavaria Film, Constantin Film and UFA. Film releases such as Run Lola Run by Tom Tykwer, Good Bye Lenin! by Wolfgang Becker, Head-On by Fatih Akin, Perfume by Tom Tykwer and The Lives of Others by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, have arguably managed to recapture a provocative and innovative nature. Movies like The Baader Meinhof Complex produced by Bernd Eichinger achieved some popular success.

Notable directors working in German currently include Sönke Wortmann, Caroline Link (winner of an Academy Award), Romuald Karmakar, Dani Levy, Hans-Christian Schmid, Andreas Dresen, Dennis Gansel and Uli Edel as well as comedy directors Michael Herbig and Til Schweiger.

Internationally, German filmmakers such as Roland Emmerich or Wolfgang Petersen or Uwe Boll built successful careers as directors and producers. Hans Zimmer, a film composer, has become one of the world's most acclaimed producers of movie scores. Michael Ballhaus became a renowned cinematographer.

Germany has a long tradition of cooperation with the European-based film industry, which started as early as during the 1960s. Since 1990 the number of international projects financed and co-produced by German filmmakers has expanded.

The new millennium since 2000 has seen a general resurgence of the German film industry, with a higher output and improved returns at the German box office.

The collapse of the GDR had a large effect on the German cinema industry. The viewer count increased with the new population's access to western movies. The movies produced in the United States were the most popular, due to the fact that the market was dominated by them and the production was more advanced than Germany's. Some other genres that were popular consisted of Romantic Comedies, and Social Commentaries. Wolfgang Petersen and Roland Emmerich both established international success.

Internationally though, German productions are widely unknown and unsuccessful. Even domestically, the German movies hold only a market share of about 20–25%. The movie culture is recognized to be underfunded, problem laden and rather inward looking. Since its golden age in the 1920s, the German film industry has never regained the technical excellence, the star system appeal, or the popular narratives suitable for a German, European or global audience.[48]

Film funding edit

The main production incentive provided by governmental authorities is the Deutscher Filmförderfonds (DFFF) (German Federal Film Fund). The DFFF is a grant given by the Staatsministerin für Kultur und Medien (Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media). To receive the grant a producer has to fulfill different requirements including a cultural eligibility test. The fund offers 50 million euros a year to film producers and or co-producers and grants can amount to up to 20% of the approved German production costs. At least 25% the production costs must be spent in Germany, or only 20%, if the production costs are higher than 20 million euros. The DFFF has been established in 2007 and supported projects in all categories and genres.

In 2015, the Deutsche Filmförderungsfond was reduced from 60 million euros to 50 million euros. To compensate, Finance minister Gabriel announced that the difference will be made up from the budget of the Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Klimaschutz (Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action).[49][50] For the first time in Germany high-profile tv series and digital filmmaking will be funded at a federal level in the same manner as feature films.[51] Funding is also increasingly flowing to international co-productions.

In 1979, the German states also began to establish funding institutions, often with the intention of supporting their own production locations. Today, film funding by the federal states makes up the largest share of film funding in Germany. A total of more than 200 million euros in grants are distributed annually, with an upward trend.

The history of film funding began in Germany with the founding of the UFA GmbH (1917), which was to produce pro-German propaganda films - equipped with funds from industry and banks. During the period of National Socialism (1933-1945), the state indirectly promoted the financing of film projects by establishing the Filmkreditbank GmbH (FKB) (Film Credit Bank).

After the end of World War II, many feature films were initially supported by federal guarantees. However, film funding in its current form did not develop until the 1950s, when television began to supplant motion pictures. In 1967, a film funding law was passed for the first time. The Berlin-based Filmförderungsanstalt (FFA) (Film Funding Agency) was the first major funding institution to be founded in 1968.

Critics accuse film funding in Germany of being institutionally fragmented, making it virtually impossible to coordinate all measures, which would ultimately benefit the quality of productions. They also say that a blanket distribution of grants stifles the incentive to produce films that recoup their production costs.

Film funding institutions edit

Film funding in Germany is provided, among others, by the following institutions:

Federal edit

  • Deutscher Filmförderfonds (DFFF) (German Federal Film Fund) of the Beauftragten der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien (Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media)
  • Filmförderungsanstalt (FFA) (Film Funding Agency), since 1968
  • Kuratorium junger deutscher Film (Board of Trustees for Young German Film)

Regional edit

Lokal:

Festival edit

 
The Berlin International Film Festival, also known as Berlinale

The Berlin International Film Festival, also called Berlinale, is one of the world's leading film festivals and most reputable media events.[52] It is held in Berlin, Germany.[53] Founded in West Berlin in 1951, the festival has been celebrated annually in February since 1978. With 274,000 tickets sold and 487,000 admissions it is considered the largest publicly attended film festival worldwide.[54][55] Up to 400 films are shown in several sections, representing a comprehensive array of the cinematic world. Around twenty films compete for the awards called the Golden and Silver Bears. Since 2001 the director of the festival has been Dieter Kosslick.[56][57]

The festival, the EFM and other satellite events are attended by around 20,000 professionals from over 130 countries.[58] More than 4200 journalists are responsible for the media exposure in over 110 countries.[59] At high-profile feature film premieres, movie stars and celebrities are present at the red carpet.[60]

German Film Academy edit

The Deutsche Filmakademie was founded in 2003 in Berlin and aims to provide native filmmakers a forum for discussion and a way to promote the reputation of German cinema through publications, presentations, discussions and regular promotion of the subject in the schools.

Awards edit

Since 2005, the winners of the Deutscher Filmpreis, also known as the Lolas are elected by the members of the Deutsche Filmakademie. With a cash prize of three million euros it is the most highly endowed German cultural award.

Year English title Original title Director(s)
2005 Go for Zucker Alles auf Zucker! Dani Levy
2006 The Lives of Others Das Leben der Anderen Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
2007 Four Minutes Vier Minuten Chris Kraus
2008 The Edge of Heaven Auf der anderen Seite Fatih Akın
2009 John Rabe John Rabe Florian Gallenberger
2010 The White Ribbon Das weiße Band Michael Haneke
2011 Vincent Wants to Sea Vincent will Meer Ralf Huettner
2012 Stopped on Track Halt auf freier Strecke Andreas Dresen
2013 A Coffee in Berlin Oh Boy Jan-Ole Gerster
2014 Home from Home Die andere Heimat Edgar Reitz
2015 Victoria Victoria Sebastian Schipper
2016 The People vs. Fritz Bauer Der Staat gegen Fritz Bauer Lars Kraume

Film schools edit

 
University of Television and Film Munich

Several institutions, both government run and private, provide formal education in various aspects of filmmaking.

Personalities edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Kinoergebnisse". www.ffa.de (in German). FFA Filmförderungsanstalt. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  2. ^ . UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 24 December 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  3. ^ . UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 24 December 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  4. ^ . UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 26 December 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  5. ^ Pam Cook (2007). The Cinema Book. London: British Film Institute. p. 207. ISBN 978-1-84457-192-5.
  6. ^ Brockmann, Stephen (2010). A Critical History of German Film. Camden House. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-57113-468-4.
  7. ^ Brockmann, Stephen (2010). A Critical History of German Film. Camden House. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-57113-468-4.
  8. ^ a b Brockmann, Stephen (2010). A Critical History of German Film. Camden House. p. 18. ISBN 978-1-57113-468-4.
  9. ^ Brockmann, Stephen (2010). A Critical History of German Film. Camden House. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-57113-468-4.
  10. ^ a b c Rogowski, Christian (2010). The Many Faces of Weimar Cinema. Rochester, New York: Camden House. pp. Xi-12. ISBN 978-1-57113-532-2.
  11. ^ "Restrict German Imports". Motion Picture News. XXIII (21): 3027. 14 May 1921.
  12. ^ a b c The New Encyclopædia Britannica, Macropedia – Volume 24 – Motion Pictures. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. 2010. pp. 376–378.
  13. ^ SciFi Film History – Metropolis (1927) 10 October 2017 at the Wayback MachineAlthough the first science fiction film is generally agreed to be Georges Méliès' A Trip to the Moon (1902), Metropolis (1926) is the first feature length outing of the genre. (scififilmhistory.com, retrieved 15 May 2013)
  14. ^ Brockmann, Stephen (2010). A Critical History of German Film. Camden House. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-57113-468-4.
  15. ^ Dawsey, Jason (3 November 2021). "Adolf Hitler and the Origins of the Berlin-Tokyo Axis". The National WWII Museum. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  16. ^ a b Hayward, Susan (2000). Cinema Studies: The Key Concepts. New York, NY: Routledge – Taylor & Francis. pp. 175–178. ISBN 0-415-22739-9.
  17. ^ Shapira, Avner (20 December 2010). "Going Into the Night – New Look at Early German Cinema by Ofer Ashkenazi". Haaretz.
  18. ^ Kiss, Robert (2002). "Queer Traditions in German Cinema". In Bergfelder, Tim; Carter, Erica; Goektuerk, Deniz (eds.). The German Cinema Book. British Film Institute. p. 48. ISBN 0-85170-946-X.
  19. ^ Stiasny, Philipp (2010). "Humanity Unleashed: Anti-Bolshevism as Popular Culture in Early Weimar Cinema" in The Many Faces of Weimar Cinema (Edited by Christian Rogowski). Rochester, New York: Camden House. pp. 48–66. ISBN 978-1-57113-532-2.
  20. ^ Bordwell, David and Thompson, Kristen. (2003) "Film History An Introduction". New York: McGraw-Hill, p.200.
  21. ^ a b c d e Kinobesuche in Deutschland 1925 bis 2004 4 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Spitzenorganisation der Filmwirtschaft e. V
  22. ^ Fiebing, Malte (2012). Titanic: Nazi Germany's Version of the Disaster. BoD – Books on Demand. p. 127. ISBN 9783844815122.
  23. ^ a b Allan, Séan; Heiduschke, Sebastian (2016). Re-Imagining DEFA: East German Cinema in its National and Transnational Contexts. Berghahn Books. pp. 86–87. ISBN 9781785331077.
  24. ^ McCormack, David (2019). The Berlin 1945 Battlefield Guide: Part 2: The Battle of Berlin. Fonthill Media. p. 219. ISBN 9781781557396.
  25. ^ a b "History" (in German). DEFA-Stiftung. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  26. ^ Burry, Alexander (2016). Border Crossing: Russian Literature into Film. Edinburgh University Press. p. 257. ISBN 9781474411424.
  27. ^ a b Blankenship, Janelle; Nagl, Tobias (2015). European Visions: Small Cinemas in Transition. transcript Verlag. p. 397. ISBN 9783837618181.
  28. ^ Lewis, Derek; Zitzlsperger, Ulrike (2016). Historical Dictionary of Contemporary Germany. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 174. ISBN 9781442269569.
  29. ^ "Three Hazelnuts for Cinderella". DEFA Film Library. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  30. ^ "The Silent Star". DEFA Film Library. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  31. ^ . www.progress-film.de (in German). Archived from the original on 14 November 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  32. ^ Bergan, Ronald (10 October 2006). "Obituary: Frank Beyer". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  33. ^ Allan, Seán; Sandford, John (1999). DEFA: East German Cinema, 1946–1992. p. 9. ISBN 1571819436.
  34. ^ Brockmann, Stephen (2010). A critical history of German film. Camden House. p. 266. ISBN 9781571134684.
  35. ^ Leeder, Karen (2016). Rereading East Germany: The Literature and Film of the GDR. Cambridge University Press. p. 81. ISBN 9781107006362.
  36. ^ Schneider 1990:35, 42 & 44
  37. ^ a b c d Bartov, Omer "Celluloid Soldiers: Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht" pages 130–143 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica & Mark Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 page 136.
  38. ^ Bartov, Omer "Celluloid Soldiers: Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht" pages 130–143 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica & Mark Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 pages 134–135.
  39. ^ a b Bartov, Omer "Celluloid Soldiers: Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht" pages 130–143 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica & Mark Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 page 137.
  40. ^ Bartov, Omer "Celluloid Soldiers: Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht" pages 130–143 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica & Mark Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 page 138.
  41. ^ Bartov, Omer "Celluloid Soldiers: Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht" pages 130–143 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica & Mark Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 pages 132–133.
  42. ^ Bartov, Omer "Celluloid Soldiers: Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht" pages 130–143 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica & Mark Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 page 133
  43. ^ Bartov, Omer "Celluloid Soldiers: Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht" pages 130–143 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica & Mark Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 page 135.
  44. ^ Bartov, Omer "Celluloid Soldiers: Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht" pages 130–143 from Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica & Mark Erickson, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 page 139.
  45. ^ "Germany's most famous gay rights activist: Rosa von Praunheim". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  46. ^ "Information on the Filmförderungsanstalt (FFA) – German Federal Film Board".
  47. ^ Julia, Knight (2004). New German Cinema: Images of a Generation. Wallflower Press. pp. 45–6. ISBN 978-1-903364-28-4.
  48. ^ Does German film have a future?, Exberliner, retrieved 6 July 2016
  49. ^ "Gabriel puscht die Filmindustrie". Handelsblatt (in German). 11 December 2014. Retrieved 11 April 2015.
  50. ^ "Allianz Deutscher Produzenten – Film & Fernsehen e.V." Produzentenallianz (in German). Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  51. ^ GERMAN MOTION PICTURE FUND 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine (PDF), 8 March 2016
  52. ^ 2010 Berlin Film Festival. The Hollywood Reporter 31 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  53. ^ China film wins top Berlin award, BBC News
  54. ^ Most frequented film festivals 18 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine, filmfestivals.com
  55. ^ Facts and Figures of the Berlinale, berlinale.com
  56. ^ Dieter Kosslick at IMDb, 18 February 2008
  57. ^ Speed Interview with Dieter Kosslick Berlinale Chief, filmfestivalstv.com, 18 February 2008
  58. ^ 2009 Berlinale Press release, berlinale.de, 18. February 2008
  59. ^ Kosslick zieht positive Berlinale-Bilanz 17 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine(German), PR-inside.com
  60. ^ Madonna at the Berlinale, YouTube, 19 February 2008

Further reading edit

  • Bergfelder, Tim, et al. eds. The German Cinema Book (2008)
  • Blaney, Martin. Symbiosis or Confrontation? (Bonn, 1992)
  • Brockman, Stephen. A Critical History of German Film (2011)
  • Feinstein, Joshua. Triumph of the Ordinary: Depictions of Daily Life in the East German Cinema, 1949–1989 (chapel Hill, 2002)
  • Garncarz, Joseph, and Annemone Ligensa, eds. The Cinema of Germany (Wallflower Press, distributed by Columbia University Press; 2012) 264 pages; analyses of 24 works from silent movies to such contemporary films as "Good Bye, Lenin!"
  • Hake, Sabine. German National Cinema (2002; 2nd ed. 2008)
  • Heiduschke, Sebastian. East German Cinema: DEFA and Film History (2013)
  • Hoffman, Kay 1990 Am Ende Video – Video am Ende? Berlin
  • Kapczynski, Jennifer M. and Michael D. Richardson, eds. (2012) A New History of German Cinema (Rochester Camden House, 2012) 673 pp. online review
  • Kracauer, Siegfried. (2004) From Caligari to Hitler: A Psychological History of the German Film. Princeton: Univ. of Princeton Press. ISBN 0-691-11519-2
  • Schneider, Irmela 1990 Film, Fernsehen & Co. Heidelberg.
  • Stielke, Sebastian. 100 Facts about Babelsberg – Cradle of Film and modern Media City (German/English). Bebra-Verlag (publishing house), Berlin 2021, 240 pages, ISBN 978-3-86124-746-3
  • Fay, Jennifer. 2008. Theaters of Occupation: Hollywood and the Reeducation of Postwar Germany. Minneapolis: Univ. of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-4745-3

External links edit

  • Articles and news on German filmmakers, movies, festivals, Web portal on German film of the Goethe-Institut

cinema, germany, film, industry, germany, traced, back, late, 19th, century, german, cinema, made, major, technical, artistic, contributions, early, film, broadcasting, television, technology, babelsberg, became, household, synonym, early, 20th, century, film,. The film industry in Germany can be traced back to the late 19th century German cinema made major technical and artistic contributions to early film broadcasting and television technology Babelsberg became a household synonym for the early 20th century film industry in Europe similar to Hollywood later Cinema of GermanyNo of screens4 803 2017 1 Per capita6 2 per 100 000 2011 2 Main distributorsWarner 19 5 Walt Disney 11 5 Sony Pictures 11 1 3 Produced feature films 2011 4 Fictional128 60 4 Animated5 2 4 Documentary79 37 3 Number of admissions 2017 1 Total122 305 182 Per capita1 48 2017 National films28 300 000 23 1 Gross box office 2017 1 Total 1 06 billionGermany witnessed major changes to its identity during the 20th and 21st century Those changes determined the periodisation of national cinema into a succession of distinct eras and movements 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 1895 1918 German Empire 1 2 1918 1933 Weimar Republic 1 3 1933 1945 Nazi Germany 1 4 1945 1989 East Germany 1 5 1945 1989 West Germany 1 5 1 1945 1960 Reconstruction 1 5 2 1960 1970 cinema in crisis 1 5 3 1960 1980 New German Cinema 1 5 4 1980 1989 popular productions 1 6 1990 Modern Germany 2 Film funding 2 1 Film funding institutions 2 1 1 Federal 2 1 2 Regional 3 Festival 4 German Film Academy 4 1 Awards 5 Film schools 6 Personalities 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory edit1895 1918 German Empire edit nbsp The Berlin Wintergarten theatre here in 1940 was the site of the first cinema screening ever with 8 short films presented by the Skladanowsky brothers on 1 November 1895 The history of cinema in Germany can be traced back to the years shortly after the medium s birth On 1 November 1895 Max Skladanowsky and his brother Emil demonstrated their self invented film projector the Bioscop at the Wintergarten music hall in Berlin A 15 minute series of eight short films were shown the first screening of films to a paying audience 6 This performance pre dated the first paying public display of the Lumiere brothers Cinematographe in Paris on 28 December of the same year a performance that Max Skladanowsky attended and at which he was able to ascertain that the Cinematographe was technically superior to his Bioscop Other German film pioneers included the Berliners Oskar Messter and Max Gliewe two of several individuals who independently in 1896 first used a Geneva drive which allows the film to be advanced intermittently one frame at a time in a projector and the cinematographer Guido Seeber In its earliest days the cinematograph was perceived as an attraction for upper class audiences but the novelty of moving pictures did not last long Soon trivial short films were being shown as fairground attractions aimed at the working class and lower middle class The booths in which these films were shown were known in Germany somewhat disparagingly as Kintopps Film makers with an artistic bent attempted to counter this view of cinema with longer films based on literary models and the first German artistic films began to be produced from around 1910 an example being the Edgar Allan Poe adaptation The Student of Prague 1913 which was co directed by Paul Wegener and Stellan Rye photographed by Guido Seeber and starring actors from Max Reinhardt s company nbsp The Babelsberg Studio near Berlin was the first large scale film studio in the world founded 1912 and the forerunner to Hollywood It still produces global blockbusters every year Early film theorists in Germany began to write about the significance of Schaulust or visual pleasure for the audience including the Dada movement writer Walter Serner If one looks to where cinema receives its ultimate power into these strangely flickering eyes that point far back into human history suddenly it stands there in all its massiveness visual pleasure 7 Visually striking sets and makeup were key to the style of the expressionist films that were produced shortly after the First World War Cinemas themselves began to be established landmarks in the years immediately before World War I Before this German filmmakers would tour with their works travelling from fairground to fairground The earliest ongoing cinemas were set up in cafes and pubs by owners who saw a way of attracting more customers The storefront cinema was called a Kientopp and this is where films were viewed for the most part before the First World War broke out 8 The first standalone dedicated cinema in Germany was opened in Mannheim in 1906 and by 1910 there were over 1000 cinemas operating in Germany 8 Henny Porten and Asta Nielsen the latter originally from Denmark were the first major film stars in Germany 9 Prior to 1914 however many foreign films were imported In the era of the silent film there were no language boundaries and Danish and Italian films were particularly popular in Germany The public s desire to see more films with particular actors led to the development in Germany as elsewhere of the phenomenon of the film star the actress Henny Porten was one of the earliest German stars Public desire to see popular film stories being continued encouraged the production of film serials especially in the genre of mystery films which is where the director Fritz Lang began his illustrious career The outbreak of World War I and the subsequent boycott of for example French films left a noticeable gap in the market By 1916 there already existed some 2000 fixed venues for movie performances and initially film screenings were supplemented or even replaced by variety turns In 1917 a process of concentration and partial nationalisation of the German film industry began with the founding of Universum Film AG UFA which was partly a reaction to the very effective use that the Allied Powers had found for the new medium for the purpose of propaganda Under the aegis of the military so called Vaterland films were produced which equalled the Allies films in the matter of propaganda and disparagement of the enemy Audiences however did not care to swallow the patriotic medicine without the accompanying sugar of the light entertainment films which consequently Ufa also promoted The German film industry soon became the largest in Europe 1918 1933 Weimar Republic edit nbsp UFA Studios in Berlin Tempelhof 1920The German film industry which was protected during the war by the ban on foreign films import became exposed at the end of the war to the international film industry while having to face an embargo this time on its own films Many countries banned the import of German films and audiences themselves were resisting anything that was German 10 But the ban imposed on German films involved commercial considerations as well as an American president of one of the film companies was quoted an influx of such films in the United States would throw thousands of our own out of work because it would be absolutely impossible for the American producers to compete with the German producers 11 At home the German film industry confronted an unstable economic situation and the devaluation of the currency made it difficult for the smaller production companies to function Film industry financing was a fragile business and expensive productions occasionally led to bankruptcy In 1925 UFA itself was forced to go into a disadvantageous partnership called Parufamet with the American studios Paramount and MGM before being taken over by the nationalist industrialist and newspaper owner Alfred Hugenberg in 1927 12 nbsp 1927 s Metropolis by Fritz Lang was the first feature length science fiction film in history 13 It was produced at Studio Babelsberg Germany Nevertheless the German film industry enjoyed an unprecedented development during the 14 years which comprise the Weimar period an average of 250 film were being produced each year a total of 3 500 full feature films 10 Apart from UFA about 230 film companies were active in Berlin alone This industry was attracting producers and directors from all over Europe The fact that the films were silent and language was not a factor enabled even foreign actors like the Danish film star Asta Nielsen or the American Louise Brooks to be hired even for leading roles This period can also be noted for new technological developments in film making and experimentation in set design and lighting led by UFA Babelsberg Studio which was incorporated into UFA expanded massively and gave the German film industry a highly developed infrastructure Babelsberg remained the centre of German filmmaking for many years became the largest film studio in Europe and produced most of the films in this golden era of German cinema 12 In essence it was the German equivalent to Hollywood 14 Films about an exaggerated version of Japanese culture that included geishas samurai and Shinto shrines were popular in Germany during this era 15 Due to the unstable economic condition and in an attempt to deal with modest production budgets filmmakers were trying to reach the largest audience possible and in that to maximize their revenues This led to films being made in a vast array of genres and styles 10 nbsp The Cabinet of Dr Caligari 1920 directed by Robert WieneOne of the main film genres associated with the Weimar Republic cinema is German Expressionism which was inspired by the expressionist movement in art Expressionist movies relied heavily on symbolism and artistic imagery rather than stark realism to tell their stories Given the grim mood in post World War I it was not surprising that these films focused heavily on crime and horror The film usually credited with sparking the popularity of expressionism is Robert Wiene s The Cabinet of Dr Caligari 1920 produced by Erich Pommer The film tells the story of a demented hypnotist who is using a sleepwalker to perform a series of murders The film featured a dark and twisted visual style the set was unrealistic with geometric images painted on the floor and shapes in light and shadow cast on walls the acting was exaggerated and the costumes bizarre These stylistic elements became trademarks of this cinematic movement Other notable works of Expressionism are Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau s Nosferatu 1922 a classic period piece horror film that remains the first feature length film adaptation of Bram Stoker s Dracula Carl Boese and Paul Wegener s The Golem How He Came Into the World 1920 a Gothic retelling of the Jewish folktale and Metropolis 1927 a legendary science fiction epic directed by Fritz Lang The Expressionist movement began to wane during the mid 1920s but perhaps the fact that its main creators moved to Hollywood California allowed this style to remain influential in world cinema for years to come particularly in American horror films and film noir and in the works of European directors such as Jean Cocteau and Ingmar Bergman 16 Despite its significance expressionist cinema was not the dominant genre of this era 16 Many other genres such as period dramas melodramas romantic comedies and films of social and political nature were much more prevalent and definitely more popular The master of period dramas was undoubtedly Ernst Lubitsch His most notable films of this genre were Madame DuBarry 1919 which portrayed the French Revolution through the eyes of the King of France s mistress and the film Anna Boleyn 1920 on the tragic end of King Henry VIII s second wife In these films Lubitsch presented prominent historic personalities who are caught up by their weaknesses and petty urges and thus ironically become responsible for huge historical events Despite modest budgets his films included extravagant scenes which were meant to appeal to a wide audience and insure a wide international distribution As the genre of expressionism began to diminish the genre of the New Objectivity die neue Sachlichkeit began to take its place It was influenced by new issues which occupied the public in those years as the rampant inflation caused deterioration in the economic status of the middle class These films often called street films or asphalt films tried to reflect reality in all its complexity and ugliness They focused on objects surrounding the characters and cynically symbolized the despair felt by the German people whose lives were shattered after the war The most prominent film maker who is associated with this genre is Georg Wilhelm Pabst in his films such as Joyless Street 1925 Pandora s Box 1929 and The Loves of Jeanne Ney 1927 Pabst is also credited with innovations in film editing such as reversing the angle of the camera or cutting between two camera angles which enhanced film continuity and later became standards of the industry 12 Pabst is also identified with another genre which branched from the New Objectivity that of social and political films These filmmakers dared to confront sensitive and controversial social issues which engaged the public in those days such as anti Semitism prostitution and homosexuality To a large extent Weimar cinema was playing a vibrant and important role by leading public debate on those issues 17 Pabst in his film Diary of a Lost Girl 1929 tells the story of a young woman who has a child out of wedlock is thrown out into the street by her family and has to resort to prostitution to survive As early as 1919 Richard Oswald s film Different from the Others portrayed a man torn between his homosexual tendencies and the moral and social conventions It is considered to be the first German film to deal with homosexuality and some researchers even believe it to be the first in the world to examine this issue explicitly 18 That same year the film Ritual Murder 1919 by Jewish film producer Max Nivelli came to the screen This film was the first to make the German public aware of the consequences of anti Semitism and xenophobia It portrayed a pogrom which is carried out against the Jewish inhabitants of a village in Tsarist Russia In the background a love story also evolves between a young Russian student and the daughter of the leader of the Jewish community something that was considered a taboo at the time Later on in an attempt to reflect the rapidly growing anti Semitic atmosphere Oswald confronted the same issue with his film Dreyfus 1930 which portrayed the 1894 political scandal of the Dreyfus affair which until today remains one of the most striking examples of miscarriage of justice and blatant anti Semitism The polarised politics of the Weimar period were also reflected in some of its films A series of patriotic films about Prussian history starring Otto Gebuhr as Frederick the Great were produced throughout the 1920s and were popular with the nationalist right wing who strongly criticised the asphalt films decadence Another dark chapter of the Weimar period was reflected in Joseph Delmont s film Humanity Unleashed 1920 The film was an adaptation of a novel by the same name written by Max Glass and published in 1919 The novel described a dark world consumed by disease and war The filmmakers decided to take the story to a more contemporary context by reflecting the growing fear among the German public of political radicalization They produced what was to become the first fictional account of the events of January 1919 in Berlin the so called Spartacist Uprising This film is also considered one of the anti Bolshevik films of that era 19 Another important film genre of the Weimar years was the Kammerspiel or chamber drama which was borrowed from the theater and developed by stage director who would later become a film producer and director himself Max Reinhardt This style was in many ways a reaction against the spectacle of expressionism and thus tended to revolve around ordinary people from the lower middle class Films of this genre were often called instinct films because they emphasized the impulses and intimate psychology of the characters The sets were kept to a minimum and there was abundant use of camera movements to add complexity to the rather intimate and simple spaces Associated with this particular style is also screenwriter Carl Mayer and films such as Murnau s Last Laugh 1924 Nature films a genre referred to as Bergfilm also became popular Most known in this category are the films by director Arnold Fanck in which individuals were shown battling against nature in the mountains Animators and directors of experimental films such as Lotte Reiniger Oskar Fischinger and Walter Ruttmann were also very active in Germany in the 1920s Ruttman s experimental documentary Berlin Symphony of a Metropolis 1927 epitomised the energy of 1920s Berlin The arrival of sound at the very end of the 1920s produced a final artistic flourish of German film before the collapse of the Weimar Republic in 1933 As early as 1918 three inventors came up with the Tri Ergon sound on film system and tried to introduce it to the industry between 1922 and 1926 UFA showed an interest but possibly due to financial difficulties never made a sound film 20 But in the late 1920s sound production and distribution were starting to be adopted by the German film industry and by 1932 Germany had 3 800 cinemas equipped to play sound films The first filmmakers who experimented with the new technology often shot the film in several versions using several soundtracks in different languages The film The Blue Angel 1930 directed by the Austrian Josef von Sternberg and produced by Erich Pommer was also shot in two versions German and English with a different supporting cast in each version It is considered to be Germany s first talkie and will always be remembered as the film that made an international superstar of its lead actress Marlene Dietrich Other notable early sound films all from 1931 include Jutzi s adaptation to Alfred Doblin s novel Berlin Alexanderplatz Pabst s Bertolt Brecht adaptation The Threepenny Opera and Lang s M as well as Hochbaum s Raid in St Pauli 1932 Brecht was also one of the creators of the explicitly communist film Kuhle Wampe 1932 which was banned soon after its release In addition to developments in the industry itself the Weimar period saw the birth of film criticism as a serious discipline whose practitioners included Rudolf Arnheim in Die Weltbuhne and in Film als Kunst 1932 Bela Balazs in Der Sichtbare Mensch 1924 Siegfried Kracauer in the Frankfurter Zeitung and Lotte H Eisner in the Filmkurier See also List of German films 1919 1933 1933 1945 Nazi Germany edit The uncertain economic and political situation in Weimar Germany had already led to a number of film makers and performers leaving the country primarily for the United States Ernst Lubitsch moved to Hollywood as early as 1923 the Hungarian born Michael Curtiz in 1926 Some 1 500 directors producers actors and other film professionals emigrated in the years after the Nazis came to power Among them were such key figures as the producer Erich Pommer the studio head of Ufa stars Marlene Dietrich and Peter Lorre and director Fritz Lang Lang s exodus to America is legendary it is said that Metropolis so greatly impressed Joseph Goebbels that he asked Lang to become the head of his propaganda film unit Lang fled to America instead where he had a long and prosperous career Many up and coming German directors also fled to the U S having a major influence on American film as a result A number of the Universal Horror films of the 1930s were directed by German emigrees including Karl Freund Joe May and Robert Siodmak Directors Edgar Ulmer and Douglas Sirk and the Austrian born screenwriter and later director Billy Wilder also emigrated from Nazi Germany to Hollywood success Not all those in the film industry threatened by the Nazi regime were able to escape the actor and director Kurt Gerron for example perished in a concentration camp nbsp The Titania Palast in Berlin Steglitz an Art Deco style movie theater opened in 1928Within weeks of the Machtergreifung Alfred Hugenberg had effectively turned over Ufa to the ends of the Nazis excluding Jews from employment in the company in March 1933 several months before the foundation in June of the Reichsfilmkammer Reich Chamber of Film the body of the Nazi state charged with control of the film industry which marked the official exclusion of Jews and foreigners from employment in the German film industry As part of the process of Gleichschaltung all film production in Germany was subordinate to the Reichsfilmkammer which was directly responsible to Goebbel s Propaganda ministry and all those employed in the industry had to be members of the Reichsfachschaft Film Non Aryan film professionals and those whose politics or personal life were unacceptable to the Nazis were excluded from the Reichsfachschaft and thus denied employment in the industry Some 3 000 individuals were affected by this employment ban In addition as journalists were also organised as a division of the Propaganda Ministry Goebbels was able to abolish film criticism in 1936 and replace it with Filmbeobachtung film observation journalists could only report on the content of a film not offer judgement on its artistic or other worth With the German film industry now effectively an arm of the totalitarian state no films could be made that were not ostensibly in accord with the views of the ruling regime However despite the existence of anti semitic propaganda works such as The Eternal Jew 1940 which was a box office flop and the more sophisticated but equally anti semitic Jud Suss 1940 which achieved commercial success at home and elsewhere in Europe the majority of German films from the National Socialist period were intended principally as works of entertainment The import of foreign films was legally restricted after 1936 and the German industry which was effectively nationalised in 1937 had to make up for the missing foreign films above all American productions Entertainment also became increasingly important in the later years of World War II when the cinema provided a distraction from Allied bombing and a string of German defeats In both 1943 and 1944 cinema admissions in Germany exceeded a billion 21 and the biggest box office hits of the war years were Die grosse Liebe 1942 and Wunschkonzert 1941 which both combine elements of the musical wartime romance and patriotic propaganda Frauen sind doch bessere Diplomaten 1941 a comic musical which was one of the earliest German films in colour and Vienna Blood 1942 the adaptation of a Johann Strauss comic operetta Titanic 1943 was another big budget epic that arguably inspired other films about the ill fated ocean liner 22 The importance of the cinema as a tool of the state both for its propaganda value and its ability to keep the populace entertained can be seen in the filming history of Veit Harlan s Kolberg 1945 the most expensive film of the Nazi era for the shooting of which tens of thousands of soldiers were diverted from their military positions to appear as extras Despite the emigration of many film makers and the political restrictions the period was not without technical and aesthetic innovations the introduction of Agfacolor film production being a notable example Technical and aesthetic achievement could also be turned to the specific ends of the Nazi state most spectacularly in the work of Leni Riefenstahl Riefenstahl s Triumph of the Will 1935 documenting the 1934 Nuremberg Rally and Olympia 1938 documenting the 1936 Summer Olympics pioneered techniques of camera movement and editing that have influenced many later films Both films particularly Triumph of the Will remain highly controversial as their aesthetic merit is inseparable from their propagandising of Nazi ideals See also Nazism and cinema and List of German films 1933 1945 1945 1989 East Germany edit East German cinema initially profited from the fact that much of the country s film infrastructure notably the former UFA studios lay in the Soviet occupation zone which enabled film production to get off the ground more quickly than in the Western sectors 23 The authorities in the Soviet Zone were keen to re establish the film industry in their sector and an order was issued to re open cinemas in Berlin in May 1945 within three weeks of German capitulation 24 The film production company DEFA was founded on 17 May 1946 and took control of the film production facilities in the Soviet Zone which had been confiscated by order of the Soviet Military Administration in Germany in October 1945 25 A joint stock company on paper the majority interest in DEFA was actually held by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany SED which became the ruling party of the German Democratic Republic GDR after 1949 formally placing DEFA as the state owned monopoly for film production in East Germany 26 A sister company Progress Film had also been established as a similar monopoly for domestic film distribution its principal competition being Sovexportfilm which handled distribution of Soviet films 27 In total DEFA produced some 900 feature films during its existence as well as around 800 animated films and over 3000 documentaries and short films 23 28 In its early years production was limited due to strict controls imposed by the authorities which restricted the subject matter of films to topics that directly contributed to the Communist project of the state Excluding newsreels and educational films only 50 films were produced between 1948 and 1953 citation needed However in later years numerous films were produced on a variety of themes DEFA had particular strengths in children s films notably fairy tale adaptations such as Drei Haselnusse fur Aschenbrodel Three Hazelnuts for Cinderella 1973 29 but it also attempted other genre works science fiction for example Der schweigende Stern The Silent Star 1960 30 an adaptation of a Stanislaw Lem novel or red westerns such as The Sons of the Great Mother Bear 1966 31 in which in contrast to the typical American western the heroes tended to be Native Americans Many of these genre films were co productions with other Warsaw Pact countries Notable non genre films produced by DEFA include Wolfgang Staudte s adaptation of Heinrich Mann s Der Untertan 1951 Konrad Wolf s Der geteilte Himmel Divided Heaven 1964 an adaptation of Christa Wolf s novel Frank Beyer s adaptation of Jurek Becker s Jacob the Liar 1975 the only East German film to be nominated for an Oscar 32 The Legend of Paul and Paula 1973 directed by Heiner Carow from Ulrich Plenzdorf s novel and Solo Sunny 1980 again the work of Konrad Wolf However film making in the GDR was always constrained and oriented by the political situation in the country at any given time Ernst Thalmann the communist leader in the Weimar period was the subject of several hagiographical films in the 1950s Ernst Thalmann 1954 and although East German filmmaking moved away from this overtly Stalinist approach in the 1960s 33 filmmakers were still subject to the changing political positions and indeed the whims of the SED leadership For example DEFA s full slate of contemporary films from 1966 were denied distribution among them Frank Beyer s Traces of Stones 1966 which was pulled from distribution after three days not because it was antipathetic to communist principles but because it showed that such principles which it fostered were not put into practice at all times in East Germany 34 The huge box office hit The Legend of Paul and Paula was initially threatened with a distribution ban because of its satirical elements and supposedly only allowed a release on the say so of Party General Secretary Erich Honecker citation needed In the late 1970s numerous film makers left the GDR for the West as a result of restrictions on their work among them director Egon Gunther and actors Angelica Domrose Eva Maria Hagen Katharina Thalbach Hilmar Thate Manfred Krug and Armin Mueller Stahl Many had been signatories of a 1976 petition opposing the expatriation of socially critical singer songwriter Wolf Biermann and had had their ability to work restricted as a result 35 In the final years of the GDR the availability of television and the programming and films on television broadcasts reaching into the GDR via the uncontrollable airwaves reduced the influence of DEFA productions although its continuing role in producing shows for East German television channel remained citation needed Following the Wende DEFA had ceased production altogether and its studios and equipment was sold off by the Treuhand in 1992 but its intellectual property rights were handed to the charitable DEFA Stiftung DEFA Foundation which exploits these rights in conjunction with a series of private companies especially the quickly privatized Progress Film GmbH which has issued several East German films with English subtitles since the mid 1990s 25 27 See also List of East German films 1945 1989 West Germany edit 1945 1960 Reconstruction edit The occupation and reconstruction of Germany by the Four Powers in the period immediately after the end of World War II brought a major and long lasting change to the economic conditions under which the industry in Germany had previously operated The holdings of Ufa were confiscated by the Allies and as part of the process of decartelisation licences to produce films were shared between a range of much smaller companies In addition the Occupation Statute of 1949 which granted partial independence to the newly created Federal Republic of Germany specifically forbade the imposition of import quotas to protect German film production from foreign competition the result of lobbying by the American industry as represented by the MPAA Amidst the devastation of the Stunde Null year of 1945 cinema attendance was unsurprisingly down to a fraction of its wartime heights but already by the end of the decade it had reached levels that exceeded the pre war period 21 For the first time in many years German audiences had free access to cinema from around the world and in this period the films of Charlie Chaplin remained popular as were melodramas from the United States Nonetheless the share of the film market for German films in this period and into the 1950s remained relatively large taking up some 40 percent of the total market American films took up around 30 percent of the market despite having around twice as many films in distribution as the German industry in the same time frame 36 Many of the German films of the immediate post war period can be characterised as belonging to the genre of the Trummerfilm literally rubble film These films show strong affinities with the work of Italian neorealists not least Roberto Rossellini s neorealist trilogy which included Germany Year Zero 1948 and are concerned primarily with day to day life in the devastated Germany and an initial reaction to the events of the Nazi period the full horror of which was first experienced by many in documentary footage from liberated concentration camps Such films include Wolfgang Staudte s Die Morder sind unter uns The Murderers are among us 1946 the first film made in post war Germany produced in the soviet sector and Wolfgang Liebeneiner s Liebe 47 Love 47 1949 an adaptation of Wolfgang Borchert s play Draussen vor der Tur Despite the advent of a regular television service in the Federal Republic in 1952 cinema attendances continued to grow through much of the 1950s reaching a peak of 817 5 million visits in 1956 21 The majority of the films of this period set out to do no more than entertain the audience and had few pretensions to artistry or active engagement with social issues The defining genre of the period was arguably the Heimatfilm homeland film in which morally simplistic tales of love and family were played out in a rural setting often in the mountains of Bavaria Austria or Switzerland In their day Heimatfilms were of little interest to more scholarly film critics but in recent years they have been the subject of study in relation to what they say about the culture of West Germany in the years of the Wirtschaftswunder Other film genres typical of this period were adaptations of operettas hospital melodramas comedies and musicals Many films were remakes of earlier Ufa productions Rearmament and the founding of the Bundeswehr in 1955 brought with it a wave of war films which tended to depict the ordinary German soldiers of World War II as brave and apolitical 37 The Israeli historian Omer Bartov wrote that German films of the 1950s showed the average German soldier as a heroic victim noble tough brave honourable and patriotic while fighting hard in a senseless war for a regime that he did not care for 38 The 08 15 film trilogy of 1954 55 concerns a sensitive young German soldier who would rather play the piano than fight and who fights on the Eastern Front without understanding why however no mention is made of the genocidal aspects of Germany s war in East 37 The last of the 08 15 films ends with Germany occupied by a gang of American soldiers portrayed as bubble gum chewing slack jawed morons and uncultured louts totally inferior in every respect to the heroic German soldiers shown in the 08 15 films 37 The only exception is the Jewish American officer who is shown as both hyper intelligent and very unscrupulous which Bartov noted seems to imply that the real tragedy of World War II was the Nazis did not get a chance to exterminate all of the Jews who have now returned with Germany s defeat to once more exploit the German people 37 In The Doctor of Stalingrad 1958 dealing with German POWs in the Soviet Union Germans are portrayed as more civilized humane and intelligent than the Soviets who are shown for the most part as Mongol savages who brutalized the German POWs 39 One of the German POWs successfully seduces the beautiful and tough Red Army Captain Alexandra Kasalniskaya Eva Bartok who prefers him to the sadistic camp commandant which as Bartov comments also is meant to show that even in defeat German men were more sexually virile and potent than their Russian counterparts 39 In Hunde wollt ihr ewig leben Dogs do you want to live forever of 1959 which deals with the Battle of Stalingrad the focus is on celebrating the heroism of the German soldier in that battle who are shown as valiantly holding out against overwhelming odds with no mention at all of what those soldiers were fighting for namely National Socialist ideology or the Holocaust 40 This period also saw a number of films that depicted the military resistance to Hitler In Des Teufels General The Devil s General of 1954 a Luftwaffe general named Harras loosely modeled after Ernst Udet appears at first to be cynical fool but turns out to an anti Nazi who is secretly sabotaging the German war effort by designing faulty planes 41 Bartov commented that in this film the German officer corps is shown as a group of fundamentally noble and civilized men who happened to be serving an evil regime made up of a small gang of gangsterish misfits totally unrepresentative of German society which served to exculpate both the officer corps and by extension Germany society 42 Bartov wrote that no German film of the 1950s showed the deep commitment felt by many German soldiers to National Socialism the utter ruthless way the German Army fought the war and the mindless nihilist brutality of the later Wehrmacht 43 Bartov wrote that German film makers liked to show the heroic last stand of the 6th Army at Stalingrad but none has so far showed the 6th Army s massive co operation with the Einsatzgruppen in murdering Soviet Jews in 1941 44 Even though there are countless film adaptations of Edgar Wallace novels worldwide the crime films produced by the German company Rialto Film between 1959 and 1972 are the best known of those to the extent that they form their own subgenre known as Krimis abbreviation for the German term Kriminalfilm or Kriminalroman Other Edgar Wallace adaptations in a similar style were made by the Germans Artur Brauner and Kurt Ulrich and the British producer Harry Alan Towers The international significance of the West German film industry of the 1950s could no longer measure up to that of France Italy or Japan German films were only rarely distributed internationally as they were perceived as provincial International co productions of the kind which were becoming common in France and Italy tended to be rejected by German producers Schneider 1990 43 However a few German films and film makers did achieve international recognition at this time among them Bernhard Wicki s Oscar nominated Die Brucke The Bridge 1959 and the actresses Hildegard Knef and Romy Schneider 1960 1970 cinema in crisis edit nbsp Klaus KinskiIn the late 1950s the growth in cinema attendance of the preceding decade first stagnated and then went into freefall throughout the 1960s By 1969 West German cinema attendance at 172 2 million visits per year was less than a quarter of its 1956 post war peak 21 As a consequence of this numerous German production and distribution companies went out of business in the 1950s and 1960s and cinemas across the Federal Republic closed their doors the number of screens in West Germany almost halved between the beginning and the end of the decade citation needed Initially the crisis was perceived as a problem of overproduction Consequently the German film industry cut back on production 123 German movies were produced in 1955 only 65 in 1965 However many German film companies followed the 1960s trends of international co productions with Italy and Spain in such genres as spaghetti westerns and Eurospy films with films shot in those nations or in Yugoslavia that featured German actors in the casts The roots of the problem lay deeper in changing economic and social circumstances Average incomes in the Federal Republic rose sharply and this opened up alternative leisure activities to compete with cinema going At this time too television was developing into a mass medium that could compete with the cinema In 1953 there were only 1 000 000 sets in West Germany by 1962 there were 7 million Connor 1990 49 Hoffman 1990 69 The majority of films produced in the Federal Republic in the 1960s were genre works westerns especially the series of movies adapted from Karl May s popular genre novels which starred Pierre Brice as the Apache Winnetou and Lex Barker as his white blood brother Old Shatterhand thrillers and crime films notably a series of Edgar Wallace movies from Rialto Film in which Klaus Kinski Heinz Drache Karin Dor and Joachim Fuchsberger were among the regular players The traditional Krimi films expanded into series based on German pulp fiction heroes such as Jerry Cotton played by George Nader and Kommissar X played by Tony Kendall and Brad Harris West Germany also made several horror films including ones starring Christopher Lee The two genres were combined in the return of Doctor Mabuse in a series of several films of the early 1960s At the end of the 1960s softcore sex films both the relatively serious Aufklarungsfilme sex education films of Oswalt Kolle and such exploitation films as Schulmadchen Report Schoolgirl Report 1970 and its successors were produced into the 1970s Such movies were commercially successful and often enjoyed international distribution but won little acclaim from critics 1960 1980 New German Cinema edit Further information New German Cinema In the 1960s more than three quarters of the regular cinema audience were lost as consequence of the rising popularity of TV sets at home As a reaction to the artistic and economic stagnation of German cinema a group of young film makers issued the Oberhausen Manifesto on 28 February 1962 This call to arms which included Alexander Kluge Edgar Reitz Peter Schamoni and Franz Josef Spieker among its signatories provocatively declared Der alte Film ist tot Wir glauben an den neuen The old cinema is dead We believe in the new cinema Other up and coming filmmakers allied themselves to this Oberhausen group among them Rainer Werner Fassbinder Volker Schlondorff Werner Herzog Jean Marie Straub Wim Wenders Werner Schroeter and Hans Jurgen Syberberg in their rejection of the existing German film industry and their determination to build a new cinema founded on artistic and social measures rather than commercial success Most of these directors organized themselves in or partially co operated with the film production and distribution company Filmverlag der Autoren established in 1971 which throughout the 1970s brought forth a number of critically acclaimed films Rosa von Praunheim who formed the German lesbian and gay movement with his film It Is Not the Homosexual Who Is Perverse But the Society in Which He Lives 1971 also plays an important role 45 Despite the foundation of the Kuratorium Junger Deutscher Film Young German Film Committee in 1965 set up under the auspices of the Federal Ministry of the Interior to support new German films financially the directors of this New German Cinema were consequently often dependent on money from television Young filmmakers had the opportunity to test their mettle in such programmes as the stand alone drama and documentary series Das kleine Fernsehspiel The Little TV Play or the television films of the crime series Tatort However the broadcasters sought TV premieres for the films which they had supported financially with theatrical showings only occurring later As a consequence such films tended to be unsuccessful at the box office This situation changed after 1974 when the Film Fernseh Abkommen Film and Television Accord was agreed between the Federal Republic s main broadcasters ARD and ZDF and the German Federal Film Board a government body created in 1968 to support film making in Germany 46 This accord which has been repeatedly extended up to the present day provides for the television companies to make available an annual sum to support the production of films which are suitable for both theatrical distribution and television presentation The amount of money provided by the public broadcasters has varied between 4 5 and 12 94 million euros per year Under the terms of the accord films produced using these funds can only be screened on television 24 months after their theatrical release They may appear on video or DVD no sooner than six months after cinema release Nevertheless the New German Cinema found it difficult to attract a large domestic or international audience The socially critical films of the New German Cinema strove to delineate themselves from what had gone before and the works of auteur film makers such as Kluge and Fassbinder are examples of this although Fassbinder in his use of stars from German cinema history also sought a reconciliation between the new cinema and the old In addition a distinction is sometimes drawn between the avantgarde Young German Cinema of the 1960s and the more accessible New German Cinema of the 1970s For their influences the new generation of film makers looked to Italian neorealism the French Nouvelle Vague and the British New Wave but combined this eclectically with references to the well established genres of Hollywood cinema The New German Cinema dealt with contemporary German social problems in a direct way the Nazi past the plight of the Gastarbeiter guest workers and modern social developments were all subjects prominent in New German Cinema films 47 Films such as Kluge s Abschied von Gestern 1966 Herzog s Aguirre the Wrath of God 1972 Fassbinder s Fear Eats the Soul 1974 and The Marriage of Maria Braun 1979 and Wenders Paris Texas 1984 found critical approval Often the work of these auteurs was first recognised abroad rather than in Germany itself The work of post war Germany s leading novelists Heinrich Boll and Gunter Grass provided source material for the adaptations The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum 1975 by Schlondorff and Margarethe von Trotta and The Tin Drum 1979 by Schlondorff alone respectively the latter becoming the first German film to win the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film The New German Cinema also allowed for female directors to come to the fore and for the development of a feminist cinema which encompassed the works of directors such as Margarethe von Trotta Helma Sanders Brahms Jutta Bruckner Helke Sander and Cristina Perincioli German production companies have been quite commonly involved in expensive French and Italian productions from Spaghetti Westerns to French comic book adaptations 1980 1989 popular productions edit nbsp Bernd Eichinger star at the Boulevard of Stars in BerlinHaving achieved some of its goals among them the establishment of state funding for the film industry and renewed international recognition for German films the New German Cinema had begun to show signs of fatigue by the 1980s even though many of its proponents continued to enjoy individual success Among the commercial successes for German films of the 1980s were the Otto film series beginning in 1985 starring comedian Otto Waalkes Wolfgang Petersen s adaptation of The NeverEnding Story 1984 and the internationally successful Das Boot 1981 which still holds the record for most Academy Award nominations for a German film six Other notable film makers who came to prominence in the 1980s include producer Bernd Eichinger and directors Doris Dorrie Uli Edel and Loriot Away from the mainstream the splatter film director Jorg Buttgereit came to prominence in the 1980s The development of arthouse cinemas Programmkinos from the 1970s onwards provided a venue for the works of less mainstream film makers like Herbert Achternbusch Hark Bohm Dominik Graf Oliver Herbrich Rosa von Praunheim or Christoph Schlingensief From the mid 1980s the spread of videocassette recorders and the arrival of private TV channels such as RTL Television provided new competition for theatrical film distribution Cinema attendance having rallied slightly in the late 1970s after an all time low of 115 1 million visits in 1976 dropped sharply again from the mid 1980s to end at just 101 6 million visits in 1989 21 However the availability of a back catalogue of films on video also allowed for a different relationship between the viewer and an individual film while private TV channels brought new money into the film industry and provided a launch pad from which new talent could later move into film 1990 Modern Germany edit nbsp John Rabe 2009 directed by Florian Gallenberger filming on location in Shanghai harbourToday s biggest German production studios include Babelsberg Studio Bavaria Film Constantin Film and UFA Film releases such as Run Lola Run by Tom Tykwer Good Bye Lenin by Wolfgang Becker Head On by Fatih Akin Perfume by Tom Tykwer and The Lives of Others by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck have arguably managed to recapture a provocative and innovative nature Movies like The Baader Meinhof Complex produced by Bernd Eichinger achieved some popular success Notable directors working in German currently include Sonke Wortmann Caroline Link winner of an Academy Award Romuald Karmakar Dani Levy Hans Christian Schmid Andreas Dresen Dennis Gansel and Uli Edel as well as comedy directors Michael Herbig and Til Schweiger Internationally German filmmakers such as Roland Emmerich or Wolfgang Petersen or Uwe Boll built successful careers as directors and producers Hans Zimmer a film composer has become one of the world s most acclaimed producers of movie scores Michael Ballhaus became a renowned cinematographer Germany has a long tradition of cooperation with the European based film industry which started as early as during the 1960s Since 1990 the number of international projects financed and co produced by German filmmakers has expanded The new millennium since 2000 has seen a general resurgence of the German film industry with a higher output and improved returns at the German box office The collapse of the GDR had a large effect on the German cinema industry The viewer count increased with the new population s access to western movies The movies produced in the United States were the most popular due to the fact that the market was dominated by them and the production was more advanced than Germany s Some other genres that were popular consisted of Romantic Comedies and Social Commentaries Wolfgang Petersen and Roland Emmerich both established international success Internationally though German productions are widely unknown and unsuccessful Even domestically the German movies hold only a market share of about 20 25 The movie culture is recognized to be underfunded problem laden and rather inward looking Since its golden age in the 1920s the German film industry has never regained the technical excellence the star system appeal or the popular narratives suitable for a German European or global audience 48 Film funding editThe main production incentive provided by governmental authorities is the Deutscher Filmforderfonds DFFF German Federal Film Fund The DFFF is a grant given by the Staatsministerin fur Kultur und Medien Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media To receive the grant a producer has to fulfill different requirements including a cultural eligibility test The fund offers 50 million euros a year to film producers and or co producers and grants can amount to up to 20 of the approved German production costs At least 25 the production costs must be spent in Germany or only 20 if the production costs are higher than 20 million euros The DFFF has been established in 2007 and supported projects in all categories and genres In 2015 the Deutsche Filmforderungsfond was reduced from 60 million euros to 50 million euros To compensate Finance minister Gabriel announced that the difference will be made up from the budget of the Bundesministerium fur Wirtschaft und Klimaschutz Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action 49 50 For the first time in Germany high profile tv series and digital filmmaking will be funded at a federal level in the same manner as feature films 51 Funding is also increasingly flowing to international co productions In 1979 the German states also began to establish funding institutions often with the intention of supporting their own production locations Today film funding by the federal states makes up the largest share of film funding in Germany A total of more than 200 million euros in grants are distributed annually with an upward trend The history of film funding began in Germany with the founding of the UFA GmbH 1917 which was to produce pro German propaganda films equipped with funds from industry and banks During the period of National Socialism 1933 1945 the state indirectly promoted the financing of film projects by establishing the Filmkreditbank GmbH FKB Film Credit Bank After the end of World War II many feature films were initially supported by federal guarantees However film funding in its current form did not develop until the 1950s when television began to supplant motion pictures In 1967 a film funding law was passed for the first time The Berlin based Filmforderungsanstalt FFA Film Funding Agency was the first major funding institution to be founded in 1968 Critics accuse film funding in Germany of being institutionally fragmented making it virtually impossible to coordinate all measures which would ultimately benefit the quality of productions They also say that a blanket distribution of grants stifles the incentive to produce films that recoup their production costs Film funding institutions edit Film funding in Germany is provided among others by the following institutions Federal edit Deutscher Filmforderfonds DFFF German Federal Film Fund of the Beauftragten der Bundesregierung fur Kultur und Medien Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media Filmforderungsanstalt FFA Film Funding Agency since 1968 Kuratorium junger deutscher Film Board of Trustees for Young German Film Regional edit MFG Medien und Filmgesellschaft Baden Wurttemberg since 1995 FilmFernsehFonds Bayern seit 1996 Medienboard Berlin Brandenburg since 1994 Filmburo Bremen MOIN Filmforderung Hamburg Schleswig Holstein Filmburo Hessen Hessische Filmforderung Film und Medienburo Niedersachsen Nordmedia Film und Mediengesellschaft Niedersachsen Bremen mbH Film und Medienstiftung NRW Filmburo Nordrhein Westfalen Mitteldeutsche Medienforderung since 1998 MV Filmforderung since 2020 Filmburo Mecklenburg Vorpommern until 2020 Stiftung Rheinland Pfalz fur Kultur Saarlandisches Filmburo until 1998 Gesellschaft zur Forderung des Medienstandortes Saarland Filmverband Sachsen Kulturelle Filmforderung des Landes Sachsen Anhalt through the Kunststiftung des Landes Sachsen Anhalt Filmburo Schleswig Holstein Kulturelle Filmforderung Schleswig Holstein Kulturelle Filmforderung ThuringenLokal Filmburo Franken City of Nurnberg Forderverein Filmkultur BonnFestival edit nbsp The Berlin International Film Festival also known as BerlinaleThe Berlin International Film Festival also called Berlinale is one of the world s leading film festivals and most reputable media events 52 It is held in Berlin Germany 53 Founded in West Berlin in 1951 the festival has been celebrated annually in February since 1978 With 274 000 tickets sold and 487 000 admissions it is considered the largest publicly attended film festival worldwide 54 55 Up to 400 films are shown in several sections representing a comprehensive array of the cinematic world Around twenty films compete for the awards called the Golden and Silver Bears Since 2001 the director of the festival has been Dieter Kosslick 56 57 The festival the EFM and other satellite events are attended by around 20 000 professionals from over 130 countries 58 More than 4200 journalists are responsible for the media exposure in over 110 countries 59 At high profile feature film premieres movie stars and celebrities are present at the red carpet 60 German Film Academy editThe Deutsche Filmakademie was founded in 2003 in Berlin and aims to provide native filmmakers a forum for discussion and a way to promote the reputation of German cinema through publications presentations discussions and regular promotion of the subject in the schools Awards edit Since 2005 the winners of the Deutscher Filmpreis also known as the Lolas are elected by the members of the Deutsche Filmakademie With a cash prize of three million euros it is the most highly endowed German cultural award Year English title Original title Director s 2005 Go for Zucker Alles auf Zucker Dani Levy2006 The Lives of Others Das Leben der Anderen Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck2007 Four Minutes Vier Minuten Chris Kraus2008 The Edge of Heaven Auf der anderen Seite Fatih Akin2009 John Rabe John Rabe Florian Gallenberger2010 The White Ribbon Das weisse Band Michael Haneke2011 Vincent Wants to Sea Vincent will Meer Ralf Huettner2012 Stopped on Track Halt auf freier Strecke Andreas Dresen2013 A Coffee in Berlin Oh Boy Jan Ole Gerster2014 Home from Home Die andere Heimat Edgar Reitz2015 Victoria Victoria Sebastian Schipper2016 The People vs Fritz Bauer Der Staat gegen Fritz Bauer Lars KraumeFilm schools edit nbsp University of Television and Film MunichSeveral institutions both government run and private provide formal education in various aspects of filmmaking Deutsche Film und Fernsehakademie Berlin dffb Berlin Hochschule fur bildende Kunste Hamburg HfbK Hamburg Film Academy Baden Wurttemberg Ludwigsburg International Film School Cologne Cologne University of Television and Film Munich Munich Filmuniversitat Babelsberg PotsdamPersonalities editSee also List of German film directors nbsp Ken Adam nbsp Michael Ballhaus nbsp Marlene Dietrich nbsp Roland Emmerich nbsp Curd Jurgens nbsp Diane Kruger nbsp Wolfgang Petersen nbsp Hans ZimmerSee also edit nbsp Film portal nbsp Germany portal nbsp European Union portalLists of German films List of highest grossing films in Germany European Film Academy Kammerspielfilm German underground horror List of films set in Berlin Media of Germany Cinema of the world History of cinema World cinemaReferences edit a b c Kinoergebnisse www ffa de in German FFA Filmforderungsanstalt Retrieved 15 September 2018 Table 8 Cinema Infrastructure Capacity UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on 24 December 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2013 Table 6 Share of Top 3 distributors Excel UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on 24 December 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2013 Table 1 Feature Film Production Genre Method of Shooting UNESCO Institute for Statistics Archived from the original on 26 December 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2013 Pam Cook 2007 The Cinema Book London British Film Institute p 207 ISBN 978 1 84457 192 5 Brockmann Stephen 2010 A Critical History of German Film Camden House p 13 ISBN 978 1 57113 468 4 Brockmann Stephen 2010 A Critical History of German Film Camden House p 16 ISBN 978 1 57113 468 4 a b Brockmann Stephen 2010 A Critical History of German Film Camden House p 18 ISBN 978 1 57113 468 4 Brockmann Stephen 2010 A Critical History of German Film Camden House p 19 ISBN 978 1 57113 468 4 a b c Rogowski Christian 2010 The Many Faces of Weimar Cinema Rochester New York Camden House pp Xi 12 ISBN 978 1 57113 532 2 Restrict German Imports Motion Picture News XXIII 21 3027 14 May 1921 a b c The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Macropedia Volume 24 Motion Pictures Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2010 pp 376 378 SciFi Film History Metropolis 1927 Archived 10 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Although the first science fiction film is generally agreed to be Georges Melies A Trip to the Moon 1902 Metropolis 1926 is the first feature length outing of the genre scififilmhistory com retrieved 15 May 2013 Brockmann Stephen 2010 A Critical History of German Film Camden House p 24 ISBN 978 1 57113 468 4 Dawsey Jason 3 November 2021 Adolf Hitler and the Origins of the Berlin Tokyo Axis The National WWII Museum Retrieved 26 June 2023 a b Hayward Susan 2000 Cinema Studies The Key Concepts New York NY Routledge Taylor amp Francis pp 175 178 ISBN 0 415 22739 9 Shapira Avner 20 December 2010 Going Into the Night New Look at Early German Cinema by Ofer Ashkenazi Haaretz Kiss Robert 2002 Queer Traditions in German Cinema In Bergfelder Tim Carter Erica Goektuerk Deniz eds The German Cinema Book British Film Institute p 48 ISBN 0 85170 946 X Stiasny Philipp 2010 Humanity Unleashed Anti Bolshevism as Popular Culture in Early Weimar Cinema in The Many Faces of Weimar Cinema Edited by Christian Rogowski Rochester New York Camden House pp 48 66 ISBN 978 1 57113 532 2 Bordwell David and Thompson Kristen 2003 Film History An Introduction New York McGraw Hill p 200 a b c d e Kinobesuche in Deutschland 1925 bis 2004 Archived 4 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Spitzenorganisation der Filmwirtschaft e V Fiebing Malte 2012 Titanic Nazi Germany s Version of the Disaster BoD Books on Demand p 127 ISBN 9783844815122 a b Allan Sean Heiduschke Sebastian 2016 Re Imagining DEFA East German Cinema in its National and Transnational Contexts Berghahn Books pp 86 87 ISBN 9781785331077 McCormack David 2019 The Berlin 1945 Battlefield Guide Part 2 The Battle of Berlin Fonthill Media p 219 ISBN 9781781557396 a b History in German DEFA Stiftung Retrieved 26 June 2020 Burry Alexander 2016 Border Crossing Russian Literature into Film Edinburgh University Press p 257 ISBN 9781474411424 a b Blankenship Janelle Nagl Tobias 2015 European Visions Small Cinemas in Transition transcript Verlag p 397 ISBN 9783837618181 Lewis Derek Zitzlsperger Ulrike 2016 Historical Dictionary of Contemporary Germany Rowman amp Littlefield p 174 ISBN 9781442269569 Three Hazelnuts for Cinderella DEFA Film Library Retrieved 26 June 2020 The Silent Star DEFA Film Library Retrieved 26 June 2020 PROGRESS Film Verleih Die Sohne der grossen Barin www progress film de in German Archived from the original on 14 November 2011 Retrieved 26 June 2020 Bergan Ronald 10 October 2006 Obituary Frank Beyer The Guardian Retrieved 26 June 2020 Allan Sean Sandford John 1999 DEFA East German Cinema 1946 1992 p 9 ISBN 1571819436 Brockmann Stephen 2010 A critical history of German film Camden House p 266 ISBN 9781571134684 Leeder Karen 2016 Rereading East Germany The Literature and Film of the GDR Cambridge University Press p 81 ISBN 9781107006362 Schneider 1990 35 42 amp 44 a b c d Bartov Omer Celluloid Soldiers Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht pages 130 143 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica amp Mark Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 page 136 Bartov Omer Celluloid Soldiers Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht pages 130 143 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica amp Mark Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 pages 134 135 a b Bartov Omer Celluloid Soldiers Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht pages 130 143 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica amp Mark Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 page 137 Bartov Omer Celluloid Soldiers Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht pages 130 143 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica amp Mark Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 page 138 Bartov Omer Celluloid Soldiers Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht pages 130 143 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica amp Mark Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 pages 132 133 Bartov Omer Celluloid Soldiers Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht pages 130 143 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica amp Mark Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 page 133 Bartov Omer Celluloid Soldiers Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht pages 130 143 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica amp Mark Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 page 135 Bartov Omer Celluloid Soldiers Cinematic Images of the Wehrmacht pages 130 143 from Russia War Peace and Diplomacy edited by Ljubica amp Mark Erickson London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2004 page 139 Germany s most famous gay rights activist Rosa von Praunheim Deutsche Welle Retrieved 14 June 2018 Information on the Filmforderungsanstalt FFA German Federal Film Board Julia Knight 2004 New German Cinema Images of a Generation Wallflower Press pp 45 6 ISBN 978 1 903364 28 4 Does German film have a future Exberliner retrieved 6 July 2016 Gabriel puscht die Filmindustrie Handelsblatt in German 11 December 2014 Retrieved 11 April 2015 Allianz Deutscher Produzenten Film amp Fernsehen e V Produzentenallianz in German Retrieved 13 February 2023 GERMAN MOTION PICTURE FUND Archived 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine PDF 8 March 2016 2010 Berlin Film Festival The Hollywood Reporter Archived 31 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine China film wins top Berlin award BBC News Most frequented film festivals Archived 18 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine filmfestivals com Facts and Figures of the Berlinale berlinale com Dieter Kosslick at IMDb 18 February 2008 Speed Interview with Dieter Kosslick Berlinale Chief filmfestivalstv com 18 February 2008 2009 Berlinale Press release berlinale de 18 February 2008 Kosslick zieht positive Berlinale Bilanz Archived 17 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine German PR inside com Madonna at the Berlinale YouTube 19 February 2008Further reading editBergfelder Tim et al eds The German Cinema Book 2008 Blaney Martin Symbiosis or Confrontation Bonn 1992 Brockman Stephen A Critical History of German Film 2011 Feinstein Joshua Triumph of the Ordinary Depictions of Daily Life in the East German Cinema 1949 1989 chapel Hill 2002 Garncarz Joseph and Annemone Ligensa eds The Cinema of Germany Wallflower Press distributed by Columbia University Press 2012 264 pages analyses of 24 works from silent movies to such contemporary films as Good Bye Lenin Hake Sabine German National Cinema 2002 2nd ed 2008 Heiduschke Sebastian East German Cinema DEFA and Film History 2013 Hoffman Kay 1990 Am Ende Video Video am Ende Berlin Kapczynski Jennifer M and Michael D Richardson eds 2012 A New History of German Cinema Rochester Camden House 2012 673 pp online review Kracauer Siegfried 2004 From Caligari to Hitler A Psychological History of the German Film Princeton Univ of Princeton Press ISBN 0 691 11519 2 Schneider Irmela 1990 Film Fernsehen amp Co Heidelberg Stielke Sebastian 100 Facts about Babelsberg Cradle of Film and modern Media City German English Bebra Verlag publishing house Berlin 2021 240 pages ISBN 978 3 86124 746 3 Fay Jennifer 2008 Theaters of Occupation Hollywood and the Reeducation of Postwar Germany Minneapolis Univ of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 4745 3External links editGerman Film History Biographies and autographs of the early German film era Articles and news on German filmmakers movies festivals Web portal on German film of the Goethe Institut Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cinema of Germany amp oldid 1175753607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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