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DEFA

DEFA (Deutsche Film-Aktiengesellschaft) was the state-owned film studio of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) throughout the country's existence.

Deutsche Film-Aktiengesellschaft
DEFA
Formation17 May 1946
Dissolved1992
HeadquartersEast Berlin
Location

Since 2019, DEFA's film heritage has been made accessible and licensable on the PROGRESS archive platform.[1]

History edit

 
Founding congress of DEFA Studio, Berlin, May 1946

DEFA was founded in Spring 1946 in the Soviet Occupied Zone in eastern Germany; it was the first film production company in post-World War II Germany.[2] While the other Allies, in their zones of occupation, viewed a rapid revival of a German film industry with suspicion, the Soviets valued the medium as a primary means of re-educating the German populace as it emerged from twelve years of Nazi rule.

Headquartered in Berlin, the company was formally authorized by the Soviet Military Administration to produce films on 13 May 1946, although Wolfgang Staudte had already begun work on DEFA's first film, Die Mörder sind unter uns (The Murderers Are Among Us) nine days earlier.[3] The original board of directors consisted of Alfred Lindemann, Karl Hans Bergmann, and Herbert Volkmann, with Hans Klering as administrative Secretary. Klering, a former graphic designer, also designed DEFA's logo.[4] On 13 August 1946, the company was officially registered as a joint-stock company (German: Aktiengesellschaft). By the end of the year, in addition to the Staudte film, it had completed two other feature films using the former Tobis studio facilities in Berlin and the Althoff Studios in Babelsberg. Subsequently, its principal studio was the Babelsberg Studio built by Ufa in the 1920s.

On 14 July 1947, the company officially moved its headquarters to the Bablesberg Studio, and on 13 November 1947, the company's "stock" was taken over by the Socialist Unity Party or SED, which had originally capitalized DEFA, and pro-Soviet German individuals. Soviets Ilya Trauberg and Aleksandr Wolkenstein joined Lindemann, Bergmann and Volkmann on the board of directors, and a committee was established under the auspices of the Socialist Unity Party to review projects and screen rushes.[citation needed]

In July 1948, Lindemann was dismissed from the board of directors because of alleged "financial irregularities" and replaced briefly by Walter Janka. In October 1948, the SED was instrumental in replacing Janka, Volkmann and Bergmann as corporate directors with official party members Wilhelm Meissner, Alexander Lösche [de] and Grete Keilson. In December, the death of Trauberg and the resignation of Wolkenstein resulted in two more Soviets in their stead, Aleksandr Andriyevsky and Leonid Antonov.[citation needed]

In 1948, the division of Germany into zones controlled by the Soviet Union and by the Western Allies came into effect. The SED eventually became openly Communist, with a strong Stalinist orientation. On 23 May 1949, the Allies' Germany officially became the Federal Republic of Germany (commonly known as West Germany), and on 7 October 1949, the Soviet zone officially became the German Democratic Republic (East Germany). All DEFA interests were incorporated into the new nation as its "people's" film monopoly according to the strictures of Stalinist Communism and socialist realism, and effectively an arm of the government. On 23 June 1950, Sepp Schwab [de], a hardline Communist, was appointed director-general of DEFA.[citation needed]

 
DEFA feature film studios, Babelsberg, Potsdam, July 1952

As socialist realism took hold at DEFA, the definition of desirable and acceptable themes for films became narrower. In June 1947, a film writer's conference held in Potsdam produced general agreement that the "new" German cinema would disavow both subjects and stylistic elements reminiscent of those seen on German screens during, and prior to, the Nazi era. By 1949, expectations for scripts were codified around a small number of topics, such as "[re-]distribution of land" or "the two-year plan". As in the Soviet Union, the excessive control placed by the state on authors of screenplays, as against other literary works, discouraged many competent writers from contributing to East German film. Screenwriters could find their efforts rejected for ideological reasons at any stage in script development, if not from the outset. As a result, between 1948 and 1953, when Stalin died, the entire film output for East Germany, excluding newsreels and non-theatrical educational films, amounted to fewer than 50 titles.[citation needed]

 
Two Young Pioneers examine the brochure for the DEFA children's film Die Störenfriede (The Trobulemakers) before a screening, July 1953

In the 1960s, DEFA produced the popular Red Western The Sons of the Great Mother Bear, directed by Josef Mach and starring Gojko Mitić as the Sioux Tokei-itho.[5] This spawned a number of sequels and was notable for inverting Western clichés by portraying the native Americans as the "good guys", and the American army as the "baddies".[6][citation needed]

In 1992, after German reunification, DEFA was officially dissolved and its combined studios sold to a French conglomerate, Compagnie Générale des Eaux, later Vivendi Universal. In 2004, a private consortium acquired the studios. The films produced at the DEFA studios after World War II included approximately 950 feature films, 820 animated films, more than 5,800 documentaries and newsreels, and 4,000 foreign language movies dubbed into German, which were acquired by the privatized version of the former East German film distribution monopoly, PROGRESS.[7][8]

In October 2005, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City hosted a two-week DEFA festival.[9]

Das Stacheltier edit

Das Stacheltier is a satirical series of short films that was produced in East Germany by the DEFA Film Studios from 1953[10] to 1964.[11] The short films were meant to be shown in film theatres preceding the newsreel and the main feature. The only feature film in the series was the silent film Der junge Engländer directed by Gottfried Kolditz in 1958.

Many well-known East German directors and actors contributed to the film series, including Frank Beyer, Erwin Geschonneck, Gisela May, Rudolf Wessely, Otto Tausig, Peter Sturm, Rolf Herricht and Heinz Schubert.

In 2019, Progress was acquired by LOOKSfilm. Since April 1, 2019, the entire film heritage of the GDR has been made internationally accessible and licensable on the Progress Film archive platform.[12]

DEFA Film studios edit

  • DEFA-Studio für Spielfilme in Potsdam-Babelsberg (studio for feature films)
  • DEFA-Studio für Trickfilme in Dresden (studio for animated films)
  • DEFA-Studio für populärwissenschaftliche Filme in Potsdam, Alt-Nowawes (studio for educational films)
  • DEFA-Studio für Wochenschau und Dokumentarfilme in Berlin (studio for news reels and documentation films)
  • DEFA-Studio für Synchronisation in Berlin-Johannisthal (studio for dubbing)
  • DEFA-Kopierwerke in Berlin-Köpenick and Berlin-Johannisthal (factory for movie copying)
  • DEFA-Außenhandel in Berlin (foreign trade)

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Allan, Sean; Sandford, John, (eds.) DEFA: East German Cinema, 1946–1992. New York and Oxford, Berghahn Books, 1999
  • Allan, Sean; Heiduschke, Sebastian (eds.) Re-Imagining DEFA: East German Cinema in its National and Transnational Contexts. Berghahn Books, 2016
  • Bergfelder, Tim; Carter, Erica & Goektuerk, Deniz, (eds.) The German Cinema Book. Berkeley: BFI/University of California Press. 2003.
  • Berghahn, Daniela. Hollywood behind the Wall: the Cinema of East Germany. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2005
  • Beyer, Frank. Wenn der Wind sich dreht: Meine Filme, mein Leben. Econ. 2001.
  • Elsaesser, Thomas & Wedel, Michael. The BFI Companion to German Cinema. London: British Film Institute, 1999.
  • Habel, F.-B. Das grosse Lexikon der DEFA-Spielfilme, Berlin: Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf, 2000
  • Heiduschke, Sebastian. East German Cinema: DEFA and Film History. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.
  • Naughton, Leonie. That Was the Wild East: Film Culture, Unification, and the `New´ Germany. Ann Arbor, 2002.
  • Preuss, Evelyn. "'You Say You Want a Revolution': East German Film at the Crossroads between the Cinemas." In Celluloid Revolt: German Screen Cultures and the Long 1968, edited by Christina Gerhardt and Marco Abel, 218-236. Rochester, NY: Boydell, 2019.
  • Schenk, Ralf; Richter, Erika (eds.) apropos: Film 2001 Das Jahrbuch der DEFA-Stiftung. Das Neue Berlin, 2001.
  • Schittly, Dagmar. Zwischen Regie und Regime: die Filmpolitik der SED im Spiegel der DEFA-Produktionen. Berlin, 2002.
  • Silberman, Marc; Wrage, Henning (eds.) DEFA at the Crossroads of East German and International Film Culture. A Companion. Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter, 2014.
  • Wagner, Brigitta B. (ed.) DEFA after East Germany. Rochester: Camden House, 2014.

Film edit

References edit

  1. ^ "PROGRESS". Retrieved February 23, 2021.
  2. ^ "History". www.defa-stiftung.de.
  3. ^ . BFI. Archived from the original on February 16, 2018.
  4. ^ Thomas Phelps, "Links wo das Herz ist" 2010-06-17 at the Wayback Machine Justus Liebig University Giessen (October 27–28, 1997). Retrieved 29 November 2011 (in German)
  5. ^ . BFI. Archived from the original on April 3, 2018.
  6. ^ "The Sons of Great Bear | DEFA Film Library". ecommerce.umass.edu.
  7. ^ "DEFA Stiftung — filmarchives online". www.filmarchives-online.eu.
  8. ^ Wagner, Brigitta B. (March 9, 2014). DEFA After East Germany. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 9781571135827 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ "Rebels with a Cause: The Cinema of East Germany". The Museum of Modern Art.
  10. ^ Beutelschmidt, Thomas (2013). "Grenzüberschreitung intern". In Michael Wedel, Michael; Byg, Barton; Räder, Andy; Arndt-Briggs, Skyler; Torner, Evan (eds.). DEFA international: Grenzüberschreitende Filmbeziehungen vor und nach dem Mauerbau. Springer-Verlag. pp. 92–110. ISBN 9783531190761.
  11. ^ Klötzer, Sylvia (2006). Satire und Macht : Film, Zeitung, Kabarett in der DDR. Köln: Böhlau. ISBN 978-3412150051.
  12. ^ "Digital Media Hub". www.progress.film. Retrieved 2022-08-04.

External links edit

  • DEFA Foundation
  • PROGRESS, the distributor of the complete DEFA film heritage
  • Studio Babelsberg

defa, french, aircraft, cannon, cannon, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sch. For the French aircraft cannon see DEFA cannon This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources DEFA news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message DEFA Deutsche Film Aktiengesellschaft was the state owned film studio of the German Democratic Republic East Germany throughout the country s existence Deutsche Film AktiengesellschaftDEFAFormation17 May 1946Dissolved1992HeadquartersEast BerlinLocationEast GermanySince 2019 DEFA s film heritage has been made accessible and licensable on the PROGRESS archive platform 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Das Stacheltier 2 DEFA Film studios 3 See also 4 Bibliography 5 Film 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Founding congress of DEFA Studio Berlin May 1946DEFA was founded in Spring 1946 in the Soviet Occupied Zone in eastern Germany it was the first film production company in post World War II Germany 2 While the other Allies in their zones of occupation viewed a rapid revival of a German film industry with suspicion the Soviets valued the medium as a primary means of re educating the German populace as it emerged from twelve years of Nazi rule Headquartered in Berlin the company was formally authorized by the Soviet Military Administration to produce films on 13 May 1946 although Wolfgang Staudte had already begun work on DEFA s first film Die Morder sind unter uns The Murderers Are Among Us nine days earlier 3 The original board of directors consisted of Alfred Lindemann Karl Hans Bergmann and Herbert Volkmann with Hans Klering as administrative Secretary Klering a former graphic designer also designed DEFA s logo 4 On 13 August 1946 the company was officially registered as a joint stock company German Aktiengesellschaft By the end of the year in addition to the Staudte film it had completed two other feature films using the former Tobis studio facilities in Berlin and the Althoff Studios in Babelsberg Subsequently its principal studio was the Babelsberg Studio built by Ufa in the 1920s On 14 July 1947 the company officially moved its headquarters to the Bablesberg Studio and on 13 November 1947 the company s stock was taken over by the Socialist Unity Party or SED which had originally capitalized DEFA and pro Soviet German individuals Soviets Ilya Trauberg and Aleksandr Wolkenstein joined Lindemann Bergmann and Volkmann on the board of directors and a committee was established under the auspices of the Socialist Unity Party to review projects and screen rushes citation needed In July 1948 Lindemann was dismissed from the board of directors because of alleged financial irregularities and replaced briefly by Walter Janka In October 1948 the SED was instrumental in replacing Janka Volkmann and Bergmann as corporate directors with official party members Wilhelm Meissner Alexander Losche de and Grete Keilson In December the death of Trauberg and the resignation of Wolkenstein resulted in two more Soviets in their stead Aleksandr Andriyevsky and Leonid Antonov citation needed In 1948 the division of Germany into zones controlled by the Soviet Union and by the Western Allies came into effect The SED eventually became openly Communist with a strong Stalinist orientation On 23 May 1949 the Allies Germany officially became the Federal Republic of Germany commonly known as West Germany and on 7 October 1949 the Soviet zone officially became the German Democratic Republic East Germany All DEFA interests were incorporated into the new nation as its people s film monopoly according to the strictures of Stalinist Communism and socialist realism and effectively an arm of the government On 23 June 1950 Sepp Schwab de a hardline Communist was appointed director general of DEFA citation needed nbsp DEFA feature film studios Babelsberg Potsdam July 1952As socialist realism took hold at DEFA the definition of desirable and acceptable themes for films became narrower In June 1947 a film writer s conference held in Potsdam produced general agreement that the new German cinema would disavow both subjects and stylistic elements reminiscent of those seen on German screens during and prior to the Nazi era By 1949 expectations for scripts were codified around a small number of topics such as re distribution of land or the two year plan As in the Soviet Union the excessive control placed by the state on authors of screenplays as against other literary works discouraged many competent writers from contributing to East German film Screenwriters could find their efforts rejected for ideological reasons at any stage in script development if not from the outset As a result between 1948 and 1953 when Stalin died the entire film output for East Germany excluding newsreels and non theatrical educational films amounted to fewer than 50 titles citation needed nbsp Two Young Pioneers examine the brochure for the DEFA children s film Die Storenfriede The Trobulemakers before a screening July 1953In the 1960s DEFA produced the popular Red Western The Sons of the Great Mother Bear directed by Josef Mach and starring Gojko Mitic as the Sioux Tokei itho 5 This spawned a number of sequels and was notable for inverting Western cliches by portraying the native Americans as the good guys and the American army as the baddies 6 citation needed In 1992 after German reunification DEFA was officially dissolved and its combined studios sold to a French conglomerate Compagnie Generale des Eaux later Vivendi Universal In 2004 a private consortium acquired the studios The films produced at the DEFA studios after World War II included approximately 950 feature films 820 animated films more than 5 800 documentaries and newsreels and 4 000 foreign language movies dubbed into German which were acquired by the privatized version of the former East German film distribution monopoly PROGRESS 7 8 In October 2005 the Museum of Modern Art in New York City hosted a two week DEFA festival 9 Das Stacheltier edit Das Stacheltier is a satirical series of short films that was produced in East Germany by the DEFA Film Studios from 1953 10 to 1964 11 The short films were meant to be shown in film theatres preceding the newsreel and the main feature The only feature film in the series was the silent film Der junge Englander directed by Gottfried Kolditz in 1958 Many well known East German directors and actors contributed to the film series including Frank Beyer Erwin Geschonneck Gisela May Rudolf Wessely Otto Tausig Peter Sturm Rolf Herricht and Heinz Schubert In 2019 Progress was acquired by LOOKSfilm Since April 1 2019 the entire film heritage of the GDR has been made internationally accessible and licensable on the Progress Film archive platform 12 DEFA Film studios editDEFA Studio fur Spielfilme in Potsdam Babelsberg studio for feature films DEFA Studio fur Trickfilme in Dresden studio for animated films DEFA Studio fur popularwissenschaftliche Filme in Potsdam Alt Nowawes studio for educational films DEFA Studio fur Wochenschau und Dokumentarfilme in Berlin studio for news reels and documentation films DEFA Studio fur Synchronisation in Berlin Johannisthal studio for dubbing DEFA Kopierwerke in Berlin Kopenick and Berlin Johannisthal factory for movie copying DEFA Aussenhandel in Berlin foreign trade See also editBabelsberg Studio Broadcasting in East Germany Category East German actors Category East German films Culture of East Germany DEFA Film Library List of East German films Ostern PROGRESSBibliography editAllan Sean Sandford John eds DEFA East German Cinema 1946 1992 New York and Oxford Berghahn Books 1999 Allan Sean Heiduschke Sebastian eds Re Imagining DEFA East German Cinema in its National and Transnational Contexts Berghahn Books 2016 Bergfelder Tim Carter Erica amp Goektuerk Deniz eds The German Cinema Book Berkeley BFI University of California Press 2003 Berghahn Daniela Hollywood behind the Wall the Cinema of East Germany Manchester Manchester University Press 2005 Beyer Frank Wenn der Wind sich dreht Meine Filme mein Leben Econ 2001 Elsaesser Thomas amp Wedel Michael The BFI Companion to German Cinema London British Film Institute 1999 Habel F B Das grosse Lexikon der DEFA Spielfilme Berlin Schwarzkopf amp Schwarzkopf 2000 Heiduschke Sebastian East German Cinema DEFA and Film History New York Palgrave Macmillan 2013 Naughton Leonie That Was the Wild East Film Culture Unification and the New Germany Ann Arbor 2002 Preuss Evelyn You Say You Want a Revolution East German Film at the Crossroads between the Cinemas In Celluloid Revolt German Screen Cultures and the Long 1968 edited by Christina Gerhardt and Marco Abel 218 236 Rochester NY Boydell 2019 Schenk Ralf Richter Erika eds apropos Film 2001 Das Jahrbuch der DEFA Stiftung Das Neue Berlin 2001 Schittly Dagmar Zwischen Regie und Regime die Filmpolitik der SED im Spiegel der DEFA Produktionen Berlin 2002 Silberman Marc Wrage Henning eds DEFA at the Crossroads of East German and International Film Culture A Companion Berlin Boston De Gruyter 2014 Wagner Brigitta B ed DEFA after East Germany Rochester Camden House 2014 Film editEast Side Story a documentary that discusses DEFA s musicalsReferences edit PROGRESS Retrieved February 23 2021 History www defa stiftung de Die MORDER SIND UNTER UNS 1946 BFI Archived from the original on February 16 2018 Thomas Phelps Links wo das Herz ist Archived 2010 06 17 at the Wayback Machine Justus Liebig University Giessen October 27 28 1997 Retrieved 29 November 2011 in German Die SOHNE DER GROSSEN BARIN 1965 BFI Archived from the original on April 3 2018 The Sons of Great Bear DEFA Film Library ecommerce umass edu DEFA Stiftung filmarchives online www filmarchives online eu Wagner Brigitta B March 9 2014 DEFA After East Germany Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 9781571135827 via Google Books Rebels with a Cause The Cinema of East Germany The Museum of Modern Art Beutelschmidt Thomas 2013 Grenzuberschreitung intern In Michael Wedel Michael Byg Barton Rader Andy Arndt Briggs Skyler Torner Evan eds DEFA international Grenzuberschreitende Filmbeziehungen vor und nach dem Mauerbau Springer Verlag pp 92 110 ISBN 9783531190761 Klotzer Sylvia 2006 Satire und Macht Film Zeitung Kabarett in der DDR Koln Bohlau ISBN 978 3412150051 Digital Media Hub www progress film Retrieved 2022 08 04 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to DEFA DEFA Film Library and Online Shop DEFA Foundation PROGRESS the distributor of the complete DEFA film heritage Studio Babelsberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title DEFA amp oldid 1180285434, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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