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Mezhrabpomfilm (russian: Межрабпомфильм), from the word ''film'', and the Russian acronym for Workers International Relief or Workers International Aid (russian: Международная рабочая помощь, was a German-Russian film studio, formerly Mezhrabpom-Rus, from 1922-1936. Currently “ Gorky Film Studio


History

The studio was formed from the joining together in 1922 of Moisei Aleinikov, a Russian producer, and Willi Münzenberg, a German communist. The studio was set up in Moscow, with headquarters in Berlin. After producing around 600 films the "international experiment was brutally ended eleven and fourteen years later by Hitler's and Stalin's regimes." Classics of revolutionary cinema, such as Vsevolod Pudovkin's ''
The End of St. Petersburg ''The End of St. Petersburg'' (russian: Конец Санкт-Петербурга, Konets Sankt-Peterburga) is a 1927 silent film directed by Vsevolod Pudovkin and produced by Mezhrabpom. Commissioned to commemorate the tenth anniversary of th ...
'' (''Konez Sankt Peterburga'' (1927)) were made by Mezhrabpom-Film. Other significant films made by the studio include Storm Over Asia (1928), Boris Barnet's '' The Girl with a Hatbox'' (''Devushka s korobkoy'' (1927), Yakov Protazanov's '' Aelita'' (1924) and '' St. Jorgen's Day'' (1930), Margarita Barskaya's ''Torn Shoes'' (''Rvanye Bashmaki'' 1933), a drama about children set in Germany when the Nazis assumed power, and
Aleksandr Andriyevsky Alexander Leonidovich Andrijevsky (russian: Алекса́ндр Леони́дович Андрие́вский; born August 10, 1968) is a Belarusian former professional ice hockey player who played one game in the National Hockey League for the ...
's early science-fiction film '' Loss of Sensation'' (''Gibel Sensatsii'' 1935). The Soviet Union's first animated films, and first sound film, Nikolai Ekk's '' Road to Life'' (1931) were made by the studio. One of Mezhrabpomfilm's last films was Gustav von Wangenheim's ''Fighters'' (1936), about German workers fighting the Nazi Brownshirts and the SS in 1933. It was made by German filmmakers and actors who had fled to Moscow to avoid Hitler's terror. Ironically, 2 actors working on the set were arrested during the filming and by the end of 1938 (during Stalin's terror years) two thirds of the film crew were arrested. In 1936, the company was dissolved, as it was regarded too independent and too influenced by foreigners. ''Rot-Front Studio'' became its successor, but in the same 1936 its name was changed to ''Soyuzdetfilm'' (russian: Союздетфильм), the world's first film company devoted to films for children and teenagers, which in 1948 was renamed Gorky Film Studio. Its German branch ''Prometheus Film'', produced some of the "socially committed cinematic art of the late Weimar Republic
ed Dream Factory productions Ed, ed or ED may refer to: Arts and entertainment * ''Ed'' (film), a 1996 film starring Matt LeBlanc * Ed (''Fullmetal Alchemist'') or Edward Elric, a character in ''Fullmetal Alchemist'' media * ''Ed'' (TV series), a TV series that ran fro ...
such as Phil Jutzi's work, Leo Mittler's '' Beyond the Street'' (''Jenseits der Strasse'' 1929), Slatan Dudow's '' Kuhle Wampe or Who Owns the World?'' (''Kuhle Wampe, oder: Wem gehört die Welt?'' 193

berlinale pressrelease], as well as two joint productions with Mezhrabpomfilm, before going bankrupt in 1932. Berlin's ''Bertz + Fischer'' published a book for a Retrospective - a programme of films which were presented at the 2012 Berlin Film Festival - in which German and Russian authors look at the studio and the aesthetics of the films produced there (Günter Agde, Alexander Schwarz (ed.): ''Die rote Traumfabrik: Meschrabpom-Film und Prometheus (1921–1936)''. Berlin: Bertz + Fischer 2012).


See also

* Gorky Film Studio


External links


MUBI, 10 January 2012: ''Berlinale 2012. The Reds are coming to MoMA!''



References

{{Authority control Weimar culture Film production companies of Germany Film production companies of Russia German film studios Communist Party of Germany