Odesa Film Studio (Ukrainian: Одеська кіностудія художніх фільмів, Russian: Одесская киностудия художественных фильмов) was a Ukrainian, formerly Soviet, film studio in Odesa. Founded in 1919, it was one of the first studios in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union.
Company type | Closed Joint-stock company |
---|---|
Industry | Film |
Founded | 1919 |
Headquarters | Frantsuz'ky Bulvar 33, Odesa, Ukraine |
Key people | Andrii Osipov (acting Chairman) |
Products | Motion pictures, TV films |
Owner | Government of Ukraine (50%+1) and Nova Film Studios LLC |
Parent | Odesa Film Studios of featured films Nova Film Studios |
Website | odesafilmstudio.com.ua |
It is partially owned by the government and supervised by the State Property Fund of Ukraine and the Ministry of Culture. Together with Dovzhenko Film Studios, they are the only state-owned and major film producers in the country. The studio is located at 33 French Boulevard (33 Французский бульвар), in Odesa, Ukraine.[1]
History and reorganization
editIt was founded on 23 May 1919 by the decision of the Odesa Governorate's Executive Committee, from the remnants of cinema studios of Myron Grossman, Dmitriy Kharitonov, and Borisov. It was one of the first domestic film producers in the Soviet Union. At first, it was listed as "Political film section of political department and of 41st Division of the Red Army", and the first feature film filmed under this name was the "Spiders and flies." The original studios went into decline after the Russian Civil War and the Ukrainian War of Independence, as their owners emigrated, running from political prosecution. Grossman's film studio "Myrograph" existed in Odesa since 1907 and was the oldest one recorded in Ukraine.[citation needed]
In 1922, it was reorganized into the "Odesa Film Factory of the All-Ukrainian Photo Cinema Administration (VUFKU)". The Odesa film studio was the VUFKU’s main production facility. In 1926, Vyacheslav Levandovskyi and Deviatkin created an animation studio of VUFKU.[citation needed]
In 1930, VUFKU was reorganized into "Ukrainafilm" of "Soyuzkino" (Union-cinema).[2]
During the years of the Second World War (Eastern Front 1941-1945) it was part of the Tashkent Film Studio. By 1954 they returned to Odesa.[3]
In 1955, the Odesa Film Studio resumed its own film production. Director Alexander Gorky not only obtained permission to revive the studio, but also solved the personnel problem by inviting VGIK graduates — directors, cameramen, artists, and economists. Then the former students, who usually went for years as assistants, quickly got independent work. On November 26, 1956, the film by Felix Mironer and Marlen Khutsiev “Spring on Zarechnaya Street” was released, which became a significant event not only for the studio, but for the entire Soviet cinema.
In 1979, the Odesa Film Studio released The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed. It is the highest grossing film of the studio, and was popular throughout the Soviet Union.[citation needed]
In 2005, Odesa film studio was reorganized as a Closed Joint Stock Company, with the government owning the majority of shares.[citation needed]
In 2019, the National Bank of Ukraine issued a commemorative coin titled "100 years Odesa Film Studio"[4]
In addition, the main Ukraine post service issued a special anniversary stamp dedicated to the Odesa film studio.
Description
editThe studio is located in the downtown right near the shore of Black Sea covering some 7 hectares (17 acres) and consisting of three pavilions of 600 square metres (6,500 sq ft), 432 square metres (4,650 sq ft), and 240 square metres (2,600 sq ft). Inside the studio's building is located another film studio, Vira Kholodna Film Studio and the Odesa Film School. The Odesa Film Studio has its own movie theater, U-Cinema, which is also located in the same building.[citation needed]
Near the studio is the Museum of the Cinema.[citation needed]
Cinema Museum
editOn the territory of the Odesa film studio there is a cinema museum of the Odesa branch of the National Union of Cinematographers of Ukraine. The museum stores materials collected over the years of the existence of the Odesa Film Studio, film catalogs, photo albums of acting tests, information about directors and producers, film equipment, books, newspapers, film magazines, etc. In total, more than twelve thousand “storage units”.[5]
Directors
editSelected films
editSoviet Union
edit- 1926 Ягідка кохання / Love's Berries, directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko (silent film)
- 1926 Вася – реформатор / Vasia the Reformer, directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko (silent film)
- 1926 Тарас Трясило / Taras Triasylo, directed by Petro Chardynin (silent film)
- 1926 Тарас Шевченко / Taras Shevchenko, directed by Petro Chardynin (silent film)
- 1927 Сумка дипкур'єра / The Diplomatic Pouch, directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko (silent film)
- 1928 Арсенал / Arsenal, directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko (silent film)
- 1928 Звенигора / Zvenyhora, directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko (silent film)
- 1936 Назар Стодоля / Nazar Stodolia, directed by Heorhiy Tasin
- 1941 Таємничий острів / Mysterious Island, directed by Eduard Pentslin
- 1957 Орлёнок / Orlyonok, directed by Eduard Nikandrovich Bocharov
- 1967 Короткі зустрічі / Brief Encounters, directed by Kira Muratova
- 1978 Д'Артаньян та три мушкетери / D'Artagnan and Three Musketeers, directed by Heorhiy Yungvald-Khilkevych
- 1979 Пригоди Електроніка / The Adventures of the Elektronic, directed by Kostiantyn Bromberg
- 1979 Місце зустрічі змінити не можна / The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed, directed by Stanislav Hovorukhin
- 1982 Трест, що луснув / The Trust That Has Burst, directed by Oleksandr Pavlovskyi
- 1982 Чарівники / Wizards, directed by Kostiantyn Bromberg
- 1983 Серед сірих каменів / Among Grey Stones, directed by Kira Muratova
- 1983 Військово-польовий роман / Wartime Romance, directed by Petro Todorovskyi
- 1983 Колесо історії / Wheel of History, directed by Stanislav Klymenko
- 1986 У пошуках капітана Гранта / In search of Captain Grant, directed by Stanislav Hovorukhin
- 1987 Данило — князь Галицький / Danylo — Kniaz of Halychyna, directed by Yaroslav Lupiy
- 1989 Астенічний синдром / The Asthenic Syndrome, directed by Kira Muratova
Ukraine
edit- 1991 Чудо в краю забуття / Miracle in the Land of Oblivion, directed by Natalia Motuzko
- 1999 Як коваль щастя шукав / How the Blacksmith Looked for Happiness, directed by Radomyr Vasylevsky
- 2001 На Полі Крові / Akeldama, directed by Yaroslav Lupiy
- 2007 Біля річки / At the River, directed by Eva Neymann
Selected directors
edit- 1919-1925
- Myron Grossman (1908-1918) (considered a founder of Odesa cinematography)
- Pyotr Chardynin (1923-1932)
- Les Kurbas (1922-1925)
- Georgiy Tasin, the first studio director in 1922
- 1926-1936
- 1936-1954
- 1955-1965
- Kira Muratova and Oleksandr Muratov
- Vadym Kostromenko, currently the director of the museum
- Vadym Avloshenko
- Pyotr Todorovsky
- 1966-1996
- Georgi Yungvald-Khilkevich
- Stanislav Govorukhin
- Aleksandr Pavlovsky
- Natalya Zbandut (Medyuk)
- Mykhailo Kats
Selected actors
edit- 1919-1925
- Vera Kholodnaya (1914-1919) (featured in 35 films)
- Daria Zerkalova
- 1926-1936
- 1966-1996
Others
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Творческое Объединение "Маски"". May 16, 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-05-16.
- ^ "Kinofest NYC - VUFKU History". kinofestnyc.com. Retrieved 2016-12-01.
- ^ "Odesa Film Studio". Audiovisual Identity Database. 2024-08-08. Retrieved 2024-08-14.
- ^ "100 років Одеській кіностудії". bank.gov.ua. Archived from the original on 2019-05-14.
- ^ Тютюненко, Наталия (2014-10-28). "Кино по-одесски, или история длиною в 95 лет | Mediasat" (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-02-04.
Bibliography
edit- Histoire du cinéma ukrainien (1896–1995), Lubomir Hosejko, Éditions à Dié, Dié, 2001, ISBN 978-2-908730-67-8, traduit en ukrainien en 2005 : Istoria Oukraïnskovo Kinemotografa, Kino-Kolo, Kiev, 2005, ISBN 966-8864-00-X
External links
edit- Media related to Odesa Film Studio at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
- Non-official website Odesa film studio