Available Formats
The Continental Connection: GermanSpeaking Migrs and British Cinema, 192745
By (Author) Tobias Hochscherf
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
1st May 2015
United Kingdom
Paperback
240
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Now available in paperback, this study is a major appraisal of the contributions of German-speaking emigres to British cinema from the late 1920s to the end of World War II. Through a series of film analyses and case studies, it challenges notions of a self-sufficient British national cinema by advancing the assumption that filmmakers from Berlin, Munich and Vienna had a major influence on aesthetics, themes and narratives, technical innovation, the organisation of work and the introduction of apprenticeship schemes. Whether they came voluntarily or as refugees, their contributions and expertise helped to consolidate the studio system and ultimately made possible the establishment of a viable British film industry. Hochscherf talks about such figures as Ewald Andre Dupont, Alfred Junge, Oscar Werndorff, Mutz Greenbaum and Werner Brandes, and such companies as Korda's London Film Productions, Powell and Pressburger's The Archers and Michael Balcon's Gaumont-British. -- .
Tobias Hochscherf is Professor of Audiovisual Media at the University of Applied Sciences Kiel in Germany.