The Dream Factory - 100 Years of Film in Babelsberg

Loft studios in Berlin with a high fire risk and a beautiful woman whose films caused a lot of excitement: These were the reasons why a film pioneer started looking for new company facilities in 1911.
One century and more than 3,000 films later, the successors of the Bioscop film company celebrate the 100th anniversary of the world’s oldest film studio. Filmmuseum Potsdam honors this anniversary with a new permanent exhibition.
Of course, the exhibition features invaluable exhibits from the studio’s history. And yet, the question remains how to tell the story of film in Babelsberg. Despite rapid technological progress, the making of films still follows traditional, internationally valid patterns that even children are able to understand - and this is why the process of filmmaking is at the core of the exhibition.
The starting point of every film production is an idea, which is then developed into a screenplay. Finding a producer for the project sets the stage for a long process that includes casting, costumes and make-up, set construction, shooting, editing, and sound design. When the audience roars with applause at the premiere and the film wins an award or becomes a box-office success, its makers are happy. The exhibition encompasses seven theme rooms where visitors can discover the films of Ufa, DEFA, and Studio Babelsberg.
Interactive modules allow them to find out in a playful, intuitive way what it’s like to sing along with Zara Leander or to replace actors such as Renate Krößner or Detlev Buck in a casting session. Besides, the exhibition provides young people looking for professional perspectives with hands-on information on jobs in the media business.
Throughout five political periods, Studio Babelsberg has been a factory realizing the dreams of the creative and the powerful - from the German Empire to the age of globalization, during the Nazi era and in GDR times. A computer-based information system and an exhibition guide shed light on the background of film production in Babelsberg, putting films and those who worked on them into their historical context.




Begleitbuch und DVD Historische Potsdam-Filme

Exhibition tour

Exactly 100 years after the issuance of the building permit for Bioscop's first film studio on 3 November 1911, the museum honors the artists, craftsmen and organizers who worked for the company and its successors - Ufa, DEFA, and Studio Babelsberg - with an exhibition.

Studio Babelsberg has always been a factory realizing the dreams of the creative and the powerful. Throughout five political periods - from the German Empire to the age of globalization, during the Nazi era and in GDR times - films were produced at the world's oldest studio.

The exhibition is dedicated to those who put their energy into the more than 3,000 feature and TV films that have been made in Babelsberg since the production of the first film in 1912. In seven theme rooms, the exhibition sheds light on the entire filmmaking process - from the first idea to the premiere.

Due to the fact that, ever since the beginnings of filmmaking, this process has basically remained the same worldwide, even visitors who don't know any of the films presented in the exhibition will understand it, become curious about the films, and might get interested in watching them on the big screen or on DVD. The exhibition is bilingual.

On the history of the Babelsberg studios

1911 - 1920 | 1920 - 1921 | 1921 - 1945 | 1946 - 1992 | 1992 - 1999 | 2000 - 2008 | 2009 - today

1911 - 1920: Bioscop

1911
The fire department evicts the Bioscop film company from their loft studio in Berlin. Guido Seeber, cameraman and technical director, discovers a vacant factory building surrounded by a large area of waste land in Babelsberg. The firm moves to the suburban location. For the extremely successful productions with Danish actress Asta Nielsen, a light-flooded glass studio is built in late autumn.

1912
The first production in the "Glashaus" (the "glass studio"), Urban Gad's film "Der Totentanz" ("The Dance of the Dead") starring Nielsen, is shot in February. This is the beginning of a Nielsen series that is successful throughout Europe.

1913
Bioscop extends its capacities, building a second glass studio and a circus arena for 1,000 spectators. Asta Nielsen leaves the studio. Director Stellan Rye and actor Paul Wegener shoot the film "Der Student von Prag" ("The Student of Prague"). This "art film" with its spectular film tricks inspires experts and audiences.

1914
In the summer, Bioscop is close to bankruptcy. With entertaining and patriotic kitsch, the long tradition of involvement with propaganda and cooperation with ruling systems begins. Most male skilled workers leave to fight in World War I, the female staff manages to keep the company going until 1918. Noticeable works of artistic value, such as Paul Wegener's "Der Golem", remain exceptions.

1916
Otto Rippert directs the highly successful series "Homunculus", the story of an artificial "human"; six films are produced in only five months. This is the first time a series - a format known only in the USA so far - is shot in Germany. With the series and the trilogy "Ashaver", the studios in Babelsberg are the first in Germany to produce monumental and costume films.

1917
The Bioscop management tries in vain to sell the studios to Ufa (Universum Film), which is in the course of formation. Instead, the leasing of the studio facilities becomes normal. Only three films and one series are made by Bioscop until 1919.

1920 - 1921: Decla-Bioscop

1920
From the consolidation of Bioscop with the Decla (Deutsche Eclaire-Gesellschaft) company, the second-largest German film company after Ufa emerges. After the war, sensation-based films and exotic adventures fulfill audience desires. The production of "art films" is maintained. The well-known painter César Klein designs the expressionistic, distorted set for the thriller "Genuine" (DIR: Robert Wiene).

1921 - 1945: Ufa

1921
Decla-Bioscop merges with Ufa, which is about to become the market-dominating film company. Fritz Lang's "Der müde Tod" ("The Weary Death") is one of the most successful Babelsberg productions of the year.

1922
Ufa takes over the leadership in Neu-Babelsberg and makes the studio the most vital and innovative one in Germany. Decla producer Erich Pommer now works for Ufa and becomes its creative mastermind. Masterpieces of the silent film era are created, such as "Die Nibelungen" ("Nibelungen", 1922/24, DIR: Fritz Lang) and "Der letzte Mann" ("The Last Laugh", 1924, DIR: Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau) with Emil Jannings. Hollywood sends trainees to examine Babelsberg's novel film trick inventions and astounding set decorations. In 1924, Alfred Hitchcock visits the studios as assistant director of a production.

1925
As a result of inflation, mismanagement and megalomania, Ufa has to sign an adhesion contract with the American companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Paramount. Famous actors such as Henny Porten have meanwhile become mass idols.

1926
Hollywood succeeds in headhunting creative personnel from Babelsberg, among them Erich Pommer and Emil Jannings, the first and - up to the present day - only German actor to be honoured with the newly-created Oscar award. Europe's biggest studio, the "Große Halle" ("the large studio") is established.

1927
Extensive production times and exorbitant demands of artists like Fritz Lang, whose science fiction film "Metropolis" is part of the World Cultural Heritage today, contribute to the miserable financial situation of the studios. Taken over by Alfred Hugenberg's right-wing press conglomerate Scherl, Ufa contracts out of the agreements with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Paramount. This way, a powerful propaganda enterprise emerges. Besides entertainment for the masses, Ufa produces more and more reactionary films. The introduction of strict working schedules and cost regulations as weel as ideological pressure change the working atmosphere in Babelsberg.

1928
Ufa and Babelsberg expand. The staff increases, the studio area is extended significantly by real estate acquisitions. Employees criticising Ufa manager Hugenberg or his party, the DNVP, are discarded. A group of Russian emigrants from Paris now produces in Babelsberg - among others, the highly successful film "Geheimnisse des Orients" ("Secrtes of the Orient", DIR: Aexander Wolkoff). Ufa decides to construct sound film studios.

1929
The sound film comes from Babelsberg - a little too early at first, then almost too late. The first screenings of the sound film department in the mid 1920s do not convince the Ufa bosses, the department even has to leave the Babelsberg area as the noisy film shooting of "Metropolis" disturbs its experiments. Hollywood uses German patents, releasing its first sound film already in 1927. The "large studio" is split up. Next to the "Tonkreuz", a cross-shaped, sound-proof studio without windows made of red clinker brick, the famous "Mittelhalle" ("middle studio") is built, which is named "Marlene-Dietrich-Halle" in 1995. Already on 16 December, the first feature-length Ufa sound film "Melodie des Herzens" ("Melody of the Heart", DIR: Hanns Schwarz) premiers.

1930
Meanwhile, Ufa actors are well-known to each and everyone, the company's name has become a quality label. The sound film "Der blaue Engel" ("The Blue Angel", DIR: Josef von Sternberg) becomes a triumph for main actress Marlene Dietrich. She travels to Hollywood for the premiere and becomes a superstar during the following years. On the outdoor studio area, a small-scale version of Sanssouci Castle's facade is built for "Das Flötenkonzert von Sanssouci" ("The Flute Concert of Sanssouci", DIR: Gustav von Ucicky). Most of the Ufa members of the supervisory board already get involved with the NSDAP.

1931
Only two more silent films are shot. Most sound films have several soundtracks - German, English and French actors consecutively play the same parts on the same sets. The small glass studio in which the Babelsberg film history began in 1912 gives way to a modern glass studio for rear projections.

1933
With the films "Morgenrot" ("Dawn", 1932, DIR: Gustav von Ucicky) and "Hitlerjunge Quex" ("Hitler Youth Quex", DIR: Hans Steinhoff - here, Hitler himself attends the premiere), Ufa demonstrates its sympathy for the regime. Jews and political dissidents are discarded with anticipatory obedience. Among the first emigrants are actor Peter Lorre, director Fritz Lang and producer Erich Pommer. A new school of officials, directors and stars takes in the positions of those persecuted because of their race or political attitude. Among the most prominent representatives of national socialist cinema are directors Veit Harlan and Karl Ritter.

1935
Adolf Hitler and Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels visit the studios, acclaimed by the staff. Their tour through the studio also passes the location where the subversive comedy "Amphitryon" (DIR: Reinhold Schünzel) was shot. The Ministry for Propaganda controls film production, all studios are nationalised until 1937. Entertainment films, sometimes with national socialist implications, dominate the studios' production.

1937
Swedish actress Zarah Leander is made a star by Ufa and even competes with Hans Albers, the idol of the public, in terms of growing salary demands. Colour film becomes a "national task".

1938
The German Film Academy starts producing in Babelsberg. The studios that are located between the exclusive residential area Neu-Babelsberg and the former village Nowawes are integrated into the municipal district of Potsdam by a territorial reform. The studio discusses measures to be taken in case of mobilisation or air raid.

1939
An air-raid shelter for 418 persons is built. The last German-French coproduction before the war is made with French comedian Fernandel. With the beginning of World War II in 1939, high spirits become strategically important. The NS leadership and successful Ufa actors and directors pay court to each other - up to the bitter end of the Nazi regime in 1945.

1940
The anti-semitic film "Jud Süß" ("Jew Süß", DIR: Veit Harlan) with Ferdinand Marian in the main role premiers.

1942
The Ufa becomes a part of the state company Ufa Film GmbH (Ufi). On Hitler's instructions, films made in the Babelsberg studios are still allowed to use the Ufa label. Material and personnel constraints increase due to the war.

1943
Ufa celebrates its 25th anniversary with "Münchhausen" (DIR: Joseph von Baky); the film is a dazzling display of design, costumes, stars and esprit. Proscribed author Erich Kästner has written the script using a pseudonym, Hans Albers plays the main role. In the summer, the bulletin "What to do if my workplace got destroyed?" is handed out to all Ufa employees.

1944
"Die Feuerzangenbowle" (DIR: Helmut Weiß) premiers. More and more employees have to work in armament factories or are drafted into the military. Prisoners from a nearby forced labour camp work at the film productions. Due to material constraints, slow censorship decisions and closing cinemas, the studios incur losses.

1945
At gigantic expenses, the film "Kolberg" (1943/1945, DIR: Veit Harlan) - the most expensive film of the Nazi era with Heinrich George in the main role - is made for the purpose of agitation. Babelsberg continues to produce until springtime, also in order to save employees from being drafted into the Wehrmacht or the Volkssturm. At the end of April, the Soviet Army reaches Potsdam and Babelsberg. In July, the Allied Forces of World War II use the studio to establish an intelligence department for the Potsdam Conference.

1946 - 1992: DEFA

1946
Germany's first post-war film "Die Mörder sind unter uns" ("Murderers Among Us", DIR: Wolfgang Staudte) is shot in the Althoff studios in Babelsberg with Hildegard Knef in the main role. Here, the DEFA (Deutsche Film AG) is founded on 17 May. From the very beginning, anti-fascist films define the new company's pofile. In the former Ufa studio, Soviet film companies work, e.g., on the synchronisation of Soviet films for the German market.
1947
The Soviet occupying power allows DEFA employees to start the cleanup of the studio area.

1948
In January, DEFA starts shooting the circus film "1-2-3-Corona" (DIR: Hans Müller) in Babelsberg and Berlin. In the following decades, children's films are produced on a regular basis - all in all 160 films. This is unique in Germany. In the first half of the year, the number of employees increases from 14 to more than 100. During the years to follow, former Ufa employees work hand in hand with anti-fascists and the new DEFA staff, accomplishing an enormous amount of rebuilding work.

1949
From the foundation of the state in October until its decline 40 years later, the political leadership of the GDR controls film production. The first DEFA cinema is opened in Berlin. The DEFA house journal "DEFA-Blende" is published for the first time. The opera film "Figaros Hochzeit" ("The Marriage of Figaro", DIR: Georg Wildhagen) becomes the popular success of the year.

1950
The SED, the state party of the GDR, tightens film censorship. During Christmas time, the DEFA colour film "Das kalte Herz" ("Heart of Stone", DIR: Paul Verhoeven) premiers and marks the beginning of the height of DEFA fairy tale films in the 1950s and 1960s.

1951
As first DEFA film that has already been screened, "Das Beil von Wandsbek" ("The Axe of Wandsbek", DIR: Falk Harnack) is banned after its premiere. Harnack recedes from his position as artistic director. In August, "Der Untertan" ("The Underdog", DIR: Wolfgang Staudte) premiers. In West German cinemas, screenings of the film are dismissed due to "anti-German propaganda".

1953
More than 1000 artists, technicians, inventors, craftsmen and administrators already work in the film metropolis that covers an area of 460,000 square metres. Soviet interests in the DEFA end on 1 January, the company is nationalised entirely. Now, the studio's name is "VEB DEFA-Spielfilm". The SED leadership orders the dismissal of all employees resident in West Berlin. Between 1953 and 1955, Kurt Maetzig directs an elaborate colour film in two parts about labour leader Ernst Thälmann. The films, with Günter Simon playing the main role, have a lasting effect on the perception of history of millions of GDR spectators.

1958
Despite several successes, DEFA has difficulties to reach audiences. In order to improve film quality, artist teams are created that work on projects more independently than before. French star actor Jean Gabin works in Babelsberg, the Film "Die Elenden" ("Les Misérables", DIR: Jean-Paul Le Chanois) is the beginning of a series of German-French coproductions.

1959
At the Cannes Film Festival, Konrad Wolf's "Sterne" ("Stars") is honoured with an award. The first TV film with the overtly symbolic title "Brücke zwischen gestern und morgen" ("Bridge between Yesterday and Tomorrow") is completed. During the following 30 years, the studios produce 540 films for GDR television.

1960
"5 Tage - 5 Nächte" ("5 Days - 5 Nights", DIR: Heinz Thiel) is the first German-Soviet coproduction. The first DEFA science fiction film "Der schweigende Stern" ("First Spaceship on Venus", DIR: Kurt Maetzig) is also the first DEFA film with multi-channel magnetic sound. DEFA technicians start developing a 70 mm large-screen camera.

1961
The DEFA company brigade group takes an active part in the securing of the construction of the Berlin Wall. With 27 premieres, the studio reaches the highest annual production level of its history.
1965
The 11th Plenary Assembly of the SED discards critical, naturalistic art. This way, more than half of the DEFA's annual production ends up in the archive. Artists and cultural officials involved in the making of these films are banned from their professions. Filmmakers sidestep to historical or literary films during the following years.

1966
DEFA western films become box office successes for more than a decade.

1968
The first 70 mm DEFA film "Hauptmann Florian von der Mühle" with Manfred Krug in the main role premiers successfully. Same as the Soviet Union, the USA, Great Britain and France, DEFA now produces on 70 mm footage. "Ich war neunzehn" ("I Was Nineteen", DIR: Konrad Wolf) is an artistic climax in the tradition of antifascist films and is also received well by audiences.

1969
As the GDR tries to gain international recognition as an independent German state, 19 "DEFA Film Weeks" are created: in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and in socialist countries. The first DEFA Film Week in the Federal German Republic takes place in Oberhausen. Celebrating the GDR's 20th anniversary, DEFA shows the popular success "Zeit zu leben" ("Time to live", DIR: Horst Seemann).

1972
The "Gegenwartsfilm" ("contemporary film", i.e. a film dealing with a contemporary subject matter) "Der Dritte" ("Her Third", DIR: Egon Günther) is awarded the main prize at Karlovy Vary Film Festival. Main actress Jutta Hoffmann receives the award "best actress" at the Venice International Film Festival. In the following years, films about self-confident women become popular successes, such as "Die Legende von Paul und Paula" ("The Legend of Paul and Paula", DIR: Heiner Carow) in 1973.

1974
"Jakob der Lügner" ("Jacob the Liar", DIR: Frank Beyer), a coproduction of DEFA and national television, is broadcasted in December, shown in cinemas one year later and, as the only DEFA film, nominated for an Oscar.

1976
The expatriation of singer-songwriter Wolf Biermann causes an inflammation of the latent conflict between critical artists and the regime. Even film celebrities such as actor Manfred Krug and director Frank Beyer protest against governmental disposal. The confrontation shows its effect: more and more artists leave the GDR.

1978
After 25 years, DEFA's foreigen trade results include 1100 contracts with film distributors and TV stations. DEFA films have been exported to 80 countries.

1980
At last, renowned director Konrad Wolf has made a new contemporary film, attracting audiences to the cinemas. Main actress Renate Krössner is awarded a Silver Bear for her role in Wolf's "Solo Sunny" on the Berlinale. Same as at the beginning of the 1970s, female characters are at the center of successful films.

1983
2400 employees work on 33 feature films and 26 TV films with 52 parts. However, the GDR's economic difficulties gradually become visible: investments are rare.

1985
The first Golden Bear for a DEFA film goes to "Die Frau und der Fremde" (DIR: Rainer Simon) at the Berlinale. TV films account for 40 percent of the entire production during the 1980s. "Ernst Thälmann", a TV film with two parts, occupies considerable studio capacity. With Peter Kahane's debut "Ete und Ali" ("Ete and Ali"), the young generation of directors finally succeeds in cinemas.

1987
A modern studio for TV audio engineering and synchronisation is opened after a 26-month construction period. 16 feature films and 24 TV films with 23 parts are produced. Business goals are more than fulfilled, which is also due to the fact that the studio equips Berlin's 750th anniversary celebrations.

1988
The film "Einer trage des anderen Last" (DIR: Lothar Warneke) is received very well by audiences and discussed intensively, although its topic - tolerance between Christians and socialists and their common humanistic ideals - is as past-due as reforms in the GDR.

1989
In October, suppressed resentments are finally spoken out in the studios: The staff demands the release of the films banned in 1965. During the time of the "Wende", the breakdown of the GDR, DEFA films are screened in empty cinemas. By the turn of the year, the studio's general director announces that state support, international coproductions and services have become necessary to ensure the company's competitiveness.

1990
The Treuhandanstalt, a holding company for the privatisation of GDR property, privatises all GDR state companies. All DEFA institutions become GmbHs (i.e. limited companies). Hundreds of the 2400 employees are dismissed - this is the beginning of a clean sweep that is not finished before the year 2000. People from the film business and politicians plead for maintaining the venerable Babelsberg location, even French Culture Minister Jack Lang supports the idea of a European film and TV centre in Babelsberg. 14 DEFA productions premier - with moderate resonance. Since 3 October, GDR citizens have become FRG citizens, and the change takes its toll.

1991
The ORB (Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg), a regional division of the ARD (Alliance of Public Broadcasters of Germany), moves to the studio area and starts broadcasting. Few TV productions are ordered from Babelsberg but DEFA films are still being produced. "Der Tangospieler" ("The Tango Player", DIR: Roland Gräf) is awarded several federal film prizes. A Treuhand work group develops a DEFA film tour for tourists that is first offered in August. With more than a million items, Babelsberg's prop storage is the largest one in Europe. In December, the European Film Awards take place in the studio.

1992 -1999: Studio Babelsberg

1992
The Treuhand concludes negotiations with Compagnie Générale des Eaux (CGE, today: Vivendi) and sells the studio to the French conglomerate; the new company's name is Studio Babelsberg GmbH. Over a period of 45 years, the liquidated DEFA company had produced 700 feature films, 540 TV films and a long list of children's films. Two thirds of the 46-hectare studio area are now reserved for media enterprises. The shooting of Studio Babelsberg's first feature film production "Der Kinoerzähler" ("The Movie Teller", DIR: Bernhard Sinkel) with Armin Müller-Stahl in the main role begins.

1993
The last movie with the DEFA label "Novalis - Die blaue Blume" (DIR: Herwig Kipping) premiers, same as the last DEFA children's film "Zirri - Das Wolkenschaf" (DIR: Rolf Losansky). After its privatisation and extension, the DEFA film tour is now called "Studiotour Babelsberg". From the house discovered in 1911 by Guido Seeber for Bioscop, the ORB youth radio channel "Fritz" starts broadcasting. The ghastly, abandoned studio building is finally modernised. Director-superstar Billy Wilder visits the place where his career began. Studio Babelsberg's first international film production is called "Mesmer" (DIR: Roger Spottiswood).

1995
The production company Grundy UFA rents Studio Babelsberg's new TV centre and starts producing "Gute Zeiten, schlechte Zeiten" - the most successful daily soap of German TV history - for RTL.

1996
The UFA Film and TV Production Company, Germany's biggest TV producer, settles opposite Studio Bablesberg.

1998
An entire street of houses is built on the studio's outdoor area for Leander Hausmann's "Sonnenallee" - the set is later used and remodeled for several other productions. Carl-Friedrich Wachs, Managing Director and successor of Volker Schlöndorff, establishes Babelsberg Independence for coproductions with young underground producers. Unfortunately, Babelsberg Independence fails economically and has to leave the studio two years later.

1999
Due to generous government aids, the media metropolis Babelsberg develops: 60 buildings have been demolished, the infrastructure has been modernized. The newly built TV studios are booked up. More than 1500 employees and freelancers work in more than 60 film and media companies, such as the UFA Film and TV Production Company and Medienboard Brandenburg. Filmpark Babelsberg attracts 570.000 visitors during its most successful business year. Studio Babelsberg becomes an established service provider and uses the slogan "The studio where Fritz Lang shot 'Metropolis' and where Marlene Dietrich crossed her lovely legs" in the last year of the 20th century.

2000 - 2008: Studio Babelsberg

2000
The Deutsches Rundfunkarchiv, with its collections predominantly consisting of GDR TV productions, moves from Berlin-Adlershof to a new building in the ORB area. "Enemy at the Gates", by then the most expensive European film, is shot. The "Konrad Wolf" Film and Television College moves into a new building in the area of the media metropolis.
2001
Roman Polanski's "The Pianist" is shot. The film is awarded several Oscars and a Palm d'Or at Cannes Film Festival.

2003
The shooting of the Hollywood production "In 80 Tagen um die Welt" ("Around the World in 80 Days") begins. ORB and SFB found the joint venture RBB (Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg) with offices in Berlin and Potsdam. 650 RBB employees work in Babelsberg.

2004
Among other locations, "The Bourne Supremacy" (DIR: Paul Greengrass) with Matt Damon and Franke Potente is also shot in Berlin and Potsdam. The French conglomerate Vivendi sells Studio Babelsberg to Munich-based investors Dr. Carl L. Woebcken and Christoph Fisser. The Hollywood production "Aeon Flux" is shot.

2005
Studio Babelsberg GmbH goes public. By renting two new studio facilities outside the historical studio area, the studio capacity is doubled, making Studio Babelsberg the largest studio complex in Europe. Besides the daily soap "GZSZ", two telenovelas are shot - industrial TV productions in the modernized Tonkreuz provide security for Babelsberg's balance. The first European radio station for children "Radio Teddy" goes on the air from the Filmpark. In the Marlene-Dietrich-Halle, the Hollywood productions "V for Vendetta" (DIR: James McTeigue) with Natalie Portman in the main role and "Black Book" (DIR: Paul Verhoeven) are shot.

2006
The Hollywood thriller "Der ewige Gärtner" ("The Constant Gardener", DIR: Fernando Meirelles), which is coproduced by Studio Babelsberg, receives a Golden Globe and actress Rachel Weisz wins an Oscar for her performance. "V for Vendetta" is screened at the Berlinale.
Result at the end of the year: 26 international inquiries, 26 negotiated offers, yet not a single realised major order in 20 months. The leasing of the studio facilities for TV productions turns out satisfactory.
Roman Polanski orders stage decorations for the theatre staging of "Dance of the Vampires" and rehearses in the studio.

2007
Finally, another order from Hollywood! Same as "The Bourne Supremacy" (2004), the third part of the thriller - "The Bourne Ultimatum" featuring Matt Damon - is realised using the studio’s capacities.

2008
Austrian director Stefan Ruzowitzky is awarded the Oscar for his film "The Counterfeiters", which was produced in Babelsberg in 2007. In spring, Babelsberg Film School opens with the support of Studio Babelsberg. When the school has to close its doors again in autumn, its students continue their education at other academies. Same as in 2007, the studio facilities are booked to capacity with several big and medium-sized productions. The shooting of the new film of US cult director Quentin Tarrantino causes a public stir. By the end of the year, the studio concludes a contract with Hollywood producer Joel Silver to ensure its participation in American productions and to maximize the booking of its studio facilities for the following years.

2009 - today: Studio Babelsberg / European Media Centre

2009
For the first time, Studio Babelsberg presents the SHOOTING STARS Awards at the Berlinale film festival. The prize goes to David Kross for his performance in "The Reader" (directed by Stephen Daldry and co-produced by Studio Babelsberg); Kate Winslet receives the Oscar for Best Actress in a Leading Role. After eight years, Roman Polanski uses the studio facilities again to shoot "The Ghost Writer". Due to lack of booking, the management decides to hire short-term employees.

2010
Studio Babelsberg AG is in the red and pays no dividend for 2009. In spring, US-based director Roland Emmerich comes to Babelsberg to shoot "Anonymous", a thriller revolving around Shakespeare. Studio Babelsberg plans to buy ground close to the Medienstadt railway station to be able to provide sufficient space for big productions and applies for public funds.

2011
With the events of the "Potsdam - Film City 2011" program, Potsdam prepares the studio's 100th anniversary in 2012. The second 3-D film produced in Babelsberg is called "Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters". Lana & Andy Wachowski, directors of "The Matrix", co-direct "Cloud Atlas" with Tom Tykwer. Starring Tom Hanks and produced by X Filme, "Cloud Atlas" is the first German film with a 100-million-euro budget. For the expansion of the studio, the city of Potsdam provides an area of about 5 hectares located closely to the historic studio premises.

2012
On 12 February, Studio Babelsberg celebrates its 100th birthday at Marlene-Dietrich-Halle. The Berlinale film festival and media from all over the world honor the studio on its anniversary.

Exponate der Ausstellung

In der Ausstellung finden sich auf 460 m2 sichtbar und verborgen:
über 1000 Fotos
ca. 350 Filmausschnitte
mehr als 500 Exponate

größtes Exponat:
Schlossmodell GRITTA VON RATTENZUHAUSBEIUNS (1985) von Alfred Hirschmeier/ Gisela Schultze, Breite: 330 cm

wertvollstes Exponat:
PATHÉ B-Holzkamera gebaut ab 1905, Typ wurde eingesetzt bei Dreharbeiten DIE NIBELUNGEN (1924),
GOLDENER BÄR der Berlinale für Rainer Simons DIE FRAU UND DER FREMDE (1985)

schönste Exponate:
Entwurfszeichnungen von Otto Hunte zu DIE NIBELUNGEN (1924),
Entwürfe und Modelle von anderen Szenenbildnern, Arbeitsfotos in den Büchern im ersten Raum

kleinstes Exponat:
Eintrittskarte zur Premiere von DIE LEGENDE VON PAUL UND PAULA im Berliner Filmtheater KOSMOS, Maße: Höhe: 3,7 cm x Breite: 10,6 cm

schwerstes Exponat:
ca. 400 kg, Filmprojektor Dresden D21 (um 1960) aus dem Staatsratsgebäude der DDR, von den Staats- und Parteichefs Walter Ulbricht und Erich Honecker sowie von Bundeskanzler Gerhard Schröder für Vorführungen genutzt

ältestes Exponat:
Filmprojektor Ernemann Imperator (um 1910)

neuestes Exponat:
Schiffsmodell DIE DREI MUSKETIERE (2011)

alberne Exponate:
Kleiderbügel von Ilse Werner, Schnapsflasche mit Albers-Kopf

trauriges Exponat:
Totenmaske von Asta Nielsen

am weitesten gereistes Exponat:
4526 km, OSCAR-Nominierungsurkunde 1977 für Frank Beyers JAKOB DER LÜGNER (1974)

Sponsors

Finanzierung
Das Budget betrug 900.000 €. An der Finanzierung beteiligten sich:
Beauftragter der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien
Land Brandenburg

Stadt Potsdam
Ostdeutsche Sparkassenstiftung mit der MBS Potsdam
DEFA-Stiftung
Kulturland Brandenburg
UFA Film & TV Produktion
Filmpark Babelsberg
InvestitionsBank des Landes Brandenburg
schule@museum
(Über die Höhe der einzelnen Förder- und Sponsorenbeiträge geben wir keine Auskunft.)

Partner
Studio Babelsberg
HFF Potsdam-Babelsberg (Hörstücke, Filmaufnahmen)
Fachhochschule Potsdam / Universität Potsdam (interaktive Medien)
schule@museum / Voltaire-Schule Potsdam (Kurzfilme)

Medienpartner
rbb-Fernsehen / Antenne Brandenburg / Märkische Allgemeine Zeitung

Team
Produktion: Dr. Bärbel Dalichow (Museumsdirektorin Filmmuseum Potsdam)
Herstellungsleitung: Christine Handke (Filmmuseum Potsdam)
Idee: Jeannette Eggert (Filmemacherin), Dr. Jasdan Bernward Joerges (Ausstellungsmacher)
Drehbuch + Regie: Jeannette Eggert, Andy Räder (Filmhistoriker)
Ausstellungsgestaltung: Grit Wendicke (Szenenbildnerin), Colin Elze (Architekt)
Texte: Dr. Bärbel Dalichow, Andy Räder, Ugla Gräf (Filmmuseum Potsdam)
Übersetzung: Evan Torner
Lektorat: Ben Fergusson, Katrin Kramer
Bauausführung: Art Department Studio Babelsberg
Grafik: h neun Berlin
Grafikproduktion: O! Agentur für Werbung Falko Joester, Dornbusch - Mit Farbe gestalten
Originale, Leihverkehr: Sammlungsabteilung des Museums unter Leitung von Dorett Molitor
Restaurierung: Maxie Tafelski
Requisite: Heike Pfeiffenberger
Audiovisuelle Medien: Jeannette Eggert
Montage: Lena Hatebur
Medientechnik: SETIS Cine Elektronik
Exponateeinrichtung: Abrell & Van den Berg - Ausstellungsservice, Maxie Tafelski
Plastik: Rainer Sperl
Fotocollagen: Steffen Mühle / Mike Geßner (ornament & versprechen)
Mitarbeit:
Birgit Acar, Guido Altendorf, Kerstin Barkmann, Ines Belger, Alexa Eberle, Ulrike Ernst, Uwe Düdder, Dr. Ralf Forster, Jens Knitel, Jörg Leopold, Gabriel Maasberg, Dorett Molitor, Beate Rabe, Sachiko Schmidt, Heidrun Schmutzer, Kay Schönherr, Birgit Scholz, Maik Springer, Matthias Struch, Astrid Trubel Praktikanten Susann Friedrich, Judith Gebauer, Christine Hastädt, Lena Hoffmann, Nadine Jenke, Johannes Junker, Victoria Kinski, Siobhan Piekarek, Franziska Pollin, Lissi Reimann, Bernd Schöneberg, Simon Schulz, Fabian Stetzler Hörstücke: Urte Alfs, Sarah Penger, Esther Rothstegge betreut von Prof. Anna Barbara Kurek, Dr. Martina Schuegraf, Ulli Scuda, Prof. Dr. Kerstin Stutterheim
Interaktive Elemente: Mandy Hoffmann, Jana Kühl, Jula Lakritz, Simon Wimmer betreut von Prof. Peter Badel, Jeannette Eggert, Dr. Jasdan Bernward Joerges, Prof. Boris Müller, Prof. Winfried Gerling Programmierung Interaktive Stationen: Torsten Büchner, Daniel Krüger, Niels Rumpf (MicroMovie Media)
Informationssystem: Renate Schmal, Dr. Peter Warnecke, theco.de

Dank
Das Filmmuseum Potsdam bedankt sich für die Unterstützung beim Zustandekommen der Ausstellung bei
Ines Bauermeister, Caroline Bennewitz, Thomas Bergmann, Klaus-Peter Beyer, Heide Breitel, Thomas Brussig, Evelyn Carow, René Dame, Deutsches Filmorchester Babelsberg, Christiane Dorst, Andreas Dresen, Sigi Engelmann, Uli Gaulke, Renate Göthe, Sabine Gorny, Uli Hanisch, Jörg Hauschild, Lorna Hoefler-Steffen, Marie Hölker, Ulrich Illing, Prof. Ruth Keller, Sebastian Klatt, Nadja Klöpping, Jens Knitel, Sebastian Krawinkel, Heidi Krell, Brigitte Krex, Uli Kunz, Dietmar Linke, Holger Lochau, Kerstin Lommatzsch, Alexander Lück, Martina Marten, Silvan Maugeri, Nico Mews, Henning Molfenter, Christiane Mückenberger, Kirsten Otto, Andreas Pfeiffenberger, Joanna Piechotta, Evgeny Revvo, Christoph Rohrscheidt, Christian Scheerer, Gisela Schultze, Frances Kiko Soeder, Marian Stefanowski, Manfred Thomas, Tom Tykwer, Dr. Chris Wahl, Prof. Dr. Michael Wedel, Lydia Wiehring von Wendrin, Maurice Wilkerling

Film/Hörfunk
Arthaus Musik, Bert Beel, Blueprint Film, Boje Buck Filmproduktion, Bonnier Media Deutschland, Heide Breitel Film, Bundesarchiv-Filmarchiv, Berlin; Dänisches Filminstitut, DEFA Stiftung, defa spektrum, Delphi-Filmverleih, Der Audioverlag, Deutsche Filmakademie, DFA Produktion GmbH/ Gisela Liesenfeld, Deutsches Rundfunkarchiv, finkernagel & lück medienproduktion, Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung, Grundy UFA TV Produktion, Hessischer Rundfunk, Hochschule für Film und Fernsehen "Konrad Wolf", Kick Film, Kineos, Dr. Wilfried Kugel, MFA Filmverleih, Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk, NBC Universal, Oeckl Film TV, Pandora Filmverleih, PROGESS Film-Verleih GmbH, rbb Fernsehen, Ries & Erler, Frieder Roth, Sony Pictures Entertainment/World Wide Product Fulfillment, Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek, Studio Babelsberg AG, Sunset Movie Productions, Tobis Filmverleih, Transit Film, transfer media, Universal Pictures Germany, Julian Schwantes, Hessischer Rundfunk, Walt Disney Studio Motion Pictures Germany, Westdeutscher Rundfunk

Fotos
Agentur Cinetext, ANTAEUS Film- und Fernsehproduktion, Akademie der Künste, ASG Fort Hahneberg, Aufbau Verlag Berlin, David Azia, Jan Bauer, Bauhaus-Archiv Berlin, Rolf Baumgartner, Bernd Baxmann, Sibylle Bergemann, Karin Blasig, Bildarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Helmut Böhmert, CEMEX, Cinémathèque Française, Clemens Bilan, Boje Buck Produktion, Jürgen Brauer, Bundesarchiv-Bildarchiv, Bundesarchiv Filmarchiv Berlin, Franz Caspar, Wolfgang Chevallier, Collection Rolf Heyne, Matthias David, ddp images, DEFA-Stiftung, defa-spektrum, Delphi-Filmverleih, Deutsches Rundfunkarchiv, Peter Dietrich, Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum für Film und Fernsehen, Deutsche Kinemathek: Marlene Dietrich Collection Berlin/ Fotoarchiv, Deutsches Filminstitut - DIF, Roland Dressel, Jeannette Eggert, Christine Fenzl, Filmarchiv Austria, Filmmuseum Potsdam, Filmpark Babelsberg, Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung, Helga Gentz, Joachim Gern, Michael Gottschalk, Grundy UFA, Lutz Hannemann, Uli Hanisch, Ronny Hartmann, Heinrich-Heine-Institut/Rheinisches Literaturarchiv/Nachlass Hanns Heinz Ewers, Stefan Heinrichs, Hessischer Rundfunk/Historisches Archiv, Ursula Hesse, Hans-Jörg Höber, hoestermann: Agentur für Schauspieler, Wolfgang Jahnke, Henning Kaiser, Michael Kappeler, Gerhard Kassner, Fred Kastler, Irmtraud Kewitz, Erich Kilian, Kinowelt Filmverleih, Eugen Klagemann, Hermann J. Knipper, Christa Köfer, Barbara Köppe, Jaromir Komarek, Nela Koenig, Brigitte Krex, Herbert Kroiss, Hans-Joachim Kundt, Erika Lehmphuhl, Jörg Leopold, Florian Liedel, Günter Linke, Matthias Lippmann, Dieter Lück, Michael Lüder, Hannes Magerstädt, Märkische Allgemeine Zeitung, Martina Marten, Silvan Maugeri, Henning, Molfenter, Francois Mori, Eduard Neufeld, Jürgen Olczyk, OSTKREUZ Agentur der Fotografen, Waltraud Pathenheimer, photoselection, Thomas Pritschet, Procter & Gamble Company, Progress Filmverleih, Heinz Pufahl, Stephan Rabold, Jim Rakete, rbb media, Matthias Rietschel, RTL, Arkadi Sager, Matt Sayles, Katrin Schlösser, Axel Schmidt, Markus Schreiber, Klaus D. Schwarz, Siegfried Skoluda, Max Sonnenschein, Staatsbibliothek Berlin zu Berlin Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Günter Steffen, Studio Babelsberg AG, T-Kiesewetter.de, Max Teschner, Manfred Thomas, TMB-Fotoarchiv/Boettcher/Hahn, UFA Cinema, UFA Film & TV Produktion, Manfred Uhlenhut, Ullstein Bildarchiv, Jutta Voigt, Walt Disney Pictures, Michael Wagner, Warner Bros., William Walling, Hein Wenzel, Westdeutscher Rundfunk, Howard Wise, Karoline Wolf, Kurt Wunsch, Klaus Zähler.

Das Filmmuseum Potsdam bedankt sich herzlich für Leihgaben bei
Akademie der Künste: Alfred Hirschmeier Archiv/ Heiner Carow Archiv/ Ulrich Plenzdorf Archiv, ANTAEUS Film- und Fernsehproduktion/Alexander Gehrke, Boje Buck Produktion, Jürgen Brauer, Bundesarchiv Berlin/ Abteilung DDR, Bundesbeauftragter für Stasi-Unterlagen (BStU), Cinémathèque Francaise, Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum für Film und Fernsehen: Marlene Dietrich Collection Berlin/ Sammlung Erich Kettelhut/ Nachlass Adalbert von Schlettow/ Schriftgutarchiv/ Graphisches Archiv, Deutsches Filminstitut - DIF: Nachlass Alfred Bücken/ Nachlass Otto Hunte, Andreas Dresen, Peter Fuchs, Grundy UFA, Heinrich-Heine-Institut, Rheinisches Literaturarchiv, Nachlass Hanns Heinz Ewers, Ursula Hesse, Hochschulbibliothek Hochschule für Film und Fernsehen «Konrad Wolf» Potsdam-Babelsberg, Kostümstudio Studio Babelsberg, Joachim König, Sebastian Krawinkel, ö Filmproduktion, Helga Poche, Requisitenfundus Studio Babelsberg, Katja Riemann, Katrin Sass, Micaëla Schmidt, Gunther Scholz, Rainer Simon, Studio Babelsberg, Ulrich Völkel, Jutta Voigt, Frieda von Wild, Württembergische Landesbibliothek, Graphische Sammlungen, Stuttgart

Exponate aus den Beständen und den Sammlungen des Filmmuseum Potsdam
Frank-Beyer-Archiv, Heike Bauersfeld, Doris Borkmann, Barbara Braumann, Käthe Braun-Harnack, Daniel Brühl, Sophie Bücken, Evelyn Carow, Gisela Diedershagen / Sammlung Henny Porten, Joachim Dittrich, Christiane Dorst, Gisela Engelin-Hommes, Felix Felzmann / Sammlung Hans Albers, Marion und Uwe Fleischer, Christel Gräf, Roland Gräf, Sabine Greunig, Allan O. Hagedorff, Joris Hamann, Michael Hinze / Sammlung Willi Depenau, Edith Hirschmeier / Sammlung Alfred Hirschmeier, Susanne Hopf, Ulrich Illing, Andre Kallenbach, Peter Kahane, Andreas Kleinert, Nadja Klier, Christa Kozik, Ingrid Kreuder / Sammlung Peter Kreuder, Brigitte Krex, Rolf Losansky, Martina Marten, Lotti Mehnert, Matthias Müller, Roland Oehme, Lieselotte Pieske / Sammlung Werner Pieske, Uwe Pieske, Brigitte Pettersson, Michael Pindter, Hans Pohl, Marianne Poppe-Willmann / Sammlung Hans Poppe, Emöke Pöstenyi, Carl Raddatz, Ingeburg Sasse / Sammlung Karl-Ernst Sasse, Gisela Schultze, Rainer Simon, Günter Reisch, Anneliese Stemmle / Sammlung Robert A. Stemmle, Studio Babelsberg AG, Studio Babelsberg, Art Department, Thomas Warneke / Sammlung Lothar Warneke, Bernd Thürnagel, Brigitte Welzel, Ilse Werner, Marianne Westermeier, Thomas Wilkening, Melitta Wilkening / Sammlung Albert Wilkening, Thomas Wilkening Filmproduktion, Marlene Willmann, Isi Wimmer, Rudi Winter, Helfried Winzer, Edith Wolter / Sammlung Manfred Wolter, Georg Wüstenberg, Herrmann Zschoche

Nicht in allen Fällen konnten die Rechteinhaber ermittelt werden. Wir bitten unberücksichtigte Rechtsnachfolger, sich an das Filmmuseum Potsdam zu wenden.