Studio Misr
Studio Misr is a film studio established in Egypt in 1935 by the economist Talaat Harb. Owned and staffed by Egyptians, it is known as 'The Studio of Egypt'. For three decades, it is the leading Egyptian equivalent to Hollywood's major studios.[1]
Native name | ستوديو مصر |
---|---|
Type | Film studio |
Industry | Film production |
Founded | 7 March 1935 |
Founder | Talaat Harb |
Headquarters | |
Area served | North Africa • Middle East |
Products | Films |
Owner | Egyptian Acting and Cinema Company |
Parent | Banque Misr |
Studio Misr's first film was Wedad (1936), the first film to star the singer Umm Kulthum.[2] In 1939 Studio Misr made four films, including The Will (1939), out of a total of fifteen Egyptian films. Facing difficulty raising capital in the 1940s, Studio Misr reduced its emphasis on direct film production, increasingly renting out its development, printing and editing facilities to other Arab filmmakers. In 1946, for example, Studio MISR made three films - including Black Market (1946) - out of a total of 52 Egyptian films.[3] After a slow deterioration in the 1980s, they were taken over by Karim Gamal El Dine and are now equipped with digital editing rooms and a working photochemical laboratory.[4]
References
- Darwish, Mustafa, Dream Makers on the Nile: A Portrait of Egyptian Cinema, The American University in Cairo Press, Cairo, 1998, pp. 12–13.
- Terri Ginsberg; Chris Lippard (2010). Historical Dictionary of Middle Eastern Cinema. Scarecrow Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-8108-6090-2.
- Armbrust, Walter (2004). "Egyptian cinema on screen and off". In Andrew Shryock (ed.). Off Stage/on Display: Intimacy and Ethnography in the Age of Public Culture. Stanford University Press. pp. 79–84. ISBN 978-0-8047-5007-3.
- Donadieu, Pierre (2022-07-05). "La formation des paysagistes concepteurs dans le monde". Projets de paysage (Hors-série). doi:10.4000/paysage.28100. ISSN 1969-6124.