Cinema of Bulgaria
Cinema of Bulgaria | |
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Number of screens | 138 (2011)[1] |
• Per capita | 2.1 per 100,000 (2011)[1] |
Main distributors |
Alexandra 36.7% Forum Film BG 35.9% A Plus Films 9.8%[2] |
Produced feature films (2011)[3] | |
Fictional | 9 (60.0%) |
Animated | - |
Documentary | 6 (40.0%) |
Number of admissions (2011)[4] | |
Total | 4,722,740 |
• Per capita | 0.6 (2012)[5] |
National films | 668,711 (14.2%) |
Gross box office (2011)[4] | |
Total | BGN 36.7 million |
National films | BGN 4.36 million (11.9%) |
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Cinema of Bulgaria refers to the film industry in Bulgaria.
The beginning of Bulgarian cinema was in January 1915 with the premiere of the first Bulgarian feature film Bulgaran is a Gallant.
Directors
Actors and actresses
- Nikolay Binev
- Stoyan Bachvarov
- Rusi Chanev
- Georgi Cherkelov
- Stefan Danailov
- Nina Dobrev
- Itzhak Fintzi
- Georgi Georgiev-Getz
- Anton Gorchev
- Kiril Gospodinov
- Stanislav Ianevski
- Georgi Kaloyanchev
- Velko Kanev
- Apostol Karamitev
- Asen Kisimov
- Nevena Kokanova
- Todor Kolev
- Konstantin Kotsev
- Tatyana Lolova
- Georgi Mamalev
- Hristo Mutafchiev
- Stoyanka Mutafova
- Lyubomir Neikov
- Dimitar Panov
- Georgi Partsalev
- Katya Paskaleva
- Pavel Popandov
- Petar Popyordanov
- Georgi Rusev
- Krastyu Sarafov
- Yosif Sarchadzhiev
- Hristo Shopov
- Naum Shopov
- Petar Slabakov
- Nikola Todev
- Kosta Tsonev
- Grigor Vachkov
- Martina Vachkova
- Ani Valchanova
- Philip Trifonoff
Animators
Festivals
Notable Films
- Main article: list of Bulgarian films
- (1910) Bulgaran is Gallant - The Bulgarian is Gallant (considered the first Bulgarian movie)
- (1917) Baronat - Baronet
- (1917) Lyubovta e ludost - The Love is Crazy
- (1921) Dyavolat v Sofia - The Devil in Sofia
- (1922) Bay Ganyo - Bay Ganyo
- (1929) Nai-vyarnata strazha - The Most Loyal Guard
- (1958) Lyubimetz 13 - Favourite #13
- (1962) Tyutyun - Tobacco (nominated for a Golden Palm award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1963)
- (1964) Kradetzat Na Praskovi - The Peach-Garden Trespasser
- (1970) Kit - Whale
- (1970) Bash Maystorat - The Past-Master
- (1972) Kozijat Rog - The Goat Horn
- (1973) Prebroyavane na Divite Zaytsi - The Hare Census
- (1973) Siromashko Lyato - Indian Summer
- (1974) Selyaninat s Koleloto - A Peasant on a Bicycle
- (1975) Osadeni Dushi - Doomed Souls
- (1975) Svatbite na Ivan Asen - The Weddings of King Ivan Assen
- (1976) Shturets v Uhoto - A Cricket in the Ear
- (1976) Dva Dioptara Dalekogledstvo - Farsighted for Two Diopters
- (1978) Toplo - Warmth
- (1980) Dami Kanyat - Ladies Choice
- (1981) Asparuh - Khan Asparoukh
- (1981) Orkestar bez ime - A Nameless Band
- (1983) Gospodin za Edin Den - King for a Day
- (1984) Opasen Char - Dangerous Charm
- (1988) Vreme na nasilie - Time of Violence
- (1988) Vchera - Yesterday
- (2001) Pismo do Amerika - Letter to America
- (2001) Opashkata Na Diavola - Devil's Tail
- (2004) Mila ot Mars - Mila from Mars
- (2005) Otkradnati Ochi - Stolen Eyes
- (2006) Razsledvane - Investigation
- (2008) Dzift - Zift
- (2010) Misiya London - Mission London
- (2010) HDSP: Lov na drebni hishtnici - HDSP: Hunting down small predators
- (2011) Tilt - TILT
- (2012) Sofia's Last Ambulance
- (2014) The Lesson (2014 Bulgarian film)
See also
- Cinema of the world
- History of cinema
- List of famous Bulgarians
- Sofia International Film Festival
- World cinema
References
- 1 2 "Table 8: Cinema Infrastructure - Capacity". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- ↑ "Table 6: Share of Top 3 distributors (Excel)". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- ↑ "Table 1: Feature Film Production - Genre/Method of Shooting". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- 1 2 "Table 11: Exhibition - Admissions & Gross Box Office (GBO)". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- ↑ "Country Profiles". Europa Cinemas. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
External links
- Sofia International Film Festival Website
- New Bulgarian Cinema (College Gate Press, 2008) by Dina Iordanova
- KinoKultura Special Issue on Bulgarian Cinema edited by Dina Iordanova and Ron Holloway
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