|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Cinema: World Cinemart, 1938
Biggest 25¢ worth of facts & figures the cinema industry could buy last week was a 377-page review of foreign film markets during 1938, issued by the U. S. Department of Commerce. Most comforting figures: despite censorship bans and trade barriers in authoritarian countries, Hollywood lost only 6% of its market abroad, still ruled the 1938 roost by supplying 65% of all the films shown in the world's cinemas. Most disturbing fact: in Esthonia, esthetic censors banned several Hollywood films for mere banality.
Other facts & figures:
> Czechoslovakia's pre-Hitler censorship regulations forbade films that might "threaten the Czechoslovakian democratic system directly or indirectly through propaganda of a dictatorial regime."
> French cinema interests are pushing legislation to shoo U. S. films out of France by eliminating double features.
> In Germany, film imports must receive Propaganda Ministry certificates of nonobjection (Unbedenklichkeitsbescheinigung) before they go to the censors to be scanned for scenes "racially offensive," "reflecting against German prestige," etc.
> Banned in Poland: films depicting class struggle, misery as a source of agitation, Russian background.
> British film classifications: U for universal exhibition, A for adults, H for horrific (not for children).
> The U. S. S. R. has 30,000 cinema theatres, almost as many as all Europe's put together, but only 8,000 are wired for sound.
> The Théatre Moderne, in Papeete, Tahiti, shows pictures five to 20 years old.
> New Zealand cinemakers produced one film feature in 1938, showed it in one theatre, junked it.
Most Popular »
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Tiger Woods' Sponsors: Will Any Stick by Him?
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- Under U.S. Pressure, Pakistan Balks at Helping on Afghan Taliban
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- America's Most Wanted Teenage Bandit
- Proposed 'Botox Tax' Draws Wide Array of Opponents
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up
- Joe Klein's Annual Teddy Awards
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Proposed 'Botox Tax' Draws Wide Array of Opponents
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Tiger Woods' Sponsors: Will Any Stick by Him?
- Joe Klein's Annual Teddy Awards
- America's Most Wanted Teenage Bandit
- Under U.S. Pressure, Pakistan Balks at Helping on Afghan Taliban
- Study: European Muslims Feel Shut Out





RSS