Eberhard Schmidt (producer)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eberhard Schmidt (born January 20, 1908 in Essen , † after 1944) was a German film production manager.

Life

Schmidt had received a commercial training. On November 20, 1932 he was appointed director of the production company Pallas-Film and from the end of 1934 worked as a production manager for various companies.

In 1942 the UFA entrusted him with the most comprehensive and ambitious film project of the Third Reich, the splendid furnishing film Münchhausen . For the script for this large-scale production commissioned on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the UFA, Schmidt won the ostracized writer Erich Kästner and, bypassing Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels , was able to get it through with Fritz Hippler , director of the Reichsfilm ; however, Kästner had to write under a pseudonym (Dr. Berthold Bürger).

In the spring of 1945, Eberhard Schmidt and his film staff and a number of actors left Berlin for the " Ostmark " to wait for the war to end. In order not to be picked up by the Wehrmacht or the SS or transferred to the nearby front, the crew faked filming - the work "shot" with cameras without existing film material went down in the annals of German film history as The Lost Face .

At the end of the war, Schmidt's trail is lost.

Filmography

as production manager

Web links