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1961 East German film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Children of Golzow (German: Die Kinder von Golzow) is a documentary by the German filmmaker Winfried Junge that was started in 1961 and lasted until 2007, when the series concluded. The film is a prolonged observation of the lives of several people in the Brandenburg village of Golzow.
The Children of Golzow (Die Kinder von Golzow) | |
---|---|
Directed by | Winfried Junge |
Screenplay by | Barbara Junge |
Produced by | DEFA |
Starring | 18 people from Golzow |
Narrated by | Winfried Junge |
Edited by | Barbara Junge |
Release date | From 1961 to 2007 |
Running time | 2,570 minutes (42 hours, 50 min.) |
Countries | East Germany (1961-1990) Germany (1990-2007) |
Language | German |
In 1985, the episode "Lebensläufe" was included in the Guinness Book of World Records as the movie with the longest production period. There is also a museum about the documentary in Golzow.
Eighteen people born between 1953 and 1955 were filmed by Junge and his wife Barbara at regular intervals from 1961 to 2007 in a variety of situations which were both public as well as more having a more personal accent (such as the death of a relative).
The films reflect not only the individual life stories of the characters but also provide profound insight into the history of the GDR and the process of German reunification in 1990. After reunification the DEFA film studio closed, so Junge continued the "Golzow-Project" with the ARD and its regional affiliate RBB.[citation needed]
The idea for the project derives from Karl Gass.
This is a list of the installments of the "Children of Golzow" until 2007. The titles are in the German language, translation into English in brackets.
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