
Fridrikh Ermler
Personal Info
Known for
Directing
Gender
Male
Birthday
1898-05-13
Day of Death
1967-07-12 (69 years old)
Place of Birth
Rezekne, Latvia
Fridrikh Ermler
Biography
Fridrikh Markovich Ermler[a] (13 May 1898 – 12 July 1967) was a Soviet film director, actor, and screenwriter. He was a four-time recipient of the Stalin Prize (in 1941, twice in 1946, and in 1951).
After studying pharmacology, he joined the Czarist army in 1917 and soon took part in the October Revolution on the side of the Bolshevists. Captured and tortured by the White army, he only became a full party member at the end of the Civil War.
From 1923 to 1924 Ermler studied at the Cinema Academy. In 1932 he took part in creating one of the first Soviet talkies – the movie Vstrechny (The Counterplan). He also was one of the founders of the Creative Association KEM (together with E. Ioganson). In 1929-1931 Ermler studied at the Communist Academy and wrote for the newspaper Kino. He also became the chairman of the Russian Association of Revolutionary Filmmakers.
In 1940 he became the director of the Lenfilm studio. Between 1941 and 1944, he worked at the Central United Film Studio of Feature Films (TsOKS) in Alma-Ata (now Kazakhfilm Film Studio).
He died on 12 July 1967, in Komarovo. A memorial plaque was placed on the house in Leningrad where he lived from 1930 to 1962.
Acting
(2024)
Smile!
as Archive footage
(1940)
Our Cinema
as (archive footage)
Crew
(1965)
Facing the Judgement of History
Director
(1955)
Unfinished Story
Director
(1953)
Dinner Party
Director, Screenplay
(1950)
The Great Force
Director, Writer
(1945)
The Turning Point
Director
(1943)
No Greater Love
Director
(1943)
Air Taxi
Producer
(1943)
To the Sounds of Dombras
Producer
(1938)
Great Citizen
Director, Writer
(1935)
Peasants
Director, Writer
(1932)
Shame
Director, Writer
(1929)
Fragment of an Empire
Director, Writer
(1927)
The Parisian Cobbler
Director
(1927)
House in the Snow-Drifts
Director
(1926)
Katka's Reinette Apples
Director
(1924)
Skarlatina
Director