Yugoslavia, Romania, and Bulgaria, unlike their more sophisticated Warsaw Pact allies, did not begin to develop film industries until after World War II. Yugoslavia was the most immediately successful and produced the countries’ first internationally known director: the political avant-gardist Dušan Makavejev (Ljubavni slucaj ili tragedija sluzbenice P.T.T. [The Tragedy of the Switchboard Operator], 1967). Makavejev belonged to the late 1960s movement known as Novi Film (New Film), which also included such directors as Puriša Djordjević, Aleksandar Petrović, and Živojin Pavlović, all of whom were temporarily purged from the film industry during a reactionary period in the early 1970s. This dark period came to an end in 1976 when the filmmakers of the Prague school made their debuts. Goran Marković, Rajko Grlić, Srdjan Karanović, Lordan Zafranović, and Emir Kusturica were all graduates of the FAMU film school in Prague who had begun their careers working for Yugoslav television. Their offbeat, visually flamboyant social comedies brought a new breath of life into Yugoslav cinema and won a number of international prizes. Like Czechoslovakia, whose Jiří Trnka perfected puppet animation in the 1950s, Yugoslavia also became world famous for its animation, especially that of the “Zagreb school” founded by Vatroslav Mimica and Dušan Vukotić.
The Romanian and Bulgarian film industries did not begin to progress until the mid-1960s. Both countries subsequently developed authentic national cinemas and boasted directors well known on the festival circuit (e.g., the Romanians Dan Piţa, Mircea Veroiu, and Mircea Daneliuc and the Bulgarians Hristo Hristov, Eduard Zakhariev, Georgi Dyulgerov, and award-winning animator Todor Dinov).
For decades, state money was readily available for filmmaking throughout the Soviet bloc countries, provided that the films were ideologically acceptable. This changed with the collapse of the Soviet Union in January 1992, whereupon funding became the chief obstacle to filmmaking in the region. By the late 1990s, fewer than two dozen films per year were produced in Russia. Adding to the decline were such factors as theatres that were closed or converted into businesses such as car dealerships, a home-video industry that was barely in its inceptive stages, and the popularity of American and Asian films. Although such directors as Sergey Bodrov and Vladimir Khotinenko received a degree of international acclaim, the financial situation of the film industries throughout Russia and eastern Europe during the 1990s suggested that it would be many years before these nations established a degree of prominence in world cinema. Spain and Mexico
ViridianaFernando Rey in Viridiana (1961), directed by Luis Buñuel.Kingsley International Release; photograph from a private collection
Buñuel, LuisLuis Buñuel on the set of Le Fantôme de la liberté (1974; The Phantom of Liberty).Mary Evans Picture Library Ltd/AGE fotostockOf the smaller film industries of the West, Spain’s should be noted because it produced one of the world’s greatest satirists in Luis Buñuel, and Mexico’s should be commended because it allowed Buñuel to work after he was forced out of Spain by the fascists. (Buñuel also worked frequently in France.) In a career that spanned most of film history, Buñuel directed scores of brilliantly sardonic films that assaulted the institutions of bourgeois Christian culture and Western civilization. Among his most successful are Los olvidados (1950; The Forgotten Ones), Él (1952; Torment), Nazarín (1958), Viridiana (1961), El ángel exterminador (1962; The Exterminating Angel), Belle de jour (1967), Le Charme discret de la bourgeoisie (1973; The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie), and Le Fantôme de la liberté (1974; The Phantom of Liberty). Buñuel deeply influenced Carlos Saura, another Spanish filmmaker whose work tended toward the grotesque and darkly comic (La caza [The Hunt], 1966; La prima Angélica [Cousin Angelica], 1974; Bodas de sangre [Blood Wedding], 1981), as well as an entire generation of younger directors who began to work after Spanish dictator Francisco Franco’s death in 1975 (e.g., Victor Erice, Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón, Jaime Chavarri, and Pilar Miró). Pedro Almodóvar, whose provocative postmodernist works include Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios (1988; Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown), Todo sobre mi madre (1999; All About My Mother), and Habla con ella (2002; Talk to Her), was hailed as Spain’s most innovative director since Buñuel.
Buñuel’s presence in Mexico between 1946 and 1965 had little effect on the general mediocrity of that nation’s film industry, however. The commercialism of the Mexican cinema was briefly mitigated by a group of idealistic young filmmakers in the late 1960s (Arturo Ripstein, Felipe Cazals, Jaime Humberto Hermosillo) but reappeared even more relentlessly in the following decade. The Mexican cinema enjoyed a resurgence at the turn of the 21st century, and directors such as Alfonso Cuarón (Y tu mamá también, 2001) and Alejandro González Iñárritu (Amores perros, 2000) gained international acclaim. Sweden
The post-World War II Swedish cinema, like the Spanish, is noted for producing a single exceptional talent: Ingmar Bergman. Bergman first won international acclaim in the 1950s for his masterworks Det sjunde inseglet (1957; The Seventh Seal), Smultronstället (1957; Wild Strawberries), and Jungfrukällan (1960; The Virgin Spring). His trilogies of the 1960s—Såsom i en spegel (1961; Through a Glass Darkly), Nattvardsgästerna (1963; Winter Light), and Tystnaden (1963; The Silence); Persona (1966), Vargtimmen (1968; Hour of the Wolf), and Skammen (1968; Shame)—were marked by a deep spiritual and intellectual probing, and later films, such as Viskningar och rop (1972; Cries and Whispers) and Fanny och Alexander (1984; Fanny and Alexander), confirmed that he is essentially a religious artist. Throughout the 20th century, the Scandinavian film industries remained small, state-subsidized, and (after the introduction of sound) oriented largely toward the domestic market.
Viskningar och rop (Cries and Whispers)Erland Josephson and Liv Ullmann in Viskningar och rop (1972; Cries and Whispers), directed by Ingmar Bergman.© 1973 New World Pictures Inc.; photograph from a private collection
United States
In the United States, as elsewhere, the last half of the 1960s was a time of intense conflict between generations and of rapid social change. Deeply involved with its own financial crisis, Hollywood was slow to respond to this new environment, and the studios made increasingly desperate attempts to attract a demographically homogeneous audience that no longer existed. The stupendous failure of Twentieth Century–Fox’s blockbuster Cleopatra (1963) was briefly offset by the unexpected success of its The Sound of Music (1965), but over the next few years one box-office disaster after another threatened the studios’ independence until most were absorbed by conglomerates. RKO had been sold to the General Tire and Rubber Corporation in 1955, and Universal had been acquired by MCA (the Music Corporation of America) in 1962. Paramount was then taken over by Gulf + Western Inc. in 1966, United Artists by Transamerica Corporation in 1967, Warner Bros. by Kinney National Services, Inc. (later renamed Warner Communications), in 1969, and MGM by the Las Vegas financier Kirk Kerkorian in 1970. Continuing this trend, in 1981 Twentieth Century–Fox was acquired by Denver oil tycoon Marvin Davis (who later shared ownership with publisher Rupert Murdoch), and Columbia was purchased by the Coca-Cola Company in 1982. United Artists merged with MGM in 1981 to form MGM/UA, which was subsequently acquired by Turner Broadcasting System, Inc., in 1986. The impact of such mergers was pronounced because they reduced filmmaking in the United States to a subordinate role; in the profit-making machinery of these multinational corporations, film production was often less important than the production of such items as refined sugar, ball bearings, field ammunition, rubber tires, and soft drinks.