German film company
Share of the Aafa Althoff-Ambos-Film AG, issued 21. November 1921; signed by the principals Rudolf Dworsky and Gabriel Levy
Aafa Film or Aafa-Film was a German film production and distribution company which operated during the 1920s and 1930s. Established in 1920 as Radio-Film the company was controlled by the producer Gabriel Levy and the director Rudolf Dworsky . The company was one of the leading producers of the Weimar Republic , and survived the transition from silent to sound film in 1929. It made the first German full sound film (as opposed to part-sound films or silent films with sound added later) It's You I Have Loved that year.[ 1] During the early 1930s Aafa produced a number of mountain films directed by Arnold Fanck . It also made a multi-language version musical Lieutenant, Were You Once a Hussar? (1930).
In 1934 the company was forcibly disbanded and its assets taken over during the Aryanization programme of the Nazi Party which confiscated businesses from Jewish ownership. This was also part of a wider move which led to production being concentrated in the hands of four major studios Bavaria , Tobis , Terra and UFA .
Selected filmography
References
Bibliography
Kreimeier, Klaus. The Ufa story: a history of Germany's greatest film company, 1918–1945 . University of California Press, 1999.