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Buftea Studios

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MediaPro Studios in Romania is Eastern Europe's largest and longest established film studios with a tradition in cinema spanning over 60 years. It provides full production services for the international film and TV industry. The complex is located in the town of Buftea, some 20 kilometers north-west of Bucharest. Since they were founded (in the 1950s), over 600 films have been shot, processed and/or serviced there – both Romanian and international productions.

Being the production services arm of MediaPro Entertainment which is part of Central European Media Enterprises, MediaPro Studios is now the center of a network of facilities that includes: 19 stages in Buftea (Romania), a complete studio under construction in Croatia, part of the Barrandov Studios in Prague and dozens of stages used for production in Croatia, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Bulgaria and Slovak Republic. With these facilities comes the region’s largest production services provider – a collective of each country’s top production companies, ready to assist runaway productions for a more fluid and cost efficient response to clients.

Beginning

In the wake of Soviet control of Romania, the newly installed regime was quick to realize the propaganda potential of feature films. In 1950, construction began at what would later be called, using a terminology typical for that era, Centrul de Producţie Cinematografică Buftea (Buftea Film Production Center). Like any other business in a communist country, the studios were owned by the state and controlled by the Communist Party.

Although the studios were not fully finished until 1959, shooting began in the middle and the and of the 1950s. At its completion, there were four stages, one set for mixed indoor-outdoor shooting, and a film processing lab. A single stage could store 30 limousines, as it did during a shooting for S-a furat o bombă (“A Bomb Has Been Stolen”), or could reproduce La Scala Opera Hall in Milan, used in the film Darcleé. Under the floor of the mixed indoor-outdoor set there was a water tank with crystal walls for underwater shootings.

Film production during the communist regime

From 1959 until 1989 the studios produced around twenty films per year. Films created during this period that won international acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival include: Scurtă istorie (A Short History) directed by Ion Popescu-Gopo, which won the Palme d'Or for Short Films in 1957;[1] Pădurea spânzuraților (Forest of the Hanged) directed by Liviu Ciulei, who won the Best Director Award in 1965;[2] Răscoala (Blazing Winter) directed by Mircea Mureșan, who won the Best First Work Award in 1966;[3] Cântecele Renașterii (Renaissance Songs), a documentary about the Madrigal Choir directed by Mirel Ilieșiu, which won the Palme d'Or for Short Films in 1969.[4]

Some of the most famous directors of Romanian cinema made their debuts at the Buftea Studios: Iulian Mihu and Manole MarcusViața nu iartă (Life Doesn’t Spare), in 1959; Dan PițaNunta de piatră (The Stone Wedding), in 1972; Mircea VeroiuDuhul aurului (Gold Fever), in 1974; Mircea DaneliucCursa (The Long Drive), in 1975.

Due to good technical conditions provided by the Romanian studios, many international co-productions were shot at Buftea Studios before 1990. Ciulinii Bărăganului (Baragan Thistles), directed by Louis Daquin, Codine (Codeine) and Steaua fără nume (Nameless Star), both directed by Henri Colpi, Serbările galante (The Lace Wars), directed by René Clair, Dacii (The Dacians), directed by Sergiu Nicolaescu or Columna (The Column), directed by Mircea Drăgan, are only a few examples.

The transition to the market economy

After the fall of the communist regime (the Romanian Revolution of 1989) the studios suffered heavily from lack of funding. Film production dramatically diminished and the number of theaters that stayed open was in freefall. However, Romanian film directors managed to make their voice heard in international festivals once again: Dan Piţa was awarded the Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 1992[5] (for Hotel de lux – Hotel Deluxe) and Lucian Pintilie was awarded the Special Grand Prize of the Jury at the same festival in 1998[6] (for Terminus Paradis).

Like the entire Romanian economy, the Buftea Studios entered a recession period. The government reduced funding the film industry during this period.[citation needed] Thus, the late 1990s found the Buftea Studios on the verge of bankruptcy.

A new beginning

In 1998 the studios were purchased at a public auction by MediaPro. It took more than a year of intensive renovation to bring back to life all the production facilities. Today MediaPro Studios has 16 stages, the largest water tank in Eastern Europe,[citation needed] a backlot (including a lake), more than 30,000 costumes from all historical periods,[citation needed] and exterior sets from the 16th to 18th century.

The first important production after 1998 was in 2000. Costa Gavras’ Amen reestablished the reputation of MediaPro Studios and opened the way for more than 50 international productions.[citation needed] In the following years, some international filmmakers such as Franco Zeffirelli, Jeremy Irons, Sissy Spacek, Donald Sutherland, Andy García, Dennis Hopper, Fanny Ardant, Robert Carlyle, Dolph Lundgren or Bob Hoskins set foot in the studios and contributed to international productions, features, and TV films. Joyeux Noël[7] (Merry Christmas), French nominee at the Academy Awards and Golden Globes, Sex Traffic,[8] which won 9 BAFTA awards, The Cave,[9] a science fiction horror film and An American Haunting[10] are some of the titles shot in the studios.

In autumn 2006 three new Romanian titles entered the theaters: Margo, directed by Ioan Cărmăzan, Lacrimi de iubire (Tears of Love) – the first Romanian spin-off –, and Trei fraţi de belea (Three Loony Brothers) – from the authors of the number one film in local box-office after 1990, Garcea şi oltenii (Garcea, the Stupidest Policeman on Earth).

In 2007, California Dreaming (endless), a MediaPro Pictures production directed by Cristian Nemescu, received Un certain regard Prix at Cannes Film Festival.

In recent years, MediaPro Studios has diversified its range of services to include television. Working with the TV stations co-owned by Adrian Sârbu and Central European Media (Pro TV and Acasă), MediaPro Studios and its sister company, MediaPro Pictures, produced the first local sitcom, Neighbors Forever, 2002, as well as the first local soap opera (Only Love, 2004). Neighbors Forever has been on the air for 10 seasons which is a record in Romanian television.

Their television production portfolio also includes other soap operas and sitcoms, a police series, and dozens of TV films. Studio officials claim that in 2006 alone about 1,000 hours of fiction were produced for television.[citation needed]

The services provided by the studios also include the shooting of television commercials and event management.

Present days

Since 2009, with the integration of MediaPro Entertainment within Central European Media Enterprises, MediaPro Studios is servicing original content production for six countries, dozens of CME broadcasters and distribution as well as receiving commissions from third party broadcasters. It is able to offer full production services to the international film industry.

Taking advantage of the region’s abundance of talent in the field, MediaPro Entertainment was the first to create a coherent entity integrating cutting-edge CGI / VFX technology and content into the production and post-production work flow and facilities. MediaPro Magic is now one of the leading VFX and Post-production houses in the region.

Notable films

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s

References