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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Staaken_Studios
rdf:type
dbo:Company
rdfs:label
Staaken Studios
rdfs:comment
Staaken Studios was a film studio located in Staaken on the outskirts of the German capital Berlin. A large former zeppelin hangar, it was converted to film use following the First World War and operated during the Weimar Republic. In July 1923 it was the largest studio in the world, with floor space of around 18,000 square feet. It was used for the construction of massive sets on a series of major productions of the silent era, including I.N.R.I., Metropolis, The Holy Mountain and The Ship of Lost Souls. These epics were a part of the German attempt on world markets during the decade. The 1927 Anglo-German co-production The Ghost Train was shot at Staaken.
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dbc:German_film_studios
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48587444
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1113677045
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dbr:Berlin dbr:First_World_War dbr:The_Threepenny_Opera_(film) dbr:Wall_Street_Crash dbr:Square_feet dbr:Metropolis_(1927_film) dbr:I.N.R.I._(film) dbr:Zeppelin dbr:The_Ship_of_Lost_Souls dbr:The_Holy_Mountain_(1926_film) dbr:Tempelhof_Studios dbr:Hangar dbc:German_film_studios dbr:Co-production_(film) dbr:Ariane_(film) dbr:Film_set dbr:Silent_era dbr:Staaken dbr:Weimar_Republic dbr:Sound_film dbr:The_Ghost_Train_(1927_film)
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dbo:abstract
Staaken Studios was a film studio located in Staaken on the outskirts of the German capital Berlin. A large former zeppelin hangar, it was converted to film use following the First World War and operated during the Weimar Republic. In July 1923 it was the largest studio in the world, with floor space of around 18,000 square feet. It was used for the construction of massive sets on a series of major productions of the silent era, including I.N.R.I., Metropolis, The Holy Mountain and The Ship of Lost Souls. These epics were a part of the German attempt on world markets during the decade. The 1927 Anglo-German co-production The Ghost Train was shot at Staaken. In 1929, following the Wall Street Crash, the studio's owners collapsed financially and Staaken was acquired by the Deutsche Lichtspiel-Syndikat. It was equipped for sound film, but it increasingly struggled to attract new productions. Amongst the films shot during the early 1930s were The Threepenny Opera and Ariane. After 1934 it was no longer available as a film studio.
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wikipedia-en:Staaken_Studios