Azerbaijanfilm
| Company type | JSC |
|---|---|
| Industry | Motion pictures Animated films |
| Founded | 16 April 1920 |
| Headquarters | Baku, Azerbaijan |
| Products | Motion pictures Television programs |
| Owner | Government of Azerbaijan |
Azerbaijanfilm (Azerbaijani: Azərbaycanfilm) is an Azerbaijani state-owned film production company. It is located in the capital Baku.
Azerbaijanfilm was originally established in 1920 as a photo-cinema department at the Azerbaijan SSR's People's Commissariat, and was renamed to the Azerbaijani Photo-Cinema Office (AFKI) in 1923. It then went through several name changes, including Azdovletkino (1926–1930), Azkino (1930–1933), Azfilm (1933), Azdovletkinosenaye (1934), Azerfilm (1935–1940), and Baku Cinema Studio (1941–1959), before adopting its present name in 1960 as Azerbaijanfilm cinema studio named after Jafar Jabbarly. Currently, Azerbaijanfilm is a part of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Azerbaijan.[1]
| Cinema of Azerbaijan |
|---|
| Lists of Azerbaijani films |
| pre-1920 |
| 1920s |
| 1930s |
| 1940s |
| 1950s |
| 1960s |
| 1970s |
| 1980s |
| 1990s |
| 2000s |
| 2010s |
| 2020s |
| Animation |
| Azerbaijanfilm |
| People |
Notable films
Azerbaijan SSR
- 1931 Qaz
- 1933 Lökbatan
- 1945 The Cloth Peddler
- 1956 O Olmasin, Bu Olsun
- 1961 Balıqçılar
- 1963 Kür
- 1964 İçəri Şəhər
- 1964 Ulduz
- 1965 Mingəçevir
- 1970 Sevil
- 1977 Birthday
- 1979 Babek
- 1988 The Scoundrel
- 1989 Anecdote
Azerbaijan
- 1991 The Engagement Ring
- 1998 Sari Gelin
- 2001 The Dream
- 2004 National Bomb
- 2009 The 40th Door
- 2010 The Precinct
- 2011 Buta
- 2012 Amazing Azerbaijan (documentary)
- 2012 Steppe Man
- 2014 Nabat
See also
References
- ^ Rollberg, Peter (2008). Historical Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Cinema. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 56–59. ISBN 978-0810860728.
External links
- Official website (in Azerbaijani, English, and Russian)
- Azeri films (in Russian)
- Azerbaijani film at the Internet Movie Database
- Azerbaycan Kinosu (in Azerbaijani)