
Director
Slatan Dudow
Born 1903 · Zaribrod, Bulgaria (today Dimitrovgrad, Serbia)
Slatan Dudow was a Bulgarian born film director, who worked in Weimar Germany and later East Germany. Influenced by revolutionary ideas, Dudow moved to Berlin in 1922. He gave up his plan to study architecture and studied theater from 1925 to 1926. He worked with Leopold Jessner and Juergen Fehling and was a chorus member under Erwin Piscator. But it was a trip to Moscow, where he met Majakowski and Eisenstein, that proved to be the most influential for his career. After his return from Moscow, Dudow directed Brecht's theater piece Die Massnahme, while beginning his film career. He was commissioned to produce the film Wie der Berliner Arbeiter wohnt (1929) as part of the documentary series Wie lebt der Berliner Arbeiter? To Whom Does the World Belong? (1932) was originally banned because it was perceived as an insult to the Weimar Republic's president, judiciary, and religion. Dudow was arrested several times by the Nazis after 1933; he was imprisoned in 1939, but soon escaped to France and then Switzerland. In 1946, he returned to Berlin and worked as a director at the DEFA studios.
Directed

Metropolis
Assistant Director · 1927

Kuhle Wampe or Who Owns the World?
Director · 1932
Sprengt die Ketten!
Assistant Director · 1930

Soap Bubbles
Director · 1935

Christine
Director · 1963

Stronger Than the Night
Director · 1954
Rot Sport marschiert
Assistant Director · 1930

The Captain from Cologne
Director · 1956

The Benthin Family
Director · 1950

Our Daily Bread
Director · 1949

How the Berlin Worker Lives
Director · 1930

Destinies of Women
Director · 1952

Love's Confusion
Director · 1959
