Erkki Karu

Erkki Karu (born Erland Fredrik Kumlander[1]) (10 April 1887 Helsinki – 8 December 1935 Helsinki) was a Finnish film director, screenwriter and producer. He was one of the pioneers of the Finnish cinema.

Erkki Karu
Born
Erland Fredrik Kumlander

(1887-04-10)10 April 1887
Died8 December 1935(1935-12-08) (aged 48)
Helsinki, Finland
Occupationfilm director, screenwriter, producer
Years active1919–1935
Spouse(s)Elli Kylmänen
ChildrenOlavi (1916–1992) and Sinikka (1917–1994)
Erkki Karu (left) and Eino Kari in 1927.

Career

Karu started his career as a member of a theater troupe in 1907.[2] He became interested in cinema during the 1910s and was reportedly interested in starting his own film company as early as 1915.[3] Karu dabbled in filmmaking, and directed, wrote, edited and produced the comedy short films Ylioppilas Pöllövaaran kihlaus and Sotagulashi Kaiun häiritty kesäloma for Suomen Biografi Oy, both of which were released in 1920.[4]

Karu founded the film production company Suomi-Filmi in 1919, which by the end of the 1920s had grown into the largest company in its field in Finland.[5][6] Karu not only worked as the CEO, but was also the head director for most of his stay in the company. Working to secure the finances of his company, Karu had to wait until 1922 before starting work on his feature-length debut, an adaptation of the Väinö Kataja novel Koskenlaskijan morsian, which saw its release on New Year's Day 1923.[7] The film was a success, as was Karu's next work, the Aleksis Kivi adaptation Nummisuutarit, released in the same year.[8] Because of both the popularity and artistic merit of these works, the year 1923 has been called the pinnacle of Karu's directing career.[8][9] Throughout the rest of the decade and the early 1930s, Karu continued to direct popular films, such as Myrskyluodon kalastaja (1924), Suvinen satu (1925), Muurmanin pakolaiset (1927) and Nuori luotsi (1928). He remained the most successful director during the early years of Suomi-Filmi.[10]

Suomi-Filmi ran into financial difficulties after the global depression stemming from the Wall Street Crash of 1929 caused the attendance figures of cinemas to drop.[11] Karu was accused of financial irresponsibility by the rest of the company's shareholders and in 1933 had to resign from the company he had started.[12] After leaving Suomi-Filmi, Karu wasted no time, and only months later started what would become his old company's main rival, Suomen Filmiteollisuus. Karu had originally intended to start the company alongside an assistant director from Suomi-Filmi, Risto Orko, but Orko eventually chose to remain in Suomi-Filmi when he was offered the spot of head director. Instead, Karu found another partner, Toivo Särkkä,[13] who himself would go on to become the most prolific director in not only Suomen Filmiteollisuus but the whole of Finland.[14]

Karu held the title of head director in his new company, but during his short stay there could only direct two films, Syntipukki and Roinilan talossa, both in 1935, neither of which was very successful.[10] He died unexpectedly on December 8, 1935.[15]

Family

Karu married Elli Kylmänen, at the end of 1915.[3] The couple had two children, Olavi (1916-1992) and Sinikka (1917-1994).

Filmography

  • Ylioppilas Pöllövaaran kihlaus (1920)
  • Sotagulashi Kaiun häiritty kesäloma (1920)
  • Se parhaiten nauraa joka viimeksi nauraa (1921)
  • Finlandia (1922)
  • Koskenlaskijan morsian (1923)
  • The Village Shoemakers (Nummisuutarit, 1923)
  • Kun isällä on hammassärky (1923)
  • Myrskyluodon kalastaja (1924)
  • Suvinen satu (1925)
  • Muurmannin pakolaiset (1927)
  • Runoilija muuttaa (1927)
  • Nuori luotsi (1928)
  • Meidän poikamme (1929)
  • Tukkipojan morsian (1931)
  • Meidän poikamme merellä (1933)
  • Voi meitä! Anoppi tulee! (1933)
  • Ne 45000 (1933)
  • Meidän poikamme ilmassa – me maassa (1934)
  • Syntipukki (1935)
  • Roinilan talossa (1935)

Notes

  1. Alanen, Antti (2012). Elokuvantekijät. Helsinki: Otava. pp. 338–339. ISBN 978-951-1-20533-3.
    Erkki Karu on IMDb
  2. Uusitalo 1994, p. 21
  3. Uusitalo 1994, p. 22
  4. Uusitalo 1994, p. 23
  5. Uusitalo 1972, p. 148
  6. Kimmo Laine. "The production companies Suomi-Filmi and Suomen Filmiteollisuus as builders of Finnish national cinema in 1933-1939 (summary)". Archived from the original on 2008-04-06. Retrieved 2008-03-19.
  7. Uusitalo 1972, p. 88
  8. Uusitalo 1972, p. 92
  9. von Bagh, p. 411
  10. von Bagh, p. 412
  11. Uusitalo 1994, p. 84
  12. Uusitalo 1994, p. 106-108
  13. Uusitalo 1994, p. 119
  14. von Bagh, p. 459
  15. Uusitalo 1994, p. 128
gollark: I don't know why it's even under debate. You should indent with ASCII 31 Record Separator.
gollark: Well, in the data science world, you would just copypaste it out of a Medium post.
gollark: 1. encode2. do so automatically3. ???4. profit
gollark: I agree entirely, that's why I spent a nontrivial amount of time porting this to Rust to run faster.
gollark: Maybe this is you, then.

References

  • Bagh, Peter von (2005). Suomalaisen elokuvan uusi kultainen kirja (in Finnish). Otava. ISBN 951-1-12705-5.
  • Uusitalo, Kari (1972). Eläviksi syntyneet kuvat (in Finnish). Otava. ISBN 951-1-03535-5.
  • Uusitalo, Kari (1988). Meidän poikamme: Suomalaisen elokuvan perustanlaskija Erkki Karu ja hänen aikakautensa. Suomen elokuva-arkiston julkaisusarja A 11 (in Finnish). Helsinki: Suomen elokuva-arkisto. ISBN 951-860-962-4. ISSN 0358-3643.
  • Uusitalo, Kari (1994). Kuvaus – kamera – käy! Lähikuvassa suomifilmit ja Suomi-Filmi Oy (in Finnish). Helsinki: Kirjastopalvelu Oy. ISBN 951-692-344-5.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.