Hans Androschin

Hans Androschin (born Johann Androschin, 16 March 1892 in Vienna 18 May 1976 in Vienna) was an Austrian cinematographer.

Life and career

He started his career at the age of 17 as simple cinematographer in Viennese studios. During World War I, he served as soldier. Afterwards he went abroad to work for foreign film companies. When he came back to Vienna, he became chief cinematographer at Sascha-Film in Vienna. He realised well known or historically important German and Austrian films, such as the scandalous Ecstasy (1933) with Hedy Lamarr or the early horror film The Hands of Orlac (1924).

His work as cinematographer also includes Café Elektric (1927) with the first main roles of the German movie star Marlene Dietrich and the later important Austrian actor and director Willi Forst.

In 1928, Androschin moved to Poland, where he worked as Hans Andruszin in studios of Warsaw and Bydgoszcz. With the beginning of sound films, Androschin focussed on documentary films. After Germany occupied Austria in 1938, he became sound master of the film department of the Wehrmacht. After World War II, he worked again as cinematographer of documentary films about the Austrian nature and culture.

Selected filmography

gollark: Personal freedom is just... how free you are to do stuff in your personal life or interacting with others, political is how much you can influence governance and/or how much you can talk about/do political things, economic is how free you are to... engage in commerce and stuff I guess.
gollark: Er, personal, not civil.
gollark: NationStates, an online game and therefore entirely accurate all the time, defines three freedoms: civil, political and economic.
gollark: But that's ONE of the issues and a more subjective one; even just from the standpoint of "what sort of output can this system produce" there are others, as I mentioned.
gollark: If the state controls all economic transactions, you are obviously less free.
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