The Village Shoemakers

The Village Shoemakers (Finnish: Nummisuutarit) is a Finnish silent comedy film made in 1923, directed and produced by Erkki Karu, written by Artturi Järviluoma[1] and starred by Axel Slangus. The film is based on the 1864 play Heath Cobblers, written by Aleksis Kivi, and is the first of several film versions of the play.

The film was shot at Suomi-Filmi's Vironkatu studio in Helsinki and outdoor filming was made in the villages of Pilpala and Hunsala in Loppi, Tavastia Proper. The film was a great spectator success, although it was not as popular as another Erkki Karu film completed the same year, Koskenlaskijan morsian. The film has been criticized as the most silent Finnish silent film to watch in Finnish. It is funny and critically melancholy on the other hand. Kurt Jäger's cinematography in the final scene gets a special mention.[2] It is said to continue to successfully defy the ruthless tooth of time.[1]

The Village Shoemakers premiered on November 11, 1923 in the Bio-Bio and Edison Theaters in Helsinki. The film was also distributed in Sweden and Norway.

References

  1. Arto Pajukallio, Elokuvat, Helsingin Sanomat 30.4.2012, sivu D 7 (in Finnish)
  2. Päivän elokuvia, Tv-maailma, 17/2012 sivu 13 (in Finnish)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.