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What does Balazs Bela do?

Balazs Bela

Balazs Bela is a Hungarian film director whose major works include Somewhere in Europe and Blu-ray.

Chinese name: Balazs Bela.

Mbth: balaz Bella

Occupation: Director

Representative works: somewhere in Europe, blue light, etc.

resume

Hungarian film director. Formerly known as Herbert? Bauer, born in Said, died in Prague. After World War I, he devoted himself to the revolutionary cause, actively worked for the Hungarian Soviet Republic, and served as a member of the Soviet Writers' Committee. 19 19 After the failure of the Hungarian revolution, he was forced to go into exile in Austria and write for Vienna Daily. During his stay in Vienna, he began to develop the theory of film as an independent art. Starting from 1923, he published theoretical monographs on montage, lens angle, close-up and acoustics. In film aesthetics, balaz made a deep research on the sound, dialogue, color, script, editing and shot scheduling of films from the perspective of philosophy and psychology, and emphasized the importance of theory in the process of film appreciation, hoping to meet the development of this brand-new art form. He believes that movies should only be spread in industrial civilization, and its universality is closely related to economic development, and it is often regarded as a part of the national propaganda machine. He believes that the lens angle is "the most powerful expression of the film itself. The lens brings the audience into the movie screen. " His articles are the theoretical pioneers of the concepts of scene arrangement, scene photography and their psychological effects. After Hitler came to power, balaz went into exile in the Soviet Union. From 1933 to 1945, he was hired as a professor of aesthetics at the Moscow Film Academy and created Karl? Brugner (1936) and other movie scripts. After the liberation of Hungary, he returned to Budapest, founded the Film Academy, and taught in film academies in Hungary, Czech Republic and Poland. He used to be the artistic consultant of German Democratic Film Company and German German Film Company, the chairman of Hungarian Pen Club, and the editor-in-chief of the film magazine Searchlight. 1949, he won the kossuth national prize, and a film studio in Budapest was named after him.