Jacek Rotmil
Jacek Rotmil | |
---|---|
Born |
24 November 1888 St. Petersburg, Russian Empire |
Died |
31 July 1944 Warsaw, Occupied Poland |
Other names | Jacques Rotmil |
Occupation |
Art director Production designer |
Years active | 1919–1940 |
Jacek Rotmil (1888–1944) was a Russian-born art director and production designer who worked on 100 films during his career Following the First World War, Rotmil entered the booming German film industry and worked prolifically until 1933. Following the Nazi rise to power Rotmil went into exile in Poland where he was employed frequently on Polish and Yiddish productions. He had first become involved in the Polish film industry in 1930 when working on the sound version of the Polish film Exile to Siberia in Berlin.[1]
After the Germans took over Poland in 1939, Rotmil went into hiding. He was later arrested and executed in Pawiak prison shortly before the Warsaw Uprising.[2] He was one of a large number of Polish film personnel to die during the Second World War.[3]
Selected filmography
- Monna Vanna (1922)
- Das Herz am Rhein (1925)
- The Motorist Bride (1925)
- Passion (1925)
- The Schimeck Family (1926)
- The Blue Danube (1926)
- The Adventurers (1926)
- Chaste Susanne (1926)
- The Fallen (1926)
- The Prince of Pappenheim (1927)
- Vacation from Marriage (1927)
- Fabulous Lola (1927)
- Circle of Lovers (1927)
- The Serfs (1928)
- Rhenish Girls and Rhenish Wine (1929)
- The Convict from Istanbul (1929)
- Phantoms of Happiness (1929)
- Her Dark Secret (1929)
- Exile to Siberia (1930)
- Prokurator Alicja Horn (1933)
- Rapsodia Bałtyku (1935)
- Róza (1936)
- Ostatnia brygada (1938)
- Robert and Bertram (1938)
References
Bibliography
- Haltof, Marek. Polish Film and the Holocaust: Politics and Memory. Berghahn Books, 2012.
- Skaff, Sheila. The Law of the Looking Glass: Cinema in Poland, 1896–1939. Ohio University Press, 2008.