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East German Gems on disk

Over at Eureka Video, they have been busy adding some sci-fi gems to their collection.

Following the division of Germany in the aftermath of World War II, DEFA was established as the state-owned film studio of East Germany or the German Democratic Republic (GDR). The studio was active from 1946 until its dissolution in 1992, the studio made hundreds of feature films, from hard-hitting dramas to crime thrillers, fairytale adaptations and Westerns. During the 1960s and 1970s, it also produced a series of colourful and wildly imaginative science fiction films in which courageous cosmonauts attempt to unravel the secrets of the universe: titles include: The Silent Star • Signals: A Space Adventure • Eolomea • In the Dust of the Stars

Based on Stanisław Lem’s The AstronautsThe Silent Star begins as an extraterrestrial object is unearthed in the Gobi desert. When it is found to have originated on Venus, the crew of the spacecraft Kosmoskrator is dispatched to the yellow planet to solve its mysteries.

In Signals: A Space Adventure, the Laika and its crew are sent to find a lost research vessel, the Ikaros. But as they draw nearer to the missing craft, they begin to intercept a series of strange radio transmissions.

Then, Eolomea sees eight ships dispatched from the space station Margot disappear without a trace – and it’s down to science officer Maria Scholl (Cox Habbema) to find out what happened to them.

Finally, In the Dust of the Stars follows the crew of the Cyrano as they land on the planet TEM 4 to investigate a distress signal – and find themselves under the psychedelic influence of its bizarre inhabitants.

The ambition was for these films to sit somewhere between Forbidden PlanetStar TrekSolaris and 2001: A Space Odyssey, DEFA’s science fiction films are marvels of production design and practical effects work – as well as poignant commentaries on the central issues of the atomic age, including nuclear warfare, rapid technological advancement and capitalist expansion.

It is funny that videographers using AI strive to make modern films and big franchises have this retro feel – check these beauties out to see human-created lush!

The Masters of Cinema series presents all four of DEFA’s space-faring films together for the first time in any format from astonishing restorations by the DEFA Foundation, accompanied by a wealth of new and archival extras.

These include:

• Limited Collector’s Edition Box Set [2000 copies]
• Limited edition hard case featuring new artwork by Carly A-F
• Limited edition 60-page collector’s book featuring an introduction by Mariana Ivanova, Academic Director of
the DEFA Film Library, and new writing by DEFA historians Sebastian Heiduschke, Sonja Fritzsche and Evan Torner
• All four films presented in 1080p HD from restorations by the DEFA Foundation
• Reversible inner sleeve artwork featuring new designs for each film by Carly A-F
• Signals: A Space Adventure presented from a new 6K scan of the original 70mm camera negative
• Eolomea presented from a 4K scan of the original 70mm camera negative
• The Silent Star and In the Dust of the Stars presented from 2K scans of the original 35mm camera negatives
• The Robot (Klaus Georgi, 1968) – animated short produced by the DEFA Studio for Animation Film
• Jana and the Little Star (Christl Wiemer, 1971) – short produced by the DEFA Studio for Animation Film
• Love 2002 (Joachim Hellwig, 1972) – short on the future of love in East Germany produced by the DEFA Studio for Newsreels and Documentary Films
• Optional English subtitles on all features and shorts, newly revised for this release
• New audio commentaries on all four features by Jim Morton, founder of the East German Cinema Blog
• Blast Off – a new interview with science fiction scholar Mark Bould
• Red Skies – a new interview with Soviet cinema expert Claire Knight
• Exploring the Cosmos – a new video essay by science fiction expert Paweł Frelik
• British Filmmaker Visits DEFA (1959) – archival newsreel of Anthony Asquith’s visit to the set of The Silent Star
• A Rocket in the Soviet Zone (1959) – archival newsreel covering the making of The Silent Star
• Cosmonaut Dreams – archival featurette on the making of Eolomea, featuring special-effects cameraman Kurt
Marks, costume designer Barbara Müller-Braumann and technician Jan-Peter Schmarje
• Dusting Off After 30 Years – interview with Peter Suring, director of photography on In the Dust of the Stars
• Original theatrical trailers