Many Hungarians have contributed to film art and its technology, but, due to political reasons, many of them found it was easier to find success abroad. As of 2018, Hungarians working in Hollywood and some in Hungary had received more than 150 Academy Award nominations and about 46 Academy Awards. Already in the 1930s there were 17 Hungarian nominations, but the peak was in the decade of the 1940s when about 51 nominations and 13 to 15 Academy Awards were given to exiled Hungarians. The best year was 1944 with 9 to 10 nominations and four (
Michael Curtiz,
Paul Lukas,
George Pal, and
William S. Darling) Academy Awards. The first Hungarian to be nominated was
Lajos Bíró (1929) and the first to win the award was
William S. Darling (1933). Art Direction might be the most successful category concerning wins/nominations:
Paul Groesse 3/11,
William S. Darling 3/7,
Joseph Kish 1/5,
Vincent Korda 1/4,
Alexandre Trauner 1/2 and
Marcel Vertès 1/1. The number of nominees and awards in all categories, exceeds all other nations, counted per capita. Hungarians emigrated in large numbers after several disasters following the First World War (1918) when neighbouring countries—Romania, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia—occupied parts of the former Kingdom of Hungary, which lost two-thirds of its territory in a 1920 treaty. There was a brief communist takeover accompanied by a so-called ″red terror″ and then a reaction against it called the ″white terror″, which disrupted the economy. At that time Hungarian filmmakers tried their fortunes abroad, first, as did
Géza von Bolváry, in the German-speaking world and later in the English-speaking world. Film with sound was invented (1918) in Germany by
Dénes Mihály.
Béla Gáspár invented, 1932, the first full color one-strip film:
Gasparcolor patented in 1933. With the advent of racial laws in 1939, Jewish citizens were forced to leave the country to find work. It is ironic that some of the most successful propaganda films during the Second World War for both sides were directed by Hungarians:
Münchhausen by
Josef von Báky and
"Pimpernel" Smith by
Leslie Howard. With another, longer-lasting, communist takeover in 1948, more Hungarians left. After the crushed
1956 revolution, more important filmmakers left, including Vilmos Zsigmond, László Kovács, Jean Badal and
Peter Medak. Following the amnesty of 1960, the cultural climate eased somewhat. Nevertheless, despite the hardships of staying at home, some Hungarians received Academy Award nominations (21 times for 24 people up to 2018) and in some cases the actual Award (Ferenc Rofusz (1980), István Szabó (1981), Zsuzsa Böszörményi (1991) and co-winners Jászberényi, Perlaki and Priskin (2010), and co-winners
Imre Major and
Csaba Kőhegyi in 2014. The first Hungarian to be nominated from Hungary was
Tamás Czigány, for best short documentary in 1967. The best-known Hungarian film to date is
Mephisto, by István Szabó. It won an Academy Award in the category Best Foreign Language film. The year before, in 1980,
The Fly, an animation by Rofusz, became the very first Hungarian film to receive an Academy Award. The Foreign Student Academy Award went to Zsuzsa Böszörményi (1991). In 2010 the trio
Márk Jászberényi,
Tamás Perlaki and
Gyula Priskin obtained the scientific and engineering award for Lustre, a software program to color-correct intermediates in real time, first used on
The Lord of the Rings. In 2014, the same prize went to three Hungarians,
Tibor Madjar,
Imre Major and
Csaba Kőhegyi. Up to 2018, ten films have been nominated in the category Best Foreign Language Film: four nominations to István Szabó (the most nominated person in Hungary), two to
Zoltán Fábri (1969, 1979) and one each to
Imre Gyöngyössy,
Barna Kabay and
Károly Makk, and
On Body and Soul (2018). Three films have been nominated for Best Short Animation (
Marcell Jankovics,
Ferenc Rófusz and
Géza M. Tóth). Cinematographer
Lajos Koltai has been nominated for best cinematography in 2000. In 2016,
Son of Saul won the second Best Foreign Language Film AA for Hungary. In 2017 Hungary won the best short feature category with
Mindenki. In 2018, Hungary got its 10th nomination in the category Best Foreign Language Film for
On Body and Soul by
Ildikó Enyedi. The most successful film around 2019 is
Eternal Winter by
Atilla Szász.
Those Who Remained was shortlisted for Best Foreign film 2020.
Famous Hungarians in the film industry Hollywood Cinematographers
László Kovacs ASC, Andrew László ASC.
Andrew Marton directed the chariot race in
Ben-Hur for which he won a Golden Globe.
Joe Eszterhas wrote
Basic Instinct and became the highest-paid writer in Hollywood history. He also wrote the Berlin Golden Bear winner "Music Box" and the first Hungarian "blockbuster",
Children of Glory.
Zoltan Elek won AA-award (1986) for make-up. Actors of Hungarian origin are
Peter Lorre,
Paul Newman (10 AA nominations: 59, 62, 64, 68–69, 82–83, 86–87, 95, 99 and 2003)/one win 87 plus one honorary award 86 and 99 win),
Tony Curtis (1 AA nomination),
Johnny Weissmüller (Tarzan) and
Béla Lugosi (Dracula),
Franciska Gaal,
Ilona Massey,
Zsa Zsa Gabor.
Hedy Lamarr was half-Hungarian as was
Ali MacGraw nominated (71) (
Love Story),
Adrien Brody (1 AA),
Goldie Hawn (1 AA),
Marton Csokas and
Isabelle Huppert, one nomination (2017).
Great Britain •
Alexander Korda founded London films in order to compete with Hollywood on the same terms. He produced
The Third Man with music of
Anton Karas. • Producer
Gabriel Pascal got one nomination (1939) for
Pygmalion co-directed and starred by
Leslie Howard.
Germany •
Géza von Radványi made 70 mm films to compete with Hollywood. •
Josef von Báky (directed
Münchausen) •
Géza von Bolváry •
Géza von Cziffra •
Eduard von Borsody •
Julius von Borsody Israel Ephraim Kishon (b. Ferenc Hoffmann) was Israel's first nominee for best foreign-language film. He got two nominations (1964, 1972).
Czechoslovakia Ján Kadár (b. János Kadár) won the first AA for Czechoslovakia (1965).
Canada Paul Sarossy is active often as Atom Egoyan's cinematographer.
Hungary Some years after the failed revolution of 1956 against the Soviet-dominated communist dictatorship, the cultural climate eased slightly; this led to more creative freedom. Important films in the 1960s were directed by
István Gaál: (
The Falcons),
András Kovács:
Hideg Napok (1966),
Miklós Jancsó:
The Round-Up (1965) (Screenplay:
Hernádi Gyula, DOP:
Tamás Somló), and
István Szabó (
The Father).
Márton Keleti directed:
Franz Liszt: Dreams of Love. (1970) filmed in 70 mm by
István Hildebrandt. Other important filmmakers
Sándor Pál,
Márta Mészáros (
Adoption Golden Bear Berlin 1975),
Péter Gothár (Golden Lion, Venice):
Time Stands Still (Cannes: Award of the Youth, 1982) (1982).
Sunshine and
Children of Glory are successful bigger budget movies about Hungary's turbulent past. Recent successful films include:
János Szász: (Witman fiúk, DOP:
Tibor Máthé 1997),
György Pálfi:
Hukkle (2002), (
Taxidermia) (2006). The first super-studio in Hungary was
Korda Studios. The next was
Raleigh Studios, Budapest. Partly because of this an increasing number of foreign films, mainly with larger budgets, have been shot in Hungary in recent years, especially in Budapest. Budapest has been nicknamed "Hollywood on the Danube" because it is arguably now the most Hollywood-populated place outside the U.S. Steven Spielberg's
Munich was also partly shot in Budapest. Most of
Guillermo del Toro's
Hellboy II was shot in Hungary. Altogether 47 foreign films were shot in Hungary in 2008, and 52 in 2009. In comparison, about 20 to 30 Hungarian movies are made annually.
Art movies Hungarians were major pioneers in cinema both in Europe (e.g.
Alexander Korda) and in the United States, and they have entered to the formation of the
art movie.
István Szőts People of the Mountains won the
Venice Biennale in 1942, then
Géza Radványi Somewhere in Europe influenced the emerging
neorealism. After
World War II the greatest Hungarian film director was
Miklós Jancsó who won the first two international film prizes: •
The Round-Up (Szegénylegények),
Locarno,
FIPRESCI, 1965 •
Red Psalm ("Még kér a nép"
Sándor Petőfi),
Cannes,
Best Director Award, 1971 • Hungary won Crystal Globe 2016 • Hungary won Prix Europa (Best European TV Movie or Mini-series of the Year) 2017:
Memo • Hungary won Prix Europa (Best European TV Movie or Mini-series of the Year) 2018:
Eternal Winter by
Attila Szász • Main Prize at Braunschweig Int. Film Festival 2018: X by
Ujj Mészáros • Main Prize at Berlin Int. Film Festival 2018:
On Body and Soul by
Ildikó Enyedi • Main Prize at Monte Carlo Int. Film Festival 2019:
Bad Poems by
Gábor Reisz • Main Prize at Tuburon Int. Film Festival(US) 2019:
Eternal Winter, also: Best Director, Screenplay, Actress and Cinematography ==Cuisine==