The Budapest Twelve is a list of 12 Hungarian films considered the best from the period between 1948 and 1968. The films were chosen in secret ballot of the Hungarian film industry in 1968.
Budapest Twelve
The International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) held its annual conference in Budapest in 1968, the year that marked the 20th anniversary of the nationalization of the Hungarian film industry. On this occasion, the department of film critics of the Alliance of Hungarian Filmmakers choose the best 12 films in a secret ballot. The films were screened at the 4. Hungarian Film Week and one year later aired on the Hungarian Public Television.[1]
The full list of films:[1]
- Frigyes Bán: Treasured Earth
- Miklós Jancsó: The Round-Up
- Zoltán Fábri: Merry-Go-Round
- András Kovács: Cold Days
- Félix Máriássy: Budapest Spring
- Zoltán Fábri: Professor Hannibal
- Imre Fehér: In Soldier's Uniform
- Károly Makk: The House Under the Rocks
- Ferenc Kósa: Ten Thousand Days
- István Gaál: Sodrásban
- Márton Keleti: The Corporal and the Others
- István Szabó: Father
New Budapest Twelve
In 2000, the Alliance of Hungarian Filmmakers and Television Directors along with the film and TV critic department of the National Association of Hungarian Journalists voted on the films they consider the best in the history of Hungarian cinema.[2]
The full list of films:[3]
- Miklós Jancsó: The Round-Up
- Károly Makk: Love
- Zoltán Huszárik: Szindbád
- István Szőts: People of the Mountains
- Géza Radványi: Somewhere in Europe
- Péter Gothár: Time Stands Still
- István Székely: Hyppolit, the Butler
- Zoltán Fábri: Merry-Go-Round
- András Jeles: Little Valentino
- Ildikó Enyedi: My 20th Century
- István Szabó: Father
- Zoltán Fábri: Professor Hannibal
References
- 1 2 Ujhelyi, Szilárd (1968). Karcsai Kulcsár, István (ed.). A BUDAPESTI 12. Filmbarátok Kiskönyvtára. Budapest: Magyar Filmtudományi Intézet és Filmarchívum.
- ↑ "FILMES ELISMERÉSEK – Budapesti tizenkettő". 24.hu (in Hungarian). 8 February 2000. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
- ↑ "Új Budapesti Tizenkettő". Filmvilág. XLIII (3): 2. March 2000.