Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Milo Harbich

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Editor Director

Movies
  
Free Land

Role
  
Film Editor

Name
  
Milo Harbich

Years active
  
1933-1962


Born
  
13 August 1900
Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Died
  
September 13, 1988, Nova Petropolis, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Spouse
  
Flory Jacobi (m. 1922–1927)

Similar People
  
Hans Steinhoff, Gerhard Lamprecht, Josef von Baky, Douglas Sirk, Herbert Maisch

Milo Harbich (13 August 1900 – 13 September 1988) was a Brazilian-born German film editor and director. He was born to Austrian-Brazilian parents who moved to Dresden when he was a small child. He began career as stage actor, but by the early 1930s was increasingly involved with the German film industry. He edited his first film in 1933. During the Nazi era he worked on a mixture of propaganda films and less overtly political entertainment such as To New Shores (1937) and the Marika Rökk vehicle Hello Janine! (1939). He often worked with the directors Douglas Sirk and Hans Steinhoff.

Contents

After having previously made a couple of short films, Harbich directed Kriminalkommissar Eyck his first feature film in 1940.

In 1946 he directed Free Land for DEFA in East Germany. The following year he returned to his native Brazil where he continued to work on films intermittently until the early 1960s.

Editor

  • Inge and the Millions (1933)
  • Just Once a Great Lady (1934)
  • The Higher Command (1935)
  • The Gypsy Baron (1935)
  • One Too Many on Board (1935)
  • To New Shores (1937)
  • Men Without a Fatherland (1937)
  • Hello Janine! (1939)
  • Director

  • Free Land (1946)
  • References

    Milo Harbich Wikipedia