-
Retrieved 2
September 2017. Gomery,
Douglas (1976). "Tri-Ergon, Tobis-
Klangfilm, and the
Coming of Sound".
Cinema Journal. 16 (1).
University of Texas...
-
chief competitor,
Klangfilm, a
joint subsidiary of Germany's two
leading electrical manufacturers.
Early in 1929,
Tobis and
Klangfilm began comarketing...
- 1928, and
merged with
Klangfilm (a
partnership between Siemens & Halske, AEG, and a
Dutch recording company) to form Tobis-
Klangfilm in
March 1929. Source:...
- the
Tobis syndicate in 1928,
joined by the
Klangfilm AG
syndicate in 1929 and
renamed as Tobis-
Klangfilm by 1930.
While Tri-Ergon
became the dominant...
-
Singer (1927).
American film studios,
while Europe standardized on Tobis-
Klangfilm and Tri-Ergon systems. This new
technology allowed for
greater fluidity...
-
accessed 5
September 2020. Gomery,
Douglas (1976). "Tri-Ergon, Tobis-
Klangfilm, and the
Coming of Sound".
Cinema Journal. 16 (1): 51–61. doi:10.2307/1225449...
-
under the
pseudonym 'Emair' for the
German sound film
distributor Tobis Klangfilm. The
Leuven City
Archive preserves seven posters designed by Magritte...
- 1958
Kinopanorama 9-Track 6 1913
Kinoplasticon 12 1956
Klangfilm Magnetocord 3 1954
Klangfilm-Stereocord 3 1990 LC-Concept
Digital Sound 22 1969 Li-Westrex...
-
features her
singing three songs 1935
Mazurka Willi Forst Cine-Allianz/Tobis-
Klangfilm Germany Co-stars:
Ingeborg Th****, Paul Hartmann, and
Albrecht Schoenhals...
-
Italiana (Italian Air Force)
Distributed by Tobis-Melo-Film
Listema Tobis Klangfilm Release date 1931 (1931)
Running time 10 minutes, 51
seconds Country Italy...