The Dovzhenko Film Studios (Ukrainian: Національна кіностудія художніх фільмів імені О. Довженка, translit. Natsional'na kinostudiya khudozhnikh filmiv imeni O. Dovzhenka) is a former Soviet film production studios located in Ukraine that were named after the Ukrainian film producer, Alexander Dovzhenko, in 1957. With the fall of the Soviet Union, the studio became a property of the government of Ukraine. Since 2000 the film studios were awarded status national.
Its history the studios begin in 1920's when the All-Ukrainian Photo-Cinema-Directorate (VUFKU) announced concourse on a project proposition for the construction of a cinema-factory in 1925. Out of 20 of them was chosen the project of Valerian Rykov who led his architect group composed of students of the Architectural Department of Kyiv Art Institute. With the construction of the O. Dovzhenko Film Studios beginning in 1927, it was at the time the largest in the Ukrainian SSR. Although the filming pavilions were still unfinished a year later, movie production had begun. Many memorial plates are located within the studios in memory of the many film producers which had once worked here. One film pavilion is named Shchorsivskyi, because Olexandr Dovzhenko shot his movie, Shchors, there. This area of the studios is currently used as a museum.
I agapi einai profasi
gi' autos pou den einai
pia eroteumeni
i sinitheia einai egklima
ki eimaste ki i dio dio filakismeni
tote pes mou giati
na zoume mazi
alitheia giati den epanastatoume
Fevgo to kano gia to kalo mas
fevgo to kano ke gia tou dio mas
ke min pistepsis
oti epapsa na s' agapao
min pistepsis pos gia sena allo den ponao
Se parakalo mi me kitas
m' auto to vlemma
se parakalo mi me girnas
sto idio psema
fevgo, fevgo
Ta filia mas
eine allothi
eimaste ki i dio simvivasmeni
o,ti teleiose, paei teleiose
auto pou mas edene