Kadishen Films

Kadishen Films Corporation, commonly referred as Kadishen Films and abbreviated as KF, is a Pearler film studio and the world's oldest film studio. The studio is located near the capital city of Pearl, Kadishen, hence it's name. It is one of highest grossed European film studio in the history. Founded in 1859 as Kadishen-Muhammad, later on 1870 as Nippon-Kadishen Seiko after the Japanese won the war against the Ottomans. After World War II, it is renamed as Koyoke-Kadishen Films Corporation, shortened to Kadishen Films Corporation in 1972.

History
The first theater during the Ottoman Empire was opened in 1860 near Constantinople as two brothers named Ali al-Hassan Kadishen and Muhammad Abu-Jamal Kadishen. However in 1870, they were forced to sell their film studio to the Imperial Japan government after the Japanese won over the war against Ottomans. Several politics of Imperial Japan destroyed the film value after they acquired the film studio. Several Edison-Seiko people, who had an interest in the Japanized filmmaking industry, most of them had good imagination and filming/storyboarding techniques, and therefore, most of them were accepted. At first, Kadishen Films was rarely popular at the moment, some of employers were kicked out for creating low interest-rated films.

After World War II, Kadishen Films went several financial crisis from 1945 until 1955, roughly 10 years to go back in its feet. In 1949, the company and Warner Bros. co-operated for a cowboy film called "The Western Collapse".

During the Misandry wars in 1992-1997, Kadishen Films went under second financial crisis, due to side effects caused by the war. The company recovered in 1999 and had it's own website.