Artur Brauner, a Polish-born Holocaust survivor who became one of post-World War II Germany’s most prominent film producers, died on Sunday in Berlin. He was 100.

His family confirmed the death to the German news agency DPA. His 100th birthday was celebrated last September with a gala event in Berlin attended by a host of European celebrities.

The hundreds of films that Mr. Brauner produced included several with a Holocaust theme, among them Agnieszka Holland’s “Europa Europa” (1990), about a boy in Nazi Germany who joins the Hitler Youth to try to conceal the fact that he is Jewish. It won a Golden Globe.

“Babi Yar” (2003), produced by Mr. Brauner and directed by Jeff Kanew, centered on the 1941 Nazi massacre of Jews in Ukraine, in which several of Mr. Brauner’s relatives were killed. It was not a box-office success in Germany, leading Mr. Brauner to observe disappointedly that the test of “whether the German cinema public has become politically more mature” had “clearly negative” results.