Dreaming Lips (1932 film)
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Dreaming Lips | |
---|---|
Directed by | Paul Czinner |
Produced by | Marcel Hellman |
Written by | Henri Bernstein (play) Carl Mayer Paul Czinner |
Starring | Elisabeth Bergner Rudolf Forster Anton Edthofer Margarethe Hruby |
Cinematography | Jules Kruger René Ribault |
Edited by | Erich Schmidt |
Production
company |
Pathé-Natan
Matador-Film |
Distributed by | Bavaria Film |
Release dates
|
13 September 1932 |
Running time
|
95 minutes |
Country | France Germany |
Language | German |
Dreaming Lips (German:Der träumende Mund) is a 1932 French-German drama film directed by Paul Czinner[1] and starring Elisabeth Bergner, Rudolf Forster and Anton Edthofer. The film is based on the play Mélo by Henri Bernstein. As was common at the time, the film was a co-production with a separate French-language version Mélo made.
After Bergner and Czinner went into exile in Britain following the Nazi takeover, they remade the film in 1937. A further German remake was released in 1953, starring Maria Schell.
Contents
Cast
- Elisabeth Bergner as Gaby
- Rudolf Forster as Michael Marsden
- Anton Edthofer as Peter
- Margarethe Hruby as Christine
- Jaro Fürth as Arzt
- Peter Krogeras Kind
- Karl Hannemann as Impresario
- Ernst Stahl-Nachbaur as Polizist
- Werner Pledath
- Gustav Püttjer
- Willi Schur
References
- ↑ Hake p.59
Bibliography
- Hake, Sabine. German National Cinema. Routledge, 2008.
External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Dreaming Lips at IMDb
<templatestyles src="Asbox/styles.css"></templatestyles>
<templatestyles src="Asbox/styles.css"></templatestyles>
Categories:
- German-language films
- 1932 films
- German films
- Films of the Weimar Republic
- French films
- 1930s drama films
- French drama films
- German drama films
- Films directed by Paul Czinner
- Films based on plays
- Screenplays by Carl Mayer
- Multilingual films
- 1930s German film stubs
- 1930s drama film stubs
- German black-and-white films