The Rakoczi March
Appearance
The Rakoczi March | |
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Directed by | |
Written by | |
Starring |
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Cinematography | |
Edited by | József Szilas |
Music by | Paul Abraham |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Mondial-Film |
Release dates | 23 November 1933 (Hungary)
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Running time | 101 minutes |
Countries |
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Languages | German Hungarian |
The Rakoczi March (German: Rakoczy-Marsch) is a 1933 drama film directed by Gustav Fröhlich and Steve Sekely and starring Fröhlich, Leopold Kramer and Camilla Horn. It was a co-production between Austria, Germany and Hungary.[1] It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director Márton Vincze. A separate Hungarian-language version, Rákóczi induló, was made.
Cast
[edit]German-language version
[edit]- Gustav Fröhlich as Oberleutnant Tarjan
- Leopold Kramer as Graf Job
- Camilla Horn as Vilma, his daughter
- Paul Wagner as Rittmeister Arpad Graf Job, his son
- Ellen Frank as Erika, his niece
- Tibor Halmay as Leutnant Lorant
- Margit Angerer as the recital singer
- László Dezsőffy as the watchman
- Anton Pointner as Merlin, Job's neighbour
- Charles Puffy as the vet
- Willi Schur as Mischka, Tarjan's batman
- Rudolf Teubler as the peasant
- Otto Treßler as the regimental doctor
- Peter Wolff as Fähnrich Bilitzky
Hungarian-language version
[edit]- Pál Jávor as Tarján Sándor first Military-major
- Margit Dajka as Vilma, Jób's daughter
- Ferenc Kiss as Árpád, Jób's son
- Gyula Csortos as count Jób Ferenc
- Tibor Halmay as Lóránt Military-major
- Ida Turay as Tamássy Éva, Vilma' cousin
- Gyula Gózon as Mihály, Tarján's Batman
- Imre Apáthi as Bilinczky Géza Flagbearer
- Ernõ Szenes as Dr.Kovács, chief veterinarian
- Oscar Beregi Sr. as Baron Merlin Ádám, landed gentleman
- László Dezsõffy as Guard-master
- Géza Márky as dancing boy in vintage
- Emil Fenyö as doctor
- István Dózsa as Jób's lackey
- Gusztáv Vándory as doctor in the village
- Erzsi Pártos as gorl in the village
- Karola Zala as Jób's aunt
- Ilona Náday as peasant girl
- Lajos Gárday as Lóránt's Batman
- Ferenc Pázmán as General
- Kálmán Zátony as Common soldier
References
[edit]- ^ Dassanowsky p. 49
Bibliography
[edit]- Von Dassanowsky, Robert (2005). Austrian Cinema: A History. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-2147-0.
External links
[edit]
Categories:
- 1933 films
- 1933 drama films
- Austrian drama films
- Hungarian drama films
- 1930s German-language films
- 1930s Hungarian-language films
- Films based on works by Ferenc Herczeg
- German multilingual films
- Films directed by Gustav Fröhlich
- Films directed by Steve Sekely
- Films scored by Paul Abraham
- Austrian black-and-white films
- German black-and-white films
- Hungarian black-and-white films
- Austrian multilingual films
- Hungarian multilingual films
- 1933 multilingual films
- Films shot at Hunnia Studios
- Austrian film stubs