The video shows the first five minutes of the film.
The video shows the first five minutes of the film.
The video shows the first five minutes of the film.
The video shows the first five minutes of the film.
The video shows the first five minutes of the film.
The video shows the first five minutes of the film. Filme der NS-Zeit sind im Kontext der staatlich beeinflussten Produktion und Rezeption zu sehen. Mehr erfahren »
The video shows the first five minutes of the film.
The video shows the first five minutes of the film.
Karl Freund, Emil Jannings (left to right) while shooting "Der letzte Mann" (1924)
Fritz Rasp in scene from the Buenos Aires copy of "Metropolis", which contains numerous scenes thought to be lost. (Image editing: Dennis Neuschäfer-Rube for ZEITmagazin)
Marianne Hoppe, Ferdinand Marian (left to right) in "Romanze in Moll" (1944)
"Faust" (1926)
Emil Jannings in "Faust" (1926)
Leo Slezak (second from left), Hans Albers (second from right) in "Münchhausen" (1943)
Hans Albers, Brigitte Horney (left to right) in "Münchhausen" (1943)
Gustav Fröhlich, Joe May (left to right) while shooting "Asphalt" (1929)
Russian war drama about the love between a peasant girl and a Russian prince at the time of the Russian (February) Revolution in 1917. As a young peasant girl, Mary Warren (Geraldine Farrar) is being ...
As producer, actor and filmmaker, Richard Massingham managed to combine his passion for film and medical science.
A short melodrama: the Chinese man Sang Lee takes pity on a white child (Jack). Twenty years later, Jack, now a prominent lawyer, defends his foster father in court from false accusations.
When the now-wealthy Jack sees his former lover by chance on the silver screen, he immediately goes looking for her.