An Everyday Story

An Everyday Story (German: Eine alltägliche Geschichte) is a 1948 drama film directed by Günther Rittau and starring Gustav Fröhlich, Marianne Simson and Karl Schönböck.[1] The film was produced in 1944, towards the end of the Second World War, but was not given a release until DEFA in the Soviet Zone distributed it four years later. It received its Austrian release the following year, and finally in West Germany in 1950.

An Everyday Story
Directed byGünther Rittau
Produced byHerbert Engelsing
Written by
Starring
Music byHans-Otto Borgmann
CinematographyGeorg Bruckbauer
Edited byLilian Seng
Production
company
Distributed bySovexport-Film
Release date
26 November 1948
Running time
84 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman

The film's sets were designed by the art director Otto Hunte and Karl Vollbrecht.

Synopsis

A novelist completes what he considers to be his masterpiece, but the publisher tells him instead to write an everyday story.

Cast

gollark: They can. You can order things without mapping them to numbers.
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gollark: > We have no idea what the numeric value of any bid is yet, right? We do not. There may not even be a numeric value.
gollark: > Here's a fun guess (not going to test it): the bid's value is the smallest prime factor of the SHA of the bid.Wouldn't that be rather slow to compute?
gollark: Solution: download all videos you want to watch from YouTube, while you still can.

See also

References

  1. Bock & Bergfelder p. 193

Bibliography

  • Bock, Hans-Michael & Bergfelder, Tim. The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopaedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books, 2009.
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