The Deruga Case (film)

The Deruga Case (German: Der Fall Deruga) is a 1938 German crime film directed by Fritz Peter Buch and starring Willy Birgel, Geraldine Katt and Dagny Servaes.[1] It is based on the 1917 novel of the same title by Ricarda Huch.

The Deruga Case
Directed byFritz Peter Buch
Produced byGeorg Witt
Written by
  • Ricarda Huch (novel)
  • L.A.C. Müller
  • Hans Neumann
  • Fritz Peter Buch
Starring
Music byHans Ebert
CinematographyWerner Bohne
Edited byElisabeth Kleinert-Neumann
Production
company
UFA
Distributed byUFA
Release date
22 September 1938
Running time
105 minutes
CountryNazi Germany
LanguageGerman

The film's sets were designed by the art directors Wilhelm Depenau and Ludwig Reiber.

Cast

  • Willy Birgel as Dr. Stefan Deruga
  • Geraldine Katt as Baroness Mingo Truschkowitz
  • Dagny Servaes as Baronin Truschkowitz
  • Georg Alexander as Baron Truschkowitz
  • Käthe Haack as Marta Schwertfeger
  • Claire Winter as Ursula Züger
  • Hans Leibelt as Justizrat Dr. Klemm
  • Erich Fiedler as Dr. Schelling
  • Paul Bildt as Landgerichtsvorsitzender Dr. Zeunemann
  • Walter Franck as Senior Prosecutor
  • Ernst Karchow as Prosecutor Dr. Noth
  • Erika von Thellmann as Therese Klinkhardt
  • Roma Bahn as Valeska Durich
  • Fritz Odemar as Hofrat Dr. Mäulchen
  • Leo Peukert as Verzelli
  • Erich Ziegel as Professor Vandermühl
  • Oscar Sabo as Hausmeister Schulz
  • Beppo Brem as Friseur Alfinger
  • Walter Albrecht as 1. Geschworener
  • Otto Braml as 1. Gerichtswachtmeister
  • Walter Buhse as 2 Geschworener
  • Loulou Daenner as 2. Journalistin
  • Jac Diehl as Justizwachtmeister
  • Josefine Dora as Garderobiere
  • Peter Erkelenz as Sachverständiger
  • Wilhelm Große as 6. Geschworener
  • Christine Großmann as 1. Journalistin
  • Kurt Hagen as 2. Gerichtswachtmeister
  • Bruno Klockmann as 3. Geschworener
  • William Leo as Protokollführer
  • Karin Luesebrink as Zuschauerin bei der Gerichtsverhandlung
  • Guenther Markert as 2. Journalist
  • Otto Marle as 4. Geschworener
  • Edith Meinhard as Serviererin
  • Hugo Meissl as Prozesszeichner
  • Hans Nerking as 1. Beisitzer
  • Alfred Pussert as 3. Journalist
  • Louis Ralph as Kriminalbeamter
  • Leo Reiter as 5. Geschworener
  • Arthur Reppert as Zuschauer bei der Gerichtsverhandlung
  • Jutta Sabo as Zuschauerin bei der Gerichtsverhandlung
  • Ernst Albert Schaach Diener Fredrich
  • Willi Schaeffers as Privatdetektiv
  • Walter Schenk as 4. Journalist
  • S.O. Schoening as 2. Beisitzer
  • Wera Schultz as Zuschauerin bei der Gerichtsverhandlung
  • Alfred Stratmann as Zuschauer bei der Gerichtsverhandlung =
  • Tommy Thomas as Zuschauer bei der Gerichtsverhandlung
  • Bruno Tillessen as Gast im Café
  • Egon Vogel as 5. Journalist
  • Jens von Hagen as 1. Journalist
  • Hubert von Meyerinck as Riedmüller
  • Walter Werner as Sanitätsrat Dr. Gürtner
gollark: Perhaps you would end up with the AIs learning to distinguish training scenarios from not training scenarios, and being awful all the time when not monitored.
gollark: Narrow AIish things can beat humans on narrow tasks like "playing go" already.
gollark: Or at least better-in-most-ways.
gollark: People haven't managed anything better yet, yes.
gollark: Humans are kind of awful.

References

  1. Moeller p. 31

Bibliography

  • Moeller, Felix. The Film Minister: Goebbels and the Cinema in the Third Reich. Axel Menges, 2000.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.