The Man Without Nerves
The Man Without Nerves (German:Der Mann ohne Nerven) is a 1924 German silent crime film directed by Harry Piel, assisted by Gérard Bourgeois and starring Piel, Dary Holm and Albert Paulig. It premiered in Berlin on 5 December 1924.[1]
The Man Without Nerves | |
---|---|
Directed by | Harry Piel Gérard Bourgeois |
Produced by | Harry Piel |
Written by | Edmund Heuberger Herbert Nossen |
Starring | Harry Piel Dary Holm Albert Paulig Marguerite Madys |
Cinematography | Georg Muschner Gotthardt Wolf |
Production company | Harry Piel for Hape-Film (Berlin) |
Distributed by | Bayern-Film |
Release date | 5 December 1924 |
Country | Germany |
Language | Silent German intertitles |
Cast
- Harry Piel as Der Mann ohne Nerven
- Dary Holm as Aud Egede Christensen
- Albert Paulig as Henry Ricold
- Marguerite Madys as Yvette
- Paul Guidé as Hector Marcel
- Denise Legeay as Lizzie
- José Davert as Jack Brown
- Hermann Picha as Der Notar des Herzogs
gollark: Other way round, really.
gollark: (I know, I just joke about it being inevitable lots)((OR DO I?))
gollark: See, I like capitalism but dislike much of how the government works.
gollark: And because of that complexity you need to throw money at lawyers to deal with legal things and may have to settle for a bad outcome *even if you're innocent*.
gollark: The current legal system is in my opinion one of the worst aspects of our society, as the law is so large and complicated that one person literally cannot understand it all and they can be imprisoned due to not knowing.
References
- Grange p.184
Bibliography
- Grange, William. Cultural Chronicle of the Weimar Republic. Scarecrow Press, 2008.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.