The Night Without Pause

The Night Without Pause (German: Die Nacht ohne Pause) is a 1931 German comedy film directed by Andrew Marton and Franz Wenzler and starring Sig Arno, Camilla Horn and Max Adalbert.[1]

The Night Without Pause
Directed by
Produced byJoe Pasternak
Written by
Starring
Music byOtto Stransky
CinematographyKároly Vass
Edited byWolfgang Becker
Production
company
Distributed byDeutsche Universal-Film
Release date
  • 22 December 1931 (1931-12-22)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman

It was made by the German subsidiary of Universal Pictures in partnership with Tobis Film. The film's sets were designed by Fritz Maurischat and Gabriel Pellon. It is based on a popular stage farce by Ernst Bach and Franz Arnold, and was remade in 1952.

Synopsis

When his wife becomes suspicious that he is having an affair after discovering incriminating evidence, Julius Seipold manages to convince her that it is his innocuous assistant Max who is having a relationship. He invents a wild backstory about Max, which in turn fascinates the Julius Seipold's daughter Gertie.

Cast

gollark: Nowadays you can throw together a generic Twitter clone webapp in a weekend or so, after all.
gollark: Clearly we need a shiny new even MORE free social network.
gollark: Radio stuff is longer range without infrastructure, but mostly there is some (even developing countries apparently have quite good cellular coverage these days).
gollark: You can get on the internet with a £50 phone and free WiFi somewhere, radio still requires a bunch of specialised hardware.
gollark: Australia *and* south-east asia.

References

  1. Waldman p. 193

Bibliography

  • Waldman, Harry (2008). Nazi Films in America, 1933–1942. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-3861-7.
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