White Rose (film)
White Rose (Hungarian: Fehér rózsa) is a 1919 Hungarian silent drama film directed by Alexander Korda and starring María Corda, Gyula Bartos and Emil Fenyvessy. It was based on an 1853 novel by Mór Jókai.[1] It was released by the state-owned Hungarian film industry during the Hungarian Soviet Republic, although production had begun before the regime came to power.[2] Korda went on to make two further films for the Soviet government Yamata and Ave Caesar! which led to his eventual arrest once the regime had been overthrown and his ultimate decision to leave Hungary for Austria.
White Rose | |
---|---|
Directed by | Alexander Korda |
Written by | Mór Jókai (novel) László Vajda |
Starring | María Corda Gyula Bartos Emil Fenyvessy Helene von Bolvary |
Cinematography | Gusztáv Mihály Kovács |
Production company | Councils' Republic |
Release date | 1919 |
Country | Hungary |
Language | Silent Hungarian intertitles |
Cast
- María Corda
- Gyula Bartos
- Emil Fenyvessy
- Helene von Bolvary
- Gyula Szőreghy
- Nusi Somogyi
- Márton Rátkai
- Victor Varconi
- Mari K. Demjén
gollark: You give each option an arbitrary score from 0 to 5 or something and whichever gets the highest total wins.
gollark: That idea of resource allocation doesn't seem very good, though.
gollark: Although score voting is simple too and apparently might be better.
gollark: Yes, I know how approval voting works.
gollark: "Decisions are made using X. Resource allocation is managed via Y. In case people aren't happy with what the government/decision-making system is doing they can Z."
References
- Kulik p.340
- Kulik p.25
Bibliography
- Cunningham, John. Hungarian Cinema: From Coffee House to Multiplex. Wallflower Press, 2004.
- Kulik, Karol. Alexander Korda: The Man Who Could Work Miracles. Virgin Books, 1990.
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