The Fox of Glenarvon
The Fox of Glenarvon (German: Der Fuchs von Glenarvon) is a German propaganda film from the Nazi era portraying the years of the Irish fight for independence during World War I. It was produced in 1940 by Max W. Kimmich and starred Olga Tschechowa, Karl Ludwig Diehl, Ferdinand Marian and others. The screenplay was written by Wolf Neumeister and Hans Bertram after a novel of the same title by Nicola Rhon (Maria von Kirchbach) that had been published at Ullstein publishing house in 1937. It was made at the Johannisthal Studios in Berlin, with sets designed by the art directors Wilhelm Depenau and Otto Erdmann. The shoot lasted from December 1939 to February 1940. It passed censorship on 22 April 1940 and had its debut in Berlin's Ufa-Palast am Zoo two days later.
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1940 in filmAlbert FlorathAribert MogBernhard GoetzkeBruno HübnerCurt LucasDer Fuchs von GlenarvonElisabeth FlickenschildtEllen BangElse von MöllendorffFerdinand MarianFranz Weber (actor)Friedrich KaysslerGustav PüttjerHans BertramHans MierendorffHans Richter (actor)Hermann BraunHilde KörberHorst BirrKarl DannemannKarl HannemannKarl Ludwig DiehlList of German films of 1940List of Nazi propaganda filmsList of Tobis Film filmsList of films featuring prisonsList of films set in IrelandLucie HöflichMax W. KimmichMy Life for IrelandNazi propaganda and the United KingdomOhm KrügerOlga ChekhovaOtto Erdmann (art director)Paul OttoPeter ElsholtzRichard HäusslerThe fox of GlenarvonTitanic (1943 film)
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The Fox of Glenarvon
The Fox of Glenarvon (German: Der Fuchs von Glenarvon) is a German propaganda film from the Nazi era portraying the years of the Irish fight for independence during World War I. It was produced in 1940 by Max W. Kimmich and starred Olga Tschechowa, Karl Ludwig Diehl, Ferdinand Marian and others. The screenplay was written by Wolf Neumeister and Hans Bertram after a novel of the same title by Nicola Rhon (Maria von Kirchbach) that had been published at Ullstein publishing house in 1937. It was made at the Johannisthal Studios in Berlin, with sets designed by the art directors Wilhelm Depenau and Otto Erdmann. The shoot lasted from December 1939 to February 1940. It passed censorship on 22 April 1940 and had its debut in Berlin's Ufa-Palast am Zoo two days later.
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Der Fuchs von Glenarvon ist ei ...... land – pro-irischen Tendenzen.
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Le Renard de Glenarvon (Der Fu ...... du ministère de la Propagande.
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The Fox of Glenarvon (German: ...... -Palast am Zoo two days later.
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1940-04-24
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23,877,952
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1,008,703,449
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Tobis Filmkunst
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The Fox of Glenarvon
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1940-04-24
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Hans Bertram
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Der Fuchs von Glenarvon ist ei ...... land – pro-irischen Tendenzen.
@de
Le Renard de Glenarvon (Der Fu ...... du ministère de la Propagande.
@fr
The Fox of Glenarvon (German: ...... -Palast am Zoo two days later.
@en
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Der Fuchs von Glenarvon
@de
Le Renard de Glenarvon
@fr
The Fox of Glenarvon
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The Fox of Glenarvon
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