A Man Has Been Stolen Explained

A Man Has Been Stolen
Director:Max Ophüls
Producer:Erich Pommer
Starring:Lili Damita
Henri Garat
Raoul Marco
Music:Walter Jurmann
Bronislau Kaper
Cinematography:René Colas
René Guissart
Editing:Ralph Baum
Studio:Fox Europa
Distributor:Fox Film
Gaumont British Distributors (UK)
Runtime:102 minutes
Country:France
Language:French

A Man Has Been Stolen (French: On a volé un homme) is a 1934 French comedy thriller film directed by Max Ophüls and starring Lili Damita, Henri Garat and Raoul Marco.[1]

It was shot at the Joinville Studios in Paris. The film's sets were designed by the art director Max Heilbronner. The film was produced by Erich Pommer, recently escaped from Nazi-controlled Germany,[2] for the European subsidiary of Fox Film. Many of the filmmakers employed were refugees from Nazi Germany.

Pommer also produced another film simultaneously Liliom, a romance film directed by Fritz Lang. Ophüls later suggested that he felt that the two directors had each been assigned to the wrong production "had we exchanged the films Lang most likely would have made an extraordinary mystery and I a very good romantic comedy".[3] Neither film was very successful at the box office.[4] It is now a lost film.[5]

Synopsis

A millionaire is kidnapped, but begins to fall in love with the woman keeping him prisoner.

Cast

References

  1. Hardt p.142
  2. Hardt p.138-39
  3. Hardt p.142-43
  4. Williams p.211
  5. Book: Williams, Alan Larson.. Republic of images : a history of French filmmaking. 1992. Harvard University Press. 0-674-76267-3. Cambridge, Mass.. 24106528.

Bibliography