Forty Eight Hours to Acapulco explained
Forty Eight Hours to Acapulco |
Director: | Klaus Lemke |
Producer: | Joseph Kommer Dieter Geissler |
Starring: | Dieter Geissler Christiane Krüger Monika Zinnenberg |
Music: | Roland Kovac |
Cinematography: | Hubertus Hagen Niklaus Schilling |
Editing: | Wolfgang Limmer |
Studio: | Seven Star Film |
Distributor: | Cinema Service |
Runtime: | 81 minutes |
Country: | West Germany |
Language: | German |
Forty Eight Hours to Acapulco (German: 48 Stunden bis Acapulco) is a 1967 West German crime film directed by Klaus Lemke and starring Dieter Geissler, Christiane Krüger and Monika Zinnenberg.[1] Location shooting took place in Bavaria, Italy and Mexico.
Cast
- Dieter Geissler as Frank Murnau
- Christiane Krüger as Laura Gruner
- Monika Zinnenberg as Monika
- Alexander Kerst as Vater Gruner
- Charly Kommer as Amerikanischer Gangster
- Manuel Rivera Lyn Guild as Dienstmädchen bei Mr. Wayne
- Lucas Hernandez
- Roberto Lopez
- Ilse Pagé as Mädchen auf Gruners Party
- Michael Maien as Monikas Tischnachbar
- Teddy Stauffer as Mr. Wayne
- Roland Carey as Mr. Cameron
- Gideon Bachmann as Mann an der Bar in Rom
Bibliography
- Bock, Hans-Michael & Bergfelder, Tim. The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopaedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books, 2009.
Notes and References
- Bock & Bergfelder p.419