The Old Scoundrel Explained

The Old Scoundrel
Producer:Ernst Hugo Charell
Music:Erno Buder
Editing:Erno Hajos
Runtime:102 minutes

The Old Scoundrel (Hungarian: A vén gazember) is a 1932 German-Hungarian drama film directed by Heinz Hille and starring Rosy Barsony, Tibor Halmay and Károly Sugar.[1] It was made as a co-production between the Hunnia Film Studio and German's leading film company UFA. A German-language version And the Plains Are Gleaming was also made by the same director, and featuring several of the same cast members. The film's sets were designed by the art director Márton Vincze.

Cast

References

  1. Lohr p.188

Bibliography