Twelve Minutes After Midnight Explained
Twelve Minutes After Midnight (German: Zwölf Minuten nach zwölf) is a 1939 German comedy crime film directed by Johannes Guter and starring Geraldine Katt, Ursula Herking and René Deltgen.[1]
Synopsis
In Stockholm a young female law student investigates a series of jewel thefts that have been baffling the police.
Cast
- Geraldine Katt as Ingrid Barko
- Ursula Herking as Nelly Eklund
- René Deltgen as Niels Terström
- Carl Raddatz as Juwelenmakler Griffin
- Rudolf Platte as Karl Jensemann
- Paul Henckels as Juwelier Anders
- Boris Alekin as Betrunkener Ganove
- Wilhelm Althaus as Kommissar Svenson
- Walter Bechmann Paul Bildt as Gerichtsvorsitzender
- Hildegard Busse as Lydia Duval
- Werner Funck as Ganove
- Fred Goebel as Kriminalkommissar in Oslo
- Hanna Lussnigg as Susanne
- Gustav Mahncke as Michalski's Diener
- Carl Merznicht Manfred Meurer as Michalski's Komplize
- Hermann Meyer-Falkow as Wachbeamter bei Gericht
- Fridtjof Mjøen as John Williams
- Heinz Müller as Wirt der Ganovenkneipe
- Friedrich Ohse as Ganove
- Klaus Pohl as Gauner Collin
- Anton Pointner as Hock
- Alfred Pussert as Wachbeamter
- Arthur Reinhardt as Wachmann beim Juwelenraub
- Oscar Sabo as Zugschaffner
- Hermann Schröder as Zuschauer bei Gerichtsverhandlung
References
- Kreimeier p.313
Bibliography
- Kreimeier, Klaus. The Ufa Story: A History of Germany's Greatest Film Company, 1918-1945. University of California Press, 1999.