She and the Three (1922 film)
She and the Three | |
---|---|
German | Sie und die Drei |
Directed by | Ewald André Dupont |
Written by | Julius Urgiß |
Produced by | Henny Porten |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Helmar Lerski |
Production company | Henny Porten Filmproduktion |
Distributed by | UFA |
Release date |
|
Country | Germany |
Languages | Silent German intertitles |
She and the Three (German: Sie und die Drei) is a 1922 German silent comedy film directed by E. A. Dupont and starring Henny Porten, Hermann Thimig, and Robert Scholz.[1]
The film's sets were designed by the art director .
Plot[]
Lia Lona is a celebrated film diva. One day, when she is presented with a certificate by a film club that bears her name in her honour, she considers the man who wants to give her a diploma to be a thief. Then things start to get turbulent. In the moving train, she pulls the emergency brake on the run and is then arrested. The accusation, which is a total nonsense, brings her to court where the judge assigns Lia has to start five days of arrest for her hasty action. But for the film diva, the punishment becomes an amusing and lively change from everyday acting. Cleverly, she can also instruct her film crew to use these "holidays from the self" to produce semi-documentary footage, which she plans to weave into her next film.
Cast[]
- Henny Porten as "Sie", Lia Lona, actress
- Hermann Thimig as The Gentle
- Robert Scholz as stormer
- Jakob Tiedtke as unknown
- Hermann Picha as the Lord with the sense of normality
- Oscar Sabo as cautious man Jouissance
- Paul Graetz as director
- Kurt Vespermann as screenwriter
- Charles Puffy as Film director
- Blandine Ebinger as Die Zofe
- Hermann Vallentin as Räuberhauptmann Krause
- Leonhard Haskel as Der Wärter
- Max Adalbert as Der einseifende Herr
- Hans Wassmann as Der Lenker der "grünen Minna"
- Willi Schaeffers as Chairperson of Lia Lona Club
- Gert Sascha as man with a television set
- Curt Bois as assistant director
- Fritz Schulz as shoeshiner
- Carl Geppert as Oberkellner im Hotel "Zur Qualle"
- Georg Baselt as Der Torhüter
- Zugführer as
- Theo Sigmund as Chief judge
- Anton Herrnfeld
- Max Zilzer as criminal defense lawyer
- as criminal defense lawyer
- Hugo Döblin as criminal defense lawyer
- Siegfried Berisch as criminal defense lawyer
- Rudolf Bergel as criminal defense lawyer
- Ferdinand Grünecker as criminal defense lawyer
- Arthur Bergen as criminal defense lawyer
- Otto Schiller as criminal defense lawyer
- Emil Albes as court usher
- Adolphe Engers as raver for cinema and soup
- Franz Groß as man of honour behind Swedish curtains
- Harald Paulsen as man of honour behind Swedish curtains
- Georg John as man of honour behind Swedish curtains
- as man of honour behind Swedish curtains
- as man of honour behind Swedish curtains
- Paul Westermeier as criminal shimmy dancer
- Senta Söneland as lady of honour behind Swedish curtains
- Margarete Kupfer as lady of honour behind Swedish curtains
- Maria Forescu as lady of honour behind Swedish curtains
- Josefine Dora as chubby bathing woman
- Marie Grimm-Einödshofer as lady with the scouring cloth
References[]
- ^ St. Pierre, Paul Matthew (2010). E. A. Dupont and his Contribution to British Film: Varieté, Moulin Rouge, Piccadilly, Atlantic, Two Worlds, Cape Forlorn. Madison, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 19. ISBN 1611474337.
External links[]
- 1922 films
- German films
- Films of the Weimar Republic
- German silent feature films
- Films directed by E. A. Dupont
- Films about filmmaking
- UFA GmbH films
- German comedy films
- 1922 comedy films
- German black-and-white films
- 1920s German film stubs