The captain from Tenkesberg
Movie | |
---|---|
German title | The captain from Tenkesberg |
Original title | A Tenkes kapitánya |
Country of production | Hungary |
original language | Hungarian |
Publishing year | 1963 |
length | 184 minutes |
Rod | |
Director | Tamás Fejér |
script | Ferenc Örsi |
music | Tihamér Vujicsics |
camera | Istvan Mezey |
cut | Vera Besztercei |
occupation | |
|
The captain of Tenkesberg (Hungarian: A Tenkes kapitánya ) is a two-part Hungarian film by Tamás Fejér from 1963, which serves both the genre of coat-and-sword film and film comedy .
action
At the beginning of the Hungarian struggle for freedom of Franz II. Rákóczi at the beginning of the 18th century, Máté Eke, the "captain", fought as a Hungarian Robin Hood with the support of the peasants against the Habsburg rule near the southern Hungarian Siklós . His opponent is the commandant of Siklós Castle, Baron Eckbert von Eberstein. With Austrian soldiers he is supposed to put down the Kuruzen movement in the name of the emperor . After numerous adventures, the Hungarians succeed in driving the Habsburgs out of Siklós.
background
The film is based on the adventure novel A Tenkes kapitánya (German: Captain Tenkes ) by Ferenc Örsi (1927-1994). Based on the novel, the 13-part television series Captain Tenkes was filmed in and around Siklós in 1963 and 1964 . The film was made by third parties. The individual episodes of the series were cut together. Despite the shortening of the total playing time by around two hours, the film version was also made into a two-part series with a total of 184 minutes. In the GDR, the film was shown for the first time on May 6 and June 3, 1966 in cinemas and later repeatedly on GDR television . In an arrangement by Lutz Hillmann, Der Kapitän vom Tenkesberg premiered as a play on June 28, 2007 in Bautzen .
synchronization
Although the movie premiered just over a year after it was broadcast on television and was compiled entirely from the series, it was completely re-dubbed. The only speakers who kept their roles were Hans-Joachim Hegewald (Bruckenbacker) and Käte Koch (Baroness Amalia). The captain was now spoken by Gerhard Paul, his opponent Eberstein by Achim Petry .
criticism
"Undemanding adventure entertainment in two parts"
Web links
- The captain of Tenkesberg in the Internet Movie Database (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ The captain from Tenkesberg. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .