The Berlin Range (1913)
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | The Berlin Range |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 1913 |
length | 50 minutes |
Rod | |
Director | Max Mack |
script | Iwa Raffay |
production | Jules Greenbaum |
occupation | |
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Die Berliner Range is a German silent film fun play from 1913 by Max Mack with Hanni Weisse in the title role.
action
At the center of the action is a young actress who is taking a break to get a taste of a completely different profession. The cheeky young lady then takes off her elegant clothes, slips on a white work jacket and small-checked trousers and thus becomes an apprentice baker. Soon the Berlin range completely confused their master’s bakery business with their junky ideas. But she also intervenes to help the baker's boys' strike, is beaten up and beaten up herself. In the end, however, everything turns out fine, and the young lady achieves her goal.
Production notes
The Berlin Range was created in the Vitascope studio in Berlin's Lindenstrasse 32–34. The film passed the censorship on October 17, 1913 and premiered on the same day. In Austria-Hungary, the premiere took place on October 24, 1913 in Vienna.
criticism
"Hanni Weisse ... puts on ... a pair of white trousers, like the baker boys wear, ... to show the amiability and versatility of her talent anew in all kinds of strange situations."