Eva (1935)

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Movie
Original title Eve
Country of production Austria
original language German
Publishing year 1935
length 96 minutes
Age rating FSK 12
Rod
Director Johannes Riemann
script Ernst Marischka
production Atlantis film, Vienna
music Franz Lehár
camera Eduard Hoesch
cut Alwin Elling
occupation

Eva is an Austrian music and film comedy by Johannes Riemann from 1935. The film is based on the operetta of the same name by Alfred Maria Willner and Robert Bodanzky with music by Franz Lehár (1911). In the main role , Hans Söhnker embodies the passionate racing driver Georg von Hochheim.

action

Georg von Hochheim, a passionate racing driver, has to take over the management of a porcelain factory that he has inherited. The job in a management is not at all suitable for him, but he gives in to his dominant grandmother, who absolutely wants him to take over the management there.

In his new leadership role, he should first learn the craft of porcelain production from scratch. He is anonymously mixed into the production department as a “new employee”. Surprisingly for everyone who is familiar with his background, he falls in love with the factory worker Eva in his played role as a normal production worker.

After some turbulence, the film's plot has a happy ending .

Production notes

The film was made in the spring of 1935 in the Tobis Sascha Atelier in Sievering, Vienna. Eva was released in German cinemas on July 25, 1935 . Further publication dates (abroad) were August 20, 1935 in Austria , June 7, 1936 in Finland , April 26, 1937 in Portugal and January 7, 1938 in the USA (there under the title Eva, the Factory Girl ) . The location was Vienna .

Julius von Borsody designed the film structures , while Alfred Norkus provided the sound . Reinhold Meißner was production manager.

The strip received the rating "artistically valuable".

Music track

  • The love and the kissing
  • the Eva waltz: It would also be nothing but a dream of happiness
  • the song of recklessness: Lord God, leave me my recklessness

The individual numbers were published by Ludwig Doblinger (Bernhard Herzmansky), Vienna

criticism

"[...] stiffly theatrical and a bit out of date, but thanks to the comedian guard Rühmann-Moser-Sandrock still quite enjoyable."

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Eva (1935) - Release Info - IMDb. In: imdb.com. Retrieved June 26, 2015 .
  2. ^ Eva (1935) - Filming Locations - IMDb. In: imdb.com. Retrieved June 26, 2015 .
  3. Ulrich J. Klaus: Deutsche Tonfilme, Volume 6, year 1935. P. 55. Berlin 1995
  4. ^ Eva (1935). Retrieved June 26, 2015 .