Miss Lausbub

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Movie
Original title Miss Lausbub
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1929
length 84 minutes
Rod
Director Erich Schönfelder
script Viktor Abel
Karl Ritter
production Olympic film, Berlin
camera Axel Graatkjaer
occupation

Fräulein Lausbub is a German silent film lustspiel from 1929 with Dina Gralla in the title role.

action

Bundle of energy Daisy Baroness Eggloffsburg is a spoiled and quite lively, happy tomboy who is always in the mood for pranks. As a member of the upper class, her whole interest is in equestrian sport. She grew up among the junior jockeys and as a result she is practically at home on the turf. Her uncle Egon, a strict old man, thinks that it has to be enough with the maddening and crazy ideas - sometimes she sprinkles people with a water hose, sometimes she locks two horses that don't get along in a box, then shoots again sweets them to guests or throws goldfish into the punch bowl.

I need a man to read her the riot act and tame Daisy. The dedicated young sportsman Harry Spring is supposed to bring the girl as well as the derelict farm of the racing stable owner Baron Eggloffsburg up to speed. The nonsense should finally be driven out of the noble daughter! But Daisy doesn’t give up so quickly and now begins to tease the young beau with the all too familiar joke methods. It comes as it has to: what teases each other loves each other, and the young Harry finally manages to tame Miss Lausbub and lead her to the altar.

Production notes

The film was made in June and July 1929 in the Berlin film studios of Staaken, was censored on November 27, 1929 and was banned from young people. The world premiere of Miss Lausbub was on January 28, 1930 in the Berlin marble house . The seven-stroke had a length of 2110 meters.

Martin Pichert was in charge of production and Heinrich C. Richter designed the buildings . For the Danish camera veteran Axel Graatkjær , this was his last job in Germany. With the dawn of the sound film era, he left the country and returned to his homeland.

Reviews

The reviews of this comedy, which was perceived as old-fashioned, were devastating. Here are a few examples.

"Dina Gralla is really a funny button, very pretty and full of funny possibilities - but the authors Abel and Ritter let her down"

- Tempo , No. 24 of January 29, 1930

“You know if you just read the title. (...) In addition, ... Dina Gralla's emphatically served fried fish comedy has long made nervous. "

- Hans Sahl : Berliner Börsen-Courier dated February 2, 1930

“So if you go into this film, you do it at your own risk. Our young people no longer read Marlitt today. "

- Berliner Tageblatt No. 56 of February 2, 1930

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