The landlady also has a count
Frau Wirtin also has a Count is an Austro-German comedy film by Franz Antel from 1968 with Terry Torday as the wife of the landlady, Harald Leipnitz as the actor Ferdinand and Jeffrey Hunter as the eponymous, Countess Galan.
action
Central Europe, at the beginning of the 19th century. Susanne Delberg, the landlady of the Lahn, is at the time of the Napoleonic campaigns of conquest with her acting troupe on the way from her guest house via southern Germany to Italy to save the Count of Lucca from existential and love difficulties. On the way there, she and her girls experience quite a few erotic flirtations and bed stories during their rest stops in castles and in Napoleonic camps.
Susanne fights off some overly intrusive types with an excellently curved sword. Soon she meets the count, who first conquers her heart and then her bed. But he, too, is threatened by enemies and must be saved from his enemies. Finally, Susanne and her ladies get caught up in a plot against Napoleon Bonaparte himself, whom the landlady von der Lahn also gets to know on the way south. She exposes this conspiracy against the Corsican emperor, who all too likes to be wrapped around his finger by the beautiful landlady.
Production notes
The landlady also has a count was filmed in Hungary in mid-1968 and premiered on November 26, 1968. It is the second part of the six-part Wirtin film series Antels.
Carl Szokoll was production manager, Kurt Kodal took over production management. Herta Hareiter and Lambert Hofer created the film structures . Gerdago designed the costumes. Eberhard Schroeder was one of three assistant directors. When director Franz Antel showed his hero actors Jeffrey Hunter and Harald Leipnitz to jump off the car during night shots, he broke his little finger.
synchronization
role | actor | Voice actor |
---|---|---|
Susanne / her niece | Terry Torday | Rose-Marie Kirstein |
Count Enrico | Jeffrey Hunter | Manfred Schott |
Duchess Elisa | Pascale Petit | Helga Trümper |
Saint Laduc | Jacques Herlin | Wolf Rahtjen |
mayor | Gustav Knuth | Erik Jelde |
Napoleon Bonaparte | Heinrich Schweiger | Thomas Reiner |
Pipo | Carlo Delle Piane | Erich Ebert |
Andrea di Santa Croce | Bela Erny | Jürgen Clausen |
criticism
The Lexicon of International Films condemned the film with the words: "Spasmodic slapstick."
Individual evidence
- ^ Franz Antel: Twisted, in love, my life , Munich, Vienna 2001, p. 186
- ↑ The landlady also has a count. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed January 1, 2018 .
Web links
- Landlady also has a count in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- The landlady also has a count at filmportal.de