Between Heaven and Earth (1913)
Movie | |
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Original title | Between heaven and earth |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 1913 |
length | 64 minutes |
Rod | |
Director | Otto Rippert |
script | Heinrich Lautensack |
production | Continental-Kunstfilm-GmbH, Düsseldorf-Berlin |
occupation | |
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Between Heaven and Earth is a German silent film by Otto Rippert from 1913.
action
On the top of a factory chimney that has just been built, the engineer Olaf and the insidious administrator Erdmann von Erdmannsdorf fight a life and death duel. At the center of the dispute is Inge von Britz, divorced Countess von Gleichen. The young woman is the daughter of the factory owner. The manager tries by all means to get Olaf to give up, but he doesn't even think about it.
Now the manager is resorting to insidious means. First he secretly loosens the crampons inside the chimney, then Erdmann also throws down the rope and pulley of the elevator - the only alternative to leaving the chimney that remains now. In “justified self-defense”, Olaf then overcomes his opponent and drops a message. It asks to raise a paper kite to which a rope is attached. With this rope the resourceful engineer descends inside the chimney.
Production notes
Between Heaven and Earth , the film was shot in the Continental Film Atelier at Chausseestrasse 123 in the summer of 1913 and was probably released as a three-act film in Wilhelmine cinemas that same year. When it was again censored on November 7, 1922, the now four-act film was banned from young people.
The script was written by the then well-known writer Heinrich Lautensack .
It was 1160 meters long in four acts , about 64 minutes.
Web links
- Between heaven and earth in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Between heaven and earth at The German Early Cinema Database