Ewiger Wald
1936 film / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ewiger Wald is a 1936 German film directed by Hanns Springer and Rolf von Sonjevski-Jamrowski. The film's international English title was Enchanted Forest.
Ewiger Wald | |
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Directed by | Hanns Springer Rolf von Sonjevski-Jamrowski |
Written by | Albert Graf von Pestalozza (writer) Carl Maria Holzapfel (poems[clarification needed]) |
Produced by | Albert Graf von Pestalozza (producer) |
Starring | See below |
Cinematography | Sepp Allgeier Werner Bohne Otto Ewald Wolf Hart Guido Seeber A.O. Weitzenberg Bernhard Wentzel |
Edited by | Arnfried Heyne |
Music by | Wolfgang Zeller |
Release date | 1936 |
Running time | 75 minutes 88 minutes (Germany) |
Country | Nazi Germany |
Language | German |
Commissioned by Alfred Rosenberg's cultural organization Militant League for German Culture in 1934 under the working title Deutscher Wald–Deutsches Schicksal (German Forest – German Destiny), the feature-length movie premiered in Munich in 1936. Intended as a cinematic proof for the shared destiny of the German woods and the German people beyond the vicissitudes of history, it portrayed a perfect symbiosis of an eternal forest and a likewise eternal people firmly rooted in it between Neolithic and National Socialist times.