Love Letters from Engadin

1938 film
  • Luis Trenker
  • Werner Klingler
Written by
  • Hanns Sassmann
  • Luis Trenker
Produced by
  • Alf Teichs
  • Walter Tost
  • Luis Trenker
Starring
  • Luis Trenker
  • Carla Rust
  • Erika von Thellmann
Cinematography
  • Hans Ertl
  • Karl Puth
  • Walter Riml
  • Klaus von Rautenfeld
Edited byWaldemar GaedeMusic byGiuseppe Becce
Production
company
Luis Trenker-Film
Distributed byTerra Film
Release date
  • 5 December 1938 (1938-12-05)
Running time
95 minutesCountryNazi GermanyLanguageGerman

Love Letters from Engadin or Love Letters from the Engadine (German: Liebesbriefe aus dem Engadin) is a 1938 German romantic comedy film directed by Luis Trenker and Werner Klingler and starring Trenker, Carla Rust and Erika von Thellmann.[1] It contains elements of the mountain film genre for which Trenker was best known. It is set in London and in the Engadin valley in the Swiss Alps, where much of the location shooting took place. Interiors were shot at the Sievering and Schönbrunn Studios in Vienna, which had recently been annexed by Germany.[2] The film's sets were designed by the art director Fritz Maurischat. It was distributed by Terra Film.

Synopsis

The manager of a ski resort decides to raise money by writing love letters on behalf of his popular ski instructor to various former pupils asking them to visit the resort again and donate to new facilities. This causes complications when one of his former students in London breaks off her engagement to an aristocrat, having discovered he is marrying her for her fortune, and travels out to Switzerland accompanied by a female friend.

Main cast

References

  1. ^ Höbusch p. 212
  2. ^ Klaus p.123

Bibliography

  • Höbusch, Harald (2016). Mountain of Destiny: Nanga Parbat and Its Path Into the German Imagination. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-1-57113-958-0.
  • Klaus, Ulrich J. Deutsche Tonfilme: Jahrgang 1938. Klaus-Archiv, 1988.

External links

  • Love Letters from Engadin at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  • v
  • t
  • e
Films directed
Novels
Stub icon

This article related to a German film of the 1930s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e