Difference between revisions of "File:1924 D'Annunzio & Jacoby (film).jpg"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
''' Quo Vadis? ''' <Italian-German> (1924) is a feature film (silent, B&W, 90m), directed by [[Gabriellino D'Annunzio]] and [[Georg Jacoby]].
~ Screenplay by [[Gabriellino D'Annunzio]] and [[Georg Jacoby]], based on [[Quo Vadis? (1895 Sienkiewicz), novel]]
==Abstract==
Fifth silent version of Sienkiewicz's novel. The grandioso production, starring [[Emil Jannings]] as [[Nero]], with a cast of 20,000 extras, was the major attempt in early Fascist Italy to recapture the success of the historical epics of the previous decade. Emil Jannings' performance received indeed some praise, but as a whole the movie was a critical and commercial failure.
==Cast==
* [[Emil Jannings]] = [[Nero]]
* [[Elena Sangro]] = [[Poppea]]
* [[Alphons Fryland]] = [[Marcus Vinicius]]
* [[Lillian Hall-Davis]] = [[Lygia]] (Licia)
* [[Bruto Castellani]] = [[Ursus]]
* [[Andrea Habay]] = [[Petronius]]
* [[Raimondo Van Riel]] = [[Tigellinus]]
==Production==
Produced by  Unione Cinematografica Italiana in Italy (1924). Premiered in Austria (1924)
International release includes the United States (New York, NY: 15 February 1925), Finland (8 March 1925), and Italy (Rome: 16 March 1925).
==External links==
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quo_Vadis_(1924_film) Wiki.en]
*[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0015253/ The Internet Movie Database]
[[Category:1924]]
[[Category:Film Studies--1920s]]
[[Category:Film Studies--1920s]]
[[Category:Film Studies--Italian]]
[[Category:Film Studies--Italian]]


[[Category:1924, Top Films]]
[[Category:Antiquity (film subject)]]
[[Category:Bible (film subject)]]
[[Category:Bible (film subject)]]
[[Category:Christian Origins (film subject)]]
[[Category:Christian Origins (film subject)]]
[[Category:Fiction--1920s|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Fiction--Italian|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Fiction--German|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Cinema--1920s|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Cinema--Italian|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Cinema--German|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Films|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Italian language--1920s|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--1920s|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--Fiction|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--Italian|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Nero (subject)|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Nero--cinema (subject)|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Poppea--cinema (subject)|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Vinicius--cinema (subject)|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Lygia--cinema (subject)|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Ursus--cinema (subject)|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Petronius--cinema (subject)|1925 D'Annunzio]]
[[Category:Tigellinus--cinema (subject)|1925 D'Annunzio]]

Latest revision as of 21:51, 17 November 2024

Quo Vadis? <Italian-German> (1924) is a feature film (silent, B&W, 90m), directed by Gabriellino D'Annunzio and Georg Jacoby.

~ Screenplay by Gabriellino D'Annunzio and Georg Jacoby, based on Quo Vadis? (1895 Sienkiewicz), novel

Abstract

Fifth silent version of Sienkiewicz's novel. The grandioso production, starring Emil Jannings as Nero, with a cast of 20,000 extras, was the major attempt in early Fascist Italy to recapture the success of the historical epics of the previous decade. Emil Jannings' performance received indeed some praise, but as a whole the movie was a critical and commercial failure.

Cast

Production

Produced by Unione Cinematografica Italiana in Italy (1924). Premiered in Austria (1924)

International release includes the United States (New York, NY: 15 February 1925), Finland (8 March 1925), and Italy (Rome: 16 March 1925).

External links

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current06:37, 2 June 2017Thumbnail for version as of 06:37, 2 June 2017230 × 345 (46 KB)Gabriele Boccaccini (talk | contribs)

The following 3 pages use this file: