Silenced Bells
1941 film
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Silenced Bells (Hungarian: Elnémult harangok) is a 1941 Hungarian drama film directed by László Kalmár and starring Margit Lukács, Ferenc Kiss and István Nagy.[1] It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest. The film's sets were designed by the art director Imre Sörés. It is based on a novel of the same title by Viktor Rákosi, which had previously been adapted into 1916 and 1922 silent versions.
Directed byLászló Kalmár
Written bySándor Hunyady
Based onSilenced Bells by Viktor Rákosi
Produced byMária Hausz
| Silenced Bells | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Directed by | László Kalmár |
| Written by | Sándor Hunyady |
| Based on | Silenced Bells by Viktor Rákosi |
| Produced by | Mária Hausz |
| Starring | Margit Lukács Ferenc Kiss István Nagy |
| Cinematography | István Eiben |
| Edited by | Zoltán Kerényi |
| Music by | Szabolcs Fényes |
Production company | Hausz Mária Filmkölcsönzõ |
Release date |
|
Running time | 97 minutes |
| Country | Hungary |
| Language | Hungarian |
Cast
- Margit Lukács as Florica
- Ferenc Kiss as Todorescu
- István Nagy as Simándy Pál református lelkész
- Géza Berczy as Fõispáni államtitkár
- Nándor Bihary as Cigányprímás
- László Földényi as Orosz gróf
- Zoltán Greguss as Radescu
- Lajos Gárday as Pásztor
- János Görbe as Pásztor
- Gyula id. Szabó as Kocsmáros
- József Juhász as Pásztor
- Lajos Kelemen as Pásztor
- Mária Keresztessy as Todorescu felesége
- Árpád Lehotay as Fõispán
- László Misoga as Pásztor
- Domokos Sala as Pásztor
- Marcsa Simon as Sári néni
- Lajos Sugár as Angol újságíró
- Dezsö Szalóky as öreg parasztember
- Gyula Szöreghy as Vendég a kolozsvári fogadóban
- Kató Timár as Todorescuék cselédje
- Sándor Tompa as Kurátor
- Gusztáv Vándory as Református püspök
