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Bon Voyage (German: Glückliche Reise) is a 1954 West German musical comedy film directed by Thomas Engel and starring Paul Hubschmid, Inge Egger and Paul Klinger. [1] The film's sets were designed by the art directors Emil Hasler and Walter Kutz. It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin and on location in Hamburg and the Balearic Islands.
Bon Voyage, a West German musical film; Bon Voyage, a 1958 Filipino film starring Fernando Poe Jr. Bon Voyage!, a Disney family film and comic book; Bon Voyage, a World War II drama; Bon Voyage, a Swiss-German short film; Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (and Don't Come Back!!), a 1980 animated film
"Bon Voyage" is the first single from the debut studio album Bitte ziehen Sie durch, by the Hamburg hip hop and electropunk band Deichkind, in cooperation with the German rapper Nina Tenge. It was the first single ever by the band.
Bon Voyage (German: Glückliche Reise) is a 1933 German musical comedy film directed by Alfred Abel and starring Magda Schneider, Ekkehard Arendt and Max Hansen. [1] It was shot at the EFA Studios in Berlin. The film's sets were designed by the art director Manfred Hoermann. [2]
Bon Voyage is a Swiss-German short film written and directed by Marc Raymond Wilkins. Bon Voyage was shortlisted with ten other short-film from 137 entries submitted to the 89th Academy Awards in Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film category. The final five nominations are scheduled to be announced on January 24, 2016. [1]
Bon Voyage is a 1944 short French language propaganda film made by Alfred Hitchcock for the British Ministry of Information.Although the film is short (26 minutes), it uses two radically different interpretations of the same events, a technique not unlike that used by Akira Kurosawa in Rashomon (1950), Errol Morris in The Thin Blue Line (1988), and Fernando Meirelles in Cidade de Deus (2002).
2 "Bon voyage" means literally "Good trip" 1 comment. Toggle the table of contents. Talk: Bon Voyage. Add languages. Page contents not supported in other languages.
kaput (German spelling: kaputt), out-of-order, broken, dead; nix, from German nix, dialectal variant of nichts (nothing) Scheiße, an expression and euphemism meaning "shit", usually as an interjection when something goes amiss; Ur- (German prefix), original or prototypical; e.g. Ursprache, Urtext; verboten, prohibited, forbidden, banned. In ...