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Listed to compete at the 1968 Cannes Film Festival: A beszélő köntös: Tamás Fejér: István Iglódi, Antal Páger: Agitátorok : Dezső Magyar: Gábor Bódy, Tamás Szentjóby, György Cserhalmi: Banned after release Fényes szelek: Miklós Jancsó: Hosszú futásodra mindig számíthatunk: Gyula Gazdag: Isten hozta, őrnagy úr: Zoltán ...
Heroic Purgatory (煉獄エロイカ, Rengoku eroica) is a 1970 Japanese drama film directed by Yoshishige Yoshida. [1] [2] It is the second film in a loose trilogy, preceded by Eros + Massacre (1969) and followed by Coup d'Etat (1973). [3] [4]
Ádám Magyar: Animation: First freely downloadable computer animated 3D feature-film Iszka utazása: Csaba Bollók: Mária Varga, Marian Ursache: A Nap utcai fiúk: György Szomjas: Kata Gáspár, Péter Bárnai: Ópium – Egy elmebeteg nő naplója: János Szász: Ulrich Thomsen, Kirsti Stuboe: Entered into the 29th Moscow International Film ...
Bulcsú (Sándor Csányi) is a ticket inspector on the underground; he spends his nights sleeping on the train platforms, and never leaves the underground.His ragtag team of inspectors – consisting of the veteran Professzor (Zoltán Mucsi), the disheveled Lecsó (Sándor Badár), neurotic narcoleptic Muki (Csaba Pindroch) and dimwitted greenhorn Tibi (Zsolt Nagy) – is routinely ...
Magyar vándor (English: The Hungarian Strayer [1] or Hungarian Vagabond [2]) is a 2004 Hungarian action comedy film directed by Gábor Herendi and starring Károly Gesztesi, János Gyuriska and Gyula Bodrogi. The plot contains elements of time travel fiction.
1945 is a 2017 Hungarian drama film directed by Ferenc Török [2] and co-written by Török and Gábor T. Szántó.It concerns two Jewish survivors of the Holocaust who arrive in a Hungarian village in August 1945, and the paranoid reactions of the villagers, some of whom fear that these and other Jews are coming to reclaim Jewish property.
Hungarian film 2002– Való Világ: Real World/Big Brother Hungary 2002 Max: Berlin: 2003 The Lion in Winter: 2003 Kontroll: Budapest: Hungarian film 2003 Underworld: Ferenciek tere, [3] Gozsdu udvar [4] 2004 Being Julia: London: 2005 8mm 2: 2005 Munich: Rome: portrayed as additional cities Paris: London: 2006 Day of Wrath: Spain: 2006 Copying ...
Hungarian Rhapsody (Hungarian: Magyar rapszódia) is a 1979 Hungarian drama film directed by Miklós Jancsó. It was entered into the 1979 Cannes Film Festival. [1] It won Golden Peacock (Best Film) at the 7th International Film Festival of India. The film depicts "a peasant revolt in Hungary in the early twentieth century."