The Red Needle
The Red Needle (French: L'aiguille rouge, German: Verträumte Tage) is a 1951 Franch-West German drama film directed by Emil-Edwin Reinert and starring Michel Auclair, Michèle Philippe and Jean Marchat.[1]
| The Red Needle | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Directed by | Emil-Edwin Reinert |
| Written by | Vicki Baum (short story) André Haguet André Legrand Jacques Natanson |
| Produced by | Paul-Edmond Decharme |
| Starring | Michel Auclair Michèle Philippe Jean Marchat |
| Cinematography | André Bac |
| Edited by | Monique Kirsanoff |
| Music by | Joe Hajos |
Production companies | Alcina, National-Film |
| Distributed by | DisCina |
Release date |
|
Running time | 85 minutes |
| Countries | France West Germany |
| Language | French |
The film's sets were designed by the art director Georges Wakhévitch. The film was partly shot on location in Mittenwald and the Bavarian Alps. It was based on a story by Vicki Baum. A separate German version Dreaming Days was made with a different cast.
Cast
- Michel Auclair as Florian Faber
- Michèle Philippe as Maya Berger
- Jean Marchat as Berger
- Margo Lion as Fanny
- René Génin as Henri
- Colette Jacommet as Maya, enfant
- Claude Maritz as Hans, le guide
References
- Krautz p.39
Bibliography
- Krautz, Alfred. International directory of cinematographers set- and costume designers in film. Saur, 1983.
External links
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