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Title Director Cast Genre Notes Lúdas Matyi: Kálmán Nádasdy: Imre Soós, György Solthy, Erzsi Pártos, Teri Horváth: The first Hungarian film in color, Best male actor, Karlovy Vary Film Festival 1950
Magyar rekviem: Károly Makk: György Cserhalmi: Drama: Halálutak és angyalok: Zoltán Kamondi: Enikő Eszenyi: Drama: Screened at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival: A hetedik testvér: Jenő Koltai, Tibor Hernádi: Csongor Szalay (voice), Balázs Simonyi (voice), Álmos Elõd (voice) Animated fantasy-comedy-drama: Szerelmes szívek: György ...
About Wikipedia; Contact us; Contribute Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; ... Magyar Film Iroda: Release date. 13 November 1940 () Running time. 87 minutes:
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 ...
A low born Roman Catholic Hungarian girl from a big family lives in poverty. She met and married a rich Jewish man, Mr Rozsnyai and they established a famous elite night club in 1931.
العربية; Aragonés; Azərbaycanca; تۆرکجه; বাংলা; Беларуская; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Български
Another Way (Hungarian: Egymásra nézve), is a 1982 Hungarian film directed by Károly Makk about an affair between two women. It is based on a semi-autobiographical novella Another Love (Törvényen belül) by Erzsébet Galgóczi (1930–1989), who co-wrote the screenplay with Makk.
Hungarian cinema began in 1896, when the first screening of the films of the Lumière Brothers was held on the 10th of May in the cafe of the Royal Hotel of Budapest.In June of the same year, Arnold and Zsigmond Sziklai opened the first Hungarian movie theatre on 41 Andrássy Street named the Okonograph, where they screened Lumière films using French machinery.