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Father and Son (German: Väter und Söhne) is a 1930 German-Swedish film directed by Victor Sjöström and starring Rudolf Rittner, Franziska Kinz and Martin Herzberg. [1] It was shot at the Råsunda Studios in Stockholm. The film's sets were designed by the art director Vilhelm Bryde. A separate Swedish-language film was released the following ...
In return, Father and Son had to serve as advertisers for the Winterhilfswerk, for the 1936 Reichstag elections, and for the 1936 Summer Olympics. Ohser ended the series at his own request and had father and son say goodbye in issue 49/1937 [8] of the Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung. In this last cartoon, the characters walk towards the horizon ...
Father and Son (German: Vater und Sohn) is a 1929 German silent film directed by Géza von Bolváry and starring Harry Liedtke, Rolf von Goth, and Charles Puffy. [1] The film's art direction was by Robert Neppach and Erwin Scharf.
German E. O. Plauen (often stylized as e.o.plauen ) was the pseudonym of Erich Ohser (18 March 1903 – 5 April 1944) (some sources give his birth year as 1909), a German cartoonist best known for his strip Vater und Sohn ("Father and Son").
Father and Son (German: Vater und Sohn) is a 1918 German silent drama film directed by William Wauer and starring Albert Bassermann, Elsa Bassermann and Gertrud ...
Father and Son, a 1907 memoir by Edmund Gosse; Father and Son (comics), cartoon characters created by E. O. Plauen Fathers and Sons, an 1862 novel by Ivan Turgenev; Fathers and Sons, a 1987 play by Brian Friel
His father claims to not see or hear the creature, and he attempts to comfort his son, asserting natural explanations for what the child sees – a wisp of fog, rustling leaves, shimmering willows. The Erl-King attempts to lure the child into joining him, promising amusement, rich clothes, and the attentions of his daughters.
It is the earliest poetic text in German, and it tells of the tragic encounter in battle between a father (Hildebrand) and a son (Hadubrand) who does not recognize him. It is the only surviving example in German of a genre which must have been important in the oral literature of the Germanic tribes.