Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Won Best Animated Feature at the 1st Kecskeméti Animációs Filmfesztivál [1] 1983: Visszaesők: Zsolt Kézdi-Kovács: Lili Monori, Miklós Székely B. Romance/Drama: Entered into the 1983 Cannes Film Festival: Álombrigád: András Jeles: Ádám Szirtes, Róbert Rátonyi: Banned until 1989 Elcserélt szerelem : Sándor Szalkay: Lili Monori ...
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 ...
Bujtor started his acting career in 1964, and played in more than a hundred Hungarian films. He won the Béla Balázs Award in 1979.. In the early 1980s he became known as the Hungarian dubbing voice of Italian actor Bud Spencer, whose films were highly popular in Hungary at the time.
العربية; Aragonés; Azərbaycanca; تۆرکجه; বাংলা; Беларуская; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Български
Werckmeister Harmonies (pronounced [verkˈmaɪ̯stɐ]; Hungarian: Werckmeister harmóniák) is a 2000 Hungarian drama film [4] directed by Béla Tarr and co-directed by Ágnes Hranitzky, based on the 1989 novel The Melancholy of Resistance by László Krasznahorkai.
As mentioned above, the Magyar Nemzeti Filmalap, [2] established in 2011, was one of the predecessors of the NFI, a Hungarian state organisation that provided support for the development, pre-production, production and distribution (marketing) of feature films, documentaries and animated films intended for cinema distribution. It also promoted ...
Gyula Gózon as Dani nagypapa; Sándor Pécsi as Dani Sándor; Imre Soós as Dani János; Kálmán Latabár as Matejka bácsi; Ferenc Bessenyei as Varga, igazgató; Endre Szemethy as Kuczogi bácsi
This is a list collecting the most notable films produced in Hungary and in the Hungarian language during 1901–1948.. While the first years of the Hungarian cinema were in its infancy with mostly experimental films and short comedic sketches mostly conducted by enterprising hobbyists, by 1940 a large industry grew out of their footsteps, with famed film star idols and film studios.