Hans Finohr

Hans Finohr Trailers

The Sons of Great Bear TrailerAs Long as There’s Life in Me TrailerTiefe Furchen Trailer

Hans Finohr (5 September 1891 in Rynnek, Kreis Löbau (Westpreußen);  8 November 1966 in Potsdam) war eindeutscher Film- und Theaterschauspieler.

Most Popular Hans Finohr Trailers

Total trailers found: 19

Tiefe Furchen Trailer (1965)

02 September 1965

Germany in May 1945: the war is over, men are returning home and a new life begins in the villages. After 12 years in a concentration camp, the "Red Shoemaker" also returns to his home village.

Les Misérables Trailer (1958)

12 March 1958

In 19th century France, Jean Valjean, a man imprisoned for stealing bread, must flee a relentless policeman named Javert.

Five Cartridges Trailer (1960)

03 November 1960

It is the year 1936 and the Spanish Civil War is raging. When the German commander of an international brigade is badly wounded he gives his five comrades a message which he divides up and secretes into in five cartridges.

Intrigue and Love Trailer (1959)

09 November 1959

Ferdinand is an army major and son of President von Walter, while Luise Miller is the daughter of a middle-class musician.

Castles and Cottages Trailer (1957)

09 February 1957

Lifelong hard work for the count makes the servant Anton a cripple. Everybody calls him Crooked Anton.

The Sons of Great Bear Trailer (1966)

18 February 1966

As American settlers encroach on the lands of the Lakota people, Tokei-ihto witnesses the murder of his father at the hands of Red Fox, who wanted information on where the tribe finds its gold.

As Long as There’s Life in Me Trailer (1965)

09 September 1965

This is part one of a two-part biopic about Karl Liebknecht. In 1914, Germany is arming itself for war.

An Old Love Trailer (1959)

04 October 1959

Frieda and August Walkowiak celebrate their 30th wedding anniversary. However, the marriage has been in crisis for some time.

Only One Woman Trailer (1958)

06 March 1958

The film tells the life story of Louise Otto Peters, who in the middle of the XIX century in Germany for the first time raised a voice of protest against the unfair treatment of women and their labor.

Sunday Drivers Trailer (1963)

30 August 1963

On August 12, 1961, eight people in three cars set off for Berlin from Leipzig. They want to go to the West.

The Condemned Village Trailer (1952)

15 February 1952

East German propaganda film about an American army base trying to take away land from a West German village.

Tanz am Sonnabend-Mord? Trailer (1962)

19 January 1962

A Saturday evening dance in the village pub is interrupted when the barn of local farmer Paul Gäbler catches on fire.

Die Nacht an der Autobahn Trailer (1962)

16 September 1962

A young doctor has to spend a night in a lonely house near the transit highway. Unexpectedly, he witnesses East-West smuggling operations, which he manages to prevent at the last moment.

Zu jeder Stunde Trailer (1960)

29 January 1960

The soldier Martin has been relocated to a small border village in Thuringia. During a storm, he comes to the rescue of Renate, a farmer′s daughter.

Prague at Zero Hour Trailer (1963)

06 July 1963

Czech friends help refugees from Nazi Germany escape in 1939.

SAS 181 antwortet nicht Trailer (1959)

02 July 1959

Kurt, an apprentice in a fish combine, is an ambitious loner. He wants to show what a good sailor he is at a regatta, but fails because of his recklessness and the storm.

The Sailor's Song Trailer (1958)

09 November 1958

A film about the historical uprising of the seamen in Kiel: During the Russian October Revolution of 1917, German and Russian soldiers start to solidarize with each other.

Ein Sommertag macht keine Liebe Trailer (1961)

17 March 1961

During a weekend spent on the island Hiddensee, the snobbish high school student Jan, who has just been expelled from school, meets Christine.

Simplon-Tunnel Trailer (1959)

12 June 1959

A sociohistorical drama about the construction of the Simplon-tunnel: A conflict develops when German workers want to strike and fight for better working conditions while Italian workers simply want to earn money and provide for their families.