Lisl Lindau

Most Popular Lisl Lindau Trailers

Total trailers found: 11

The Lost Ones Trailer (1971)

29 March 1971

Two young nationalists from Soviet Estonia falls under the influence of popular radio DJ Rudolf Talgre, who during the war collaborated with the Nazis and was proud of it and now settled in Sweden.

Young Pensioner Trailer (1972)

06 May 1972

One lovely day a young man, a former ballet dancer suddenly finds himself on a pension and begins searching for a new place in life.

Gladiator Trailer (1971)

20 September 1971

Joonas and Tiidrik are two men from the island of Saaremaa who recklessly escape from the German prison during the First World War.

The Milkman of Mäeküla Trailer (1965)

10 July 1965

A baron gives a poor peasant a well-paid job of a milkman but for reward he has to accept his beloved girl going to the mansion from time to time.

Uninvited Guests Trailer (1959)

17 May 1959

Four Estonians who have escaped to Sweden during the war return to Soviet Estonia in the 1950s. The four saboteurs work for the Western Secret Service.

In the Backyard Trailer (1957)

24 April 1957

The story of the distressed residents living in poor slums during the economic crisis of the first Estonian Republic in early 1930s.

Girl in Black Trailer (1967)

03 February 1967

Young Saale, the girl in black with her small suitcase, comes to live with her aunt in a fishermen's village.

Underwater Reefs Trailer (1959)

02 September 1959

Tõnis Hoopkaup is the head of a fishing collective in Tagaranna, a village on the Estonian island of Saaremaa.

A Woman Heats the Sauna Trailer (1979)

02 January 1979

The story is about a woman, who has to heat up the company's sauna, because the bosses want to entertain foreign visitors.

The Smacking Sea Trailer (1981)

20 November 1981

The Smacking Sea is a film about the work of traditional seal hunters on the smacking Baltic Sea and their life in the coastal village.

Indrek Trailer (1976)

02 February 1976

Based on the second part of the pentalogy "Truth and Justice" by Anton H. Tammsaare.