The Desert King of Brandenburg (Der Wüstenkönig von Brandenburg)
Titre | The Desert King of Brandenburg (Der Wüstenkönig von Brandenburg) |
Date de sortie | 1973 |
Réalisateur | Hans Kratzert |
Type | Couleur |
Format | |
Genre | |
Durée | 82 |
Importance du cirque | |
Sypnosis | A few days after the end of World War II, 11-year-old orphan Julius is on the run from the destroyed city of Berlin. Julius and formerly imprisoned communist Kaiser both stumble on a horse in a forest and report it to the Soviet commander in a nearby town. They are given jobs at a traveling circus which has set up camp on the outskirts, and Kaiser is even appointed ringmaster. Since it is very expensive to feed the circus main attraction, a lion, Kaiser thinks of using the horse as food. Julius, however, is horrified by this idea and runs away with the horse. After several adventures and after having met a girl called Ulrike, who helps him to save the horse from a racketeer, Julius is again confronted with the lion that has escaped and threatens Ulrike’s life. Now Julius is willing to sacrifice the horse. The lion, however, knowing horses from the circus does not touch the horse. Eventually, both the lion and the horse perform at the circus while Julius and Kaiser return to Berlin. |
Casting | Jörg Hochschild, Hilmar Baumann, Waleri Issajew, Günter Schubert, Günter Junghans, Lotte Loebinger. |
Société(s) de production | Deutsche Film (DEFA) |
Pays | |
Thématique | |
Notes |