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  1. So Ends Our Night is a 1941 drama directed by John Cromwell and starring Fredric March, Margaret Sullavan and Glenn Ford. The screenplay was adapted by Talbot Jennings from the novel Flotsam by German exile Erich Maria Remarque, who rose to international fame for his first novel, All Quiet on the Western Front .

    • $900,000
  2. So Ends Our Night ist ein US-amerikanisches Filmdrama aus dem Jahr 1941 von John Cromwell. Kurz vor dem Ausbruch des Zweiten Weltkriegs treffen in Wien drei Emigranten aufeinander: Josef Steiner, verkörpert von Fredric March, der gegen die Nazis opponiert, und seine Frau Marie schützen will, sowie Ludwig Kern, Sohn einer jüdischen Mutter ...

    • So Ends Our Night
    • Englisch
    • 1941
    • USA
  3. So Ends Our Night: Directed by John Cromwell. With Fredric March, Margaret Sullavan, Frances Dee, Glenn Ford. Story about three German refugees during World War II who are always hiding, always in fear of deportation.

    • (628)
    • Drama, War
    • John Cromwell
    • 1941-02-27
  4. In Austria, German Ludwig Kern (Glenn Ford) is stripped of his passport and jailed for 40 days when he admits he is a Jew. Befriended by German political dissident Josef Steiner (Fredric March ...

    • (6)
    • Fredric March
    • John Cromwell
    • February 27, 1941
  5. Ein Anti-Nazi-Film aus Hollywood über eine Flucht durch ganz Europa. Mit „So Ends Our Night“ erhält Erich Maria Remarques Roman „Liebe deinen Nächsten“ eine cineastische Würdigung, die auch heute erschreckende Aktualität trägt. Das Drama erzählt die Geschichte von drei Menschen in Wien, die auf der Flucht vor dem NS-Regime in ...

  6. Film Length. 10,910ft. An anti-Nazi on the run and a young Jewish couple race across Europe trying to escape Hitler's ever powerful influence. When the political refugee risks his life to see his dying wife in Austria, he has a dangerous encounter with a rabid Nazi.

  7. So Ends Our Night is a gentle, poetically romantic adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque’s Flotsam. This story of a trio of German refugees trying to escape the clutches of the Nazi regime has much in common with Lewis Milestone's equally neglected Arch of Triumph (1948), which reworked the German author's 1945 novel of the same name.