Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. The Ghost Train (Hungarian: Kísértetek vonata) is a 1933 Hungarian comedy mystery thriller film directed by Lajos Lázár and starring Jenö Törzs, Marika Rökk and Ella Gombaszögi. It is an adaptation of Arnold Ridley's 1923 play The Ghost Train. It was shot at the Hunnia Studios in Budapest.

  2. The Ghost Train: Directed by Walter Forde. With Jack Hulbert, Cicely Courtneidge, Ann Todd, Cyril Raymond. The story, about the social interaction of a group of railway passengers who have been stranded at a remote rural station overnight who are increasingly threatened by a latent external force, Part talkie mostly silent.

    • (68)
    • Comedy, Thriller
    • Walter Forde
    • 1933-12-01
  3. The Ghost Train is a 1931 British comedy thriller film directed by Walter Forde and starring Jack Hulbert, Cicely Courtneidge and Ann Todd. It is based on the play The Ghost Train by Arnold Ridley. The film's art direction was by Walter Murton.

  4. One of the most eagerly sought after lost British films, the first sound version of Arnold Ridley's successful railway station comedy thriller teams husband and wife comedians Jack Hulbert and Cicely Courtneidge.

    • The Ghost Train (1933 film) Film1
    • The Ghost Train (1933 film) Film2
    • The Ghost Train (1933 film) Film3
    • The Ghost Train (1933 film) Film4
  5. A group of tourists are stranded at a country way station, where their fears arise when they are told of a "ghost train" which careens through the station at night. The ghost train turns out to be a real train, run by Russian gun smugglers, who are later captured by detective Teddie Deakin.

    • Walter Forde
    • Jack Hulbert
  6. This earliest surviving Romanian horror-thriller is distinctly un-Romanian in several ways: an adaptation of Arnold Ridley’s play of the same name (best known through its 1941 film version starring Arthur Askey), TRENUL FANTOMĂ was shot in Hungary as an alternate-language version of KÍSÉRTETEK VONATA (1933), with both films using footage ...

  7. Synopsis. This earliest surviving Romanian horror-thriller is distinctly un-Romanian in several ways: an adaptation of Arnold Ridley’s play of the same name (best known through its 1941 film version starring Arthur Askey), TRENUL FANTOMĂ was shot in Hungary as an alternate-language version of KÍSÉRTETEK VONATA (1933), with both films using ...