Mountains on Fire
0 sources
Mountains on Fire
Summary
Mountains on Fire is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (10 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Mountains on Fire's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Mountains on Fire's instance of is recorded as conflation[4].
- Mountains on Fire was directed by Karl Hartl[5].
- Mountains on Fire was directed by Luis Trenker[6].
- Mountains on Fire was directed by Joë Hamman[7].
- Karl Hartl wrote the screenplay for Mountains on Fire[8].
- Luis Trenker wrote the screenplay for Mountains on Fire[9].
- Mountains on Fire's composer is recorded as Giuseppe Becce[10].
- Mountains on Fire's genre is war film[11].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Luis Trenker[12].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Lissy Arna[13].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Claus Clausen[14].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Paul Graetz[15].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Luigi Serventi[16].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Erika Dannhoff[17].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Michael von Newlinsky[18].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Armand Bernard[19].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Georges Péclet[20].
- A cast member of Mountains on Fire was Joë Hamman[21].
- Mountains on Fire's director of photography is recorded as Sepp Allgeier[22].
- Mountains on Fire's director of photography is recorded as Albert Benitz[23].
- Mountains on Fire's director of photography is recorded as Giovanni Vitrotti[24].
- The original language of Mountains on Fire was German[25].
- Mountains on Fire's color is recorded as black-and-white[26].
- Mountains on Fire's country of origin is recorded as Germany[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Directors include Karl Hartl[5], Luis Trenker[6], and Joë Hamman[7]. Screenwriters include Karl Hartl[8] and Luis Trenker[9]. Cast members include Luis Trenker[12], Lissy Arna[13], Claus Clausen[14], Paul Graetz[15], Luigi Serventi[16], and Erika Dannhoff[17].
Publication
Mountains on Fire was published on November 13, 1931[28]. The original language of it was German[25]. Its genre is war film[11].
Subject and Themes
Mountains on Fire's main subject is Alps[29].
Why It Matters
Mountains on Fire ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (10 views/month).[2] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]