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- Q315896 subject Q18011103.
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- Q315896 subject Q8457490.
- Q315896 subject Q8490785.
- Q315896 abstract "People on Sunday (German: Menschen am Sonntag) is a 1930 German silent drama film directed by Curt and Robert Siodmak from a screenplay by Billy Wilder. The film follows the lives of a group of residents of Berlin on a summer's day during the interwar period. Hailed as a work of genius, it is a pivotal film not only in the development of German cinema but also of Hollywood. In addition to the Siodmak brothers and Wilder, the film features the talents of Edgar G. Ulmer (producer), Fred Zinnemann (cinematography) and Eugen Schüfftan, who had developed the Schüfftan process for Metropolis three years earlier.The film is subtitled "a film without actors" and was filmed over a succession of Sundays in the summer of 1929. The actors were amateurs whose day jobs were those that they portrayed in the film—the opening titles inform the audience that these actors have all returned to their normal jobs by the time of the film's release in February 1930. They were part of a collective of young Berliners who wrote and produced the film themselves, on a shoestring budget. This lightly scripted, loosely observational work of New Objectivity became a surprise hit.People on Sunday is notable not only for its portrayal of daily life in Berlin shortly before Adolf Hitler became Chancellor, but also as an early work by the future Hollywood writer/director Billy Wilder before he moved to the United States to escape from Hitler's Germany. For decades, it was assumed that Wilder's mother, grandmother and stepfather perished at Auschwitz, but his Austrian biographer Andreas Hutter discovered, in 2011, that they were murdered at different and disparate places: his mother, Eugenia "Gitla" Siedlisker - in 1943 at Plaszow; his stepfather, Bernard "Berl" Siedlisker, in 1942 at Belzec and his grandmother, Balbina Baldinger, died in 1943 in the ghetto in Nowy Targ. The film is also the directorial debut of the Siodmak Brothers. The film was produced by Seymour Nebenzal, cousin to the Siodmaks, whose father Heinrich put up the funds to make the movie. This began a thirty-year collaborative friendship between Nebenzal and Wilder.".
- Q315896 cinematography Q213821.
- Q315896 director Q51498.
- Q315896 director Q77489.
- Q315896 distributor Q260528.
- Q315896 imdbId "0020163".
- Q315896 language Q226730.
- Q315896 producer Q1283902.
- Q315896 producer Q75410.
- Q315896 releaseDate "1930-02-04".
- Q315896 runtime "4380.0".
- Q315896 wikiPageExternalLink 1904-people-on-sunday-young-people-like-us.
- Q315896 wikiPageExternalLink film_view.php?film_id=570.
- Q315896 wikiPageExternalLink peopleOnSundaymenschenAmSonntag1930.
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- Q315896 writer Q51498.
- Q315896 writer Q51547.
- Q315896 cinematography Q213821.
- Q315896 director Q51498.
- Q315896 director Q77489.
- Q315896 distributor Q260528.
- Q315896 distributor "Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek/Berlin".
- Q315896 id "20163".
- Q315896 language Q226730.
- Q315896 language "German intertitles".
- Q315896 name "People on Sunday".
- Q315896 producer Q1283902.
- Q315896 producer Q75410.
- Q315896 released "1930-02-04".
- Q315896 runtime "4380.0".
- Q315896 writer Q51547.
- Q315896 writer "Curt Siodmak".
- Q315896 writer "Robert Siodmak".
- Q315896 type CreativeWork.
- Q315896 type Movie.
- Q315896 type Film.
- Q315896 type Wikidata:Q11424.
- Q315896 type Work.
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- Q315896 type Q386724.
- Q315896 comment "People on Sunday (German: Menschen am Sonntag) is a 1930 German silent drama film directed by Curt and Robert Siodmak from a screenplay by Billy Wilder. The film follows the lives of a group of residents of Berlin on a summer's day during the interwar period. Hailed as a work of genius, it is a pivotal film not only in the development of German cinema but also of Hollywood. In addition to the Siodmak brothers and Wilder, the film features the talents of Edgar G.".
- Q315896 label "People on Sunday".
- Q315896 name "People on Sunday".