Execs from Germany’s Zdf, Denmark’s TV2 also on board.
National film institutes from Denmark, Ireland, Estonia and the Nordics are teaming up to launch the European Writers Club (Ewc), an EU-backed initiative to increase collaboration on high-end series projects across the continent.
The project launches with a panel at 17.00 Cet today at Series Series, the event for European series and creators held in Fontainebleu, France.
The Ewc is created and headed by CEO Thomas Gammeltoft, partner and executive producer at Nordic and Italian production and distribution firm True Content Entertainment. Copenhagen-based Gammeltoft was previously CEO of the Copenhagen Film Fund...
National film institutes from Denmark, Ireland, Estonia and the Nordics are teaming up to launch the European Writers Club (Ewc), an EU-backed initiative to increase collaboration on high-end series projects across the continent.
The project launches with a panel at 17.00 Cet today at Series Series, the event for European series and creators held in Fontainebleu, France.
The Ewc is created and headed by CEO Thomas Gammeltoft, partner and executive producer at Nordic and Italian production and distribution firm True Content Entertainment. Copenhagen-based Gammeltoft was previously CEO of the Copenhagen Film Fund...
- 6/30/2022
- by Ben Dalton
- ScreenDaily
Record numbers of industry attendees from 46 countries virtually attended Nordic Film Market at TV Drama Vision.
Goteborg’s industry activities attracted a record 734 delegates for the Nordic Film Market and 566 for TV Drama Vision, from across 46 countries. Like the festival, the industry programme was held online for the first time this year due to the pandemic.
One hot film project being pitched at script stage was Stranger, which unites Danish production company Motor with Poland’s Opus Film (Ida). Mads Hedegaard will make his fictional feature directorial debut with the film, which he co-writes with Jesper Fink (Margrete-Queen Of The...
Goteborg’s industry activities attracted a record 734 delegates for the Nordic Film Market and 566 for TV Drama Vision, from across 46 countries. Like the festival, the industry programme was held online for the first time this year due to the pandemic.
One hot film project being pitched at script stage was Stranger, which unites Danish production company Motor with Poland’s Opus Film (Ida). Mads Hedegaard will make his fictional feature directorial debut with the film, which he co-writes with Jesper Fink (Margrete-Queen Of The...
- 2/11/2021
- by Wendy Mitchell
- ScreenDaily
A trio of high-profile Scandinavian producers – Thomas Gammeltoft (“Terribly Happy”), Sofie Wanting Hassing (“Ida”) and Ole Søndberg (“Wallander”) – are launching TrueContent Entertainment, an ambitious independent production and distribution company based in Copenhagen.
The company is a reboot of Sweet Chili Entertainment, a digital distribution company founded by Wanting Hassing and joined by Gammeltoft in Jan. 2020 after he stepped down from the Copenhagen Film Fund, rolling off a seven-year tenure. Søndberg, an industry veteran who founded Yellow Bird and executive produced “Wallander” and the “Millennium” franchises, joined TrueContent Entertainment in 2018 as executive producer. Wanting Hassing and Gammeltoft will serve as co-CEOs.
Financially backed by independent private capital, TrueContent Entertainment will work as a talent-driven company, bringing on board top-notch creatives who will set up individual production companies to develop their own projects, ranging from films to series, including documentaries, as well as source third-party projects. These banners will be subsidiaries of...
The company is a reboot of Sweet Chili Entertainment, a digital distribution company founded by Wanting Hassing and joined by Gammeltoft in Jan. 2020 after he stepped down from the Copenhagen Film Fund, rolling off a seven-year tenure. Søndberg, an industry veteran who founded Yellow Bird and executive produced “Wallander” and the “Millennium” franchises, joined TrueContent Entertainment in 2018 as executive producer. Wanting Hassing and Gammeltoft will serve as co-CEOs.
Financially backed by independent private capital, TrueContent Entertainment will work as a talent-driven company, bringing on board top-notch creatives who will set up individual production companies to develop their own projects, ranging from films to series, including documentaries, as well as source third-party projects. These banners will be subsidiaries of...
- 2/3/2021
- by Elsa Keslassy
- Variety Film + TV
Regional fund CEO to join Sweet Chili Entertainment.
Thomas Gammeltoft is to step down as CEO of Copenhagen Film Fund (Cphff) on December 31 after more than six years at the helm.
He will take up a new position as creative director at Sweet Chili Entertainment, a Copenhagen-based film financing and distribution outfit.
Jorgen Ramskov, chairman of the Cphff board, confirmed that the hunt for a successor has now begun.
Gammeltoft, who has been CEO of the regional fund since its launch in September 2013, will also step down as interim CEO of Vision Denmark, a trade body that aims to unite companies across film,...
Thomas Gammeltoft is to step down as CEO of Copenhagen Film Fund (Cphff) on December 31 after more than six years at the helm.
He will take up a new position as creative director at Sweet Chili Entertainment, a Copenhagen-based film financing and distribution outfit.
Jorgen Ramskov, chairman of the Cphff board, confirmed that the hunt for a successor has now begun.
Gammeltoft, who has been CEO of the regional fund since its launch in September 2013, will also step down as interim CEO of Vision Denmark, a trade body that aims to unite companies across film,...
- 9/25/2019
- by Michael Rosser
- ScreenDaily
The Göteborg Film Festival’s 6th Nostradamus Report, titled “Relevance in a New Reality,” was presented at a seminar held at the festival on Friday afternoon. The yearly report is designed to forecast what the coming three-to-five years may look like for the screen industries.
This year’s Nostradamus is in five chapters in which industry experts are quoted and conclusions are drawn by the report’s authors. The new edition demonstrates a continuation and consolidation of familiar industry trends among industry professionals, covering topics such as: the uncertain future of public funding, major movements in the streaming market, the role of cinema in the new value chain, potential paths forward for Vr; and the need for a rebooted industry conversation around tech and shared challenges.
“We’ve talked about ‘structural change’ for a while now,” said Nostradamus author Johanna Koljonen. “In the next three to five years, a sector...
This year’s Nostradamus is in five chapters in which industry experts are quoted and conclusions are drawn by the report’s authors. The new edition demonstrates a continuation and consolidation of familiar industry trends among industry professionals, covering topics such as: the uncertain future of public funding, major movements in the streaming market, the role of cinema in the new value chain, potential paths forward for Vr; and the need for a rebooted industry conversation around tech and shared challenges.
“We’ve talked about ‘structural change’ for a while now,” said Nostradamus author Johanna Koljonen. “In the next three to five years, a sector...
- 2/1/2019
- by Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
Fund backs Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animated documentary Flee.
The Copenhagen Film Fund has made its first investment in a documentary.
The Fund has backed Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animated documentary Flee with just over €200,000.
The story follows 11-year-old Amin, who is forced to flee Afghanistan and sees his family scattered across Europe. He arrives in Denmark on his own after five years of fleeing - and has never told the real story about how he arrived to the country until now.
“It’s a powerful story, and a story with so many layers. It’s exciting for us to...
The Copenhagen Film Fund has made its first investment in a documentary.
The Fund has backed Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animated documentary Flee with just over €200,000.
The story follows 11-year-old Amin, who is forced to flee Afghanistan and sees his family scattered across Europe. He arrives in Denmark on his own after five years of fleeing - and has never told the real story about how he arrived to the country until now.
“It’s a powerful story, and a story with so many layers. It’s exciting for us to...
- 3/29/2018
- by Wendy Mitchell
- ScreenDaily
Fund backs Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animated documentary Flee.
The Copenhagen Film Fund has made its first investment in a documentary.
The Fund has backed Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animated documentary Flee with just over €200,000.
The story follows 11-year-old Amin, who is forced to flee Afghanistan and sees his family scattered across Europe. He arrives in Denmark on his own and becomes friends with Jonas (the film’s director). The pair have been friends for 20 years, although Amin had kept the story of his past mostly secret from everyone in Denmark.
“It’s a powerful story, and a story with so many layers.
The Copenhagen Film Fund has made its first investment in a documentary.
The Fund has backed Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animated documentary Flee with just over €200,000.
The story follows 11-year-old Amin, who is forced to flee Afghanistan and sees his family scattered across Europe. He arrives in Denmark on his own and becomes friends with Jonas (the film’s director). The pair have been friends for 20 years, although Amin had kept the story of his past mostly secret from everyone in Denmark.
“It’s a powerful story, and a story with so many layers.
- 3/29/2018
- by Wendy Mitchell
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: Copenhagen Film Fund backs Per Fly’s Backstabbing For Beginners.
The Copenhagen Film Fund is investing $440,000 (€400,000) in Per Fly’s English-language thriller about economic corruption, Backstabbing For Beginners.
Ben Kingsley and Theo James are confirmed to star in the story of a Dane caught in a power struggle with corrupt colleagues while working for the Un’s Oil For Food programme.
Fly co-wrote the screenplay with Daniel Pyne and Fly directs for Danish production companies Creative Alliances and Parts & Labor Dk. Producers are Malene Blenkov, Lars Knudsen, Nikolaj Vibe Michelsen and Jay van Hoy.
Thanks to the Fund’s investment, the film is set to shoot large sections in the Copenhagen area starting in April. The project has already started shooting in Morocco.
Backstabbing For Beginners has a total budget of $8.5m (€7.7m) with other financing coming from the Danish Film Institute and Nordic, Us and Canadian investors.
Copenhagen Film Fund, set up three...
The Copenhagen Film Fund is investing $440,000 (€400,000) in Per Fly’s English-language thriller about economic corruption, Backstabbing For Beginners.
Ben Kingsley and Theo James are confirmed to star in the story of a Dane caught in a power struggle with corrupt colleagues while working for the Un’s Oil For Food programme.
Fly co-wrote the screenplay with Daniel Pyne and Fly directs for Danish production companies Creative Alliances and Parts & Labor Dk. Producers are Malene Blenkov, Lars Knudsen, Nikolaj Vibe Michelsen and Jay van Hoy.
Thanks to the Fund’s investment, the film is set to shoot large sections in the Copenhagen area starting in April. The project has already started shooting in Morocco.
Backstabbing For Beginners has a total budget of $8.5m (€7.7m) with other financing coming from the Danish Film Institute and Nordic, Us and Canadian investors.
Copenhagen Film Fund, set up three...
- 2/24/2016
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
The Copenhagen Film Fund is in talks for another project with Working Title, after they recently collaborated on The Danish Girl by Tom Hooper.
“It was a working and learning experience,” says Copenhagen Film Fund CEO Thomas Gammeltoft of The Danish Girl with Working TItle and Universal. “We want to collaborate in a way that the money ends up on screen. We are learning how we can make this perfect experience for all of us.”
The Danish Girl, set for release in November, stars Eddie Redmayne in his first role after his Oscar win, playing pioneering transgender artist Einar Wegener.
The Fund is currently doing a “benchmark analysis” of costs and plans for productions across the Ireland, UK, Denmark, Germany and the Czech Republic and will publish the results of the study in August.
From 2016 to 2018, the Fund’s coffers could double from Euros 5m every two years to Euros 5m every year. The Fund covers...
“It was a working and learning experience,” says Copenhagen Film Fund CEO Thomas Gammeltoft of The Danish Girl with Working TItle and Universal. “We want to collaborate in a way that the money ends up on screen. We are learning how we can make this perfect experience for all of us.”
The Danish Girl, set for release in November, stars Eddie Redmayne in his first role after his Oscar win, playing pioneering transgender artist Einar Wegener.
The Fund is currently doing a “benchmark analysis” of costs and plans for productions across the Ireland, UK, Denmark, Germany and the Czech Republic and will publish the results of the study in August.
From 2016 to 2018, the Fund’s coffers could double from Euros 5m every two years to Euros 5m every year. The Fund covers...
- 5/20/2015
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
Fledgling animation company receives Copenhagen Film Fund investment for Longway North.
With the aid of Copenhagen Film Fund’s investment in major French feature animation Longway North, Nørlum ApS is setting up a base in Copenhagen.
The fledgling animation company from Viborg came to prominence in 2012 as a co-producer on Oscar-nominated Cartoon Saloon’s Song of the Sea.
Longway North will be directed by Remi Chayé and will be produced by Sacrebleu Productions in co-production with Nørlum.
Supported by the Danish Film Institute with investment from the West Danish Film Fund, the film centres on a young girl from 19th Century Russian aristocracy who dreams of the great expanses of the North and run aways from home to go there.
Copenhagen Film Fund’s CEO Thomas Gammeltoft commented: “We are incredibly proud that we can be a part of financing a top class international animation feature, and that this investment is directly responsible for creating jobs in...
With the aid of Copenhagen Film Fund’s investment in major French feature animation Longway North, Nørlum ApS is setting up a base in Copenhagen.
The fledgling animation company from Viborg came to prominence in 2012 as a co-producer on Oscar-nominated Cartoon Saloon’s Song of the Sea.
Longway North will be directed by Remi Chayé and will be produced by Sacrebleu Productions in co-production with Nørlum.
Supported by the Danish Film Institute with investment from the West Danish Film Fund, the film centres on a young girl from 19th Century Russian aristocracy who dreams of the great expanses of the North and run aways from home to go there.
Copenhagen Film Fund’s CEO Thomas Gammeltoft commented: “We are incredibly proud that we can be a part of financing a top class international animation feature, and that this investment is directly responsible for creating jobs in...
- 6/11/2014
- by ian.sandwell@screendaily.com (Ian Sandwell)
- ScreenDaily
The first poster has arrived for the upcoming Good People which stars James Franco, Kate Hudson, Omar Sy and Tom Wilkinson. Henrik Ruben Genz directs the thriller from the Kelly Masterson script, which tells of a couple who find cash in their dead tenant's apartment and keep it for themselves. They end up becoming the target of the thief who stole it. Also on board the cast are Sam Spruell, Michael Jibson and Diarmaid Murtagh. Produces are Benhamin Forkner, Ed Cathell III, Avi Lerner, Tobey Maguire, Eric Kranzler and Thomas Gammeltoft.
- 9/9/2013
- Upcoming-Movies.com
The Copenhagen Film Fund has backed its first project, the Sbs TV series Heartless directed by Natasha Arthy and produced by Fridthjof Film.
The Copenhagen Film Fund had its first board meeting Sept 3. Other discussions included BentleyProductions shooting an episode of UK TV series Midsomer Murders.
The Fund’s newly appointed CEO, Thomas Gammeltoft, said: “We’re thrilled to see the years-long effort to establish a Copenhagen film fund finally bear fruit. I look forward to the coming years’ work of attracting exciting international productions to Greater Copenhagen and to seeing Copenhagen Film Fund investments help keep Danish productions in this country.
“We are proud and delighted to be involved in the Heartless TV series, which without funding from the Copenhagen Film Fund would have had to move production to Hungary. We see Heartless as a pathbreaking fantasy youth series made on Danish turf and holding major international potential.It’s good that we can also make...
The Copenhagen Film Fund had its first board meeting Sept 3. Other discussions included BentleyProductions shooting an episode of UK TV series Midsomer Murders.
The Fund’s newly appointed CEO, Thomas Gammeltoft, said: “We’re thrilled to see the years-long effort to establish a Copenhagen film fund finally bear fruit. I look forward to the coming years’ work of attracting exciting international productions to Greater Copenhagen and to seeing Copenhagen Film Fund investments help keep Danish productions in this country.
“We are proud and delighted to be involved in the Heartless TV series, which without funding from the Copenhagen Film Fund would have had to move production to Hungary. We see Heartless as a pathbreaking fantasy youth series made on Danish turf and holding major international potential.It’s good that we can also make...
- 9/5/2013
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
Fund becomes operational in September.
Producer Thomas Gammeltoft has been appointed the first CEO of the new Copenhagen Film Fund. The fund is expected to have a budget of Euros 4.7m over three years.
The Fund, set up to attract film and TV co-productions in the city, was confirmed in January and will become operational after he takes the post on Sept 1.
As a producer, Gammeltoft’s credits include Terribly Happy and Stealing Rembrandt. He had been an executive at Eyeworks Fine and Mellow.
He said:
“Denmark has momentum like never before when it comes to TV series and feature films. A film fund in Copenhagen may be the icing on the cake in attracting international films and TV series and creating growth in the region. It is long overdue and it is a great honor for me to be able to take part in it.”
The head of the Copenhagen Film Fund’s board, Jørgen Ramskov, added...
Producer Thomas Gammeltoft has been appointed the first CEO of the new Copenhagen Film Fund. The fund is expected to have a budget of Euros 4.7m over three years.
The Fund, set up to attract film and TV co-productions in the city, was confirmed in January and will become operational after he takes the post on Sept 1.
As a producer, Gammeltoft’s credits include Terribly Happy and Stealing Rembrandt. He had been an executive at Eyeworks Fine and Mellow.
He said:
“Denmark has momentum like never before when it comes to TV series and feature films. A film fund in Copenhagen may be the icing on the cake in attracting international films and TV series and creating growth in the region. It is long overdue and it is a great honor for me to be able to take part in it.”
The head of the Copenhagen Film Fund’s board, Jørgen Ramskov, added...
- 6/26/2013
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
James Franco, Kate Hudson and Omar Sy have all joined the cast of Henrik Genz's contemporary thriller "Good People" at Millennium Films.
Genz makes his English-language debut on the story of an American couple living in London who fall into severe debt renovating her family’s home.
When the tenant in their downstairs apartment passes away and leaves 200,000 pounds in cash, they take it, and that’s when bad things begin to happen.
Kelly Masterson, Paul Grellong and Christina Hodson penned the script based on Marcus Sakey’s novel.
Thomas Gammeltoft, Ben Forkner, Tobey Maguire, Eric Kranzler, and Mark Gill are producing. Filming begins at the end of May in London.
Source: Deadline...
Genz makes his English-language debut on the story of an American couple living in London who fall into severe debt renovating her family’s home.
When the tenant in their downstairs apartment passes away and leaves 200,000 pounds in cash, they take it, and that’s when bad things begin to happen.
Kelly Masterson, Paul Grellong and Christina Hodson penned the script based on Marcus Sakey’s novel.
Thomas Gammeltoft, Ben Forkner, Tobey Maguire, Eric Kranzler, and Mark Gill are producing. Filming begins at the end of May in London.
Source: Deadline...
- 4/23/2013
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
Breaking: Millennium Films is starting production at the end of May in London on Good People, which will star James Franco, Kate Hudson and Omar Sy and be directed by Henrik Genz, who ismaking his English-language debut. The contemporary thriller centers on an American couple living in London who fall into severe debt renovating her family’s home. When the tenant in their downstairs apartment passes away and leaves 200,000 pounds in cash, they take it, and that’s when very bad things start happening to good people. Kelly Masterson, Paul Grellong and Christina Hodson wrote the script based on Marcus Sakey’s novel. Thomas Gammeltoft, Ben Forkner, Tobey Maguire, Eric Kranzler, and Mark Gill produced, with Matthew Plouffe, Avi Lerner, Trevor Short, Boaz Davidson, John Thompson and Matt O’Toole serving as executive producers. Paul Ritchie is co-producer.”...
- 4/22/2013
- by MIKE FLEMING JR
- Deadline
The lovely Juilliard-trained actress, Jessica Chastain has been offered a lead role in the big-screen adaptation of Marcus Sakey’s novel ‘Good People’.
Chastain would star as Anna Reed opposite James Franco, who will star as her husband Tom in Henrik Genz’s feature adaptation of the best selling novel by Marcus Sakey.
Danish director Genz (The Killing TV series) will helm the film based on Kelly Masterson‘s script. Ben Forkner is producing along with Tobey Maguire, Eric Kanzler, Thomas Gammeltoft, Mark Gill and Ed Cathell.
The story follows a couple (Chastain and Franco) in their 30s in severe debt,
who finds the tenant in their downstairs apartment has died and left a stack of cash.’ The obligatory moral-crisis element to the plot synopsis reads as follows: ‘If they take the money, all of their problems will be solved. But that’s when bad things start happening to good people.
Chastain would star as Anna Reed opposite James Franco, who will star as her husband Tom in Henrik Genz’s feature adaptation of the best selling novel by Marcus Sakey.
Danish director Genz (The Killing TV series) will helm the film based on Kelly Masterson‘s script. Ben Forkner is producing along with Tobey Maguire, Eric Kanzler, Thomas Gammeltoft, Mark Gill and Ed Cathell.
The story follows a couple (Chastain and Franco) in their 30s in severe debt,
who finds the tenant in their downstairs apartment has died and left a stack of cash.’ The obligatory moral-crisis element to the plot synopsis reads as follows: ‘If they take the money, all of their problems will be solved. But that’s when bad things start happening to good people.
- 12/24/2012
- by Nick Martin
- Filmofilia
Back in 2010, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo director Niels Arden Oplev had reportedly signed on to direct Tobey Maguire in Good People, an adaptation of Marcus Sakey‘s thriller novel.
However, now comes word that Danish director Henrik Genz (Terribly Happy) will direct the film based on an adaptation of the book by Kelly Masterson (Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead) with James Franco as the front-runner to star.
The project was mistaken in an earlier report on Wednesday by The Wrap for an adaptation of the Broadway play ‘Good People’, by David Lindsay-Abaire.
Based on Marcus Sakey’s third book, this Good People follows a Chicago couple that comes across $400,000 and do whatever they can to try and keep it.
Tobey Maguire will serve as producer along with Ben Forkner, Matthew Plouffe, Thomas Gammeltoft, Mark Gill, and Ed Cathell. No word if Maguire’s set to co-star.
However, now comes word that Danish director Henrik Genz (Terribly Happy) will direct the film based on an adaptation of the book by Kelly Masterson (Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead) with James Franco as the front-runner to star.
The project was mistaken in an earlier report on Wednesday by The Wrap for an adaptation of the Broadway play ‘Good People’, by David Lindsay-Abaire.
Based on Marcus Sakey’s third book, this Good People follows a Chicago couple that comes across $400,000 and do whatever they can to try and keep it.
Tobey Maguire will serve as producer along with Ben Forkner, Matthew Plouffe, Thomas Gammeltoft, Mark Gill, and Ed Cathell. No word if Maguire’s set to co-star.
- 11/29/2012
- by Nick Martin
- Filmofilia
Henrik Ruben Genz's dark comedy "Terribly Happy", this year's Danish entry for the foreign language Oscar, is getting a $10-15 million budget English language remake reports Screen Daily.
The story is based on Erling Jepsen’s novel about a troubled police officer dispatched to a mysterious community on a swampy peninsula. Howard Rodman ("Savage Grace") will adapt the script for the remake.
Director Genz and his producer Thomas Gammeltoft will re-team in the same capacities on the new version which has three times the budget and will allow them to approach the material from a new point of view.
“I felt I wasn’t finished with the material and wanted to explore it further. When the opportunity for a remake came up I felt I couldn’t let go of this curiosity and energy that bound me to the material” says Genz.
Gammeltoft says the new version will allow...
The story is based on Erling Jepsen’s novel about a troubled police officer dispatched to a mysterious community on a swampy peninsula. Howard Rodman ("Savage Grace") will adapt the script for the remake.
Director Genz and his producer Thomas Gammeltoft will re-team in the same capacities on the new version which has three times the budget and will allow them to approach the material from a new point of view.
“I felt I wasn’t finished with the material and wanted to explore it further. When the opportunity for a remake came up I felt I couldn’t let go of this curiosity and energy that bound me to the material” says Genz.
Gammeltoft says the new version will allow...
- 2/15/2010
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
- Fish Tank, Everyone Else, Dogtooth, Police Adjective, A Prophet and White Ribbon are just a half a dozen titles among the 48 films that have a shot at being nominated among several categories for 22nd The European Film Awards. Among those that mysteriously didn't make the list are a pair of films that played at Cannes in Romania's Tales From the Golden Age and France's The Father of My Children. The way it works is, 2000 members of the European Film Academy will vote for the nominations in the different award categories which will be announced on the 7th of November with the winners announced on the 12th of December. Here is the complete list below. 33 Scenes From Life Poland / Germany, 96 min Written & directed by Ma½goÊka Szumowska Produced by Raimond Goebel & Karl Baumgartner Broken Embraces Spain, 129 min Written & directed by: Pedro Almodóvar Produced by: Agustín Almodóvar Everyone Else Germany, 119 min
- 9/7/2009
- IONCINEMA.com
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