The Blue Swords
http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Blue_Swords an entity of type: Thing
Die blauen Schwerter ist ein Spielfilm der DEFA. Der 1949 in Schwarzweiß gedrehte Film befasst sich mit der Biographie von Johann Friedrich Böttger, dem Miterfinder des ersten weißen europäischen Porzellans.
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Die blauen Schwerter è un film drammatico del 1949 diretto da Wolfgang Schleif, basato sulla vita dell'alchimista tedesco Johann Friedrich Böttger.
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The Blue Swords (German: Die blauen Schwerter) is a 1949 East German historical drama film directed by Wolfgang Schleif and starring Hans Quest, Ilse Steppat and Alexander Engel. It sold more than 3,299,432 tickets. The film portrays the life of Johann Friedrich Böttger, an alchemist of the early eighteenth century who was held prisoner by the Elector of Saxony in order to discover the secret of gold production. Failing to accomplish this, which he knows to be impossible, he instead works to develop porcelain. The title refers to the symbol of Meissen, a pair of crossed swords. His story had previously been turned into a 1935 film The King's Prisoner, released during the Nazi era.
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Die blauen Schwerter
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Die blauen Schwerter
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The Blue Swords
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The Blue Swords
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Die blauen Schwerter
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The Blue Swords
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31322390
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1110989291
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East Germany
xsd:date
1949-12-30
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5940.0
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Die blauen Schwerter ist ein Spielfilm der DEFA. Der 1949 in Schwarzweiß gedrehte Film befasst sich mit der Biographie von Johann Friedrich Böttger, dem Miterfinder des ersten weißen europäischen Porzellans.
rdf:langString
Die blauen Schwerter è un film drammatico del 1949 diretto da Wolfgang Schleif, basato sulla vita dell'alchimista tedesco Johann Friedrich Böttger.
rdf:langString
The Blue Swords (German: Die blauen Schwerter) is a 1949 East German historical drama film directed by Wolfgang Schleif and starring Hans Quest, Ilse Steppat and Alexander Engel. It sold more than 3,299,432 tickets. The film portrays the life of Johann Friedrich Böttger, an alchemist of the early eighteenth century who was held prisoner by the Elector of Saxony in order to discover the secret of gold production. Failing to accomplish this, which he knows to be impossible, he instead works to develop porcelain. The title refers to the symbol of Meissen, a pair of crossed swords. His story had previously been turned into a 1935 film The King's Prisoner, released during the Nazi era. The sets were designed by the art directors Karl Schneider and Erich Zander. It was shot at the Babelsberg Studios in East Berlin.
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99.0
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3477
xsd:date
1949-12-30
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5940.0