The Women House of Brescia

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Women_House_of_Brescia an entity of type: Thing

The Women House of Brescia (German: Das Frauenhaus von Brescia) is a 1920 German-language silent film directed by Hubert Moest. The film's alternative name was The House of Pillory. The film was considered highly controversial for the depiction of prostitution. The film's story was set in medieval Europe during the fourteenth century. The film was based on Karl Hans Strobl's novel Das Frauenhaus von Brescia. The Pillory houses were the places where enemy women captured during wartime were imprisoned so that the people could exploit them as they wished. The depiction of prostitution was the basis for the picture's rejection by the British Board of Film Classification in 1921 and its being banned in Germany. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Women House of Brescia
rdf:langString The Women House of Brescia
rdf:langString The Women House of Brescia
xsd:integer 43529844
xsd:integer 1114948223
rdf:langString Theatrical release poster
rdf:langString Georg Schubert
rdf:langString Germany
rdf:langString Moest-Film GmbH & Co.
rdf:langString German intertitles
rdf:langString Das Frauenhaus von Brescia
rdf:langString Hubert Moest
xsd:integer 1920
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Gertrude Welcker
rdf:langString Joseph Klein
rdf:langString Eduard von Winterstein
rdf:langString Ernst Deutsch
rdf:langString Hedda Vernon
rdf:langString Fritz Delius (actor)
rdf:langString Fritz Jessner
rdf:langString Josef Peterhans
rdf:langString Maria Forescu
rdf:langString Olga Limburg
rdf:langString Julius Roether
rdf:langString Toni Zimmerer
rdf:langString The Women House of Brescia (German: Das Frauenhaus von Brescia) is a 1920 German-language silent film directed by Hubert Moest. The film's alternative name was The House of Pillory. The film was considered highly controversial for the depiction of prostitution. The film's story was set in medieval Europe during the fourteenth century. The film was based on Karl Hans Strobl's novel Das Frauenhaus von Brescia. The Pillory houses were the places where enemy women captured during wartime were imprisoned so that the people could exploit them as they wished. The depiction of prostitution was the basis for the picture's rejection by the British Board of Film Classification in 1921 and its being banned in Germany.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8072

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