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  1. Where the Ancient Forests Rustle (German: Wo die alten Wälder rauschen) is a 1956 West German drama film directed by Alfons Stummer and starring Willy Fritsch, Josefin Kipper and Carl Möhner. It was one of a large number of heimatfilm made during the decade.

    • 14 September 1956
    • Eberhard Meichsner, Walter Traut
  2. Where the Ancient Forests Rustle (German: '''Wo die alten Wälder rauschen''') is a 1956 West German drama film directed by Alfons Stummer and starring Willy Fritsch, Josefin Kipper and Carl Möhner. It was one of a large number of heimatfilm made during the decade.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Walter_BoosWalter Boos - Wikipedia

    Where the Ancient Forests Rustle (1956) The Crammer (1958) Dorothea Angermann (1959) My Schoolfriend (1960) Town Without Pity (1961) Max the Pickpocket (1962) He Can't Stop Doing It (1962) My Daughter and I (1963) Coffin from Hong Kong (1964) Situation Hopeless... But Not Serious (1965) Schulmädchen-Report (1970) Director. Nurse ...

    • Editor, Director
    • 1948–1981 (film)
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Walter_TrautWalter Traut - Wikipedia

    Bibliography. External links. Walter Traut (1907–1979) was an Austrian film producer and production manager. [1] Selected filmography. The White Hell of Pitz Palu (1950) Behind Monastery Walls (1952) Ave Maria (1953) Where the Ancient Forests Rustle (1956) Fruit in the Neighbour's Garden (1956) The Doctor of Stalingrad (1958)

    • Producer, Production manager
    • 1930–1972 (film)
  5. Where the Ancient Forests Rustle is a 1956 West German drama film directed by Alfons Stummer and starring Willy Fritsch, Josefin Kipper and Carl Möhner. It was one of a large number of heimatfilm made during the decade.

  6. 1956 film by Alfons Stummer. Where the Ancient Forests Rustle (Q18029798) From Wikidata. Jump to navigation Jump to search. 1956 film by Alfons Stummer. edit. Language

  7. English. Producer, Jim & Elaine Larison ; narrator, John Flynn. Huge forests once covered much of Africa, Asia, Europe, and North and South America. But the rapid growth and western spread of civilization have gradually--and almost totally--destroyed these original forests.