Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. How I Unleashed World War II (Polish: Jak rozpętałem drugą wojnę światową) is a 1970 Polish comedy film directed by Tadeusz Chmielewski and based on Kazimierz Sławiński's novel "Przygody kanoniera Dolasa" (The Adventures of Dolas the Cannoneer).

  2. 26 nov 2021 · 16K views 2 years ago. ...more. Part one of the three part 1970 Polish wartime comedy How I Unleased World War II. Follows Polish infantryman Franciszek Dolas as he gets himself into...

  3. 2 apr 1970 · With Marian Kociniak, Janina Boronska, Adam Cyprian, Wirgiliusz Gryn. The adventures of unlucky Polish soldier Franek Dolas during world war II. In September he escapes from Stalag and goes to France. After that he fights in Africa and Europe.

    • (3,6K)
    • Adventure, Comedy, War
    • Tadeusz Chmielewski
    • 1970-04-02
  4. How I Unleashed WWII (Jak rozpetalem druga wojne swiatowa) is a classic Polish comedy broken into three parts. he main character, Franek Dolas, believes he started World War II by a mishap he caused. Franek overslept while on a train that entered the German border and fired a shot at a German.

  5. The adventures of unlucky Polish soldier Franek Dolas, who is convinced, that he caused the World War II with his accidental shot. He escapes from a prisoner camp, then he travels around Nazi-occupied Europe and northern Africa in attempts of getting to the Polish Army in exile to fight the enemy.

  6. Synopsis. On the night of August 31, 1939, Dolas, from a platoon reinforcing a train station on the German border, falls asleep in a train car and unknowingly crosses into Germany. The moment he shoots a German, who he thinks is a saboteur, the German invasion of Poland begins, and Dolas is convinced it was his fault.

  7. Synopsis by Nathan Southern. Originally produced in 1970, Tadeusz Chmielewski's epic-length period comedy Jak Rozpetalem Druga Wojne Swiatowa (AKA How I Unleashed World War II clocked in at just shy of 4 hours; Chmielewski divided the complete opus into three consecutive parts.