Professor Hannibal
| Professor Hannibal | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Directed by | Zoltán Fábri | 
| Written by | 
  | 
| Starring | 
  | 
| Cinematography | Ferenc Szécsényi | 
| Edited by | Ferencné Szécsényi | 
| Music by | Zdenkó Tamássy | 
Production company  | |
Release date  | 
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Running time  | 88 minutes | 
| Country | Hungary | 
| Language | Hungarian | 
Professor Hannibal (Hungarian: Hannibál tanár úr) is a 1956 Hungarian drama film directed by Zoltán Fábri and starring Ernő Szabó, Zoltán Greguss and Manyi Kiss. The film is based on a novel by Ferenc Móra set in Budapest during the Interwar period. When a Latin teacher publishes an essay on the Carthaginian General Hannibal, he is quickly hailed as a celebrity genius, but in reality has become an unwitting pawn of far-right politicians.[1] The film was chosen to be part both of Budapest Twelve, a list of Hungarian films considered the best in 1968 and its follow-up, the New Budapest Twelve in 2000.[2][3]
Release
The initial popularity of the film is hard to judge as five days after it premiered on 18 October 1956 the Hungarian Uprising began. It was re-released in 1957.[4]
Partial cast
- Ernő Szabó as Nyúl Béla
 - Zoltán Greguss as Muray
 - Manyi Kiss as Nyúl Béláné
 - Noémi Apor as Lola
 - Emmi Buttykay as Mici
 - Hilda Gobbi as Vogelmayerné
 - Oszkár Ascher as Schwarz Béni
 - Ödön Bárdi as Danielisz
 - Béla Barsi as Menyus
 - Ferenc Bessenyei as Hannibál
 - György Kálmán as Újságíró
 - Zoltán Makláry as Manzák
 - László Mensáros as Török
 - László Misoga as Vogelmayer
 - Lajos Rajczy as Rezsõ úr
 - Mihály Selmeczy as Ofenthaler igazgató
 - Rudolf Somogyvári as Vidrozsil
 - József Szendrõ as Wilhelm
 
References
- ^ Cunningham p.88-89
 - ^ Ujhelyi, Szilárd (1968). Karcsai Kulcsár, István (ed.). A BUDAPESTI 12. Filmbarátok Kiskönyvtára. Budapest: Magyar Filmtudományi Intézet és Filmarchívum.
 - ^ "Új Budapesti Tizenkettő". Filmvilág. XLIII (3): 2. March 2000.
 - ^ Cunningham p.90-91
 
Bibliography
- Cunningham, John. Hungarian Cinema: From Coffee House to Multiplex. Wallflower Press, 2004.
 
External links
