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Fusilier Wipf

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4-492: Fusilier Wipf (German: Füsilier Wipf ) is a 1938 Swiss drama film directed by Hermann Haller and Leopold Lindtberg and starring Paul Hubschmid , Heinrich Gretler and Robert Trösch . When the First World War breaks out, a hairdresser 's assistant in neutral Switzerland is mobilised for border protection duty. Serving in the army, he grows from a boy into a man and develops a greater love for his country. The film

8-746: Is an annual film festival held every August in Locarno , Switzerland. As of 2014, The Swissmakers (1978) ( Die Schweizermacher ) is the highest grossing Swiss film of all time. In German-speaking cantons, French-language films usually have German subtitles. Likewise, in French-speaking cantons, German-language films usually have French subtitles. Adult-oriented films in foreign languages are often screened with original audio and double subtitles in German and French. Children-oriented films in foreign languages are usually dubbed. This Switzerland -related article

12-512: The 1930s. It is influenced by the neighboring countries of France, Germany and Italy, with which it shares languages. Before the mid-1960s Swiss films were often sentimental, but the French New Wave led to more experimental cinema. The Solothurn Film Festival was founded in 1966 with a declaration of showing the modern reality of Swiss Life. It is the most important festival for Swiss film productions. The Locarno Festival founded in 1946

16-517: Was part of the intellectual spiritual defence of Switzerland during the era as the country maintained a neutral stance in the years leading up to the Second World War , which began a year after the film was released. This article related to a Swiss film is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Cinema of Switzerland The film industry based in Switzerland dates to

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