88 minutes
2/28/1942
A simple, religious Hungarian woodcutter lives with his wife and boy child with a small community of squatters among the peaceful mountains of Transylvania until a lumber company claims their land and forces them all to become company workers or else leave the land. This 1942 Hungarian film takes a detailed and unflinching look at the hardships of mountain living, and the realistic approach proved influential to the Neorealist movement in Italian cinema. Hungarian master director Istvan Szots won the Biennale Cup at the Venice Film Festival for his auspicious debut, but the film was banned by the Nazis as "too Catholic" and not publicly exhibited until after World War II.
János Görbe
as Gergely Csutak
Alice Szellay
as Anna Csutak
Péterke Ferency
as Gergö Csutak, their son
József Bihari
as Márton Üdö , Gergo's godfather
Lajos Gárday
as Ádám Ülkei
Oszkár Borovszky
as manager
Lenke Egyed
as maid
Imre Toronyi
as György Bende, doctor
György Kürthy
as György Bende
Elemér Baló
as woodcutter
János Pásztor
as woodcutter
Jenö Danis
as woodcutter
Lajos Alszeghy
as Court Clerk
János Makláry
as guide
Endre Turáni C.
as passenger
László Misoga
as passenger
Nándor Bihary
as passenger
Sándor Hidassy
as passenger
Irma Cserey
as passenger