Es kommt der Tag

Deutschland Frankreich 2008/2009 Spielfilm

Summary

The Day Will Come

At the end of the 1970th Judith decided to abandon her normal life to join the terrorist underground. Therefore she had to give her little daughter up for adoption. Thirty years later Judith is back in the middle-class. She has changed her name and lives with her husband and two children in Alsace. But all of a sudden her past catches up with her: One day her first daughter Alice appears on her doorstep and demands an answer to the question why her mother once did abandon her. Moreover she demands that Judith will go to the authorities and stands up straight for her past crimes.

 

Comments

You have seen this movie? We are looking forward to your comment!

Credits

All Credits

Assistant director

Script supervisor

Screenplay

Director of photography

Steadycam operator

Optical effects

Still photography

Lighting design

Gaffer

Key grip

Production design

Art director

Property master

Stand-by props

Costume design

Sound design

Audio mixing

Stunt co-ordinator

Casting

Line producer

Unit production manager

Production supervisor

Production coordinator

Post-production

Shoot

    • 15.04.2008 - 27.05.2008
Duration:
2953 m, 108 min
Format:
16mm - Blow-Up 35mm, 1:1,85
Video/Audio:
Farbe, Dolby
Censorship/Age rating:

FSK-Prüfung (DE): 08.09.2009, 119589, ab 12 Jahre / feiertagsfrei

Screening:

Uraufführung (DE): 28.06.2009, München, Filmfest;
Kinostart (DE): 01.10.2009;
TV-Erstsendung (DE): 10.11.2010, Südwest 3

Titles

  • Originaltitel (DE) Es kommt der Tag
  • Weiterer Titel The Day Will Come

Versions

Original

Duration:
2953 m, 108 min
Format:
16mm - Blow-Up 35mm, 1:1,85
Video/Audio:
Farbe, Dolby
Censorship/Age rating:

FSK-Prüfung (DE): 08.09.2009, 119589, ab 12 Jahre / feiertagsfrei

Screening:

Uraufführung (DE): 28.06.2009, München, Filmfest;
Kinostart (DE): 01.10.2009;
TV-Erstsendung (DE): 10.11.2010, Südwest 3

Awards

Bayerischer Filmpreis 2010
  • Beste Nachwuchsdarstellerin
IFF Berlin 2008
  • Thomas Strittmatter Drehbuchpreis