Milan Peschel | |
---|---|
Born | 1968 (age 55–56) |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1999–present |
Milan Peschel (born 1968) is a German actor. [1] He appeared in more than fifty films since 1999.
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | Netto | Marcel Werner | |
2006 | Black Sheep | Peter Harminsky | |
Lenz | Lenz | ||
2007 | Reclaim Your Brain | Phillip | |
2009 | Sometime in August | Thomas | |
2010 | Jew Suss: Rise and Fall | Werner Krauss | |
2011 | Stopped on Track | Frank | |
What a Man | Volker | ||
2014 | Therapy Crashers | Thomas Vierzig | |
2015 | The Manny | Rolf Horst | |
2017 | The Captain | Reinhard Freitag | |
2023 | The Palace | Caspar Tell |
Netto is a 2005 film directed by Robert Thalheim. It is a story of father-son relationship in post-unification Berlin. The song "Mein bester Kumpel" by Peter Tschernig is used throughout the film.
Uwe Peschel is a German former professional road bicycle racer and a time trialist.
Michael Rich is a German former professional road bicycle racer who won the gold medal for his native country in the men's team time trial (100 km) at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain. His winning teammates were Christian Meyer, Bernd Dittert and Uwe Peschel.
Peter Peschel is a German former professional football who played mainly as a midfielder. He was with his family resettled as Aussiedler from Poland to West Germany at the age of five. Peschel was married to a gymnast Magdalena Brzeska, with whom he had two children.
12 Paces Without a Head is a 2009 film set in the North Sea in 1401. The film centers on the German folk hero Klaus Störtebeker, who was a pirate at the time. The title comes from a legend which asserts that when he was captured by the Hanseatic League, he struck a deal with his captors that every one of his men whom he could walk past after being decapitated, would be let go. Störtebeker's body allegedly managed to make twelve paces before collapsing.
Stopped on Track is a 2011 German drama film directed by Andreas Dresen. It premiered in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival. The film won the Prize Un Certain Regard, the top award for best film in the section. The win was shared with the South Korean film Arirang, directed by Kim Ki-duk.
Oscar Ferdinand Peschel was a German geographer and anthropologist.
Peschel may refer to:
Reclaim your Brain is a 2007 German film directed by Hans Weingartner.
Henrik Peschel, also known as Henna Peschel, is a German film director, screenwriter, cameraman and producer.
Carl Gottlieb Peschel was a German painter. He was a member of the Nazarene movement.
Axel Hermann Peschel is a German former cyclist. His sporting career began with SC Dynamo Berlin. He competed for East Germany in the team time trial at the 1968 Summer Olympics. Peschel won the Peace Race in 1968. He won the DDR Rundfahrt in 1965 and 1967.
Sometime in August is a 2009 German drama film directed by Sebastian Schipper, starring Marie Bäumer, Milan Peschel, André Hennicke and Anna Brüggemann. It tells the story of Thomas and Hanna, a happily married couple settled on the countryside, whose relationship is challenged when they are visited by Tomas' brother and Hanna's goddaughter. The film is loosely based on the 1809 novel Elective Affinities by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
The Manny is a 2015 German comedy film directed and co-written by Matthias Schweighöfer, starring himself as a greedy and super-busy real-estate developer, and Milan Peschel as a victim of his development who accidentally ends up babysitting his two children.
Winnetou is a German television miniseries directed by Philipp Stölzl and starring Nik Xhelilaj and Wotan Wilke Möhring. It is based on three adventure novels by Karl May. It has been broadcast in three parts on RTL in late December 2016.
Black Sheep is a 2006 German / Swiss comedy film directed by Oliver Rihs.
Andreas Peschel is a German microbiologist and an expert in bacterial pathogens. Peschel is Head of the Infection Biology Department at the University of Tübingen, Germany.
The Captain is a 2017 international co-produced historical drama film written and directed by Robert Schwentke. It was screened in the Special Presentations section at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival. It tells the story of German war criminal Willi Herold, who assumed a stolen identity as a German officer and orchestrated the killing of deserters and other prisoners at one of the Emslandlager camps.
Ralf Kapschack is a German politician of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) served as a member of the Bundestag from the state of North Rhine-Westphalia from 2013 to October 2021.
Noemi Peschel is a former German rhythmic gymnast of Polish descent.