The Abduction of the Sabine Women (German: Der Raub der Sabinerinnen) is a 1936 German comedy film directed by Robert A. Stemmle and starring Bernhard Wildenhain, Max Gülstorff, and Maria Koppenhöfer.
[1] It was shot at the Carl Froelich's Berlin Studios located in Tempelhof.
[2] The film's sets were designed by the art directors Walter Haag and Franz Schroedter.
High school professor Gollwitz wrote a play as a student, which he now describes as a youthful sin.
Low-rent theater impresario Emanuel Striese, who is struggling with numerous problems in the ensemble and is also not well off financially, finds out about it and wants to perform it with his family.