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La commune (Paris, 1871) |
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For Whom the Bell Tolls |
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Guilty by Suspicion |
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Z |
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Directed by |
Peter Watkins |
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Written by |
Agathe Bluysen |
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First edition cover |
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Promotional movie poster for the film |
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Theatrical poster |
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|
Peter Watkins |
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Directed by |
Irwin Winkler |
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Directed by |
Costa Gavras |
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Cinematography |
Odd-Geir Sæther |
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Country |
United States |
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Produced by |
Steven Reuther |
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Produced by |
Jacques Perrin |
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Editing by |
Agathe Bluysen |
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Language |
English |
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Alan C. Blomquist |
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Ahmed Rachedi |
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Patrick Watkins |
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Genre(s) |
War novel |
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|
Nelson McCormick |
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Screenplay by |
Jorge Semprún |
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Peter Watkins |
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Publisher |
Charles Scribner's
Sons |
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|
Arnon Milchan |
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Costa Gavras |
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Release date(s) |
Germany: |
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During the Spanish Civil War, an American allied with the Republicans finds romance during a desperate mission to blow up a strategically important bridge
Director: Sam Wood
Writers: Ernest Hemingway(novel) Dudley Nichols (screenplay)
Stars: Gary Cooper, Ingrid Bergman and Akim Tamiroff |
1940 |
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Written by |
Irwin Winkler |
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Story by |
Vassilis Vassilikos |
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| |
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26 May 2000 (TV
premiere) |
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Starring |
Robert De Niro |
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Starring |
Jean-Louis Trintignant |
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United States: |
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Pages |
471 pp |
|
|
Annette Bening |
|
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Yves Montand |
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| |
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37805 |
|
ISBN |
978-0-684-83048-3
(Scribner's reprint) |
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|
George Wendt |
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|
Irene Papas |
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France: |
|
OCLC Number |
34475606 |
|
|
Sam Wanamaker |
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Jacques Perrin |
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39393 |
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Dewey
Decimal |
813/.52 20 |
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Martin Scorsese |
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Music by |
Mikis Theodorakis |
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| |
Running time |
345 min. |
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LC Classification |
PS3515.E37 F6 1996 |
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Music by |
James Newton Howard |
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Cinematography |
Raoul Coutard |
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220 min. (theatrical
cut) |
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Preceded by |
The Fifth Column and
the First Forty-Nine Stories |
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Cinematography |
Michael Ballhaus |
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Editing by |
Françoise Bonnot |
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Country |
France |
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Followed by |
Across the River and into the Trees |
|
Editing by |
Priscilla
Nedd-Friendly |
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Distributed by |
Cinema V (US) |
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Language |
French |
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Distributed by |
Warner Bros. Pictures |
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Release date(s) |
February 26, 1969(France) |
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Release date(s) |
33312 |
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Running time |
127 minutes |
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Running time |
105 minutes |
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Country |
Algeria |
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Country |
United States/France |
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France |
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Language |
English |
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Language |
French |
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Dead Man Walking |
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The Insider |
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Theatrical
release poster |
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Theatrical poster |
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The Grapes of
Wrath |
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Theatrical release poster by Reynold Brown |
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Directed by |
Tim Robbins |
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Directed by |
Michael Mann |
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Directed by |
Stanley Kubrick |
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Produced by |
Tim Robbins |
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Produced by |
Pieter Jan Brugge |
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Theatrical
release poster |
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Anthony
Mann (uncredited) |
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Jon Kilik |
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Michael Mann |
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Directed by |
John Ford |
|
Produced by |
Edward Lewis |
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Rudd Simmon |
|
Written by |
Marie Brenner |
|
Produced by |
Darryl F. Zanuck |
|
Kirk
Douglas (executive) |
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| |
Written by |
Tim Robbins |
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|
Eric Roth |
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Nunnally Johnson |
|
Screenplay by |
Dalton Trumbo |
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Based on |
Dead Man
Walking by |
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Michael Mann |
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Screenplay by |
Nunnally Johnson |
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Based on |
Spartacus by |
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Sister Helen Prejean C.S.J. |
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Starring |
Al Pacino |
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Based on |
The Grapes of
Wrath by |
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Howard Fast |
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Starring |
Susan Sarandon |
|
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Russell Crowe |
|
|
John Steinbeck |
|
Narrated by |
Vic Perrin |
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Sean Penn |
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Christopher Plummer |
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Starring |
Henry Fonda |
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Starring |
Kirk Douglas |
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Robert Prosky |
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Diane Venora |
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Jane Darwell |
|
Laurence Olivier |
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Lois Smith |
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Roger Bart |
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John Carradine |
|
Peter Ustinov |
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Jack Black |
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Rip Torn |
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Shirley Mills |
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John Gavin |
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Celia Weston |
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Bruce McGill |
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John Qualen |
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Jean Simmons |
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Music by |
David Robbins |
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Michael Gambon |
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Eddie Quillan |
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Charles Laughton |
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Cinematography |
Roger A. Deakins |
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Gina Gershon |
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Music by |
Alfred Newman |
|
Tony Curtis |
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Editing by |
Lisa Zeno Churgin |
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|
Philip Baker Hall |
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Cinematography |
Gregg Toland |
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Music by |
Alex North |
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Studio |
PolyGram
Filmed Entertainment |
|
|
Paul Perri |
|
Editing by |
Robert
L. Simpson |
|
Cinematography |
Russell Metty |
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Working Title Films |
|
Music by |
Pieter Bourke |
|
Distributed by |
20th Century Fox |
|
Stanley Kubrick
(uncredited) |
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Distributed by |
Gramercy Pictures |
|
|
Lisa Gerrard |
|
Release date(s) |
14634 |
|
Editing by |
Robert Lawrence |
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|
| |
Release date(s) |
35062 |
|
|
Graeme Revell |
|
Running time |
129 minutes |
|
Distributed by |
Universal Pictures |
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Running time |
122 minutes |
|
Cinematography |
Dante Spinotti |
|
Country |
United States |
|
Release date(s) |
07-Oct-60 |
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| |
Country |
United States |
|
Editing by |
William Goldenberg |
|
Language |
English |
|
Running time |
184 minutes |
|
|
| |
Language |
English |
|
|
David Rosenbloom |
|
Budget |
750000 |
|
Country |
United States |
|
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| |
Budget |
$11 million |
|
|
Paul Rubell |
|
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|
|
Language |
English |
|
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| |
Gross revenue |
86387284 |
|
Distributed by |
Touchstone Pictures |
|
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|
Budget |
$12 million |
|
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| |
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|
|
Release date(s) |
36469 |
|
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|
Gross revenue |
$60,000,000 |
|
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| |
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|
Running time |
157 minutes |
|
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Country |
United States |
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Language |
English |
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Budget |
$68 million |
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Gross revenue |
$60,289,912 |
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Il Postino |
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MASH |
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Human Trafficking |
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An Inconvenient Truth |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Original release U.S. DVD cover art |
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Promotional
poster for An Inconvenient Truthdesigned by The Ant Farm[1] |
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| |
Directed by |
Michael Radford |
|
Directed by |
Robert Altman |
|
Genre |
Drama |
|
Directed by |
Davis Guggenheim |
|
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| |
Produced by |
Mario Cecchi Gori |
|
Produced by |
Ingo Preminger |
|
Crime |
|
Produced by |
Lawrence Bender |
|
|
| |
Vittorio Cecchi Gori |
|
Screenplay by |
Ring Lardner, Jr. |
|
Directed by |
Christian Duguay |
|
Scott Z. Burns |
|
|
| |
Gaetano Daniele |
|
Based on |
MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors by |
|
Written by |
Carol Doyle |
|
Laurie David |
|
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| |
Starring |
Philippe Noiret |
|
Richard Hooker |
|
Agatha Dominik |
|
Co-Producer & Line
Producer: |
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|
| |
Massimo Troisi |
|
Starring |
Donald Sutherland |
|
Starring |
Mira Sorvino |
|
Lesley Chilcott |
|
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| |
Maria Grazia Cucinotta |
|
Elliot Gould |
|
Donald Sutherland |
|
Executive Producer: |
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| |
Music by |
Luis Enríquez Bacalov |
|
Tom Skerritt |
|
Robert Carlyle |
|
Jeffrey D. Ivers |
|
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| |
Distributed by |
Miramax Films |
|
Sally Kellerman |
|
Remy Girard |
|
Jeff Skoll |
|
|
| |
Release date(s) |
September 1, 1994 (VFF) |
|
Robert Duvall |
|
Music by |
Normand Corbiel |
|
Ricky Strauss |
|
|
| |
September 22, 1994 (Italy) |
|
Rene Auberjonois |
|
Editing by |
Gaetan Hout |
|
Diane Weyermann |
|
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| |
June 14, 1995
(United States) |
|
Michael Murphy |
|
Sylvain Lebel |
|
Written by |
Al
Gore (teleplay) |
|
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| |
Running time |
108 minutes |
|
Music by |
Johnny Mandel |
|
Country |
Canada |
|
Starring |
Al Gore |
|
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| |
Country |
Italy |
|
Cinematography |
Harold E. Stine |
|
Language |
English |
|
Music by |
Michael Brook |
|
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| |
Language |
Italian |
|
Editing by |
Danford B. Greene |
|
Original channel |
Lifetime Television |
|
Cinematography |
Davis Guggenheim |
|
|
| |
Gross revenue |
$21,848,932 |
|
Studio |
Aspen Productions |
|
Original run |
October 24 –
October 25, 2005 |
|
Bob Richman |
|
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| |
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|
|
Ingo Preminger
Productions |
|
Running time |
176 minutes |
|
Editing by |
Jay Cassidy |
|
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| |
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Distributed by |
20th Century Fox |
|
|
|
|
Dan Swietlik |
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| |
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|
Release date(s) |
25-Jan-70 |
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|
Studio |
Lawrence Bender
Productions |
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|
Running time |
116 minutes |
|
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|
Participant Productions |
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| |
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Country |
United States |
|
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|
Distributed by |
Paramount Classics |
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| |
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|
Language |
English |
|
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|
Release date(s) |
24-May-06 |
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| |
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|
Budget |
$3.5 million |
|
|
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|
Running time |
94 minutes |
|
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| |
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|
Gross revenue |
$81,600,000 |
|
|
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|
Country |
United States |
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Language |
English |
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Budget |
US$+1,000,000[2] |
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Gross
revenue |
US$49,756,507[3] |
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(worldwide) |
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| |
Land and Freedom |
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Burn! |
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The Chase |
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| |
Movie poster from Ken Loach's Land and
Freedom |
|
Theatrical release poster |
|
Directed by |
Gillo Pontecorvo |
|
Original film poster by Howard Terpning |
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| |
Directed by |
Ken Loach |
|
Directed by |
Martin Scorsese |
|
Produced by |
Alberto Grimaldi |
|
Directed by |
Arthur Penn |
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| |
Produced by |
Rebecca O'Brien |
|
Produced by |
Julia Phillips |
|
Written by |
Franco Solinas |
|
Produced by |
Sam Spiegel |
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| |
Written by |
Jim Allen |
|
Michael Phillips |
|
Giorgio Arlorio |
|
Written by |
Horton
Foote (play "The Chase") |
|
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| |
Starring |
Ian Hart |
|
Written by |
Paul Schrader |
|
Starring |
Marlon Brando |
|
Lillian
Hellmanscreenplay (Spiegel had it rewritten) |
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| |
Cinematography |
Barry Ackroyd |
|
Narrated by |
Robert De Niro |
|
Evaristo Márquez |
|
Starring |
Marlon Brando |
|
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| |
Editing by |
Jonathan Morris |
|
Starring |
Robert De Niro |
|
Music by |
Ennio Morricone |
|
Jane Fonda |
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| |
Studio |
PolyGram Filmed Entertainment |
|
Jodie Foster |
|
Cinematography |
Marcello Gatti |
|
Robert Redford |
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| |
Distributed by |
Gramercy Pictures |
|
Albert Brooks |
|
Studio |
Europee Associate SAS |
|
E. G. Marshall |
|
|
| |
Release date(s) |
6 October, 1995 |
|
Harvey Keitel |
|
Produzioni Europee
Associati |
|
Angie Dickinson |
|
|
| |
Running time |
109 minutes |
|
Leonard Harris |
|
Distributed by |
United Artists |
|
Music by |
John Barry |
|
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| |
Country |
United Kingdom |
|
Peter Boyle |
|
Release date(s) |
1969 |
|
Cinematography |
Joseph LaShelle &Robert Surtees(uncredited) |
|
|
| |
Spain |
|
Cybill Shepherd |
|
Running time |
112 min (U.S.) |
|
Editing by |
Gene Milford |
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| |
Germany |
|
Music by |
Bernard Herrmann |
|
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Studio |
Horizon Pictures |
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| |
Italy |
|
Cinematography |
Michael Chapman |
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|
Distributed by |
Columbia Pictures |
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| |
Language |
English |
|
Editing by |
Tom Rolf |
|
|
|
|
Release date(s) |
19-Feb-66 |
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| |
Spanish |
|
Melvin Shapiro |
|
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|
Running time |
133 minutes |
|
|
| |
Catalan |
|
Studio |
Columbia Pictures |
|
|
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Country |
United States |
|
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| |
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|
Bill/Phillips |
|
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|
Language |
English |
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| |
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|
Italo/Judeo
Productions |
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| |
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|
Distributed by |
Columbia Pictures |
|
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| |
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|
Release date(s) |
08-Feb-76 |
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| |
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Running time |
113 minutes |
|
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| |
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Country |
United States |
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Language |
English |
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| |
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|
Budget |
$1.3 million |
|
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| |
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|
Gross revenue |
$28,262,574 |
|
|
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| |
A Dry White Season |
|
Three Days of the Condor |
|
The Young Lions |
|
A Civil Action |
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| |
Film poster |
|
Theatrical poster |
|
Theatrical Poster |
|
Theatrical release poster |
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|
| |
Directed by |
Euzhan Palcy |
|
Directed by |
Sydney Pollack |
|
Directed by |
Edward Dmytryk |
|
Directed by |
Steven Zaillian |
|
|
| |
Produced by |
Paula Weinstein |
|
Produced by |
Dino De Laurentiis |
|
Produced by |
Al Lichtman |
|
Produced by |
Scott Rudin |
|
|
| |
Tim Hampton |
|
Written by |
James Grady (novel) |
|
Written by |
Edward Anhalt |
|
Steven Zaillian |
|
|
| |
Mary Selway |
|
Lorenzo Semple Jr. |
|
Starring |
Marlon Brando |
|
David Wisnievi |
|
|
| |
Written by |
Colin Welland |
|
David Rayfiel |
|
Montgomery Clift |
|
Robert Redford |
|
|
| |
Euzhan Palcy |
|
Starring |
Robert Redford |
|
Dean Martin |
|
Rachel Pfeffer |
|
|
| |
Robert
Bolt (uncredited) |
|
Faye Dunaway |
|
Hope Lange |
|
David McGiffert |
|
|
| |
André
Brink (novel) |
|
Cliff Robertson |
|
May Britt |
|
Henry J. Golas |
|
|
| |
Starring |
Donald Sutherland |
|
Max von Sydow |
|
Maximilian Schell |
|
Written by |
Steven Zaillian |
|
|
| |
Janet Suzman |
|
Music by |
Dave Grusin |
|
Music by |
Hugo Friedhofer |
|
Based on |
A Civil
Action by |
|
|
| |
Jürgen Prochnow |
|
Cinematography |
Owen Roizman |
|
Cinematography |
Joseph MacDonald |
|
Jonathan Harr |
|
|
| |
Zakes Mokae |
|
Editing by |
Don Guidice |
|
Distributed by |
Twentieth Century-Fox |
|
Starring |
John Travolta |
|
|
| |
with Susan
Sarandon |
|
Fredric Steinkamp(supervising) |
|
Release date(s) |
1958 |
|
Robert Duvall |
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| |
and Marlon
Brando |
|
Distributed by |
Paramount Pictures |
|
Running time |
167 minutes |
|
Tony Shalhoub |
|
|
| |
Music by |
Dave Grusin |
|
Release date(s) |
24-Sep-75 |
|
|
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|
William H. Macy |
|
|
| |
Cinematography |
Pierre-William Glenn |
|
Running time |
118 min. |
|
|
|
|
Zeljko Ivanek |
|
|
| |
Kelvin Pike |
|
Country |
United States |
|
|
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|
Bruce Norris |
|
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| |
Editing by |
Glenn Cunningham |
|
Language |
English |
|
|
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|
John Lithgow |
|
|
| |
Sam O'Steen |
|
French |
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|
Kathleen Quinlan |
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| |
Distributed by |
MGM |
|
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|
Peter Jacobson |
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| |
Release date(s) |
22-Sep-89 |
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|
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|
Mary Mara |
|
|
| |
Running time |
97 minutes |
|
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|
James Gandolfini |
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| |
Language |
English |
|
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|
Stephen Fry |
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| |
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Howie Carr |
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Kathy Bates |
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Music by |
Danny Elfman |
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Cinematography |
Conrad L. Hall |
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Editing by |
Wayne Wahrman |
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Distributed by |
USA/Canada |
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Touchstone Pictures |
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International |
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|
Paramount Pictures |
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| |
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|
Release date(s) |
25-Dec-98 |
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| |
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|
Running time |
115 minutes |
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| |
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|
Country |
United States |
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| |
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|
Language |
English |
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| |
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|
Budget |
$75 million |
|
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| |
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|
Gross revenue |
$56,709,981 |
|
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| |
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|
Born on the Fourth of July |
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| |
Directed by |
Charlie Chaplin |
|
Directed by |
Costa-Gavras |
|
original film poster |
|
Theatrical release poster |
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| |
Produced by |
Charlie Chaplin |
|
Produced by |
Edward Lewis |
|
Directed by |
Oliver Stone |
|
Directed by |
Sidney Lumet |
|
|
| |
Written by |
Charlie Chaplin |
|
Mildred Lewis |
|
Produced by |
A. Kitman Ho |
|
Produced by |
Griffin Dunne |
|
|
| |
Paulette
Goddard(uncredited) |
|
Written by |
Donald E. Stewart |
|
Oliver Stone |
|
Amy Robinson |
|
|
| |
Starring |
Charlie Chaplin |
|
Costa-Gavras |
|
Written by |
Oliver Stone |
|
Written by |
Naomi Foner |
|
|
| |
Paulette Goddard |
|
Thomas
Hauser (book) |
|
Ron Kovic |
|
Starring |
River Phoenix |
|
|
| |
Henry Bergman |
|
Starring |
Jack Lemmon |
|
Starring |
Tom Cruise |
|
Judd Hirsch |
|
|
| |
Stanley Sandford |
|
Sissy Spacek |
|
Kyra Sedgwick |
|
Christine Lahti |
|
|
| |
Chester Conklin |
|
Melanie Mayron |
|
Raymond J. Barry |
|
Martha Plimpton |
|
|
| |
Music by |
Charlie Chaplin |
|
John Shea |
|
Jerry Levine |
|
Music by |
Tony Mottola |
|
|
| |
Cinematography |
Ira H. Morgan |
|
Janice Rule |
|
Frank Whaley |
|
Cinematography |
Gerry Fisher |
|
|
| |
Roland Totheroh |
|
Music by |
Vangelis |
|
Willem Dafoe |
|
Editing by |
Andrew Mondshein |
|
|
| |
Editing by |
Williard Nico |
|
Cinematography |
Ricardo Aronovich |
|
Music by |
John Williams |
|
Distributed by |
Warner Bros. |
|
|
| |
Distributed by |
United Artists (1930s-2003) MK2
Editions(2003-2010) Janus Films/Criterion (2010-present) |
|
Editing by |
Françoise Bonnot |
|
Editing by |
Joe Hutshing |
|
Release date(s) |
09-Sep-88 |
|
|
| |
Release date(s) |
05-Feb-36 |
|
Studio |
PolyGram Filmed Entertainment |
|
David Brenner |
|
Running time |
111 minutes |
|
|
| |
Running time |
87 minutes |
|
Distributed by |
Universal Pictures |
|
Distributed by |
Universal Pictures |
|
Country |
United States |
|
|
| |
Language |
English |
|
Release date(s) |
12-Feb-82 |
|
Release date(s) |
20-Dec-89 |
|
Language |
English |
|
|
| |
Budget |
$1,500,000 (est.) |
|
Running time |
122 minutes |
|
Running time |
145 minutes |
|
Gross revenue |
$2,835,116 |
|
|
| |
Gross revenue |
$8.5 Million |
|
Country |
United States |
|
Country |
United States |
|
|
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| |
|
|
|
Language |
English |
|
Language |
English |
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| |
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|
Spanish |
|
Budget |
$14 million |
|
|
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| |
|
|
|
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|
Gross revenue |
$161,001,698 |
|
|
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| |
The Commitments |
|
Apocalypse Now |
|
Monty Python's Life of Brian |
|
Papillon |
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| |
Theatrical release poster |
|
theatrical
release poster by Bob Peak |
|
Terry Jones |
|
Theatrical release poster by Richard Amsel |
|
|
| |
Directed by |
Alan Parker |
|
Directed by |
Francis Ford Coppola |
Produced by |
·
Exec. prod: |
|
Directed by |
Franklin J. Schaffner |
|
|
| |
Produced by |
Lynda Myles |
|
Produced by |
Francis Ford Coppola |
·
George Harrison |
|
Produced by |
Ted Richmond |
|
|
| |
Roger
Randall-Cutler[1] |
|
Screenplay by |
John Milius |
·
Denis O'Brien |
|
Written
by |
Henri Charrière |
|
|
| |
Written by |
Dick Clement |
|
Francis Ford Coppola |
·
Producer: |
|
Dalton Trumbo |
|
|
| |
Ian La Frenais |
|
Michael Herr (narration) |
·
John Goldstone |
|
Starring |
Steve McQueen |
|
|
| |
Roddy Doyle |
|
Story by |
Joseph Conrad (novel) |
Written by |
·
Graham Chapman |
|
Dustin Hoffman |
|
|
| |
Starring |
Robert Arkins |
|
Narrated by |
Joe Estevez (uncredited) |
·
John Cleese |
|
Music by |
Jerry Goldsmith |
|
|
| |
Colm Meaney |
|
Starring |
Martin Sheen |
·
Terry Gilliam |
|
Editing by |
Robert Swink |
|
|
| |
Andrew Strong |
|
Marlon Brando |
·
Eric Idle |
|
Distributed
by |
Allied Artists
Pictures Corporation (USA) |
|
|
| |
Maria Doyle |
|
Robert Duvall |
·
Terry Jones |
|
Columbia
Pictures (Non-USA) |
|
|
| |
Music by |
Wilson Pickett |
|
Laurence Fishburne |
·
Michael Palin |
|
Release date(s) |
16-Dec-73 |
|
|
| |
Percy Sledge |
|
Dennis Hopper |
Starring |
·
Graham Chapman |
|
Running time |
150 minutes |
|
|
| |
Cinematography |
Gale Tattersall |
|
Harrison Ford |
·
John Cleese |
|
Country |
United States |
|
|
| |
Editing by |
Gerry Hambling |
|
Frederic Forrest |
·
Terry Gilliam |
|
Language |
English |
|
|
| |
Studio |
Beacon Communications |
|
Sam Bottoms |
·
Eric Idle |
|
Budget |
$12 million |
|
|
| |
Distributed by |
20th Century Fox |
|
Albert Hall |
·
Terry Jones |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Release date(s) |
14-Aug-91 |
|
Music by |
Carmine Coppola |
·
Michael Palin |
|
|
|
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|
| |
Running time |
118 minutes |
|
Francis Ford Coppola |
Music by |
Geoffrey Burgon |
|
|
|
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|
| |
Country |
Ireland |
|
Cinematography |
Vittorio Storaro |
Cinematography |
Peter Biziou |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
United Kingdom |
|
Editing by |
Richard Marks |
Editing by |
Julian Doyle |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
United States |
|
Gerald B. Greenberg |
Studio |
HandMade Films |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Language |
English |
|
Walter Murch |
Distributed by |
Orion Pictures thruWarner |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Gross revenue |
$14,919,570 |
|
Lisa Fruchtman |
Bros. Pictures |
|
|
|
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| |
|
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|
Studio |
American Zoetrope |
Release date(s) |
17-Aug-79 |
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|
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| |
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|
Distributed by |
United Artists (1979 Theatrical Version) |
Running time |
94 minutes |
|
|
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| |
|
|
|
Paramount Pictures(Redux Version) |
Country |
United Kingdom |
|
|
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| |
|
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|
Lionsgate (Blu-ray) |
Language |
English |
|
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| |
|
|
|
Miramax Films (Redux International Version) |
Budget |
$4 million[1] |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Release date(s) |
15-Aug-79 |
Gross revenue |
$20,045,115[2 |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Running time |
153 minutes (Redux: 202 minutes) |
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| |
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Country |
United States |
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|
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| |
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Language |
English |
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| |
|
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|
Budget |
$31.5 million |
|
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| |
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|
Gross revenue |
$78,784,010 (1979) |
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| |
I Want to Live! |
|
Dr. Strangelove or: |
|
Crash |
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Not Without My Daughter |
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| |
Theatrical
release poster |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Theatrical release poster |
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| |
Directed
by |
Robert Wise |
|
Original film poster by Tomi Ungerer |
|
Directed by |
Paul Haggis |
|
Directed by |
Brian Gilbert |
|
|
| |
Produced
by |
Claude Miller |
|
Directed
by |
Stanley Kubrick |
|
Produced by |
Paul Haggis |
|
Produced by |
Harry J. Ufland |
|
|
| |
Marcel Berbert |
|
Produced
by |
Stanley Kubrick |
|
Don Cheadle |
|
Written
by |
Betty Mahmoody |
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| |
Written
by |
Screenplay: |
|
Written
by |
Stanley Kubrick |
|
Bob Yari |
|
William Hoffer |
|
|
| |
Nelson Gidding |
|
Peter George |
|
Cathy Schulman |
|
David W. Rintels |
|
|
| |
Don Mankiewicz |
|
Terry Southern |
|
Screenplay
by |
Paul Haggis |
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Starring |
Sally Field |
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| |
Articles: |
|
Uncredited: |
|
Bobby Moresco |
|
Alfred Molina |
|
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| |
Ed Montgomery |
|
Peter Sellers |
|
Story by |
Paul Haggis |
|
Sheila Rosenthal |
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| |
Letters: |
|
James B. Harris |
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Starring |
Sandra Bullock |
|
Roshan Seth |
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| |
Barbara Graham |
|
Based
on |
Red Alert by |
|
Don Cheadle |
|
Sarah Badel |
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| |
Starring |
Susan Hayward |
|
Peter George |
|
Matt Dillon |
|
Mony Rey |
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|
| |
Simon Oakland |
|
Starring |
Peter Sellers |
|
Jennifer Esposito |
|
Georges Corraface |
|
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| |
Virginia Vincent |
|
George C. Scott |
|
William Fichtner |
|
Music by |
Jerry Goldsmith |
|
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| |
Theodore Bikel |
|
Sterling Hayden |
|
Brendan Fraser |
|
Cinematography |
Peter Hannan |
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| |
Music by |
Johnny Mandel |
|
Keenan Wynn |
|
Terrence Howard |
|
Editing by |
Terry Rawlings |
|
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| |
Cinematography |
Lionel Lindon |
|
Slim Pickens |
|
Chris
"Ludacris" Bridges |
|
Ofer Bedarshi
(video) |
|
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| |
Editing
by |
William Hornbeck |
|
Music
by |
Laurie Johnson |
|
Thandie Newton |
|
Distributed
by |
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
|
|
| |
Distributed by |
United Artists |
|
Cinematography |
Gilbert Taylor |
|
Ryan Phillippe |
|
Release date(s) |
January
11, 1991 (USA) |
|
|
| |
Release date(s) |
18-Nov-58 |
|
Editing by |
Anthony Harvey |
|
Larenz Tate |
|
August
2, 1991(Australia) |
|
|
| |
Running
time |
120 minutes |
|
Studio |
Hawk Films |
|
Michael Peña |
|
Running
time |
116 min. |
|
|
| |
Country |
United States |
|
Distributed
by |
Columbia Pictures |
|
Shaun Toub |
|
Country |
United States |
|
|
| |
Language |
English |
|
Release date(s) |
29-Jan-64 |
|
Music
by |
Mark Isham |
|
Language |
English |
|
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| |
|
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|
Running time |
94 minutes |
|
Cinematography |
J. Michael Muro |
|
Persian |
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| |
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Language |
English |
|
Editing by |
Hughes Winborne |
|
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| |
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|
Budget |
US$1.8 million |
|
Studio |
Lions Gate
Films, Yari Film Group |
|
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| |
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Gross revenue |
$9,164,370 (US) |
|
DEJ Productions |
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| |
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Distributed
by |
Lions Gate
Films (USA) |
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| |
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|
Pathé (UK) |
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Release date(s) |
September 10, 2004(TIFF) |
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| |
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|
06-May-05 |
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| |
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Running time |
112 minutes |
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| |
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Country |
United States |
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| |
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Germany |
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| |
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Language |
English |
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| |
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Spanish |
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Persian |
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Mandarin Chinese |
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Korean |
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| |
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Budget |
$6.5 million |
|
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| |
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Gross revenue |
$98,410,061 |
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| |
|
Asfour
Stah (1990) More at IMDbPro » |
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All the President's Men |
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October: |
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A coming-of-age
comedy/drama set in Tunisia. Twelve-year-old Noura is an impressionable boy
who must learn to reconcile two conflicting worlds - the loving world of
Moslem women and the vastly different, harsher world of men - while also
dealing with his own budding sexuality. Written by Dawn M. Barclift |
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Theatrical
release poster |
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movie
poster |
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| |
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Directed
by |
Alan J. Pakula |
|
Film poster |
|
Directed
by |
Warren Beatty |
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| |
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Produced
by |
Walter Coblenz |
|
Directed
by |
Grigori Aleksandrov |
|
Produced
by |
Warren Beatty |
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| |
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Written
by |
William Goldman |
|
Sergei Eisenstein |
|
Screenplay
by |
Warren Beatty |
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| |
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|
Robert
Redford(uncredited) |
|
Written
by |
Grigori Aleksandrov |
|
Trevor Griffiths |
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| |
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Alan J. Pakula
(uncredited) |
|
Sergei Eisenstein |
|
Uncredited: |
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| |
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Based
on |
All the President's
Men byBob Woodward andCarl Bernstein |
|
John Silas
Reed (book) |
|
Elaine May |
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| |
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Starring |
Robert Redford |
|
Starring |
Vladimir Popov |
|
Jeremy Pikser |
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| |
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|
Dustin Hoffman |
|
Vasili Nikandrov |
|
Peter S. Feibleman |
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| |
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|
Jason Robards |
|
Layaschenko |
|
Starring |
Warren Beatty |
|
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| |
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|
Jack Warden |
|
Music by |
Dimitri Shostakovich |
|
Diane Keaton |
|
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| |
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|
Hal Holbrook |
|
Cinematography |
Vladimir Nilsen |
|
Jack Nicholson |
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| |
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|
Jane Alexander |
|
Vladimir Popov |
|
Paul Sorvino |
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| |
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|
Martin Balsam |
|
Eduard Tisse |
|
Maureen Stapleton |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Music
by |
David Shire |
|
Release date(s) |
|
|
Gene Hackman |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Cinematography |
Gordon Willis |
|
|
|
Edward Herrmann |
|
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| |
|
|
|
Editing by |
Robert L. Wolfe |
|
Running time |
104min (Sweden) |
|
Music
by |
Stephen Sondheim |
|
|
| |
|
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|
Distributed by |
Warner Bros. |
|
95 min (USA) |
|
Dave Grusin |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Release date(s) |
04-Apr-76 |
|
Country |
Soviet Union |
|
Cinematography |
Vittorio Storaro |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Running time |
138 minutes |
|
Language |
Silent film |
|
Editing
by |
Dede Allen |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Country |
United States |
|
Russian (original intertitles) |
|
Craig McKay |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Language |
English |
|
|
|
|
Studio |
Barclays Mercantile
Industrial Finance |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Budget |
$8.5 million |
|
|
|
|
JRS Productions |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
Gross revenue |
$70.6 million
(United States) |
|
|
|
|
Distributed
by |
Paramount Pictures |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Release date(s) |
04-Dec-81 |
|
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| |
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|
|
|
Running time |
194 minutes |
|
|
| |
|
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|
|
|
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|
Country |
United States |
|
|
| |
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|
|
Language |
English |
|
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| |
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Russian |
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| |
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German |
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| |
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|
Budget |
$32 million |
|
|
| |
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gross revenue |
$40,382,659 |
|
|
| |
The Stoning of Soraya M. |
|
|
|
Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media |
|
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| |
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|
Theatrical release poster |
|
Film poster |
|
Film poster |
|
|
| |
American theatrical release poster |
|
Directed
by |
Mark Achbar |
|
Directed
by |
Mark Achbar |
|
Directed by |
Michael Moore |
|
|
| |
Directed by |
Cyrus Nowrasteh |
|
Jennifer Abbott |
|
Peter Wintonick |
|
Produced
by |
Michael Moore |
|
|
| |
Produced by |
Stephen McEveety |
|
Produced
by |
Mark Achbar |
|
Starring |
Mark Achbar |
|
Wendey
Stanzler(associate)[1] |
|
|
| |
John Shepherd |
|
Bart Simpson |
|
Noam Chomsky |
|
Written
by |
Michael Moore |
|
|
| |
Todd Burns |
|
Written
by |
Joel Bakan |
|
Release date(s) |
1992 |
|
Starring |
Michael Moore |
|
|
| |
Written
by |
Novel |
|
Harold Crooks |
|
Running
time |
167 minutes |
|
Roger B. Smith |
|
|
| |
Freidoune Sahebjam |
|
Mark Achbar |
|
Country |
Australia |
|
Janet Rauch |
|
|
| |
Screenplay |
|
Narrated
by |
Mikela J. Mikael |
|
Finland |
|
Rhonda Britton |
|
|
| |
Betsy Giffen Nowrasteh |
|
Music by |
Leonard J. Paul |
|
Norway |
|
Fred Ross |
|
|
| |
Cyrus Nowrasteh |
|
Cinematography |
Mark Achbar |
|
Canada |
|
Ronald Reagan |
|
|
| |
Starring |
Mozhan Marnò |
|
Rolf Cutts |
|
Language |
English |
|
Bob Eubanks |
|
|
| |
Shohreh Aghdashloo |
|
Jeff Koffman |
|
|
|
|
Cinematography |
Chris Beaver |
|
|
| |
James Caviezel |
|
Kirk Tougas |
|
|
|
|
John Prusak |
|
|
| |
Parviz Sayyad |
|
Editing by |
Jennifer Abbott |
|
|
|
|
Kevin Rafferty |
|
|
| |
Vida Ghahremani |
|
Studio |
Big Picture Media
Corporation |
|
|
|
|
Bruce Schermer |
|
|
| |
Music by |
John Debney |
|
Distributed by |
Zeitgeist Films |
|
|
|
|
Editing
by |
Jennifer Beman |
|
|
| |
Cinematography |
Joel Ransom |
|
Release date(s) |
Toronto
International Film Festival: |
|
|
|
|
Wendey Stanzler |
|
|
| |
Editing by |
David Handman |
|
10-Sep-03 |
|
|
|
|
Distributed by |
Warner Bros. |
|
|
| |
Geoffrey Rowland |
|
Canada |
|
|
|
|
Release date(s) |
December 20, 1989
(US) |
|
|
| |
Distributed
by |
Mpower Pictures |
|
January 16,
2004(limited) |
|
|
|
|
Running
time |
91 minutes |
|
|
| |
Release date(s) |
September 7, 2008(Toronto Film
Festival) |
|
United States: |
|
|
|
|
Language |
English |
|
|
| |
June 26, 2009 (U.S.) |
|
04-Jun-04 |
|
|
|
|
Budget |
$160,000[2] |
|
|
| |
October 22, 2010 (U.K.) |
|
Australia:: |
|
|
|
|
Gross revenue |
$6,706,368[2 |
|
|
| |
Running
time |
116 min. |
|
02-Sep-04 |
|
|
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|
| |
Country |
United States |
|
United Kingdom:: |
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
| |
Language |
English |
|
29-Oct-04 |
|
|
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|
|
|
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|
| |
Persian |
|
Running time |
145 minutes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Gross revenue |
$636,246 (USA)[1 |
|
Country |
Canada |
|
|
|
|
|
|
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| |
|
|
|
Language |
English |
|
|
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|
| |
Canadian Bacon |
|
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|
Kafka |
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| |
Theatrical
release poster |
|
Theatrical release poster |
|
Theatrical release poster |
|
Theatrical
release poster |
|
|
| |
Directed
by |
Michael Moore[1] |
|
Directed by |
Michael Moore |
|
Directed
by |
Larry Charles |
|
Directed
by |
Steven Soderbergh |
|
|
| |
Produced
by |
Michael Moore |
|
Produced by |
Anne Moore |
|
Produced
by |
Bill Maher |
|
Produced
by |
Harry Benn |
|
|
| |
Written
by |
Michael Moore |
|
Michael Moore |
|
Jonah Smith |
|
Stuart Cornfeld |
|
|
| |
Starring |
Alan Alda |
|
Written
by |
Michael Moore |
|
Palmer West |
|
Written
by |
Lem Dobbs |
|
|
| |
John Candy |
|
Music by |
Jeff Gibbs |
|
Written
by |
Bill Maher |
|
Starring |
Jeremy Irons |
|
|
| |
Bill Nunn |
|
Cinematography |
Daniel Marracino |
|
Starring |
Bill Maher |
|
Theresa Russell |
|
|
| |
Kevin J. O'Connor |
|
Jayme Roy |
|
Cinematography |
Anthony Hardwick |
|
Ian Holm |
|
|
| |
Rhea Perlman |
|
Editing
by |
Jessica Brunetto |
|
Editing
by |
Jeff Groth |
|
Joel Grey |
|
|
| |
Kevin Pollak |
|
Alex Meiller |
|
Christian Kinnard |
|
Music
by |
Cliff Martinez |
|
|
| |
G.D. Spradlin |
|
Tanya Meiller |
|
Jeffrey M. Werner |
|
Cinematography |
Walt Lloyd |
|
|
| |
Rip Torn |
|
Conor O'Neill |
|
Studio |
Thousand Words |
|
Editing by |
Steven Soderbergh |
|
|
| |
Music
by |
Elmer Bernstein |
|
Pablo Proenza |
|
Distributed by |
Lions Gate
Entertainment |
|
Distributed
by |
Miramax Films |
|
|
| |
Peter Bernstein |
|
T. Woody Richman |
|
Release date(s) |
Toronto
International Film Festival: |
|
Release date(s) |
15-Nov-91 |
|
|
| |
Cinematography |
Haskell Wexler |
|
John Walter |
|
06-Sep-08 |
|
Running
time |
98 min |
|
|
| |
Editing
by |
Michael Berenbaum |
|
Studio |
The Weinstein Company |
|
United States: |
|
Country |
France, United
States |
|
|
| |
Wendey Stanzler |
|
Dog Eat Dog Films |
|
October 1,
2008 (limited) |
|
Language |
English |
|
|
| |
Studio |
Dog Eats Dog Films |
|
Distributed by |
Overture Films (US) |
|
Canada: |
|
Budget |
$11,000,000 |
|
|
| |
Propaganda Films |
|
Paramount Vantage(international) |
|
03-Oct-08 |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
PolyGram Filmed
Entertainment |
|
Release date(s) |
September 6, 2009(VIFF) |
|
United Kingdom: |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Distributed
by |
Gramercy Pictures |
|
October 2, 2009(United States) |
|
03-Apr-09 |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Release date(s) |
22-Sep-95 |
|
Running time |
127 minutes |
|
New Zealand: |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Running time |
91 minutes |
|
Country |
United States |
|
03-May-09 |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Country |
United States |
|
Language |
English |
|
Running
time |
101 minutes |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Language |
English |
|
Budget |
$20,000,000 |
|
Country |
United States |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Budget |
$11 million |
|
Gross revenue |
$17,436,509[1 |
|
Language |
English |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Gross revenue |
$163,971 |
|
|
|
|
Budget |
$2,500,000[1] |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gross revenue |
$13,136,074[1 |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
JFK |
|
|
|
South of the Border |
|
Platoon |
|
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| |
Theatrical release poster |
|
Theatrical release poster |
|
South
of the Border is a 2009 documentary film directed
by Oliver Stone. The documentary premiered at the 2009 Venice Film
Festival. Writer for the projectTariq Ali calls the documentary "a
political road movie".[1] Stone stated that he hopes the film will
help people better understand a leader who is wrongly ridiculed "as a
strongman, as a buffoon, as a clown."[2]The film has Stone and his crew
travel from the Caribbean down the spine of the Andes in an attempt to explain the "phenomenon" of
Venezuelan presidentHugo Chávez, and account for the continent's "pink tide" leftward tilt. A key feature
is also Venezuela's recent Bolivarian
revolution and Latin America's political progress
in the 21st century. In addition to Chávez, Stone sought to flesh out several
other Latin American presidents whose policies and personalities generally
get limited, or according to Stone, biased media attention in the United States and Europe, notably: Evo Morales of Bolivia; Cristina Kirchner and former
presidentNéstor Kirchner of Argentina; Rafael Correa of Ecuador; Raúl Castro of Cuba; Fernando Lugo of Paraguay; and Lula da Silva of Brazil.[ |
|
Theatrical release poster by Bill Gold |
|
|
| |
Directed
by |
Oliver Stone |
|
Directed by |
Oliver Stone |
|
|
|
Directed by |
Oliver Stone |
|
|
| |
Produced
by |
A. Kitman Ho |
|
Produced
by |
Oliver Stone |
|
Directed by |
Oliver Stone |
|
Produced by |
Arnold Kopelson |
|
|
| |
Arnon Milchan |
|
Arnon Milchan |
|
Produced
by |
Fernando Sulichin |
|
Written by |
Oliver Stone |
|
|
| |
Oliver Stone |
|
Mario Kassar |
|
Jose Ibanez |
|
Starring |
Charlie Sheen |
|
|
| |
Screenplay
by |
Oliver Stone |
|
Screenplay
by |
Oliver Stone |
|
Rob Wilson |
|
Tom Berenger |
|
|
| |
Zachary Sklar |
|
Story
by |
Le Ly Hayslip |
|
Written
by |
Tariq Ali |
|
Willem Dafoe |
|
|
| |
Based
on |
On the Trail of the
Assassins by |
|
Jay Wurts |
|
Mark Weisbrot |
|
Forest Whitaker |
|
|
| |
Jim Garrison |
|
Starring |
Tommy Lee Jones |
|
Cinematography |
Carlos Marcovich |
|
Keith David |
|
|
| |
Crossfire: The Plot
That Killed Kennedy by |
|
Joan Chen |
|
Albert Maysles |
|
Kevin Dillon |
|
|
| |
Jim Marrs |
|
Haing S. Ngor |
|
Editing by |
Alexis Chavez |
|
Music by |
Georges Delerue |
|
|
| |
Narrated by |
Martin Sheen |
|
Music by |
Kitaro |
|
Distributed by |
Cinema Libre |
|
Cinematography |
Robert Richardson |
|
|
| |
Starring |
Kevin Costner |
|
Cinematography |
Robert Richardson |
|
Release date(s) |
Sep-09 |
|
Editing by |
Claire Simpson |
|
|
| |
Gary Oldman |
|
Editing
by |
David Brenner |
|
Running time |
102 minutes |
|
Studio |
Hemdale Film Corporation |
|
|
| |
Kevin Bacon |
|
Sally Menke |
|
Country |
United States |
|
Distributed by |
Metro Goldwyn Mayer |
|
|
| |
Tommy Lee Jones |
|
Studio |
Le Studio Canal + |
|
Language |
English |
|
Orion Pictures |
|
|
| |
Laurie Metcalf |
|
Regency Enterprises |
|
|
|
|
Release date(s) |
19-Dec-86 |
|
|
| |
Michael Rooker |
|
New Regency Productions |
|
|
|
|
Running time |
120 minutes |
|
|
| |
Joe Pesci |
|
Todd-AO |
|
|
|
|
Country |
United States |
|
|
| |
Jay O. Sanders |
|
Distributed by |
Warner Bros. |
|
|
|
|
Language |
English |
|
|
| |
Donald Sutherland |
|
Release date(s) |
25-Dec-93 |
|
|
|
|
Budget |
$6.5 million |
|
|
| |
John Candy |
|
Running time |
140 minutes |
|
|
|
|
Gross revenue |
$138,530,565 |
|
|
| |
Sissy Spacek |
|
Country |
France |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Music by |
John Williams |
|
United States |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Cinematography |
Robert Richardson |
|
Language |
English |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Editing
by |
Joe Hutshing |
|
Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Pietro Scalia |
|
Budget |
$33 million |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Studio |
Le Studio Canal+ |
|
Gross revenue |
$5,864,949 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Regency Enterprises |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Alcor Films |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Ixtlan Corporation |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Distributed by |
Warner Bros. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Release date(s) |
20-Dec-91 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Running time |
189 minutes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Country |
United States |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Language |
English |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Budget |
$40 million |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Gross revenue |
$205.4 million |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Breaking the Silence: |
|
The New Rulers of the World |
|
Paying the Price: |
|
Death of a Nation: |
|
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|
| |
Truth
and Lies in the War on Terror |
|
|
|
Killing the Children of
Iraq |
|
The Timor Conspiracy |
|
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| |
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|
Screenshot of title card |
|
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|
| |
Screenshot of title card |
|
Directed by |
Alan Lowery |
|
Screenshot of title card |
|
Film title card |
|
|
| |
Directed by |
John Pilger |
|
Produced by |
John Pilger |
|
Directed by |
Alan Lowery |
|
Directed by |
David Munro |
|
|
| |
Steve Connelly |
|
Alan Lowery |
|
Produced by |
John Pilger |
|
Produced by |
David Munro |
|
|
| |
Produced by |
Christopher Martin |
|
Polly Bide |
|
Alan Lowery |
|
Written
by |
John Pilger |
|
|
| |
Richard Clemmow |
|
Written
by |
John Pilger |
|
Written
by |
John Pilger |
|
Starring |
John Pilger |
|
|
| |
Written
by |
John Pilger |
|
Starring |
John Pilger |
|
Starring |
John Pilger |
|
Music by |
Agio Periera |
|
|
| |
Starring |
John Pilger |
|
Stanley Fischer |
|
Dennis Halliday |
|
Cinematography |
Bob Bolt |
|
|
| |
Music by |
Nick Russell-Pavier |
|
Nicholas Stern |
|
Robert Gates |
|
Preston Clothier |
|
|
| |
Cinematography |
Preston Clothier |
|
Susan George |
|
Hans von Sponeck |
|
Simon Fanthorpe |
|
|
| |
Editing by |
Andrew Denny |
|
George Monbiot |
|
Peter van Walsum |
|
David Munro |
|
|
| |
Studio |
Carlton Television |
|
Vandana Shiva |
|
Karol Sikora |
|
Max Stahl |
|
|
| |
Running time |
52 min |
|
Dita Sari |
|
James Rubin |
|
Editing by |
Joe Frost |
|
|
| |
Country |
United Kingdom |
|
Music
by |
Bob Dylan |
|
Scott Ritter |
|
Studio |
Carlton Television |
|
|
| |
Language |
English |
|
Maddy Prior |
|
Said Aburish |
|
Running time |
96 minutes |
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Nick Russell-Pavier |
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Doug Rokke |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Cinematography |
Preston Clothier |
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Music by |
Nick Russell-Pavier |
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Language |
English |
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Jonathan Harrison |
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Cinematography |
Preston Clothier |
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Editing by |
Joe Frost |
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Editing by |
Joe Frost |
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Studio |
Carlton Television |
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Studio |
Carlton Television |
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Running time |
65 min |
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Running time |
74 min |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Language |
English |
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Language |
English |
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1900 |
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Ladybird, Ladybird |
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The China Syndrome |
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Norma Rae |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by |
Ken Loach |
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The China Syndrome promotional poster |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed
by |
Bernardo Bertolucci |
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Produced by |
Sally Hibbin |
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Directed by |
James Bridges |
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Directed by |
Martin Ritt |
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Produced by |
Alberto Grimaldi |
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Written by |
Rona Munro |
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Produced by |
Michael Douglas |
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Produced by |
Tamara Asseyev |
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Written
by |
Franco Arcalli |
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Starring |
Crissy Rock |
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Written by |
Mike Gray |
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Alex Rose |
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| |
Bernardo Bertolucci |
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Vladimir Vega |
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T.S. Cook |
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Written by |
Harriet Frank, Jr. |
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| |
Giuseppe Bertolucci |
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Music by |
George Fenton |
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James Bridges |
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Irving Ravetch |
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Starring |
Robert De Niro |
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Cinematography |
Barry Ackroyd |
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Starring |
Jane Fonda |
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Starring |
Sally Field |
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| |
Gérard Depardieu |
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Editing by |
Jonathan Morris |
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Jack Lemmon |
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Beau Bridges |
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| |
Dominique Sanda |
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Distributed by |
Samuel Goldwyn Company |
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Michael Douglas |
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Ron Leibman |
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Donald Sutherland |
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Release date(s) |
16-Jun-94 |
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Distributed by |
Columbia Pictures |
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Music by |
David Shire |
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| |
Alida Valli |
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Running time |
101 mins |
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Release date(s) |
16-Mar-79 |
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Cinematography |
John J. Alonzo |
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| |
Burt Lancaster |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Running time |
122 minutes |
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Editing by |
Sidney Levin |
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Music
by |
Ennio Morricone |
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Language |
English |
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Country |
United States |
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Distributed by |
20th Century Fox |
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Cinematography |
Vittorio Storaro |
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Language |
English |
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Release date(s) |
March 2, 1979[1] |
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Editing
by |
Franco Arcalli |
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Gross revenue |
US$ 51.7 million[1 |
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Running time |
110 minutes |
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Studio |
Produzioni Europee
Associati |
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Country |
United States |
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Distributed
by |
20th Century
Fox (UK) |
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Language |
English |
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Paramount
Pictures (USA) |
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Budget |
$7 million |
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United
Artists(Australia/France/Germany) |
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Gross revenue |
$22,228,000 |
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Release date(s) |
15-Aug-76 |
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Running
time |
250
minutes (Argentina) |
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248
minutes (Australia) |
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302
minutes (Denmark) |
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311
minutes (Italy) |
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245 minutes (US
uncut) |
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255
minutes (VHS rated) |
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311
minutes (US NC-17) |
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315
minutes (Director's cut) |
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Country |
Italy |
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France |
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West Germany |
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Language |
Italian |
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Budget |
$9 million[1] |
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Gross
revenue |
SEK6,064,026 |
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The Organizer |
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Let Him Have It |
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The Year of Living Dangerously |
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French poster |
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Theatrical Release Poster |
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Theatrical poster |
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Directed by |
Mario Monicelli |
|
that is the english title to a UK film, a naturalist style
production in which a young man, with a mental age of 12, is sentenced to
hang for "inciting" a fellow youth to murder. A little over-long
perhaps, but the "Bentley case" certainly aroused some heated
debate at the time, so it seems worth-while in an era in which young people
around the world are hung as part of some bizarre social ritual designed
perhaps to prove "justice always works" |
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Follows a journalist in the midst of Suharto's bloody coup to
overthrow the democratically elected, leftist Indonesian government of
Sukarno. |
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Produced by |
Franco Cristaldi |
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Directed by |
Peter Medak |
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Directed by |
Peter Weir |
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Written by |
Mario Monicelli |
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Produced by |
Luc Roeg |
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The Saint of Fort Washington - About the drugs trade and
criminality thriving in the homeless shelters of your country, as the pollies
pretend that the have "solved" homelessness. Very sad ending
involving the death of a young schitzoprenic {as many homeless are}, and the
prolonged lonliness of a black, Vietnam war vet who was his only friend. Very
bleak and disillusioning, a real tear-jerker. |
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Produced by |
Jim McElroy |
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| |
Age & Scarpelli |
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Robert Warr |
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Screenplay by |
Peter Weir |
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Starring |
Marcello Mastroianni |
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Written by |
Neal Purvis |
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David Williamson |
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| |
Renato Salvatori |
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Robert Wade |
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Based on |
The Year of Living Dangerously by |
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| |
Annie Girardot |
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Starring |
Christopher Eccleston |
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Christopher Koch |
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| |
Folco Lulli |
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Paul Reynolds |
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Starring |
Mel Gibson |
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| |
Gabriella Giorgelli |
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Tom Courtenay |
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Sigourney Weaver |
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| |
Raffaella Carrà |
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Eileen Atkins |
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Michael Murphy |
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Music by |
Carlo Rustichelli |
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Music by |
Michael Kamen |
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Linda Hunt |
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Cinematography |
Giuseppe Rotunno |
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Cinematography |
Oliver Stapleton |
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Music by |
Maurice Jarre |
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Editing by |
Ruggero Mastroianni |
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Editing by |
Ray Lovejoy |
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Cinematography |
Russell Boyd |
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Release date(s) |
25-Oct-63 |
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Distributed by |
British Screen
Productions |
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Editing by |
William M. Anderson |
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Running time |
128 minutes |
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Release date(s) |
UK 1991 |
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Distributed by |
MGM |
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Country |
Italy |
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US December 6 1991 |
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Release date(s) |
17-Dec-82 |
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Language |
Italian |
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Running time |
115 min |
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Running time |
117 minutes |
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Language |
English |
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Country |
Australia |
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Language |
English |
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Budget |
$6 million |
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Gross revenue |
$10,278,575 (USA) |
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| |
Under Fire |
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Absolute Beginners |
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Riff-Raff |
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Germinal |
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| is the story of a group of
coal miners in late 19th century France, and to me it had some similarities
to "The Grapes of Wrath", even though the setting was different. |
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original film poster |
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British socialist director Ken Loach takes you on a tour of a
building site during the Thatcher era. The workers are exploited and
underpaid; unions not permitted; conditions in which the men work are
extremely hazardous. After one of the "mates" is killed because of
unsafe equipment the workers strike back. The legacy of Thatcherism and the inept Labour Party seen
through the eyes of the multi- ethnic crew at a construction site." |
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Directed by |
Claude Berri |
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with Nick Nolte, Joanna Cassady and Gene Hackman, on the U.S.
presence in the war in Nicaragua. |
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Directed by |
Ken Loach |
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Produced by |
Claude Berri, Pierre Grunstein, Bodo Scriba |
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| |
Directed by |
Roger Spottiswoode |
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Absolute Beginners -- A one-hour show about the
Bolshevik-Menshevik split, starring Patrick Stewart as Lenin!, which is one
of 13 episodes of the British Series "Fall of Eagles" series. |
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Starring |
Robert Carlyle, |
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Written by |
Claude Berri, Arlette Langmann, Émile Zola(novel) |
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| |
Produced by |
Jonathan Taplin |
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|
Emer McCourt, |
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Starring |
Gérard Depardieu, Miou-Miou and Renaud. |
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| |
Written by |
·
Clayton Frohman |
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|
Ricky Tomlinson |
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Music by |
Jean-Louis Roques |
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| |
·
Ron Shelton |
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|
Jimmy Coleman |
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Cinematography |
Yves Angelo |
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Starring |
·
Nick Nolte |
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Cinematography |
Barry Ackroyd |
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Editing by |
Hervé de Luze |
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| |
·
Gene Hackman |
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|
Release date(s) |
1991 |
|
Release date(s) |
1993 |
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| |
·
Joanna Cassidy |
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Running time |
95 min. |
|
Running time |
160 min. |
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·
Jean-Louis Trintignant |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Country |
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·
Richard Masur |
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Language |
English |
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Language |
French |
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| |
·
Ed Harris |
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Gross revenue |
52 375 096 € |
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| |
Music by |
Jerry Goldsmith |
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Cinematography |
John Alcott |
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Editing by |
·
Mark Conte |
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·
John Bloom (sup) |
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Distributed by |
Orion Pictures |
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Release date(s) |
21-Oct-83 |
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Running time |
128 minutes |
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Country |
United States |
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Language |
English |
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The Garment Jungle |
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F.I.S.T |
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Business as Usual |
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Lenin: The Train (1988) |
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Robert Loggia as an ILGWU organizer trying to
get a contract for workers at a clothing factory owned by Lee J. Cobb, who
has hired a vicious union-busting outfit. This is one of a relatively small
number of American films that is explicitly pro-union |
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Directed by |
Vincent Sherman |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by |
Lezli-An Barrett |
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| |
Robert Aldrich |
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Produced by |
Sara Geater |
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Director: |
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Produced by |
Harry Kleiner |
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Sly Stallone plays a young truck driver who organizes a truckers
union, gets heavily indebted to Mafia guns in his rise to power, and then
(dumb, dumb) tries to distance himself from the Mob. Loosely based on Jimmy
Hoffa and the Teamsters, is very sympathetic to the difficulties of workers
against armed company goons |
|
Colin McKeown |
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Damiano Damiani |
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Written by |
Lester Velie |
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Directed by |
Norman Jewison |
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Written by |
Lezli-An Barrett |
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Writers: |
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Harry Kleiner |
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Produced by |
Gene Corman |
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Starring |
Glenda Jackson |
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Damiano Damiani, Fulvio Gicca Palli, and 1 more credit » |
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Starring |
Lee J. Cobb |
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Screenplay by |
Joe Eszterhas |
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John Thaw |
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Stars: |
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| |
Kerwin Matthews |
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Sylvester Stallone |
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Cathy Tyson |
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Ben Kingsley, Leslie Caron and Dominique Sanda |
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| |
Gia Scala |
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Story by |
Joe Eszterhas |
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Music by |
The Style Council |
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Music by |
Leith Stevens |
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Starring |
Sylvester Stallone |
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Cinematography |
Ernest Vincze |
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| |
Cinematography |
Joseph F. Biroc |
|
Rod Steiger |
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Editing by |
Henry Richardson |
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Editing by |
William Lyon |
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Peter Boyle |
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Distributed by |
Cannon Film Distributors(USA) |
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Distributed by |
Columbia Pictures |
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Melinda Dillon |
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Release date(s) |
1987 |
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Release date(s) |
25-Apr-57 |
|
David Huffman |
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Running time |
89 mins. |
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Running time |
88 minutes |
|
Kevin Conway |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Country |
United States |
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Tony Lo
Bianco and |
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United States |
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Language |
English |
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Anthony Kiedis |
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Language |
English |
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Music by |
Bill Conti |
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A British drama about a woman
fired for protesting sexual harassment, who inspires a nation-wide strike
that successfully gets her reappointed. Along the way it portrays the
failures of the labor movement as the result of collaboration, and is
sympathetic to the Labour Party's Militant Tendency. |
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Cinematography |
László Kovács |
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Editing by |
Graeme Clifford |
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Distributed by |
United Artists |
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Release date(s) |
1978 |
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Running time |
145 minutes |
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| |
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Language |
English |
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| |
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Budget |
$11,000,000 |
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Gross revenue |
$20,388,920 |
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| |
Lowest of the low |
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Joe Hill |
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The Assassination of Trotsky |
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Günter Wallraff in 2010 |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Born |
October 1,
1942 (age 68) |
|
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOQYz4Gswts |
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Directed by |
Bo Widerberg |
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| |
Burscheid |
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Produced by |
Waldemar Bergendahl |
|
The Assassination of Trotsky is a
1972 British film directed by Joseph Losey with a
screenplay by Nicholas Mosley. It starred Richard
Burton as Leon Trotsky, as well as Romy
Schneider and Alain Delon. |
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| |
Occupation |
Writer, undercover journalist
Wallraff's most celebrated work is Ganz unten ('Lowest of the Low', 1985),
which succeeded in placing the suffering of Germanys immigrant workers on the
mainstream political agenda. For his undercover investigation, he disguised
himself as a Turkish worker and penetrated Germany's illegal labour market.
He recorded his experiences of working at the 'bottom of the heap': in a
Thyssen steel factory, a McDonald's and as a human guinea pig in the
pharmaceutical industry. His
investigative methods have led to the creation of the Swedish verb
'wallraffa' meaning "to expose misconduct from the inside by assuming a
role" which has been officially included in word list of the Swedish
Academy |
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Bo Widerberg |
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Written by |
Bo Widerberg |
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Starring |
Thommy Berggren |
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Cinematography |
Jörgen Persson |
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Editing by |
Bo Widerberg |
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Release date(s) |
Sweden: |
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25-Aug-71 |
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United States: |
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24-Oct-71 |
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Running time |
117 minutes |
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Country |
Sweden |
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United States |
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Language |
English |
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Swedish |
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Persepolis |
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Shooting dogs |
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Blood Diamond |
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The Killing Fields |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Promotional movie poster |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by |
Marjane Satrapi |
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Directed by |
Michael Caton-Jones |
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Directed by |
Edward Zwick |
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Directed by |
Roland Joffé |
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Vincent Paronnaud |
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Starring |
John Hurt |
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Produced by |
Marshall Herskovitz |
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Produced by |
David Puttnam |
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Produced by |
Xavier Rigault |
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Hugh Dancy |
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Graham King |
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Iain Smith |
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Marc-Antoine Robert |
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Claire-Hope Ashitey |
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Paula Weinstein |
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Written by |
Bruce Robinson |
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Kathleen Kennedy |
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Release date(s) |
2005 |
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Edward Zwick |
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Starring |
Sam Waterston |
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Screenplay by |
Marjane Satrapi |
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Running time |
115 min. |
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Written by |
Charles Leavitt |
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John Malkovich |
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Vincent Paronnaud |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Starring |
Leonardo DiCaprio |
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Haing S. Ngor |
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Based on |
Persepolis by |
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Germany |
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Djimon Hounsou |
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Julian Sands |
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Marjane Satrapi |
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Language |
English, French |
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Jennifer Connelly |
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Music by |
Mike Oldfield |
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Starring |
Chiara Mastroianni |
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Michael Sheen |
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Cinematography |
Chris Menges |
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Catherine Deneuve |
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Arnold Vosloo |
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Editing by |
Jim Clark |
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Danielle Darrieux |
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Music by |
James Newton Howard |
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Distributed by |
Warner Bros. |
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Simon Abkarian |
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Cinematography |
Eduardo Serra |
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Release date(s) |
02-Nov-84 |
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Music by |
Olivier Bernet |
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Editing by |
Steven Rosenblum |
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Running time |
141 minutes |
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Editing by |
Stéphane Roche |
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Studio |
The Bedford Falls, |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Studio |
The Kennedy/Marshall Company |
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Virtual Studios |
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Language |
English |
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Distributed by |
Sony Pictures Classics |
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Distributed by |
Warner Bros.
Pictures |
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French |
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Release date(s) |
23-May-07 |
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Release date(s) |
08-Dec-06 |
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Khmer |
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Running time |
95 minutes |
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Running time |
143 minutes |
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Budget |
$14.4 million[1] |
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Country |
France |
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Country |
United States |
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Gross revenue |
$34,700,291 |
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United States |
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Germany |
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Language |
French |
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Language |
English |
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English |
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Mende |
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Persian |
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Krio |
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German |
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Afrikaans |
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Budget |
$7.3 million |
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Budget |
$100 million |
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Gross revenue |
$22,752,488 |
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Gross revenue |
$171,407,179 |
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The Last King of Scotland |
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Milk |
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Revolution |
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| The Founding of a Republic |
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UK Theatrical release poster |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Original poster |
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Film poster |
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Directed by |
Kevin Macdonald |
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Directed by |
Gus Van Sant |
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Directed by |
Hugh Hudson |
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Traditional |
建國大業 |
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Produced by |
Charles Steel |
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Produced by |
Dan Jinks |
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Produced by |
Irwin Winkler |
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Simplified |
建国大业 |
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Lisa Bryer |
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Bruce Cohen |
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Written by |
Robert Dillon |
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Pinyin |
Jiàn Gúo Dà Yè |
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Andrea Calderwood |
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Written by |
Dustin Lance Black |
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Starring |
Al Pacino |
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Jyutping |
Gin3 Gwok3 Daai6 Jip6 |
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Screenplay by |
Peter Morgan |
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Starring |
Sean Penn |
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Donald Sutherland |
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Directed by |
Huang Jianxin |
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Jeremy Brock |
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Emile Hirsch |
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Nastassja Kinski |
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Han Sanping |
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Based on |
The Last King of Scotland by |
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Josh Brolin |
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Helen Porter |
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Produced by |
Huang Jianxin |
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Giles Foden |
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Diego Luna |
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Music by |
John Corigliano |
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Han Sanping |
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Starring |
Forest Whitaker |
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Alison Pill |
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Cinematography |
Bernard Lutic |
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Written by |
Chen Baoguang |
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Gillian Anderson |
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Victor Garber |
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Editing by |
Stuart Baird |
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Wang Xingdong |
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| |
James McAvoy |
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and James
Franco |
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Distributed by |
Warner Bros. Pictures |
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Starring |
Tang Guoqiang |
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Kerry Washington |
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Music by |
Danny Elfman |
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Release date(s) |
25-Dec-85 |
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Zhang Guoli |
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Simon McBurney |
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Cinematography |
Harris Savides |
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Running time |
126 minutes
(theatrical) |
|
Xu Qing |
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Music by |
Alex Heffes |
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Editing by |
Elliot Graham |
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115 minutes (DVD
version) |
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Liu Jin |
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Cinematography |
Anthony Dod Mantle |
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Studio |
Focus Features |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Chen Kun |
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Editing by |
Justine Wright |
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Distributed by |
Universal Pictures |
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Language |
English |
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Wang Wufu |
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Studio |
DNA Films |
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Release date(s) |
26-Nov-08 |
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Budget |
$28,000,000 |
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Music by |
Shu Nan |
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Film 4 |
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Running time |
128 minutes |
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Gross revenue |
$346,761 |
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Cinematography |
Zhao Xiaoshi |
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Distributed by |
Fox Searchlight Pictures |
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Country |
United States |
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Editing by |
Xu Hongyu |
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Release date(s) |
27 September
2006(United States) |
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Language |
English |
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Studio |
China Film Group |
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12 January
2007(United Kingdom) |
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Budget |
$20 million |
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Shanghai Film Studio |
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Running time |
123 minutes[1] |
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Gross revenue |
$54,501,383 |
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Media Asia Films |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
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Emperor Motion Pictures |
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Germany |
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Universe Entertainment |
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Language |
English |
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Polybona Films |
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Swahili |
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China Movie Channel |
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Budget |
US$6 million |
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Beijing Guoli
Changsheng Movies & TV Productions |
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Gross revenue |
US$48,362,207 |
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Beijing Hualu Baina
Film & TV Production |
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Jiangsu Broadcasting Corporation |
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DMG Entertainment |
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Beijing Xinbaoyuan
Movie & TV Investment |
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Distributed by |
China Film Group |
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Beijing Polybona Film
Distribution (China) |
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Universe Films
Distribution (Hong Kong) |
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Release date(s) |
16-Sep-09 |
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Running time |
135 minutes |
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Country |
China |
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Language |
Mandarin |
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Budget |
$8.8–$10 million |
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Gross revenue |
$62.5 million[1][2 |
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Union Maids |
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Salt of the Earth |
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White King, Red Rubber, Black Death |
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Directed by |
Jim
Klein |
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Miles
Mogulescu |
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Julia
Reichert |
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Stocholm in the 1920s. Young Roland lives
with his socialist father, Jewish mother and a boxing brother. His mother
sells condoms illegally, and from them, Roland makes slingshots which he
sells. His rebellious ways has gotten him the special attention of his school
teacher, who always makes sure that Roland is punished |
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Produced by |
Jim Klein |
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Miles Mogulescu |
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Julia Reichert |
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Cinematography |
Tony Heriza |
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Sherry Novick |
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Documentary about how
King Leopold II of Belgium acquired Congo as a colony and exploited it by
reign of terror. |
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Editing by |
Jim Klein |
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Director: |
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Julia Reichert |
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Peter Bate
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Release date(s) |
04-Feb-76 |
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Writer: |
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Running time |
50 minutes |
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Peter Bate
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Country |
United States |
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Stars: |
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Language |
English |
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Elie Lison, Roger May and Steve Driesen |
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Video cover |
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Directed by |
Herbert J. Biberman |
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Produced by |
Paul Jarrico |
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Sonja Dahl Biberman |
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Adolfo Barela |
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Written by |
Michael
Wilson |
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Michael Biberman |
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Starring |
Rosaura Revueltas |
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Will Geer |
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David Wolfe |
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Mervin Williams |
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David Sarvis |
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Ernesto Velázquez |
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Juan Chacón |
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Henrietta Williams |
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Music by |
Sol Kaplan |
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Cinematography |
Stanley Meredith |
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Leonard Stark |
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Editing by |
Joan Laird |
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Ed Spiegel |
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Distributed by |
Independent
Productions |
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Release date(s) |
March 14, 1954(New York City) |
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Running time |
94 minutes |
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Country |
United States |
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Language |
English |
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Spanish |
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Budget |
$250,000 |
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