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Who was born first, Adam Hamilton (Pastor) or Robert Daudelin?
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Robert Hamilton Robert Hamilton may refer to:
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"Robert Hamilton (merchant) Robert Hamilton (1787–1856) was a merchant and political figure in Upper Canada. He was born at Fort Niagara in 1787, the son of Robert Hamilton and brother of George Hamilton. He settled at Queenston where he was a merchant, farmer and shipbuilder. He was a lieutenant-colonel in the regional militia and became a justice of the peace in the Niagara District in 1823. He represented the 3rd riding of Lincoln in the 8th Parliament of Upper Canada. He died at Queenston in 1856.",
"Daniel Hamilton Daniel Hamilton may refer to:",
"David Hamilton (Canadian politician) David Hamilton (born April 9, 1949) served as mayor of the city of Thunder Bay, Ontario from 1992 to 1997, and later served as an administrator in three American county governments. Hamilton was born in Fort William, Ontario to James Murray Hamilton from Paris, Ontario and Martha Alice James from Kansas City, Missouri, who married in 1944. He attended the Fort William Collegiate Institute. Married Linda in 1970. 3 children - Jon (1970), Chris (1973) and Jennifer (1976).",
"Bruce Hamilton Bruce Hamilton may refer to:",
"Patrick Hamilton Patrick Hamilton may refer to:",
"Adam Brown (Canadian politician) Adam Brown (3 April 1826 – 16 January 1926) was a Canadian merchant and politician. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, he was a member of the House of Commons of Canada representing Hamilton, Ontario from 1887 to 1891. He died in Hamilton, Ontario.",
"David Adam David Adam may refer to:",
"David Hamilton (bishop) David Hamilton, Bishop of Argyll and Abbot of Dryburgh (died 1523) was a late medieval Scottish prelate. He was an illegitimate son of James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton, and brother of James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Arran. He studied at the University of Glasgow and graduated in Arts in 1492 and later studied in Paris. He was given the bishopric in 1497. He was witness to royal charters and served on royal commissions and in the exchequer in early 16th century. Between 1505-1507, he acted in Kintyre on royal business, making rentals of lands. He built Saddell Castle between 1508-1512. He died in 1523.",
"Brian Hamilton Brian Hamilton may refer to:",
"Victor P. Hamilton Victor P. Hamilton (born 26 September 1941) (PhD, Brandeis University) is a Canadian / American theologian. He was Professor of Old Testament and Theology at Asbury University from 1971 until 2007. His retains the role of professor emeritus of Old Testament at Asbury University. He has a BA from Houghton College, New York, 1963 a BD and ThM from Asbury Theological Seminary, Wilmore, Kentucky, 1966 and 1967 and an MA and PhD in Mediterranean Studies from Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts, 1969 and 1971. He is author of major commentaries on Genesis and Exodus; also authoring the respected \"Handbook on the Historical Books\"."
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"Robert Daudelin"
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When was the director of film Pecos River (Film) born?
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Pecos River (film) Pecos River is a 1951 American Western film directed by Fred F. Sears and starring Charles Starrett, Jock Mahoney and Anne James. The film's sets were designed by the art director Charles Clague.
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"The Stranger from Pecos The Stranger from Pecos is a 1943 American Western film directed by Lambert Hillyer and written by Adele Buffington. This is the second film in the \"Marshal Nevada Jack McKenzie\" series, and stars Johnny Mack Brown as Jack McKenzie and Raymond Hatton as his sidekick Sandy Hopkins, with Kirby Grant, Christine McIntyre, Steve Clark and Edmund Cobb. The film was released on July 10, 1943, by Monogram Pictures.",
"Pedernales River The Pedernales River ( ) is a tributary of the Colorado River, approximately long, in Central Texas in the United States. It drains an area of the Edwards Plateau, flowing west to east across the Texas Hill Country west of Austin. The name \"Pedernales\", first used in the middle 18th century, comes from a Spanish word for the flint rocks characteristic of the riverbed. The river rises from springs in northeastern Kerr County, approximately southeast of Junction. It flows north into southeast Kimble County and then east into Gillespie County, passing south of Fredericksburg, and into Blanco County, passing north of Johnson City. It joins the Colorado from the southwest in Lake Travis, approximately west of Austin. The river has a close association with the Texas Hill Country, tied to the history of the region and emblematic of its geography. Along its route it flows over numerous rugged limestone escarpments as it winds eastward, passing along the south side of the ranch of President Lyndon B. Johnson, who grew up in nearby Stonewall, south of the river. In 1750, Fray Benito Fernández de Santa Ana proposed a plan to the Spanish government that a mission be established among the Lipan Apache who lived along the river. In 1789, the river was the site of a skirmish between Colonel Francisco Xavier Ugalde and a group of Lipan and Mescalero Indians. The first permanent white settlement along the river was in 1846, when the town of Fredericksburg was established by German immigrants. The threat of raids from Apaches restricted settlement in the area until the 1880s. Pedernales Falls State Park is located along the river in Blanco County east of Johnson City. Like many rivers in central Texas, it is prone to variable water levels. A sign at the state park shows a relatively tranquil river in one picture and a raging wall of muddy water in the next picture, said to be taken only five minutes after the first. The speed at which flash floods can arise along this river has resulted in several deaths at the park, and warning sirens have been installed in the park and elsewhere along the river. The lower river is a popular destination for whitewater rafting during the high-water season.",
"Gallinas River (New Mexico) Gallinas River or Rio Gallinas is a river with source in San Miguel County, New Mexico, and confluence with the Pecos River in Guadalupe County, New Mexico. It is a tributary of the Pecos River, which is a tributary of the Rio Grande. The river has a tributary Gallinas Creek with confluence just southeast of Las Vegas, New Mexico.",
"Blazing Across the Pecos Blazing Across the Pecos is a 1948 American Western film directed by Ray Nazarro and written by Norman S. Hall. The film stars Charles Starrett, Patricia Barry, Paul Campbell, Charles C. Wilson, Thomas E. Jackson, Red Arnall and Smiley Burnette. The film was released on July 1, 1948, by Columbia Pictures. Businessman Jim Traynor and his henchmen are secretly arming hostile Indians with rifles to attack wagon trains. Traynor has such contempt for the law that he employs the buffoon restaurant owner Smiley Burnette as town marshal. The Durango Kid becomes Burnette's deputy and brings law and order to the West.",
"The Pecos Pistol The Pecos Pistol is a short 1949 American Western film directed by Will Cowan and starring Tex Williams, Smokey Rogers, and Barbara Payton. This is a black and white film, a partial remake of 1941 film \"Rawhide Rangers\" by Ray Taylor. Someone dear to Tex Williams was killed, so he decides to get himself kicked from the force and disguise himself as an outlaw. Now he has to infiltrate the gang of outlaws and come up with a plan to find the killer and bring the gang down.",
"David S. Cass Sr. David S. Cass Sr. (March 21, 1942 – August 28, 2020) was a film director and stuntman. He directed \"\", \"Avenging Angel\", \"Desolation Canyon\", and \"Thicker than Water\". Cass began his film career as an extra. He alternated between acting and stunt work, starting with \"McLintock!\" (1963), on which he performed stunts. He went on to become a stunt coordinator and second unit director on \"Smokey and the Bandit Part 3\", \"Knight Rider 2000\", \"Walker, Texas Ranger\" and the \"Desperado\" TV movie franchise. He later focused on TV directing, with dozens of credits.",
"Pecos River The Pecos River () originates in north-central New Mexico and flows into Texas, emptying into the Rio Grande. Its headwaters are on the eastern slope of the Sangre de Cristo mountain range in Mora County north of Pecos, NM, at an elevation of over 12,000 feet (3,700 m). The river flows for 926 miles (1,490 km) before reaching the Rio Grande near Del Rio. Its drainage basin encompasses about 44,300 square miles (115,000 km). The name \"Pecos\" derives from the Keresan (Native American language) term for the Pecos Pueblo, \"[p'æyok'ona]\". The river was also historically referred to as the Río Natagés for the Mescalero people. The river played a large role in the exploration of Texas by the Spanish. In the latter half of the 19th century, \"West of the Pecos\" was a reference to the rugged desolation of the Wild West. The Texas storekeeper, bartender, and justice of the peace, Roy Bean, a native of Kentucky, was often described as \"The Only Law West of the Pecos\", a phrase made popular from the 1956 syndicated television series, \"Judge Roy Bean\", with Edgar Buchanan in the starring role. In the series narration, \"West of the Pecos\" is described as: the wildest spot in the United States ... virtually beyond the reach of the authorities, the railroads, then pushing their way west, attracted the most vicious characters in the country. It was said that all civilization and law stopped at the east bank of the Pecos. It took one man, a lone storekeeper who was sick of the lawlessness, to change all this. His name was Judge Roy Bean.\" New Mexico and Texas disputed water rights to the river until the U.S. government settled the dispute in 1949 with the Pecos River Compact. The Pecos River Settlement Agreement was signed between New Mexico and Texas in 2003. Multiple dams have been built along the Pecos River. Santa Rosa Lake is 117 miles/188 km east of Albuquerque. Sumner Lake, formed by the 1939 Sumner Dam, is located between Santa Rosa and Fort Sumner, NM.",
"West of the Pecos (1945 film) West of the Pecos is a 1945 American Western film directed by Edward Killy and starring Robert Mitchum and Barbara Hale. It is the second film version of Zane Grey's novel, previously made in 1934 and also titled \"West of the Pecos\" starring Richard Dix. It is no relation to the 1922 silent film of the same name. The previous year, Mitchum had played the lead in another Zane Grey movie with the same screenwriter (Norman Houston) and director titled \"Nevada\", also featuring Richard Martin as comical sidekick Chito Rafferty. \"Nevada\" had been Mitchum's first movie as a leading man and the opening titles began with \"Introducing Bob Mitchum as Jim Lacy\". Colonel Lambreth's health is poor, so daughter Rill persuades him to leave his Chicago meat-packing business behind and move to their Texas cattle ranch. Her fiancé, lawyer Clyde Corbin, stays behind. On the trail, a couple of cowboys, Pecos Smith and sidekick Chito Rafferty, pull up to demand driver Tex Evans pay their back wages. After they ride off, the stagecoach is attacked by bandits. Circling back, the cowboys are told by the mortally wounded Tex that he was shot by Sam Sawtelle. The stage proceeds to town with Jeff Slinger at the reins. Rill, harassed in town, tucks her hair into her hat and disguises herself as a boy to be left alone. Brad Sawtelle, brother of Sam, organizes a posse of vigilantes to find Tex's killer. Pecos gets to Sam first and shoots him. The colonel and Rill get lost en route to their ranch. Pecos and Chito assist them and are offered jobs. Chito tries to woo the Lambreths' maid, Suzanne, but where Rill is concerned, Pecos still doesn't know she's a woman. Corbin comes to Texas and senses that Rill is now in love with someone else. Brad and his men believe Pecos to be an accomplice in the stagecoach robbery and murder. Pecos proves that the one responsible was Slinger, who is shot dead by Brad. A marshal places Brad under arrest and Rill and Pecos finally get to know each other better. The film was popular and earned $151,000 in profits.",
"The Long Loop on the Pecos The Long Loop on the Pecos is a 1927 American silent Western film directed by Leo D. Maloney and starring Maloney, Eugenia Gilbert, Frederick Dana.",
"Border River Border River is a 1954 American Western film directed by George Sherman and starring Joel McCrea, Yvonne De Carlo and Pedro Armendáriz. During the US Civil War, Clete Mattson arrives in Zona Libre, a small territory across the river from the United States. Ruled by ruthless General Calleja, it offers sanctuary to outlaws. Mattson wants to buy guns for the Confederacy, using gold stolen from the Union. Joel McCrea and Yvonne de Carlo's casting was announced in April 1953. George Sherman was assigned to direct. Filming began on 3 June 1953, the same day as Universal's \"The Glenn Miller Story\". The two films were the first movies made at Universal for four weeks. Parts of the film were shot in Colorado River, Professor Valley, and Courthouse Wash in Utah."
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"July 7, 1913"
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Who was born earlier, Dani Theunissen or Bruno Hofstätter?
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Bruno Hofstätter Bruno Hofstätter (born 14 May 1963) is an Austrian biathlete. He competed at the 1988 Winter Olympics and the 1992 Winter Olympics.
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"Bruno Iotti Bruno Demetrio Iotti or simply Bruno Iotti (born January 15, 1987 in Jundiaí), is a Brazilian midfielder.",
"André Hofschneider André Hofschneider (born 10 June 1970) is a German football former player who last managed Union Berlin.",
"Bruno Carvalho Bruno Carvalho may refer to:",
"Bruno Kernen Bruno Kernen may refer to:",
"Bruno (beach soccer) Bruno Malias Mendes better known as Bruno (born 23 March 1980) is a Brazilian beach soccer player. He plays in forward position.",
"Bruno Gonçalves (footballer, born 1994) Bruno Gonçalves Kischinhevsky, sometimes known as just Bruno (born 9 August 1994) is a Brazilian football player of Israeli descent. He last played for FC Dordrecht. He made his Eerste Divisie debut for FC Dordrecht on 18 August 2017 in a game against Fortuna Sittard.",
"Bruno Valente Bruno Valente (born 30 December 1982) is a Portuguese footballer. He plays for FC Fribourg. He spent his whole career in Switzerland.",
"Bruno Fleischer Bruno Otto Fleischer (2 May 1874 – 26 March 1965) was a German ophthalmologist. Kayser-Fleischer rings and Fleischer rings are named for him.",
"Nicola Bruno Nicole Bruno (born 26 January 1971) is a former professional tennis player from Italy. Bruno, with countryman Massimo Ardinghi, competed in the men's doubles at the 1996 Wimbledon Championships. They defeated Scott Draper and Javier Sánchez in the opening round, before losing to the Dutch pairing of Tom Kempers and Tom Nijssen in the second round. He was a doubles quarter-finalist, with Gianluca Pozzi, at the 1996 Japan Open Tennis Championships. This was his best result on the ATP Tour, but he did win four Challenger doubles titles.",
"Bruno (footballer, born 1970) Bruno Alexandre Vaza Ferreira, known as Bruno (born 12 October 1970) is a former Portuguese football player, most notably with Braga. He made his professional debut in the Primeira Liga for Torreense on 18 August 1991 as a starter and scored his team's only goal in a 1–1 draw against Paços de Ferreira. Over his career, he played 172 games on the top level of Portuguese club football."
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"Bruno Hofstätter"
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Which country the director of film For Those Who Think Young (Film) is from?
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Christopher Young (producer) Roger Christopher Young, known as Chris Young, is a Scottish TV and film producer, and founder of Young Films. His credits include "The Inbetweeners" and "Bannan". Young was born in Edinburgh in 1959. His London-based company specialized in high-quality niche films, such as the highly-acclaimed Gaelic-language film "". He achieved wider popularity with the TV series and film "The Inbetweeners". Young moved with his family to Skye in the 1990s. Young Films was relocated there in 2014. Young is a Gaelic-language activist, and his children attend Gaelic medium education. In 2014 Young endorsed Scottish independence, arguing that it would provide opportunities for Scottish film and television.
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[
"Young Gods (film) Young Gods () is a 2003 film from Finland. The film centres on a group of Finnish teenagers who begin to make videos of themselves and others having sex. Their adventures become more and more extreme, eventually leading to tragic consequences. It was directed by Jukka-Pekka Siili and stars Jussi Nikkilä.",
"Too Late to Die Young (film) Too Late to Die Young () is a 2018 Chilean film directed by Dominga Sotomayor Castillo. She became the first woman ever to win the Leopard for Best Direction at the Locarno Festival. This coming of age tale, set in \"Comunidad Ecológica de Peñalolén\", an intentional rural community in Santiago's precordillera around 1990 new year's eve in Chile, follows a teen girl named Sofía (Demian Hernández) as she navigates adolescence. The film has approval rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes based on reviews, with an average rating of . The site's critics' consensus reads: \"\"Too Late to Die Young\" uses one family's experiences as the foundation for a dreamily absorbing drama with a poignant, lingering warmth.\" On Metacritic the film holds an 80 out of 100 average score based on 15 reviews, indicating \"generally favorable reviews\".",
"Marialy Rivas Marialy Rivas is a Chilean screenwriter and film director, known for her 2012 film \"Young and Wild\", winner of the World Cinema Screenwriting Award in Sundance Film Festival. She grew up in Chile during a violent dictatorship under Augusto Pinochet. Rivas is openly lesbian and has commented publicly that, \"In Chile, it is of good taste not to say that you are gay, even if everybody knows it. People are usually infuriated by your sexuality if you are open. Nobody wants to know, so nobody wants to tell.\" She studied in the School of Cinema of Chile, but withdrew in the third year. In 1996 she directed the short film \"Desde siempre\", winner of the Santiago Short Film Festival, and was reviewed by the magazine \"Cahiers du cinéma\". Rivas says that she knew she wanted to be a director since she was seven. During her childhood Rivas was not allowed to watch television so she went to the cinema three times a week and cites this as an influence in her decision to become a director. In 2000 she directed the short film \"Smog\", along with Sebastián Lelio. In 2010 she directed \"Blokes\", selected in the Short Film Palme d'Or competition of the Cannes Film Festival. It also got awards in the Lleida Latin-American Film Festival, and other 50 film festivals. His first feature film \"Young and Wild\", was premièred on 21 January 2012 in the Sundance Film Festival, where it won the World Cinema Screenwriting Award, Drama. In May 2012 she obtained the Sundance's \"Directors and Screenwriters Lab\" award. In 2017 Rivas released her second feature film, \"Princesita\" which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and won Film of the Festival at Raindance Film Festival. Rivas first short film was \"Desde Siempre\" (1996) a documentary film about homosexuality in Chile during the 90s. At the time in Chile, the gay experience was unknown and censored from society and the film ended up resonating with people more than expected. Rivas would ask anyone to participate in the interviews and ended up using friends or friends of friends. Rivas says on the process of making the film that she would write down the interviews and pick the angle that interested her, generating one minute texts based on their words but emphasising the angle she was interested in for each character.",
"Praboo Ariva Praboo T. Arivanathan, known as Praboo Ariva, is a Malaysian screenwriter and film director of Indian descent. He became the youngest film director in Malaysia by directing the 2015 film KID. Praboo has stated that he intends to pursue film studies in the United States of America.",
"Théo Mahy Théo Mahy, full name Théo Mahy-Ma-Somga, (born November 18, 1989, Paris, France) is an independent film director, producer, and screenwriter. Since 2012, he has been living and working in the United States. His production company, L'Atelier Productions, is based in Los Angeles. He is French borne with family origins from Cameroon. His international background serves as inspiration for his filmmaking as he often uses his experiences as a descendant of immigrants as well as his French background to make social commentary on modern day society. He is most well known for his film projects \"An American Life\", \"Awakened\", \"The Audience\" starring Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut, and \"All We have Left\" starring Dree Hemingway. Mahy was borne in Paris. He directed his first short film, \"Lost in Reality\", at age 14. He attended Paul Cézanne University in Aix-en-Provence were he studied law. He moved to New York City in 2012 to pursue of a career in filmmaking. He is currently based in Los Angeles. He has worked in television as a producer and director and in film as a director, producer, and screenwriter.",
"Young & Wild (2012 film) Young & Wild () is a 2012 Chilean coming-of-age comedy-drama film directed by Marialy Rivas and co-written by Marialy Rivas, Camila Gutiérrez, María José Viera-Gallo and Pedro Peirano. Starring Alicia Rodríguez and Maria Gracia Omegna, the film tells the story of Daniela, a 17-year-old bisexual girl who writes a blog about the conflicts she experiences between her evangelical Protestant, conservative family and her sexuality. The film was released at the Sundance Film Festival in 2012 where it was awarded the World Cinema Screenwriting Award. Daniela is a 17-year-old girl who lives in Santiago, Chile. Despite her family's deeply held Protestant beliefs, she eagerly explores her sexuality, through both casual sex and a blog titled Young and Wild. The blog serves as a place where she questions her church's teachings and documents her sexual adventures, including her first experiences with masturbation, oral sex, and anal sex. As her blog becomes more popular, it attracts comments from people who range from supportive to gossipy to outright propositioning her for sex. After she is caught having sex with another student, she is expelled from her conservative Christian school. Her mother does not initially react when told the news, and Daniela learns that her beloved aunt, a bohemian who serves as a role model for her, is being taken to the hospital due to cancer. There, her aunt pleads with Daniela's mother not to send the girl to perform grueling missionary work. Instead, Daniela takes a job at a local Christian television station as a gofer, where she meets coworkers Tomás and Antonia. Daniela is immediately drawn to Tomás, about whom she begins fantasizing. The two begin dating, though he refuses to engage in premarital sexual activity. Sexually frustrated, Daniela attempts to seduce him and has varying degrees of success. When she complains to Antonia, Antonia invites her to a party, where Daniela briefly performs oral sex on Tomás until he stops her. As she leaves the party, Daniela whispers to Antonia that she came to have sex with both Tomás and her. Shortly after, Antonia and Daniela begin an affair that Daniela documents on her blog. Daniela's parents come to trust Tomás, whom they allow to stay unsupervised with her. However, Tomás' inhibitions finally break down when Daniela questions whether he is interested in her.",
"Lou Ye Lou Ye (), born 1965, is a Chinese screenwriter-director who is commonly grouped with the \"Sixth Generation\" directors of Chinese cinema. Born in Shanghai, Lou was educated at the Beijing Film Academy. In 1993, he made his first film \"Weekend Lover\", but it was not released until two years later, having its world premiere at the International Filmfestival Mannheim-Heidelberg where it received the Rainer Werner Fassbinder Award. Between completion and premiere of \"Weekend Lover\" he made and released \"Don't Be Young\", a thriller about a girl who takes her nightmares as real, in 1994. Lou, however, did not gain international prominence until his third film, the neo-noir \"Suzhou River\". That film dealt with questions of identity and proved quite controversial upon its release in China. Upon its release, international audiences praised \"Suzhou River\", which several critics felt evoked Alfred Hitchcock's \"Vertigo\", particularly in how both films focus on a man obsessed with a mysterious woman. In 2003 Lou released \"Purple Butterfly\" starring Zhang Ziyi. The film is a tale of revenge and betrayal taking place during the Japanese occupation of Shanghai, with a complex narrative structure borrowing heavily from film noir traditions. Lou's next film, \"Summer Palace\" (2006), a story of two lovers in the backdrop of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, again brought Lou into conflict with Chinese authorities, resulting in a five-year ban for both him and his producer. In order to circumvent the ban, his next film, \"Spring Fever\", was shot surreptitiously in Nanjing and registered as a Hong Kong-French coproduction to avoid censors. The film was shown in competition at the 62nd Cannes Film Festival where writer Mei Feng won the Best Screenplay award. In 1998, Lou, along with actress Nai An (who had starred in his first two films, and would go on to star in \"Suzhou River\") started the production company Dream Factory, which would go on to produce all of Lou's films. Lou Ye's films have proven controversial in their content, and often deal with issues of sexuality, gender, and obsession. Government censors banned his first film \"Weekend Lover\" for two years, while his breakout film \"Suzhou River\" was banned (with Lou receiving a 2-year ban from filmmaking) but has since been authorized in China.",
"John G. Young (filmmaker) John G. Young is an American director, producer and writer. He graduated from the State University of New York at Purchase (SUNY Purchase)where he now teaches and is Chair of Film Conservatory. His feature films include \"Parallel Sons\" in 1995, \"The Reception\" in 2005, \"Rivers Wash Over Me\" in 2009, and \"bwoy\" in 2016, starring \"RENT's\" Anthony Rapp. He also produced \"Garden\" in 2004. Much of his work deals with the intersections of race and sexuality. John G. Young was also a VP of Production and Editorial Director for Human Relations Media (HRM) for almost two decades, having created over one hundred award-winning programs for the company. He has also supervised a series of shorts entitled \"Amazing Kids of Character\", \"Profiles in Courage\" and \"Portraits of Empathy\" with Human Relations Media in collaboration with Anson Schloat. Director and writer / screenplay: Director: Editor: Producer:",
"Laura Hyppönen Laura Hyppönen is a Finnish director and filmmaker, based in London. Her debut feature film is \"Live East Die Young\" (2012), which was nominated Best UK Picture at Raindance Film Festival and Golden Hitchcock at Dinard Film Festival. The film is distributed globally by French distribution company Reel Suspects and iTunes. Hyppönen's ten-part short film series \"Ten Faces of Anna\" (2014) won Best Actor Award at the French fashion film festival ASVOFF.",
"Young People (1937 Japanese film) Young People () is a 1937 Japanese drama film directed by Shirō Toyoda. It is based on the novel of the same name by Yōjirō Ishizaka. In a Christian girls' school in Japan's northern Hokuriku region, young teacher Mr. Mazaki is impressed by pupil Keiko's artistic talent and unorthodox behaviour. Keiko was raised alone by her mother, bar madam Hatsu, and does not know who her father is. Mazaki's colleague Ms. Hashimoto senses the mutual affection between Mazaki and Keiko and warns him not to get involved, while at the same time showing an interest in Mazaki herself. After a school excursion, Keiko makes up a story that she and Mazaki had an affair and that she is pregnant by him. The film closes with Ms. Hashimoto advising Keiko to rise above herself and defy her status as an illegitimate child treated unfairly by society. Shirō Toyoda's film was the first of several adaptations of Yōjirō Ishizaka's novel and successful both with critics and the audience. Film historian Donald Richie rated it as one of the most important adaptations of works of the \"junbungaku\" (\"pure literature\") movement, which provided the source for works of directors like Toyoda, Heinosuke Gosho and Yasujirō Shimazu. In her book on literary adaptions in Japanese cinema, Keiko I. McDonald pointed out that the film not only left the novel's human conflicts unsolved, but also completely omitted Hashimoto's radical left-wing leanings, which might or might not have been owed to censorship issues."
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"American"
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Do the movies Divorced (1943 Film) and Stowaway On Board, originate from the same country?
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Stowaway on Board Stowaway on Board (Spanish:Polizón a bordo) is a 1941 Spanish comedy film directed by Florián Rey, co-starring Guadalupe Muñoz Sampedro and Ismael Merlo. Antonciño (Ismael Merlo) is planning to travel to America to find his love Rosiña (Lina Yegros), despite his poverty. He moves into the area under the pretense of being a rich man for the hardwork. Manucho and his friend Antonciño travel there. Rosiña, a younger and poor woman with dreams of buying a house, ignore habit who is unaware of Antonciño's activities. Matters become complicated as Antonio's the poor and the identity as be Manucho the rich is made public, but are not. Rosiña's remember friend Antonciño and their be lover again. Manucho (Antonio Casal) becomes a great party in the city for two days. Receivint of soon of the city for the mayor Salvador Videgain and the troubles go neared for him. "Stowaway on Board" was nominated for the best film of year in Spain.
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"The Stowaway (1958 film) The Stowaway is a 1958 French-Australian film directed by Australian director Lee Robinson and French Lebanese director Ralph Habib. It was shot on location in Tahiti. There are French and English versions of the film. The French version is known as Le Passager clandestin. A group of adventurers compete with one another to find the missing heir Rene Marechal, thought to be near Tahiti. Major Owens, a middle aged Englishman with a shady past, discovers the island on which Marechal lives but is murdered by the criminal Mougins. Mougins sets out for the island with Colette, a night club singer who is Marechal's former mistress. She is rescued by Jean, who had earlier helped Colette stow away on the boat to Tahiti. Jean and Mougins fight and Mougins falls overboard and is eaten by a shark. Jean and Collette decide to give up the search for Marechal and live on the islands. In May 1955 it was announced producer Paul Decharne, best known for \"Manon\" and \"Bluebeard\", would make two films a year in the Pacific. The first two would be co productions with Rafferty and Robinson:, starting with\"Walk into Paradise\", which would be shot on location in New Guinea, in English and French versions. The second film would be made in Tahiti with French director Yves Allegret as the principal director and Robinson as director of the English version. This movie would be shot in Cinema-Scope and would hopefully star Gerard Philippe. \"I was told that the Pacific was very wide, and its capital was Sydney* so I came here,\" said Decharne.\"I also heard that Australians appreciated French films better than any other country outside Europe. 'La Ronde' made more money in Australia than it did in France.\" At one stage the film was called \"Vahini Tahiti\". The film was shot towards the end of 1957 in Tahiti and the Society Islands. Lee Rafferty and Chips Robinson contributed money towards the production via sales from \"Walk into Paradise\" and funds loaned from Herb McIntyre from the superannuation fund of Universal Picture's Australian branch. Dialogue scenes were filmed twice, in English (by Robinson) and French (by Habib). Robinson claimed he didn't like Habib's style of direction.",
"Stowaway (2001 film) Stowaway (), alternatively known as \"Snakeheads\", is a 2001 Hong Kong action film based on the true story of a group of stowaways from Fuzhou illegally immigrating to the United Kingdom in 2000. In the incident, 58 illegal immigrants suffocated to death in an airtight truck of tomatoes at Dover, England on 20 June 2000. In June 2000, a group of Fuzhou people spend a fortune for various reasons to be smuggled to the United Kingdom. They are first sent to Quailin, before crossing the border to Vietnam. After waiting there for fake documents for flying to Moscow, they head to the Netherlands. They are unable to travel to Moscow as the people smugglers are detected. The plan is changed and all the illegal immigrants have to travel to Ukraine by car, then walk across the border to the Czech Republic through snowstorms. They are able to sneak into the Netherlands and hide in a truck to enter into the United Kingdom, but the airtight space in the truck results in the deaths of 58 people, leaving only 2 survivors. Filming locations took place in Fuzhou, Vietnam, Moscow, Ukraine, and England.",
"Stowaway (2021 film) Stowaway is a 2021 science fiction thriller drama film directed by Joe Penna, who co-wrote the screenplay with Ryan Morrison. The film stars Anna Kendrick, Daniel Dae Kim, Shamier Anderson, and Toni Collette. A co-production of the United States and Germany, it premiered on Netflix in select countries on April 22, 2021. The crew of MTS-42, a two-year mission to Mars, consists of Mission Commander Marina Barnett, biologist David Kim, and medical researcher Zoe Levenson. After taking off from Earth, the upper stage of their launch vehicle is connected by 450 meter long tethers to the ship's main hull, acting as a counterweight for inertia-based artificial gravity. Shortly after takeoff, Barnett discovers launch support engineer Michael Adams, an accidental stowaway, unconscious between two modules, entangled with a device that scrubs carbon dioxide from the air on the ship. As he falls, the device is inadvertently destroyed. The crew is forced to use emergency lithium hydroxide canisters to scrub from the air. Unfortunately, the canisters cannot sustain the extra load. Barnett orders David to immediately cultivate his algae experiment on the ship, rather than at the Martian colony, as planned. Only half of the algae survive, providing just enough oxygen for a third crew member. Without another oxygen supply, the crew of four will asphyxiate weeks before reaching Mars. Barnett asks mission control for a solution that will save all four passengers, but the only option—an untested EVA (spacewalk) to climb the tethers and recover liquid oxygen from the spent upper stage rocket—is deemed too risky. Barnett and David begin to come to terms with sacrificing Michael, but Zoe convinces them to wait ten days for mission control to think of another solution. After three days, David breaks rank to explain the situation to Michael, offering him a painless lethal injection. Michael nearly takes his own life, but Zoe stops him and convinces him to hold out for a while longer. She insists on climbing the tethers to retrieve the liquid oxygen. David reveals that the rest of the algae has died, leaving only enough oxygen for two. Now facing the death of two passengers, he agrees to join her on the climb. Zoe and David perform the EVA and jury rig a solution to fill two cylinders, which is enough to sustain two more passengers.",
"Divorced (1951 film) Divorced () is a 1951 Swedish drama film directed by Gustaf Molander and written by Ingmar Bergman.",
"One Too Many on Board One Too Many on Board () is a 1935 German drama film directed by Gerhard Lamprecht and starring Lída Baarová, Albrecht Schoenhals and René Deltgen. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Otto Erdmann and Hans Sohnle. Some scenes were shot on location in Hamburg. A separate French-language version was also released.",
"Baby on Board (film) Baby on Board is a 2009 comedy film starring Heather Graham, John Corbett, Jerry O'Connell, Anthony Starke and Lara Flynn Boyle. The film centers around Angela Marks, an ambitious, image-conscious businesswoman working for over-demanding boss Mary. When Angela becomes unexpectedly pregnant at the peak of her career, her life with her divorce attorney husband, Curtis, is turned upside-down. The film begins with an inconvenient pregnancy that leads to a nine-month roller coaster ride as Angela and Curtis try to cope — even as the interference of best friends Danny and Sylvia escalate the situation into a battle of the sexes. Although credited as \"Lara Flynn Boyle\" in the opening credits, her name is spelled \"Laura Flynn Boyle\" in the closing credits. The film's opening credit features British singer Natasha Bedingfield's song \"I Wanna Have Your Babies.\" Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregation portal, gives the film a rating of 20%.",
"Sabotage at Sea Sabotage at Sea is a 1942 British, black-and-white, drama, mystery, war film, directed by Leslie S. Hiscott and starring Jane Carr, Margaretta Scott, David Hutcheson and Ronald Shiner as Ernie the Cook. It was produced by British National Films and Shaftesbury Films. It has the overall format of a whodunnit but with a clear theme of protecting military secrets during the Second World War. A series of vignettes introduce us to a selection of people who late turn out to be the individual suspects. Cargo ship Captain Tracey (David Hutcheson) has discovered that enemy agents have tampered with his ship. The film follows the search for the saboteur. The unlikely scenario means that six would-be subjects are jointly kidnapped/shanghaied and kept on board while he investigates which one is the saboteur. The suspects include both males and females including members of the shipping company (Digby & Farar) and their relatives. The investigation tales place en route to New York. \"TV Guide\" wrote, \"the cast is handicapped by an uneventful, wordy script.\"",
"Children of Divorce (1939 film) Children of Divorce () is a 1939 Danish drama film directed by Benjamin Christensen.",
"Shipwrecked (1939 film) Shipwrecked (Italian: Naufraghi) is a 1939 Italian drama film directed by Silvio Laurenti Rosa. It was shot on location in Genoa using a mixture of professional and amateur actors.",
"A Bill of Divorcement (1940 film) A Bill of Divorcement is a 1940 film directed by John Farrow. It was also known as Never to Love and was based on a 1921 British play of the same name, written by Clemence Dane that was filmed in 1932 with John Barrymore and Katharine Hepburn. Hilary Fairchild (Adolphe Menjou) returns home after a long spell in a lunatic asylum. He has regained his sanity, but finds that his strong-willed daughter Sydney (Maureen O’Hara ) has grown up and is planning to marry and his wife (Fay Bainter) has divorced him. The film was announced in November 1939 with the lead roles allocated to Adolphe Menjou and Maureen O'Hara. O'Hara had just moved to Hollywood with Charles Laughton and appeared in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\". Producer Robert Sisk and director John Farrow had made a number of films together including the popular \"Five Came Back\" (1939). It was considered an \"A\" picture – Farrow and Sisk's first such movie at RKO. Filming started 2 December 1939. The film recorded a loss of $104,000."
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[
"no"
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Are both Khvorostyanka, Samara Oblast and Myrsini located in the same country?
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Khvorostyanka, Samara Oblast Khvorostyanka () is a rural locality (a "selo") and the administrative center of Khvorostyansky District, Samara Oblast, Russia. Population:
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"Samarsky City District Samarsky City District () is a district (\"raion\") of the city of Samara, Samara Oblast, Russia. Population:",
"Myrovrysi Myrovrysi () is a mountain village in the municipal unit of Sympoliteia, Achaea, Greece. It is located in the eastern foothills of the Panachaiko, 11 km south of Selianitika and 44.3 Km east of Patras. In 2011, it had a population of 211.",
"Vesyoly Mys Vesyoly Mys () is a rural locality (a settlement) in Verkh-Invenskoye Rural Settlement, Kudymkarsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. The population was 247 as of 2010. There are 10 streets. Vesyoly Mys is located 53 km west of Kudymkar (the district's administrative centre) by road. Yeremushkina is the nearest rural locality.",
"Samarskoye, Khaybullinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan Samarskoye () is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Samarsky Selsoviet, Khaybullinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 877 as of 2010. There are 10 streets. Samarskoye is located 21 km north of Akyar (the district's administrative centre) by road. Buribay is the nearest rural locality.",
"Sovetsky City District, Samara Sovetsky City District () is a district (\"raion\") of the city of Samara, Samara Oblast, Russia. Population:",
"Myasnikovka Myasnikovka () is a rural locality (a passing loop) in Pertsevskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 14 as of 2002. Myasnikovka is located 10 km north of Gryazovets (the district's administrative centre) by road. Myasnikovo is the nearest rural locality.",
"Mysy Mysy () is a rural locality (a village) in Khokhlovskoye Rural Settlement, Permsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. The population was 48 as of 2010. There are 9 streets. Mysy is located 44 km north of Perm (the district's administrative centre) by road. Gora is the nearest rural locality.",
"Mys, Verkhovazhsky District, Vologda Oblast Mys () is a rural locality (a village) in Chushevitskoye Rural Settlement, Verkhovazhsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 5 as of 2002. Mys is located 42 km southwest of Verkhovazhye (the district's administrative centre) by road. Zuyevskiye is the nearest rural locality.",
"Myriv Myriv was an ancient (Iron Age) Scythian settlement in Ukraine. It was one of the largest Scythian cities in Ukraine between the rivers of Dniester and Dnieper. It was founded 800-750 BC. In 900-1250 AD it was a Ruthenian settlement of Kyivan Rus. The city was destroyed during the Mongol invasion of Rus. After the Mongols left Kyivan Rus (Ukraine), the city was rebuilt at other place. It was first mentioned under its modern name of Nemyriv in 1506.",
"Mezhdurechensk, Samara Oblast Mezhdurechensk () is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) in Syzransky District of Samara Oblast, Russia. Population:"
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[
"no"
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Are director of film Gently My Songs Entreat and director of film Mathru Devata from the same country?
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Jeet Matharu Jeet Matharu is an Indian film director and assistant director who has directed many Hindi and Punjabi films. He has worked on "Addi Tapaa" (2004), "Sikka" (2015), "Amaanat" (1994), and "Ikke Pe Ikka" (1994).
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"Prashant Raj Prashant Raj (born 10 March 1982 in Bangalore) is an Indian film director and screenwriter known for his work in Kannada cinema. He made his directorial debut with \"Love Guru\" in 2009. Prashant Raj is an Indian film director who's been entertaining the audience with his movies for a decade now. It was in the year 2009 he made his debut directional movie \"Love Guru\" and set up his benchmark in the Kannada Film Industry. Later Raj continued his direction journey by directing various hit movies like \"Ghana Bhajana\", \"Whistle\", \"Zoom\", \"Dalapathi\", and \"Orange\".",
"Mathiya Chennai Mathiya Chennai is a 2009 Indian Tamil-language film directed by Vivekanand & Veerasingam. The film stars Jaivanth and Prakash Raj . \"Mathiya Chennai\" is the story of a man who loves films and dream of becoming director, but he accidentally gets in a brawl with a gangster making his future difficult, but is in love with the gangster's daughter. Later he makes a movie with the help of his lady love and when the film was about to release, the gangster pulls out all the possible options to prevent the film from its screening. The music composed by . The film earned poor reviews and became a box office dud.",
"Devdatta Sable Devdatta Sable is a Marathi singer and composer. He is known for composing music for songs \"Hi Chaal Turu Turu\" and \"Manaachyaa Dhundit\" and for the Marathi film 'Aakrandan'. Sable has sung the Adivasi song titled 'Dev jevla aamhi pahila' from the film 'Aakrandan' which has been directed by Shashikant Deshpande. Sable has performed in Maharashtrachi Lokdhara created by Shahir Sable and has composed music for the program \"Baya dar ughad\" ('बया दार उघड') written by Sushma Deshpande.",
"Devadas Kapikad Devadas Kapikad is a Tulu film and theatre actor, director, writer, producer, lyricist and singer. He has also acted in some Kannada films. He owns a drama troupe called Cha-parka. He has written and directed more than 45 dramas in Tulu language. His son Arjun Kapikad is also an actor.",
"Arjun Kumar Arjun Kumar () is a Nepalese music director, singer and film producer. His career started in 2008 as music director from film The Yug Dekhi Yug Samma and as a film producer from film Chapali Height.",
"Narayan Rayamajhi Narayan Rayamajhi (; born 25 April 1961) is a Nepali composer, lyricist, feature-film script writer, film director, and producer. He has steadily excelled as a singer and he has made a significant contribution to promote Nepali music industry. He has written more than fourteen dozen folk songs, more than six dozen modern songs, two dozens soap-opera songs, three musical plays, two documentaries and has he directed two movies \"Gorkha Paltan\" and \"Pardeshi\" Narayan Rayamajhi was born on 25 April 1961 in Jhadewa −05, Palpa District Nepal to Suryabhadur Rayamajhi and Krishna kumari Rayamajhi. He had a keen interest in musical field from his childhood. He embraced himself with many musical and cultural possessions. He learned to play musical instruments on his own. Later on his early 20s he moved to Kathmandu to initiate his Nepali music career, obtained Bachelor in Arts (B.A.) from Tribhuvan University and Diploma in Vocal from Prayag Sangeet Samiti, Allahabad India. Rayamajhi delegation to persuade his dream follows the foot step of his Late elder brother Laxman Rayamajhi. Rayamajhi has been an advisor of the \"Music Museum Nepal\" for some 20 years and he has continuously supported and aided the museum in many sphere during the time by filming, directing and editing he was a member of jury of international folk music film festival in 2012. He has played a vital role in promoting and protecting endangered Nepal Folk music. Rayamajhi was married to Chanda Rayamajhi and have three children, Alina Rayamajhi, Saru Rayamajhi and Paras Rayamajhi. The late Laxman Rayamajhi, his elder brother has played significant role in his life, two younger sisters Shakuntala Rayamajhi, Chadani Rayamajhi, followed by his two younger brothers Jeevan Rayamajhi and Durga Rayamajhi who are also active in Nepali Music Industry. Rayamajhi's songs are extensively popular in the Nepalese community all around the world. His two modern songs albums Priya and Preeti including More than sixty modern songs recorded in Radio Nepal.",
"B. S. Lingadevaru Byalakere Shivananjappa Lingadevaru is an Indian television and film director who works in Kannada cinema. He is known for his films \"Naanu Avanalla...Avalu\", \"Mouni\", and \"Kaada Beladingalu\".",
"Imran Sardhariya Imran Sardhariya (born 28 December 1979) is an Indian choreographer and film director known for his works in the South Indian film industry, and a few Bollywood films. He is the son of Late Haji Ayub. Sardhariya is a well known choreographer in South Indian movies. His Life in the Industry for the past ten years has a credit of success more than 250 songs and briefly 100 movies. In addition, he has worked on two Telugu Movies \"Josh\" and \"Chalaaki\". He was trained for five years by Mr. Jai Borade who is a winner of the national film award for best choreography in Hum Aapke Hain Koun. He has a Dance School in Bangalore known as Dinky’s Dance and Music Academy (DDMA). Imran Sardhariya made his directorial debut with Endendigu in 2015 starring Ajay Rao and Radhika Pandit in lead roles, which is produced by S V Babu of SV Productions, Edited by Deepu S Kumar, Music by V Harikrishna and Camera by Venkatesh Anguraj. He had been one of the judges of Dance Karnataka Dance(Reality Show) which was telecasted on Zee Kannada in 2017. He has won several awards for choreography. In addition to his credentials he has garnered awards from ETV, ZTV Kannada, Kasturi Kannada channels for Best choreography",
"Priyadarshini (singer) Priyadarshini Ram, also known as Priyadharshi Ram or monomymously as Priyadarshini, is an Singaporean-Indian playback singer who has performed in more than 110 movies in the Tamil, Kannada, Telugu and Hindi cinema industries. She began her career as a playback singer by performing a duet song with Hariharan for the Tamil film \"Kadhal Dot Com\", released in 2004. She later sung a duet with S. P. Balasubrahmanyam in the Kannada movie \"Rocky\". She has worked with music directors such as Bharathwaj, D. Imman, Hamsalekha, Mano Murthy, Gurukiran, R. P. Patnaik, Rajesh Ramnath, K. Kalyan, and S. A. Rajkumar, and has also recorded jingles and albums. She has a PhD in film music from the University of Mysore. This is a partial list of notable films where Priyadarshini has worked as a playback singer.",
"Anand Ranga Anand Ranga is a film director who works in Telugu film Industry. Anand Ranga was born and raised in Hyderabad. He graduated in computers and then went on to do Diploma in Film Technology, specializing in direction and screenplay writing from Film & Television Institute of Tamil Nadu, Chennai. He directed his debut Telugu feature film \"Oy!\" in 2009. He started a production house called Random Thoughts has produced two films \"DK Bose\" (2015) & \"Poga\" (2014). Ranga is married to Telugu film dubbing artist Sowmya Sharma and lives in Hyderabad."
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[
"no"
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What nationality is the director of film Gentlemen Marry Brunettes?
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Gentlemen Marry Brunettes Gentlemen Marry Brunettes is a 1955 American Technicolor musical romantic comedy film directed by Richard Sale, who co-wrote the screenplay with Mary Loos, based on the 1927 novel "But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes" by Anita Loos, aunt of Mary Loos. The film stars Jane Russell and Jeanne Crain. It was produced by Sale and Bob Waterfield (Russell's husband), with Robert Bassler as executive producer. Anita Loos was the author of the 1925 novel and 1926 play "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes", which had been adapted into the 1953 film of the same name, starring Russell and Marilyn Monroe. The studio attempted to repeat the formula, with Russell returning but Jeanne Crain stepping in for a presumably otherwise engaged Monroe (both women played new characters). Alan Young, Scott Brady, and Rudy Vallee also appear. This film was not as well received as its predecessor. The choreography was by Jack Cole, who had also contributed to the "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" film. The dance ensemble includes the young Gwen Verdon. Bonnie and Connie Jones, played by Jane Russell and Jeanne Crain, are two sisters that live in New York working on Broadway. They are known as the second generation of the Jones sisters, taking the name after their mother, Mitzi Jones, who also performed popularly with her sister, Mimi Jones. Bonnie and Connie are often offered engagements by men. Connie refuses these New Yorkers every time, while her sister Bonnie seemingly cannot say no to all these men’s offerings. This initiates fights between the men outside the sisters’ shows, and these situations embarrass Connie for being related to Bonnie. The sisters fight about Bonnie’s weakness to refuse these men. Connie wants her sister to promise her to refuse them for the sake of their career. However, the moment the sisters reconcile, a messenger knocks on their door with an offered Paris agreement by David Action to partake shows around France. The sisters immediately agree, and promise each other to focus on the success of their career rather than focusing on desperate men looking for marriage. When they arrive in Paris, they are welcomed by Charlie Biddle and David Action, played by Alan Young and Scott Brady, who will later become the sisters’ love interests. The men are surprised by the difference between the first generation and the second generation of the Jones sisters.
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[
"Paul Mayeda Berges Paul Mayeda Berges (born September 11, 1968) is an American screenwriter and director, notably as co-writer of 2002's \"Bend It Like Beckham\". Of Japanese and Basque ancestry, Berges attended the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he studied film and graduated in 1990. He began his career by making documentaries (on the Japanese American community) and teaching film production (to high school students). He has collaborated with his wife, British-Indian director Gurinder Chadha, on a number of films and made his directorial debut in 2005 with \"The Mistress of Spices\", based on the novel by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni. Berges officially met Chadha in March 1994, while he was working as a festival director at the San Francisco Asian American International Film Festival. But they had also briefly met in September 1993. They married in the mid-nineties and have twins together; a boy named Ronak and a girl named Kumiko (born June 7, 2007).",
"I'm Marrying the Director I'm Marrying the Director (German: Ich heirate Herrn Direktor) is a 1960 Austrian comedy film directed by Wolfgang Liebeneiner and starring Heidelinde Weis, Gerhard Riedmann and Hans Söhnker. It was shot at the Schönbrunn Studios in Vienna. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Fritz Moegle and Heinz Ockermüller. An ambitious young stenographer decides she is going to marry the director of her company, and sets out to woo him. However, she eventually meets a man of her own age and realises there is more to life than money.",
"The Gentleman from Maxim's The Gentleman from Maxim's () is a 1933 German comedy film directed by Carl Boese and starring Lee Parry, Johannes Riemann and Oskar Karlweis. The film's sets were designed by the art director Gustav A. Knauer and Walter Reimann.",
"Guy Green (filmmaker) Guy Mervin Charles Green OBE BSC (5 November 191315 September 2005) was an English film director, producer, screenwriter, and cinematographer. In 1948, he won an Oscar as cinematographer for the film \"Great Expectations\". In 2002, Green was given a Lifetime Achievement Award by the BAFTA, and, in 2004, he was named an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his lifetime contributions to British cinema. Green was born in Frome, Somerset, England. He began working in film in 1929 and became a noted film cinematographer and a founding member of the British Society of Cinematographers. Green became a full-time director of photography in the mid-1940s, working on such films as David Lean's \"Oliver Twist\" in 1948. In about 1955, Green switched to directing, and he moved to Hollywood around 1962. In addition to directing \"A Patch of Blue\" (1965), Green also wrote and co-produced the film. After his death, his widow Josephine told AP that it was his proudest accomplishment. Among his other films as director are \"The Angry Silence\" (1960), \"The Mark\" (1961) (nominated for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival), \"Jacqueline Susann's Once Is Not Enough\" (1975), and \"The Devil's Advocate\" (1977). Green died in his Beverly Hills home from kidney and heart failure, aged 91. In addition to his wife of 57 years, he was survived by his son, Michael; his daughter, Marilyn Feldman; and two grandchildren.",
"The Man Who Loved Redheads The Man Who Loved Redheads is a 1955 British comedy film directed by Harold French and starring Moira Shearer, John Justin and Roland Culver. The film is based on the play \"Who is Sylvia?\" (1950) by Terence Rattigan, which is reputedly a thinly veiled account of the author's philandering father. The film follows the play fairly closely, its main difference being the turning of Sylvia into a redhead. The film contains a ballet sequence featuring extracts from \"The Sleeping Beauty\", which was decorated by Loudon Sainthill. Young peer and junior member of the Foreign Office, Mark St. Neots (John Justin), is obsessed with the memory of Sylvia (Moira Shearer), a 16-year-old redhead he met at a party as a boy, and vowed he would love forever. Now older and respectably married, Mark still retains his image of the beautiful young girl with the red hair, and spends the rest of his life searching for her, through a string of casual affairs. The film was the last movie from director Harold French: I didn't like that - I didn't enjoy making it, or seeing it. I got on all right with Moira but I didn't think she was quite strong enough. I felt we were under-cast. You couldn't meet a nicer man than the leading man, John Justin, but I really wanted Kenneth More. But it wasn't a very good play and Terry did the screenplay as well. Of course Gladys Cooper steals the whole thing in the last few minutes... I quarrelled with Korda about it. I had a clause in my contract with him that he wasn't to come on the set, but he did come a few times and suggest very old fashioned ideas. His days as a great producer were pretty much over by then and he was tired. In a contemporary review, \"The New York Times\" wrote, \"With the aid of an expert cast and a director endowed with a deft, comic touch and a high regard for the subtleties of the English language, Mr. Rattigan and the producers have created a charming lark, light as a zephyr and just as welcome these days,\" before singling out Moira Shearer, who \"In essaying the roles of the 'redheads,' has developed acting talents that are both surprising and refreshing\". \"The Evening Standard\" wrote of the film, \"it's featherweight, but it's fun\".",
"My Gentleman Friends My Gentleman Friends is a Canadian docudrama television film, directed by Moze Mossanen and released in 1999. The film centres on Victor (Aron Tager), Gordon (David Gardner) and Luigi (François Klanfer), three older gay men who were all once dancers with a ballet company, and are being interviewed about their lives by documentary filmmaker Margaret (Christina Collins). The cast also includes David Dunbar, Greg Spottiswood, and Brigitte Gall as production staff assisting Margaret. Although the main trio of actors was not literally playing themselves, many of their characters' reminiscences in the film were true stories gathered by Mossanen from interviews with real older gay men who had worked in performing arts as actors, musicians, or dancers. The film premiered on Bravo on April 7, 1999. Mossanen received a Gemini Award nomination for Best Writing in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series at the 14th Gemini Awards. The film was subsequently rebroadcast on Bravo in 2004 as part of a retrospective series of Mossanen's works, alongside \"The Rings of Saturn\", \"The Year of the Lion\" and his new \"From Time to Time\".",
"Allan Gentleman Allan Forbes Gentleman is a former member of the Scottish National Swimming Team and five times World Masters Swimming Champion (Aarhus, August 1989). He is a film director, writer and actor. He has worked in the British television and film industry since 1998. His father Robert Forbes Gentleman (born 28 August 1923) was a British water polo player who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics.",
"Marry a Rich Man Marry a Rich Man is a 2002 Hong Kong movie directed by Vincent Kok.",
"I Hate Blondes I Hate Blondes (Italian: \"Odio le bionde\") is a 1980 Italian crime comedy film directed by Giorgio Capitani.",
"Stephen Frears Stephen Arthur Frears (born 20 June 1941) is an English director and producer of film and television often depicting real life stories as well as projects that explore social class through sharply drawn characters. Born in Leicester and educated at Gresham's School and Trinity College, Cambridge, Frears started his career working as an assistant director in theatre and film while directing numerous television plays. In 1971, he directed his first feature film, \"Gumshoe\". After more television work, he won acclaim for the gay romance film, \"My Beautiful Laundrette\" (1985), featuring a breakout performance from a young Daniel Day-Lewis. He continued to garner praise with \"Prick Up Your Ears\" (1987), a biographical movie about British playwright Joe Orton. He followed with the American films \"Dangerous Liaisons\" (1988) and \"The Grifters\" (1990), the latter receiving a nomination for Best Director. In 2000, Frears adaptated Nick Hornby's novel, \"High Fidelity,\" into a feature film with John Cusack, whom he had previously directed in \"The Grifters\". In 2002, he directed the drama \"Dirty Pretty Things\" with Audrey Tautou and Chiwetel Ejiofor, which addressed the exploitation of illegal immigrant workers in London. In 2006, Frears directed \"The Queen\", that focused on the reaction to the tragic death of Princess Diana in 1997. The film received its debut at the Venice International Film Festival to critical acclaim, with Helen Mirren eventually winning many awards for playing the title role, and Frears himself received his second Academy Award nomination for Best Director. Frears continued to work with exceptional talents such as Judi Dench in the drama \"Philomena\" (2013), based on the true story of a woman searching for a child she gave up for adoption in her youth; and Meryl Streep in \"Florence Foster Jenkins\" (2016), as a delusional socialite who embarks upon a career as opera singer despite a manifest lack of vocal talent. He also reunited with Dench in \"Victoria and Abdul\" (2017), a film about the unlikely friendship between the aging Queen Victoria and her young Indian servant, Abdul Karim."
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[
"American"
] |
Are director of film Kungfu Cyborg and director of film Hamido'S Son from the same country?
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Kungfu Cyborg Kungfu Cyborg () is a 2009 Hong Kong science fiction action film directed by Jeffrey Lau. In the near future, De Ming is one of China's top leading officers in the law enforcement. He is a cyborg designed to handle assignments too dangerous for traditional methods, and is the first in the TN Research Bureau's "K Series"—a revolutionary cybernetic organism programmed with a sophisticated social conscience. De Ming is sent to a remote town as part of a covert training operation, placed under the supervision of the local police captain, Xu Dachun. Xu's mission is to facilitate De Ming's undercover integration into the community while protecting the secret of his young protégé's true identity. De Ming, whose charm and compassion for justice is quick to win the hearts of the town residents—though none more completely than that of Su Mei, a fellow officer who also happens to be the object of the captain's secret affection. Eventually, one of De Ming's cybernetic siblings, the K-88, has disappeared after suffering a critical neural meltdown. Xu and Ming hunt down and confront the malfunctioning cyborg in a spectacular clash of artificial wills that leaves the captain scarred, and De Ming gradually becomes confused and conflicted over his role in human society. While the mission is a success, consequences of De Ming's actions continue to haunt the him, and Xu's behavior has become increasingly strange and erratic after the battle with the K-88, a fact that De Ming feels compelled to hide from co-workers and superiors. Su Mei's behavior also becomes troubled as she is incapable of understanding that as a machine, Ming is unable to love her in the way she so desperately desires. Torn between his bond to humanity and the knowledge that he will never be a part of it, De Ming, unprepared, must find within himself the strength to defeat the group of cyborg assassins that has descended on the town to avenge his betrayal of the cyborgs. 29th Hong Kong Film Awards
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"Eric Oram Eric Anthony Oram (born October 13, 1968) is an American Wing Chun Kung Fu practitioner and fight choreographer who introduced a new way of filming fight scenes in the film \"\" in which the actors fought with real strikes and attacks, which were then featured in slow motion at 500 frames per second in the final movie. He has trained well known actors in Wing Chun such as Christian Bale for \"Batman Begins\", Jake Gyllenhaal, and in particular Robert Downey Jr. in \"Iron Man\" and \"Sherlock Holmes\" as his personal on-set consultant in numerous movies. Oram has been credited for training Downey in Kung Fu since 2003 as a way to beat his drug addictions. He wrote a moving letter to judge and California Governor Jerry Brown in support of Downey's pardon. Oram is one of the leading authorities on Wing Chun kung fu. In 1980 his father Richard sent him to train under William Cheung, the grandmaster of the Traditional Wing Chun lineage, who is a disciple of Ip Man. He started teaching at the age of 16, and over the last 25 years he taught Wing Chun to law enforcement, professional athletes, celebrities, and the general public. He has been a fight choreographer and stuntman for major Hollywood movies for Warner Bros. Pictures and Marvel Studios. Oram has written numerous articles, and has been featured in, \"Wing Chun Illustrated\", \"American Health and Fitness\", \"Black Belt Magazine\", \"Inside Kung Fu Magazine\", the \"Los Angeles Times\", \"Men's Journal\", \"Sports Illustrated\", and \"Vanity Fair\". He has appeared on the \"Oprah Winfrey Show\" alongside student Robert Downey Jr., whom he has been training since 2003. Oram has been instrumental in helping Downey overcome his drug addictions through Kung Fu training, He then became Downey's personal fight consultant on over a dozen films. Oram has stated in multiple interviews that the most dedicated student he has ever trained is Downey. Oram also trained Christian Bale in preparation for the \"Batman Begins\" trilogy, for which \"The Dark Knight\" won the 15th Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture in 2008. The fight choreography for \"\" was different from how it was traditionally done for other movies, and was met with resistance from the production side of the film.",
"Hamid Jebeli Hamid Jebelli (; born 1958) is an Iranian stage and film actor and director. He was born in Tehran, Iran. He has directed two films; Khab-e Sefid (White Dream) and Pesar-e Maryam (son of Mary). He is also the voice actor of Iranian famous puppet character, Kolah Ghermezi. His notable films as actor are: Mother, Del Shodegan, Kolah Ghermezi and Pesar Khaleh and Kolah Ghermezi and Bache Naneh. His film, Son of Mary was chosen as the best film in Cairo Film Festival.",
"Jingle Ma Jingle Ma Cho Shing (; born 1957) is a Hong Kong-based writer and director, best known for his action films such as \"Tokyo Raiders\" and \"Seoul Raiders\".",
"Mo Ali Mo Ali (, ) is a Somali-British film director. Ali was born in Saudi Arabia. He began his movie career in 2010, making his directorial debut in the drama film \"Shank\", set in a futuristic London. Ali is sometimes confused with the other Mo Ali, a writer and artist featured among the cast of \"Lint the Movie\", a 2011 documentary on the cult science fiction author and philosopher Jeff Lint.",
"Jalal Merhi Jalal Merhi is a Brazilian-born Canadian action film producer. He was born in Brazil to Lebanese immigrant parents. He started his film career by selling his jewellery business to start a film production company. He has produced and acted in numerous action films that can be considered martial arts B movies. Because of this he is known as \"Beirut’s Steven Seagal.\" Merhi first started Shotokan style of karate as youth later moving to tiger style Kung fu. He has sifu rank in kung fu and owns his own school in Canada.",
"Hong Khaou Hong Khaou (born 22 October 1975) is a Cambodian-born Chinese, British film director and screenwriter. He is best known for his debut feature film \"Lilting\" and the short films \"Summer\" and \"Spring\". Khaou was born in Cambodia to Chinese-Cambodian parents. He was a few months old when he and his family fled to Vietnam after the Fall of Phnom Penh to the Khmer Rouge. When he was 8 years old, his family migrated to the United Kingdom in the 1980s as political refugees. Khaou studied BA (Hons) Film Production at the University for the Creative Arts (UCA) in Farnham, formerly the Surrey Institute of Art & Design, graduating in 1997. His debut feature film \"Lilting\" was produced under the Film London micro-budget scheme Microwave, and was released on 8 August in the United Kingdom by distributors Artificial Eye. His short film \"Spring\" played at both the Sundance Film Festival, and the Berlin International Film Festival in 2011, with his previous short \"Summer\" also having premiered at Berlin in 2006. He is the recipient of the 2014 Sundance Institute/Mahindra Global Filmmaking Award for his upcoming feature film \"Monsoon\".",
"Kimo Stamboel Kimo Stamboel (born Muhammad Stamboel on 1 June 1980) is an Indonesian film director, producer, and screenwriter. He is known for his works on the horror genres both as himself and also as part of The Mo Brothers with friend Timo Tjahjanto. Stamboel launched his filmmaking career in 2004 with the release of his directorial debut \"Bunian\" in 2004 and achieved mainstream success with the release of slasher hit \"Macabre\" (also known as \"Rumah Dara\") in 2009. The duo received a Citra Award for Best Director nomination in 2016 for \"Headshot.\" Kimo went to school in Australia, where he met future collaborator Timo Tjahjanto. In 2004, Stamboel released his feature film debut \"Bunian\" based on a screenplay he co-wrote with Virra I. Dewi. The shooting took place in Sydney, Australia, where he was studying at the time. Filming took place over the course of 2002 and 2003 as the crew and cast were only available during the weekends. Timo Tjahjanto, who would later become his partner as The Mo Brothers, worked on the film as a freelance cameraman. Working together as co-directors for the first time, Tjahjanto and Stamboel released the 2007 short film \"Dara.\" The short was later included in the 2008 anthology film \"Takut: Faces of Fear\". Well received by the public, they decided to develop a feature film based on the short and released \"Macabre\" in 2009 with Julie Estelle and Shareefa Daanish in the lead roles. The film received praise during its run at several film festivals and launched the two into mainstream recognition. Stamboel and Tjahjanto appeared among the patrons of Herosase in Joko Anwar's \"The Forbidden Door\". Stamboel and Tjahjanto then directed, produced, and wrote the horror-thriller \"Killers\" which premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival. It received positive reviews upon release with a 73% fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes. Their next project was the 2016 action film \"Headshot\" which stars Iko Uwais and Chelsea Islan.",
"Lee Lik-chi Lee Lik-chi (李力持) (born 10 May 1961) is a Hong Kong-based actor, director, and screenwriter. He is best known for his collaborations with Stephen Chow before disassociating each other due to frequent clashes. He is also an active contributor to local education, lecturing and organising filmmaking programs to students. Lee was born into a working-class family and grew up in government housing. His father was a metalworker and his mother was a textile worker. He has two brothers and a sister. His chemistry teacher taught him how to use a camera. Lee started in the entertainment industry as a production assistant at ATV.",
"Masaki Kobayashi filmography Masaki Kobayashi was a Japanese film director, screenwriter and producer who has directed twenty films in a career spanning 33 years. He is best known for \"The Human Condition\" Trilogy, the Academy Award–nominated horror film \"Kwaidan\" and the jidaigeki films \"Harakiri\" and \"Samurai Rebellion\".",
"Monty Tiwa Monty Tiwa (born 28 August 1976 in Jakarta) is an Indonesian screenwriter, composer, film editor, film producer and film director. Monty Tiwa enrolled in University of Kansas before he returned to Indonesia and worked as creative writer for Trans TV (2002–2003), head section creative for RCTI (2003–2004) and creative director for MNC (2004–2005). Currently, Monty works as an independent writer and film director."
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"no"
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Which film has the director born first, Siempre Es Difícil Volver A Casa or Jiggs And Maggie In Jackpot Jitters?
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Jiggs and Maggie in Jackpot Jitters Jiggs and Maggie in Jackpot Jitters is a 1949 American comedy film directed by William Beaudine and starring Joe Yule, Renie Riano and George McManus. It was the third of four films in the "Jiggs and Maggie" film series, spun off from "Bringing Up Father" (1946). The series follows the adventures of a family of Irish immigrants to the United States. Jiggs and Maggie win a racehorse in a competition, but lose large sums of money on it each time it races.
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"Lo que va de ayer a hoy Lo que va de ayer a hoy is a 1945 Mexican fantasy comedy film directed by Juan Bustillo Oro and Paulino Masip. It stars Enrique Herrera, Rosario Granados and Miguel Arenas.",
"Bringing Up Father (1946 film) Bringing Up Father is a 1946 American comedy film, based on the comic strip Bringing Up Father by George McManus, about the adventures of the social-climbing Maggie and her long-suffering husband Jiggs. Here, one of Maggie's society friends enlists her help in getting an undesirable tenant evicted, a tenant who turns out to be Jiggs himself. Meanwhile, Jiggs rounds up his friends from the bar to defend his turf. McManus briefly appears here as himself. This 1946 production is subsequent to a number of previous Maggie and Jiggs movies, both animated and live-action, notably a silent 1928 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film directed by Jack Conway. This one was successful enough to inspire four more Monogram sequels: All five of these featured former vaudevillian Joe Yule (father of Mickey Rooney) as Jiggs, and were his final films.",
"Félix Dafauce Félix Dafauce (13 November 1896 – 5 October 1990) was a Spanish film actor. He appeared in 120 films between 1925 and 1987. He was born and died in Madrid, Spain.",
"George Aguilar George Aguilar is a Mescalero Apache and Pascua Yaqui actor. He is best known for his roles as Cahuenga in \"Bagdad Café\", Johnny Sassamon in \"The Scarlet Letter\", Grandfather in Dreamkeeper, Big Foot in \"Into the West\", and Kaw Chief in \"Neverland\". Aguilar is probably best known for his work on \"Bagdad Cafe\" (1987), \"The Scarlet Letter\" (1995) and the miniseries \"Neverland\" (2011). Aguilar has been married to French actress Josiane Balasko since 2003. They reside in the Paris area. A son, also named George Aguilar, was a car mechanic and aspiring actor who with his father appeared in \"The Scarlet Letter\" (1995) and \"Into The West\" (2005); he died in 2008 at age 28.",
"Casa de mi padre Casa de mi padre (\"House of My Father\" or simply \"My Father's House\") is a 2012 Spanish-language American crime action comedy film directed by Matt Piedmont, written by Andrew Steele, and starring Will Ferrell, Gael García Bernal, Diego Luna and Génesis Rodríguez. It was described to be in the style of an \"overly dramatic telenovela\" and tells the story of Armando Álvarez, who must save his father's ranch from a powerful drug lord. \"Casa de mi padre\" was released on March 16, 2012. Armando Álvarez (Will Ferrell) has lived and worked on his father's ranch in Mexico his entire life. As the ranch encounters financial difficulties, Armando's younger brother Raúl (Diego Luna), shows up with his new fiancée, Sonia (Génesis Rodríguez). It seems that Raúl's success as an international businessman means the ranch's troubles are over as he pledges to settle all debts his father has incurred. But when Armando falls for Sonia, and Raúl's business dealings turn out to be less than legitimate, all hell breaks loose as they find themselves in a war with Mexico's most feared drug lord, the mighty Onza (Gael García Bernal). Dan Haggerty, who famously portrayed the titular character in the popular television series \"The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams\", appears as himself in a post-credits cameo. The opening scene features the lips of Christina Aguilera who sings the eponymous song. In August 2010, Emilio Diez Barroso and Darlene Carmaño Loquet of NALA Films announced that they were teaming up with Will Ferrell, Adam McKay, Kevin Messick, and Jessica Elbaum of Gary Sanchez Productions to produce the Spanish-language comedy, \"Casa de mi padre\", starring Will Ferrell. NALA Films was to finance the project; it was set to start filming in September 2010 in California. Producer Darlene Caamano Loquet stated, \"We are just thrilled he [Ferrell] is on board and are moving full steam ahead since we have one month to teach him Spanish\". In October 2010, it was reported that Gael García Bernal and Diego Luna had joined the cast along with Génesis Rodríguez, Pedro Armendáriz Jr., Héctor Jiménez, and Adrian Martinez.",
"Mi marido hoy duerme en casa Mi marido hoy duerme en casa is a 1955 Argentine film directed by Enrique Carreras and starring Adrianita, Gogó Andreu and Tono Andreu.",
"Jaclyn DeSantis Jaclyn DeSantis is an American actress. She is best known for playing Maggie on the NBC television series Windfall. Jaclyn was born in Long Island, New York. She attended the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan and Mass Arts in Boston. Later, she went on to study at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute. Dividing her time between New York City and Los Angeles, Jaclyn enjoys performing as a musician and travelling to Spain, the United Kingdom, Germany and France. DeSantis played Heather in \"Road Trip\" and Alexandra in \"Bomb the System\" in 2002. In 2005 she played Leticia in the crime/drama movie \"\". DeSantis appeared as a young widow and rancher in the 2008 film \"A Gunfighter's Pledge\". In 2009 she played Cuba Gooding Jr.'s wife in the film, \"The Way of War\". In 2003 she portrayed Luis Guzman's daughter on the sitcom, \"Luis\". Since 2014 she has been working as a Wildlife Rehabilitator and Educator at the Ojai Raptor Center in Southern California. Jaclyn is also an international DJ with the group \"Gaia Tribe\". Her hobbies include painting, writing, photography, dancing and yoga.",
"Jiggy Jiggy may refer to:",
"Una Jaula no tiene secretos Una jaula no tiene secretos (\"A Cage Has No Secrets\") is a 1962 Spanish-Argentine comedy film directed by Agustín Navarro. The script was written by Raúl Gurruchaga The movie premiered on October 3, 1962. The movie won the original screenplay award of the year. The plot revolves around the breakdown of a building's elevator, trapping its passengers. The breakdown occurs just before midnight on the last day of the year. The elevator operator is Alberto Olmedo, who still had some hair at the time. The light comedy includes various gags and humorous situations. The film was one of the last in which Carlos Gandolfo appeared as an actor. After being diagnosed with throat cancer, he turned to directing and teaching.",
"Maggie Gee Maggie Gee may refer to:"
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"Jiggs And Maggie In Jackpot Jitters"
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Who was born later, Ranti Martins or Eddie Edwards (Wrestler)?
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Eddie Edwards Eddie Edwards may refer to:
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"José Eduardo Martins José Eduardo Martins may refer to:",
"Eddie Dean Eddie Dean may refer to:",
"Eve Edwards Eve Edwards may refer to:",
"Eddie Allen Eddie Allen may refer to:",
"Eddie Matos Eddie Matos may refer to:",
"Adriano Martins Adriano Soares Martins (born June 12, 1982) is a Brazilian mixed martial artist currently competing in the Lightweight division of Taura MMA. A professional competitor since 2004, he has competed for the Ultimate Fighting Championship, Strikeforce and DREAM and Fight Nights Global. Originally from Manaus, Brazil, Martins began training in Judo in 1994, which he continued with until the year 2000, reaching the rank of brown belt. Due to his desire to learn submissions, Martins began training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in 1999. Martins went on to have an accomplished career in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, winning various titles. In 2004, needing to support his newly formed family, Martins began mixed martial arts. Martins made his professional mixed martial arts debut in 2004 and compiled a 23–6 record on the Brazilian circuit before being signed by Strikeforce. Martins was scheduled to make his Strikeforce debut against Isaac Vallie-Flagg on September 29, 2012 at . However, the event was cancelled due to an injury to headliner Gilbert Melendez. Martins faced Jorge Gurgel on January 12, 2013 at . He won the fight via unanimous decision. Martins made his promotional debut against Daron Cruickshank on November 9, 2013 at . He won via submission due to a straight armbar in the second round. The win also earned him his first \"Submission of the Night\" bonus award. Martins faced Donald Cerrone on January 25, 2014 at UFC on Fox 10. He lost the fight via knockout in the first round. As the first bout of his new four-fight contract, Martins faced promotional newcomer Juan Puig on July 6, 2014 at . He won the fight via knockout in the first round, after landing a short, counter right hand. The knockout earned him his first \"Performance of the Night\" bonus award. Martins faced Rustam Khabilov on February 22, 2015 at UFC Fight Night 61. He won the fight by split decision. In the fight, he was able to take and knock Khabilov down at the end of the second round. Martins faced Islam Makhachev at UFC 192 on October 3, 2015. He won the fight via knockout in the first round, which produced a \"Performance of the Night\" bonus.",
"Eddie Wilson Eddie Wilson may refer to:",
"Ranti Martins Ranti Martins Soleye (born 5 September 1986) is a retired Nigerian professional footballer who played as a striker. Martins is one of the best foreign players to play in the Indian I-League, with a record 214 goals across all seasons. He set a single-season record for goals in the I-League by scoring 32 goals during the 2011–12 season for Dempo. He scored a total 22 goals for Indian clubs at the continental tournament AFC Cup. Martins as a teenager went to Anwar-L-Islam College in Agege, Lagos where he played for the football club in the Principal Cup and the Shell Cup. He then moved to Ghana where he joined Asante Kotoko Football Academy. He stayed at the Academy till 2004 before moving to King Faisal Babes in the Ghana Premier League. In 2004 Martins signed for Dempo S.C. of the National Football League. His first tournament was the 2004 Federation Cup which Dempo won. After playing his first season with Dempo during the 2004–05 Martins finished the season as the 2nd top scorer at 15 goals, behind Dudu Omagbemi who had 21 goals. He did however lead Dempo to the championship that very season as well. Martins made his debut in the AFC Cup during the 2005 version of the cup against Al Ahed of Lebanon on 9 March 2005. Dempo lost the match 0–1. The next season after the 2005–06 season Dempo finished in 5th place but Martins himself finished as the league top scorer with 13 goals. He also scored 2 goals during the 2006 AFC Cup against Al-Nasr from Oman and FC Merw of Turkmenistan. Both matches ended 1–3 and 2–2 respectively. The next season Ranti Martins finished as joint top scorer with Odafe Onyeka Okolie with 16 goals. Martins then became one of the top scorers in the first season of the newly started I-League in 2007–08 when he scored 12 goals throughout the whole season, only ten goals behind the top scorer Odafe Onyeka Okolie, and tied with Somalian Mboyo Iyomi. However it was enough to help Dempo win the I-League that season.",
"Edward Williams Edward, Ed or Eddie Williams may refer to:",
"Eddie Brown Eddie Brown may refer to:"
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"Ranti Martins"
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Who is the paternal grandfather of Waleran Ii, Lord Of Ligny?
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Waleran II, Lord of Ligny Waleran II of Luxembourg, Lord of Ligny (; ; died 1354), was a French nobleman and member of the House of Luxembourg. He was Lord of Beauvoir, Roussy and Ligny. He was a son of Waleran I and his wife, Joan of Beauvoir. Walram initially inherited the castles of Beauvoir and Roussy from his mother. After the death of his brother Henry II in 1303, he also inherited his father's Lordship of Ligny. He died in 1354 and was buried in the church of Notre-Dame in Cambrai. He was married to Guyotte (died 1338), the heiress of the Burgraviate of Lille. Together they had a son:
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"Waleran, Duke of Lower Lorraine Waleran II (or Walram II) ( 1085 – 1139), also called Paganus, probably due to a late baptism, was the Duke of Limburg and Count of Arlon () from his father's death in about 1119 until his own twenty years later. He was given the Duchy of Lower Lorraine by Lothair of Supplinburg in 1128 after the latter's accession as King of Germany in 1125. He was the son of Henry, Duke of Lower Lorraine (1101–1106), and Adelaide of Pottenstein (Adelheid von Botenstein). Henry had been forced to yield the duchy to Godfrey I of Leuven on Henry V's succession, but had kept the ducal title. With the coming of Lothair, Godfrey was forced to yield it to Waleran. Godfrey was not willing to do so and war broke out, especially over disputes about the advocats of the abbey of Sint-Truiden, the Counts of Duras. In 1129, Waleran and the bishop of Liège, Alexandre de Juliers, defeated Godfrey's forces at Wilderen, near Duras, but Brabant and Duras subsequently continued to fight until they came to terms three years later. Though Waleran and Godfrey eventually reconciled, Godfrey continued to use the ducal title. He married Jutta von Wassenberg sometime between 1107–10, daughter of Gerard I of Guelders. In 1129, Waleran was made forester of Duisbourg. In 1139, Lothair died and Waleran supported Conrad of Hohenstaufen, who was elected. He remained faithful to the new king until his death shortly thereafter. He was succeeded by Godfrey II of Leuven in Lorraine. Waleran and Jutta had:",
"Waleran I of Limburg Waleran (or Walram) II of Arlon (died 1082), supposedly also called Udon of Limburg, was the count of Arlon from AD 1052 and, if he was the same person as Udon, also count of Limburg from 1065 and \"advocatus\" of the Abbey of Sint-Truiden. He was the younger son of Waleran I, Count of Arlon, and his wife Adelaide. His elder brother Fulk became Count of Arlon. The evidence for the origins and details of his family are incomplete. In 2007 Jean-Louis Kupper proposed that Udo and Walram II are probably two different people, who were both succeeded by Henry, count of Limbourg, who later became Duke of Lower Lotharingia. Some key facts for the two men would be as follows, according to Kupper: Count Henry of Limburg, inherited Limburg from his mother, but according to Kupper there is no evidence that he ever held Arlon. It was inherited by his son Waleran, Duke of Lower Lorraine, who was also known as Paganus, by 1115, when Henry (who died about 1118) was still alive. According to Kupper, this is a sign that Waleran-Paganus had inherited from his mother rather than his father, in contrast to the lordship of Limburg, and the advocacy of St Truiden, which had been his father's.",
"House of Namur The house of Namur is a family of the Lotharingian nobility, coming from Berenger count of Lommegau. He later became count of Namur, when the county of Lammegau was renamed to county of Namur. He married a sister of Giselbert duke of Lotharingia, from the House of Reginar. \"Vita Gerardi abbatis Broniensis\" states that the descendants of Berenger continued to hold the county of Namur, but the relationship between Berengar and his successor Robert I is not known. Some think that Robert is a grandson of Berengar by his mother, others speak of a nephew. His son Albert I, Count of Namur, was father of Albert II, Count of Namur. The latter gave Durbuy to his second son and Namur to his first son Albert III, Count of Namur, who married Ida from the House of Billung, heiress of La Roche-en-Ardenne. His son Godfrey I, Count of Namur married Ermesinde from the House of Ardennes-Verdun, daughter of Conrad I, Count of Luxembourg. Son of the above was Henry the Blind, Count of Namur, La Roche, Durbuy and, as Henry IV, of Luxembourg. His daughter Ermesinde inherited the counties of La Roche, Durbuy and Luxembourg, while his nephew Baldwin V, Count of Hainaut inherited Namur. Henry IV the Blind, the last male member of the House, died in 1196. Ermesinde married Waleran III, Duke of Limburg; thus the county of Luxembourg, from the House of Ardennes, passed through Ermesinda of Namur to the House of Limburg (a parent house of the House of Luxembourg).",
"Waleran the Hunter Waleran the Hunter (floruit 1086) (Latin: \"Waleran Venator\") was an Anglo-Norman magnate who held 51 manors as recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086, including Whaddon in Wiltshire and several in Hampshire, including West Dean, within the New Forest. His Latin name (perhaps an epithet) as recorded in the Domesday Book, \"Venator\" (\"the Hunter\"), suggests that he was a hunt-official of that royal forest. Little else is known about him. His descendants assumed the surname \"Waleran\", and Waldron one of the descendants in a junior line of which was Robert Walerand (died 1273), Justiciar to King Henry III. The senior line of the family retained the manor of West Dean until the death of Walter Waleran (d. \"circa\" 1200), who left three daughters and co-heiresses:",
"Walo II of Chaumont-en-Vexin Walo II (Galon II de Beaumont) (*1060; † 1098) was a viscount of Chaumont-en-Vexin and a constable of King Philip I of France. He was son of Odo (Eudes) de Beaumont, viscount of Chaumont-en-Vexin. He took a part at the First Crusade as part of the army of Hugh the Great that attempted to capture the Holy Lands, called by Pope Urban II in 1095. Walo was killed by the Turks during the Siege of Antioch on 20 May 1098. Walo was married to Humberge of Le Puiset, a sister of Everard of Le Puiset, both from the prominent Île-de-France family of Hugh I of Le Puiset. Walo and Humberge had three children: Drogo was the ancestor of the later counts of Dammartin, his great-grandson Jean, Châtelain de Trie, marrying Alix de Dammartin, daughter of Alberic III, Count of Dammartin. Medieval Lands Project, Vicomtes de Chaumont-en-Vixen Riley-Smith, Jonathan, The First Crusaders, 1095–1131, Cambridge University Press, 1997",
"Counts of Ligny The Lords of Ligny, later Counts of Ligny, ruled the fief of Ligny-en-Barrois during the Middle Ages. In 1240, the seigniory of Ligny-en-Barrois was given by Henry II of Bar as the dowry of his daughter Marguerite, who married Henry V of Luxemburg (Henry I of Ligny). Henry bestowed it upon his younger son Waleran in 1281, who was killed at the Battle of Worringen in 1288. In 1364, it was elevated to a county by Guy I, and remained in the Luxembourg family and their descendants (with an interruption 1476–1510) until 1719, when it was sold to the Duke of Lorraine by Charles-Francis.",
"John II of Luxembourg, Count of Ligny John II of Luxembourg, Count of Ligny (1392 – 5 January 1441) was a French nobleman and soldier, a younger son of John of Luxembourg, Lord of Beauvoir, and Marguerite of Enghien. His older brother Peter received his mother's fiefs, including the County of Brienne, while John received Beaurevoir. He married Jeanne de Béthune, Viscountess of Meaux, widow of Robert of Bar, on 23 November 1418, and became step-father to Jeanne de Bar, Countess of Marle and Soissons. He and Jeanne de Béthune had no children. His name originates from the fact that he was a 6th generation descendant of Henry V, Count of Luxembourg, and thus belonged to the French branch of the House of Luxembourg. His career began in the service of John the Fearless, the Duke of Burgundy, during the Armagnac-Burgundian Civil War in France. John II of Luxembourg was appointed governor of Arras in 1414, and conducted several raids into nearby Armagnac outposts. In April 1418, at the command of a Burgundian force, he relieved the besieged city of Senlis from the Armagnacs. After Paris was seized by the Burgundians in May of the same year, John II became governor of Paris, serving from 1418 to 1420. He took the side of the English during the Hundred Years' War, and carried out a number of chevauchées on behalf of the Regent Bedford. John II and his family were steadfast supporters of the English cause among the French nobility, and his brother Louis (1391–1443), the bishop of Thérouanne, became chancellor of France for the Duke of Bedford. In 1425, he seized the \"seigneurie\" of Guise, which he had disputed with René of Anjou. Guise, at that time the last Armagnac outpost in northern France, was of strategic importance grew due to its position between Burgundy and the Burgundian Netherlands. John II was a descendant of the Châtillon counts of Saint-Pol, who formerly held Guise, and his claim to it was recognized by the Duke of Bedford.",
"Philip I, Duke of Brabant Philip I, also known as \"Philip of Saint Pol\" (25 July 1404 – Leuven, 4 August 1430), was the younger son of Antoine, Duke of Brabant and Jeanne of Saint-Pol. He succeeded his brother John IV as Duke of Brabant in 1427, while he had inherited Saint-Pol and Ligny as an appanage on the death of his maternal grandfather, Waleran III of Luxembourg, Count of Ligny, in 1415. He commanded the Burgundian forces occupying Paris in 1419, but he returned to Brabant in 1420, where the populace complained of his brother's misadministration. He was then declared \"ruwaard\" (regent) of Brabant. In 1421, he was reconciled with his brother and resigned the regency. The citizens were pacified by John's \"Nieuw Regiment\" in 1422. During his own reign, Philip was forced to grant concessions to the nobility in 1428. Wary of the rise of his cousin and heir Philip the Good in the Hook and Cod wars, he sought a marital alliance with Louis II, Duke of Anjou, against Burgundy, marrying his daughter Yolande of Anjou. Because this marriage produced no children, his death in 1430 placed Brabant in the hands of his cousin Philip the Good, the next heir, whilst Saint-Pol and Ligny went to his great-aunt, Joan of Luxembourg, by proximity of blood. His wife Yolande was placed in the guardianship of Philip the Good, until she remarried in 1431 to Francis I, Duke of Brittany.",
"Arnold V, Count of Loon Arnold V de Looz, (died August 22, 1327) was Count of Loon from 1279 to 1323 and Count of Chiny (Arnulf III) from 1299 to 1310. He was the son of John I, Count of Looz and Mathilde Jülich. He helped Richardis Gelderland, his widow maternal grandfather, Henri, Count of Luxembourg and Renaud I, Count of Gelderland, fight Siegfried von Westerburg, archbishop of Cologne. Taken prisoner, he had to pay a ransom to be freed. He was forced to deal with Isabelle de Conde, widow of his father in 1281 and had to assign a dower, and give Warcq, Agimont and Givet to his half-brothers John and Jacquemin. In turn, they give up their rights to the county of Loon. This is the only condition that the parents of Marguerite one hand, and his uncle Nicolas II de Conde on the other hand, consent to marriage. In 1288, he commanded a corps of the army of John I, Duke of Brabant, and contributed much to the victory on June 5 in the famous Battle of Worringen (on the Rhine), which ended the War of Limburg succession between Renaud, Count of Gelderland, husband of Ermingarde heiress, Duchess of Limburg (+ 1283), and the Duke of Brabant. he ranks in the war of Awans and Waroux between families Waroux and Awans, from 1297 to 1335, on the side of the bishops of Liege, Hugues de Chalon (from 1396-1301) and Adolph II of La Marck (1313 to 1344), Haspengouw dependent on these princes. He was appointed regent Mambourg or Liège after the death of Adolf II of Waldeck (1302). In 1299, death without his uncle's son Louis V, he inherited Chiny (is this uncle who organized in 1285 the famous Tournament Chauvency, Jacques Bretel celebrated). In 1312, the death of the bishop of Liege Bar Thiebaut prompted him to return to Liege, but faces revolt of the bourgeoisie. The principality was ravaged and saw the excommunication of the count.",
"Anthony I, Count of Ligny Anthony I, Count of Ligny (1450–1519) was the youngest son of Louis de Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol and his wife, Jeanne de Bar, Countess of Marle and Soissons. In 1482, he inherited the County of Brienne from his brother Peter II, Count of Saint-Pol. After the death of Charles of Bourbon in 1510, Anthony inherited the County of Ligny, which thereby fell back to the House of Luxemburg. His name originates from the fact that he was a 8th generation descendant of Henry V, Count of Luxembourg, and thus belonged to the french branch of the House of Luxembourg. He married three times: By his mistress, Peronne de Machefert, he had an illegitimate son, Antoine of Luxembourg, Bastard of Brienne (1480-1538), who married and had issue (last male descendant John III of Chapelle died in 1670)."
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[
"Henry V, Count of Luxembourg"
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Are both directors of films Girl Overboard (1937 Film) and Joseph (2018 Film) from the same country?
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Girl Overboard (1937 film) 'Girl Overboard' is a 1937 American mystery film directed by Sidney Salkow from a screenplay by Tristram Tupper based on a story by Sara Elizabeth Rodger. The film stars Gloria Stuart, Walter Pidgeon, and Billy Burrud, and was released on February 28, 1937.
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[
"Joseph France Joseph France may refer to:",
"Man Overboard (film) Man Overboard (German: Mann über Bord) is a 1921 German silent drama film directed by Karl Grune and starring Grit Hegesa, Erich Kaiser-Titz and Alfred Abel. It premiered in Berlin on 19 May 1921.",
"Man Overboard! Man Overboard! (also known as Cold-Blooded Murder) is a detective novel by Freeman Wills Crofts, first published in 1936. It is the fifteenth novel in the Inspector French series. The book is set largely in Northern Ireland, and re-uses two of the characters from the earlier novel \"Sir John Magill's Last Journey\" (1930) which was set in the same country. As a MacGuffin, the novel centres on a supposedly newly discovered (though possibly fraudulent) reversible chemical process that converts petrol into an inert form which is much safer for transport and storage. The potential commercial value of this discovery leads to intrigue, theft and murder, with everything finally solved by Inspector French after his usual dogged legwork and some flashes of inspiration.",
"Albrecht Joseph Albrecht Joseph (1901–1991) was a German playwright, screenwriter and film editor. Due to his Jewish heritage Joseph was forced to leave Germany following the Nazi Party's takeover in 1933. He initially went to Austria and then on to Italy and Britain. He finally settled in the United States in 1939 and was employed occasionally in Hollywood where he was sometimes credited as Al Joseph. His final work was on the western television series \"Gunsmoke\", editing over a hundred and fifty episodes.",
"Joseph James Joseph or Joe James may refer to:",
"Marie Joseph Marie Hampton Joseph (née Downs, 21 May 1920 – 28 December 1996) was a British writer of short-stories in magazines, 16 romance novels and a book about her arthritis. In 1987, her novel \"A Better World Than\" won the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists' Association. Joseph was born in Blackburn, Lancashire, England in May 1920 and was educated at Blackburn High School for Girls. She was in the Civil Service, before her marriage with a chartered Engineer. They had two daughters, now married, and eight grandchildren. She lived in Middlesex with her retired husband. She started to write at the age of 40, and she managed to publish in journals during the 1960s and 1970s, the stories are reedited in collection in the 1990s. Joseph published her first long romance novel in 1975. In 1976, she wrote a book about her life with arthritis. She continued publishing romance novels until 1992 and died in Harrow, London in December 1996 at the age of 76.",
"Joseph Garcia Joseph Garcia may refer to:",
"P. K. Joseph P. K. Joseph was an Indian film director in Malayalam movies. He had directed 16 Malayalam movies. He died in 1990.",
"Joseph Wright Joseph Wright may refer to:",
"Anne-Marie (film) Anne-Marie is a 1936 French drama film directed by Raymond Bernard and starring Annabella, Pierre Richard-Willm and Paul Azaïs. If features Annabella as an aspiring young pilot. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Jean d'Eaubonne and Jean Perrier. Writing for \"The Spectator\" in 1936, Graham Greene gave the film a mildly good review, describing it as \"silly but with some amiable qualities\". Commenting that \"there is very little to be said for this odd plot\", and suggesting that \"there is no discoverable theme\", Greene nevertheless praised Saint-Exupéry's scenario writing and concluded that \"it is chiefly worth seeing for [its] exciting and beautifully directed melodramatic climax\"."
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"no"
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Are the directors of both films Hector The Mighty and Surja Dighal Bari from the same country?
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Prafulla Chakraborty Prafulla Chakraborty was an Indian Bengali-language film director. His notable works are "Jamalaye Jibanta Manush" and "Gali Theke Rajpath."
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[
"Surya (film) Surya is a 2004 Bengali action film directed by Haranath Chakraborty. The film features actors Prosenjit Chatterjee and Anu Chowdhury in the lead roles. The film was a remake of the 2002 Telugu film \"Aadi\" which itself was partially inspired by the 1997 Kannada movie \"Simhada Mari\". The film was a Hit at the box office. The album is composed by Babul Bose while lyrics are penned by Goutam Susmit. The background score is composed by S. P. Venkatesh. Kumar Sanu, Shaan, Udit Narayan, Sadhana Sargam, Shreya Ghoshal, Sneha Panth has given their voices for the album.",
"Behula (film) Behula is a 1966 Bengali film directed by Zahir Raihan and stars Razzak and Shuchanda as lead pair. It was based on the Hindu mythology of Behula, who fights vehemently to goddess Manasa for her husband Lakhindar's life. The director was searching for a suitable hero for the character \"Lakhindar\", he auditioned for many a man. Razzak came to give audition with a beard unshaved for seven days. This proved lucky for him as he was selected by the director. It is one of the six films where Razzak and Shuchanda shared screen time.",
"Kadira Divyaraja Kadira Divyaraja () is an upcoming Sri Lankan Sinhala language fantasy film written and directed by professor Sunil Ariyaratne. This mythological film depicts the romantic relationship between Hindu god Kartikeya and the aboriginal princess Valli. The film stars Indian actors Sonakshi Rawat as Valli and Samar Vermani as Kartikeya in the lead roles. Supporting actors include Roshan Pilapitiya, Nilmini Tennakoon, Jagath Chamila, Wasantha Wittachchi, Dhananjaya Siriwardhana and Vinu Udani. This is directed by Sunil Ariyaratne. The filming of the movie took place at Ranmihithenna Telecinema Park, Sri Lanka.",
"Ora Egaro Jon Ora Egaro Jon () is a 1972 Bengali historical drama film written by Al Masood and directed by Chashi Nazrul Islam, based on the Bangladesh Liberation War. Director Islam and lead actor Khosru Noman were both members of Mukti Bahini (liberation army). It was the first movie of Bangladesh after independence. It has been selected for preservation by the Bangladesh Film Archive. After Bangladesh won their independence, this was the first film about their liberation war.",
"Sujit Guha Sujit Guha (born 23 July 1950) is an Indian film director known for his works in Bengali cinema.",
"Aranya Rodan Aranya Rodan (English \"Cry in the wildness\"), is a 1993 Indian Odia film directed by Biplab Ray Chaudhuri, based on the novel \"Ashanta Arayana\" by Odia writer Satakadi Hota. Kalyani (Priyambada Ray) is a journalist, who is investigating the rape and subsequent murder of a tribal woman by a police man in rural Orissa. She adopts the child of the dead woman and starts getting involved with the tribals' lives even as her own married life has its share of problems.",
"Surya Kiran (director) Surya Kiran is an Indian director who works in Telugu-language films. He is known for directing \"Satyam\". Also, he participated in Telugu reality TV show \"Bigg Boss Telugu 4\" as a contestant and is evicted on day 7. He worked as a child actor in two-hundred films under the stage name Master Suresh. Surya Kiran made his directorial debut with the successful \"Satyam\" (2003) and went on to direct other Telugu-language films. In a review of \"Satyam\", one critic praised his direction and called it a highlight of the film. He participated in the Telugu Reality television show \"Bigg Boss 4\" and was the first contestant to get eliminated. He planned to make a comeback in the year 2017, but the film was stuck in development hell. he was born to father T. S. Mani and mother Radha at Chennai, Tamilnadu. His family is from Trivandrum, Kerala. His younger sister Sujitha Dhanush is also an actress. He was briefly married to Kalyani before they divorced.",
"Badol Khondokar Badol Khondokar (born 27 May 1960) is a Bangladeshi film director and producer. Khondokar was born on 27 May 1960. He directed films like \"Swapner Prithibi\", \"Prithibi Tomar Amar\", \"Sagorika\", \"Abar Ekti Juddho\", \"Prem Korechhi Besh Korechhi\" and \"Bidrohi Padma\". These films are selected for preservation in Bangladesh Film Archive. His last direction was \"Bidrohi Padma\". It was released in 2006. He involved in producing films too. Khondokar collected nomination form for Kurigram-3 in 2013 for the Tenth Jatiya Sangsad Election. Later, he withdrew his nomination form. He is the cultural advisor of the central committee of the Jatiyo Party.",
"Hector the Mighty Hector the Mighty () is a 1972 Italian comedy film directed by Enzo G. Castellari. A parody of Homer's \"Iliad\" set in modern times, it is loosely based on the 1966 novel \"Le roi des Mirmidous\" by Henri Viard and Bernard Zacharias. Italian horror film director Lucio Fulci co-wrote the screenplay. Producer Edmondo Amati wanted Fulci to direct it, but Fulci thought it was an inferior project and was able to get out of doing it, even though he was under contract to Amati at the time. A pimp named Horny Hector operates a brothel on property coveted by Cardinal Giove. The Cardinal comes up with a plan to force Hector into selling him the land by kidnapping Helen (an updating of the Helen of Troy story), triggering a small gang war.",
"Madhumita Sarcar Madhumita Sarcar is an Indian actress from Kolkata, known for playing the lead roles of Pakhi Ghosh Dostidaar Singha Roy in Bojhena Se Bojhena and Dr. Emon Mukherjee in Kusum Dola. Her movie Love Aaj Kal Porshu released in February 2020, and Cheeni, released in December 2020. She also acted in Bengali the web series Judgement Day along with Sohini Sarkar, a ZEE5 original."
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[
"no"
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What is the date of death of Vichitra Chiraprabha's father?
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Vichitra Chiraprabha Princess Vichitra Chiraprabha (; ; 21 April 1881 – 15 August 1881) was a Princess of Siam (later Thailand). She was a member of Siamese Royal Family, the daughter of Chulalongkorn. Her mother was Queen Savang Vadhana, consort and half-sister of King Chulalongkorn (later become "Queen Sri Savarindira, the Queen Grandmother"). She was the eldest daughter and the third child of King Chulalongkorn and Queen Savang Vadhana together. She was given the full name by her father as "Vichitra Chiraprabha Adulyadirekratana Khattiyarajakumari" () She died in infancy on 15 August 1881, at the age of 3 months.
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[
"Ripunjaya Ripunjaya of Magadha was the last king of Brihadratha dynasty. His minister Pulika killed him and crowned his son Pradyota as the new king.",
"Birbhadra Shah Birbhadra Shah (died c. 1697) was the Crown prince of the Gorkha state in Nepal. He was the son of Prithvipati Shah and the father of Nara Bhupal Shah. Birbhadra Shah died while returning from Bhaktapur to Gorkha.",
"Chatra Shah Chatra Shah also Chhatra Shah, Ksatra Shah (; c. 1605–1606) was briefly the king of the Gorkha Kingdom in the Indian subcontinent, present-day Nepal. After the death of his father Purna Shah. He was the brother of Rama Shah.",
"Jinavajiralongkorn Somdet Phra Sangharaja Chao Krommaluang Jinavaralongkorn (Vasana Vāsano) (), or Ariyavangsagatayana VIII (Vasana Vāsano) was the 18th Supreme Patriarch of Thailand 1973–1988 (Thai Calendar 2517–2531). He was born 1897 (2440) within the Ayutthaya province as Vasana Nilprapha (). His dharma name in Pali was Vasano (). He was a monk of the Wat Ratchabophit. He died in 1988, at age 90, after a reign of 14 years and 2 months.",
"Kandarpadharma Kandarpadharma was the King of the Simhapura dynasty of Champa. He ruled from 629 to an unknown date, when he was succeeded by his son, King Prabhasadharma. His rule was peaceful and he sent two missions to China in 630 and 631.",
"Norodom Vichara Norodom Vichara (; 17 August 194628 July 2013) was a Cambodian princess and politician. She was a daughter of King Norodom Suramarit and a half-sister of King Norodom Sihanouk. She belonged to FUNCINPEC and was elected to represent Phnom Penh Municipality in the National Assembly of Cambodia in 2003. According to a family relative, Vichara died on 28 July 2013, at the age of 66, from a lengthy battle with lung cancer.",
"Virudhaka Virudhaka (, ) was a king of Kosala during the lifetime of the Buddha. He was the son of Prasenajit and , the daughter of a Shakyan chief named by a slave girl . He grew up to be a handsome and healthy young man. He was curious about his grandfather () and grandmother (), but his mother kept preventing him from visiting them. However, one day, she finally gave in. In the Shakya realm, he did not receive a warm welcome as he expected (he was the son of a slave girl) and was offended when he learnt about his mother's true identity. Once, while king Prasenjit was away from his capital Shravasti, his minister placed Virudhaka on the throne. Prasenjit went to Magadha to seek help from Ajātaśatru in order to regain his throne.Ajatashatru was brother-in-law of Virudhaka ,as Virudhaka's half sister Princess Vajira was married to him. But before being able to meet him, Prasenjit died of exposure outside the gates of Rājagṛha. The Puranas instead of mention the name of Kṣudraka as his successor. As an act of vengeance for cheating perceived slights against his mother, a servant before her royal marriage, Virudhaka invaded and virtually annihilated the Shakyas, to which the Buddha belonged, and Koliyas, in the Himalayan foothills. He never returned to his capital, Sravasti, and a little later Ajatshatru, the mighty ruler of Magadha, annexed his kingdom.",
"Kashemsanta Sobhaga Prince Kashemsanta Sobhaga, the Prince Phromwaranurak (; ; 18 August 1856 - 4 January 1924) was a Prince of Siam (later Thailand a member of Siamese royal family and a member House of Kashemsanta is a son of King Mongkut of Siam. His mother was Chao Chom Manda Pae Dharmasaroja is a daughter of Phra Samranharuethai (Uan Dharmasaroja) and Thao Songkandan (Si Dharmasaroja) he had 4 siblings, 2 elder sisters, 1 younger brother and 1 younger sister Prince Kashemsanta Sobhaga died 4 January 1924 at the age 67.",
"Chumbhotbongs Paribatra Chumbhotbongs Paribatra, Prince of Nakhon Sawan II (; , 5 December 1904 – 15 September 1959) was the only son of Prince Paripatra to survive into adulthood. He married Mom Ratchawong Pantip Devakula (; ). Their daughter is the artist, Princess Marsi Paribatra. The only surviving male descendant of royal blood from Queen Sukhumala Marasri and an indirect first cousin of the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej (since his father and Prince Mahidol Adulyadej are half-brothers), Chumbhotpong Paripatra was a potential heir to the Thai throne according to the 1924 Palace Law of Succession. In 1952, Prince Chumbhot converted his private residence into the Suan Pakkad Palace.",
"Rudra Shah Rudra Shah (; ?–1673) was the king of the Gorkha Kingdom in the Indian subcontinent, present-day Nepal. He was the father of Prithvipati Shah."
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[
"23 October 1910"
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Are director of film Kuva Kuva Vaathugal and director of film Possessed (1947 Film) from the same country?
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K. R. Mohanan Kuttiyil Raman Mohanan (11 December 1947 – 25 June 2017) born at thiruvathra Chavakadu Thrissur was a Malayalam film director best known for his critically acclaimed works, "Ashwathama" (1978), "Purushartham" (1987) and "Swaroopam" (1992). He studied at the Pune Film Institute. Mohanan was the Chairman of Kerala State Chalachitra Academy from 2006 to 2011 and the Director of International Film Festival of Kerala. He died of serious illness on June 25, 2017, aged 69.
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[
"Kooduthedunna Parava Kooduthedunna Parava is a 1984 Indian Malayalam film, directed by P. K. Joseph and produced by Thiruppathi Chettiyar. The film stars Ratheesh, Captain Raju, Balan K. Nair and Jalaja in the lead roles. The film has musical score by A. T. Ummer. The music was composed by A. T. Ummer and the lyrics were written by Poovachal Khader.",
"Kuttichaathan (film) Kuttichaathan is a 1975 Indian Malayalam film, directed by Crossbelt Mani. The film stars KP Ummer, Vidhubala, Bahadoor and Vincent in the lead roles. The film has musical score by R. K. Shekhar. The music was composed by R. K. Shekhar and the lyrics were written by Vayalar and Bharanikkavu Sivakumar.",
"Olav Neuland Olav Neuland (often spelled wrongly \"Olev Neuland\"; 29 April 1947 Viljandi – 21 May 2005 Anija) was an Estonian film director.",
"Kunchacko Kunchacko (19 February 1912 – 15 June 1976) was an Indian film producer and director who worked in the Malayalam film industry. His venture Udaya Studios influenced the gradual shift of Malayalam film industry from its original base of Madras, Tamil Nadu to Kerala. He is the producer of \"Jeevithanauka\" (1951), starring Thikkurissy Sukumaran Nair. Kunchacko was born to Mani Chacko Maliampurackal and Eliyamma in Pulinkunnoo, Alappuzha, Kerala, India in 1912. His father was the first to start a boat service in Kuttanad. Kunchacko became interested in the art of filmmaking as he grew up. After finishing his intermediate schooling (pre-degree equivalent) he made plans to establish a film studio in Kerala. In 1947, he established Udaya Studio in Pathirappally, Alappuzha. In his early days, Kunchacko produced films under the banner of \"K & K Productions\", with the partnership of K. V. Koshy. The company produced 4 films: \"Vellinakshatram\", \"Nalla Thanka\", \"Jeevithanauka\" and \"Visappinte Vili\". \"Jeevithanauka\" (1951), starring Thikkurissy Sukumaran Nair ran for 250 days. During the making of the film \"Achchan\", Kunchacko and Koshy parted ways and each started film-making under separate banners: Kunchacko under Udaya and Koshi under Filmco. Kunchacko went on to produce \"Achchan, Avan Varunnu\" and \"Kidappadam\" under the banner of Udaya. \"Kidappadam\" was a commercial failure, and that caused Kunchacko to close down Udaya Studio. However, Udaya was opened within a few years with the help of his friend and Kerala state minister T. V. Thomas. In 1960, Kunchacko tried his hand in film direction with \"Umma\", which he followed with \"Neeli Saali\" and \"Seetha\". He went on to direct 40 films in his career of many genres including purana stories, \"vadakkan pattu\" stories, comedy films and social themed films.",
"Mohan (1947 film) Mohan is a 1947 Bollywood film directed by Anadinath Bannerjee and starring Dev Anand and Butt Kashar.",
"Cheenavala Cheenavala () is a 1975 Indian Malayalam film, produced and directed by Kunchacko. The film stars Prem Nazir, Jayabharathi, K. P. A. C. Lalitha and Adoor Bhasi in the lead roles. The film has musical score and songs composed by M. K. Arjunan.",
"T. Siva T. Siva is an Indian film producer and distributor in Chennai, India. He has produced 23 films including \"Saroja\" and \"Kanimozhi\". He owns the production company, Amma Creations. He is best known for \"Aravindhan\" (in which he introduced Yuvan Shankar Raja), \"Saroja\" and \"Aravaan\". In the late 1990s, Siva faced economic problems following the release of \"Aravindhan\" (1997). In early 1999, he attempted to make a comeback though a film titled \"Conductor Mappillai\" starring Murali and Swathi but the film was shelved.",
"Navavadhu Navavadhu is a 1971 Indian Malayalam film, directed by P. Bhaskaran and produced by A. L. Sreenivasan. The film stars Prem Nazir, Sharada, Sukumari and Adoor Bhasi in the lead roles. The film had musical score by G. Devarajan. The music was composed by G. Devarajan and the lyrics were written by Vayalar Ramavarma.",
"Thulasi Jalandar Thulasi Jalandar is a 1947 Indian, Tamil language film directed by K. B. Nagabhushanam. The film featured P. U. Chinnappa, P. Kannamba, Kothamangalam Seenu and T. S. Jaya in the lead roles. The following list was adapted from the database of Film News Anandan The film was produced by K. B. Nagabhushanam under the banner \"Raja Rajeswari Films\" owned by him and his wife P. Kannamba. He also directed the film. The story and dialogues were written by T. C. Vadivelu Naikkar. Cinematography was done by Thambu (C. V. Ramakrishnan) while the editing was done by N. K. Gopal. Sekar and Saama were in charge of art direction. Somu and Gopal handled the still photography. The film was made at the Gemini Studios. The music was composed by M. D. Parthasarathy while the lyrics were penned by Papanasam Sivan.",
"Vincent Selva Vincent Selva is an Indian film director and screenwriter associated with the Tamil film industry. This director is best known for his debut flick, \"Priyamudan\" starring Vijay, Kausalya. Other directors such as Mysskin and S. P. Jananathan worked under him. Vincent Selva got associated with film scene in the 1990s. He made his film debut as a director through the film \"Priyamudan\". The romantic film released in 1998 was a major hit at box office and had been remade to Telugu, Kannada and Hindi. This is the first movie where Vijay played an anti-hero role. In 1999 he released his second film, \"Iraniyan\", a fictional biography of freedom fighter \"Vattakudi Iraniyan\". The movie starred Murali and Meena and opened to mixed reviews. In 2002 he directed \"Youth\" a film starring Vijay, which was well received by critics and audiences. The movie starred the Fair & Lovely girl, Shaheen Khan in the lead role. In 2002, he was signed on by producer Keyaar to make a film titled \"Enna Peyar Veikalaam\" featuring Karthik in the lead role. Despite travelling to Pollachi for the shoot, the actor refused to emerge from his hotel room, and following an extended period of confusion, the film was called off. He worked on \"Khakee\", a police thriller with Sarathkumar in the lead role during 2006, but the film was shelved. Despite attempts to restart the venture in 2008, the film did not finish production. In 2005 he remade the Bollywood film, \"Gayab\" to Tamil titled, \"Jithan\". The movie met with commercial success. After the film, he directed the same actor Jithan Ramesh in \"Madurai Veeran\", but it was received negative reviews. \"Perumal\", \"Thulli Vilayadu\" and \"Inga Enna Solluthu\" are other releases. In 2016, he made a comeback with the sequel of Jithan and the movie titled \"Jithan 2\" was a major setback. The talented and multiaward winning director Mysskin known for his off beat movies worked as an assistant under him. S. P. Jananathan has also worked under him as an assistant."
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[
"no"
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Who was born later, Camila Rodrigues or Bilal Saeed?
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Bilal Bilal may refer to:
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[
"Saeed Hizam Saeed Hizam (Arabic:سعيد حزام) (born 20 March 1998) is an Emirati footballer. He currently plays as a defender .",
"Karin Rodrigues Karin Rodrigues (born November 8, 1971, in São Paulo) is a volleyball player. She competed for Brazil at the 1999 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, and 2000 Summer Olympics. There, she won the bronze medal with the Women's National Team. Rodrigues also claimed the gold medal at the 1999 Pan American Games. Rodrigues won the best blocker award and the gold medal in the 1995 South American Club Championship playing with the Peruvian club Juventus Sipesa.",
"Helal Saeed Helal Saeed Humaid Saeed Al Saeed (; born 12 May 1977), simply known as Helal Saeed is an Emirati professional footballer playing as a midfielder.",
"Saeed (film) Saeed is a Canadian dramatic short film, directed by Mehra Meh and released in 1991. The film centres on the difficulties faced by an Iranian refugee as he tries to integrate into Canadian society. The film won the Genie Award for Best Theatrical Short Film at the 12th Genie Awards in 1991.",
"Basheer Saeed Basheer Saeed (; born 28 June 1981) is a professional footballer who has represented the United Arab Emirates internationally. He also plays as a center defender .",
"Ashley Rodrigues Ashley Devia Rodrigues (born 12 September 1988) is a Canadian-born Guyanese retired footballer who played as a forward. She has been a member of the Guyana women's national team. Rodrigues played at Eastern Michigan. \"Scores and results list Guyana's goal tally first\"",
"Saeed Lotfi Saeed Lotfi may refer to:",
"Bilal Saeed Bilal Saeed (, born 12 December) is a Pakistani singer-songwriter, music producer and composer. He is best known for his singles \"12 Saal\" , \"Adhi Adhi raat \" and 'Teri khair mangdi\" . The latter was also used in the bollywood film \"Baar bar dekho\" Bilal Saeed was born in Sialkot, Pakistan in a Punjabi Muslim family. He began his career as a music composer and writer. He gained popularity through his debut single \"12 Saal\" in 2011 and \"Adhi Adhi Raat\" (also known as Oooo meme song) in 2012. In 2012, he released his new single \"Mahi Mahi\" and debut album \"Twelve\" which received two nominees at PTC Punjabi Music Award for Best Non Residents Punjabi Album and Best Non Resident Punjabi Vocalist. The album also featured Dr Zeus, Amrinder Gill and Fateh. A single \"Khair Mangdi\" from the album was nominated as Song of the Year at 13th Lux Style Awards. In 2013, for the first time he recorded songs for a film, i.e. \"Tauba Tauba\" and \"Rattan Chitian\" from Daddy Cool Munde Fool 2013 Punjabi film. In 2014, he released a single \"Lethal Combination\" with Roach Killa under Beyond Records in 2014. The single topped BBC Asian Charts. Later in December 2014, he composed a tribute song \"Maan\" on Peshawar Attack (Black Day Pakistan, 16 December 2014), to condemn the attackers of APS School, Peshawar. He also released a single \"Kaash (A Wish)\" in 2015 which topped the iTunes Chart. He made his Bollywood debut in 2015 by composing soundtrack of the film \"Ishqedarriyaan\" with Jeet Ganguly and Jaidev Kumar. He released another single in 2016 \"Paranday\", followed by 'Blah Blah Blah' featuring Punjabi Rapper Young Desi in August 2016. In 2016, the remake of his song \"Khair Mangdi\" featured in Karan Johar's Bollywood movie Baar Baar Dekho. In September 2016, he made his Lollywood debut by composing a song \"Chulbul\" for Pakistani Film Zindagi Kitni Haseen Hay.",
"Sabia (footballer) Vilmar da Cunha Rodrigues (born November 2, 1982), commonly known as Sabia, is a Brazilian football player.",
"Camilla Amado Camilla de Hollanda Amado, whose stage name was Camilla Amado (7 August 1938 – 6 June 2021) was a Brazilian actress and teacher. She was the daughter of educator Henriette Amado and Gilson Amado, founder of the defunct television station Televisão Educativa, and a distant relative of writer Jorge Amado. Amado debuted in film in the 1970s. For her performance in the movie \"The Wedding\", directed by Arnaldo Jabor in 1975 and based on the eponymous work of Nelson Rodrigues, Amado won the Kikito Gold award for Best Supporting Actress and the Special Jury Prize at the Gramado Festival. Amado was married to actor Stepan Nercessian for fourteen years."
] |
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[
"Bilal Saeed"
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Which film came out earlier, Middle Class Madhavan or The Little Cowboy?
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Middle Class Madhavan Middle Class Madhavan is a 2001 Indian Tamil-language romantic comedy film written and directed by T. P. Gajendran. The film stars Prabhu and Abhirami, while Vadivelu, Vivek, Manivannan and others in supporting roles. The film explores the travails of newlyweds who are forced to live in a joint family. The film was remade in Telugu as "Mee Intikoste Yem Istaru Ma Intikoste Yem Testaru". The music was composed by Dhina, and the film released on 18 May 2001. The story is set in the middle-class home of Madhavan (Prabhu), a budding lawyer who works for Visu. His retired and irresponsible father (Delhi Ganesh) is more interested in playing cards than looking for grooms for his two unmarried daughters. Circumstances force Madhavan to marry Abhirami (Abhirami), even before his sisters are wed, a situation quite unthinkable in middle-class homes and the couple unable to have their first night and desperate for it. Meanwhile, Madhavan's sisters find their match in an auto driver named Kuzhandaivelu (Vadivelu) and an unemployed man named Manimaran (Vivek), who claims to have a royal background. Madhavan then conducts the weddings of both his sisters, but in the struggle to keep the rest of his family happy, he and Abirami are unable to enjoy even the basic pleasures of married life. How they unite with each other, have they finally celebrated their first night? and convince their family about it (sometimes with comical results) forms the rest of the story. The soundtrack was composed by Dhina with lyrics written by Vaali. The movie received mixed to positive reviews from critics. Balaji Balasubramaniam of thiraipadam.com gave a mixed review and wrote, "Prabhu looks old but the role is no stretch for him. Abirami, last seen in Vaanavil, plays the homely role well. Visu shows up in another of his trademark, advise-giving roles while director T.P.Gajendran himself makes an appearance at several spots in various roles. Songs by Dhina are not particularly memorable. Comedy occupies a major portion of this movie too with Vadivelu and Vivek. Vadivelu surprises us with his initial softness but reverts to his usual loud ways soon.
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[
"Madhu filmography Madhavan Nair, commonly known by his stage name Madhu, is an Veteran Indian film actor, director, producer, and former film studio owner, who works in Malayalam cinema. Madhu has so far acted in more than 400 movies including Malayalam, Hindi and Tamil languages. Madhu made his directoral debut in 1970 through the movie \"Priya\", based on the novel ‘Thevadissi’ written by C. Radhakrishnan. Madhu directed eleven more movies including hit films like \"Sindooracheppu\", \"Manyasree Viswamithran\", \"Neela Kannukal\", \"Akkaldaama\", \"Kamam Krodham Moham\", \"Theekkanal\", \"Dheerasameere Yamuna Theere\", \"Aaraadhana\", \"Oru Yuga Sandhya\" and \"Udayam Padinjaru\". He was the producer of most of these films. He also produced movies like \"Kaithappoo\", \"Asthamayam\", \"Shudhikalasham\", \"Prabhatha Sandhya\", \"Vaiki Vanna Vasantham\", \"Archana Teacher\", \"Grihalakshmi\", \"Njan Ekananu\", \"Rathilayam\" and \"Mini\". He also produced and directed a movie in English ‘'Sunrise in the West'’, which was entirely shot in the United States. Madhu has acted in nearly 400 films in various languages in the span of 59 years.",
"R. Madhavan filmography R. Madhavan is an Indian actor known for his work predominantly in Tamil and Hindi films, and also in few Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada films. He began his acting career in the early 1990s by featuring in Hindi soap operas like \"Banegi Apni Baat\", \"Sea Hawks\", \"Ghar Jamai\" and \"Saaya\". In 2000, Madhavan gained recognition in Tamil cinema by playing the lead role in Mani Ratnam's romantic drama film \"Alaipayuthey\". He followed this with appearances in two commercially successful Tamil films, Gautham Vasudev Menon's directorial debut \"Minnale\" (2001) and Madras Talkies' \"Dumm Dumm Dumm\" (2001), as well as his first Hindi film in a leading role, \"Rehnaa Hai Terre Dil Mein\" (2001). In the early 2000s, Madhavan worked on Tamil films including \"Kannathil Muthamittal\" (2002), \"Run\" (2002), \"Anbe Sivam\" (2003) and \"Aaytha Ezhuthu\" (2004). Madhavan also simultaneously pursued a career in the Hindi film industry, by appearing in supporting roles in films including Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's \"Rang De Basanti\" (2006), Mani Ratnam's biopic \"Guru\" (2007) and Rajkumar Hirani's \"3 Idiots\" (2009), which became the highest-grossing Indian film of all time upon release at the time. Other Tamil productions that Madhavan worked on during the late 2000s included \"Evano Oruvan\" (2007), which he also produced, and the horror film \"Yavarum Nalam\" (2009). After appearing in \"Tanu Weds Manu\" (2011) and \"Vettai\" (2012), Madhavan took an extended break from signing new film projects. His comeback films, the romantic-comedy \"Tanu Weds Manu Returns\" (2015), the bilingual sports drama \"Irudhi Suttru\" (2016) and the crime film \"Vikram Vedha\" (2017) all performed well at the box office. His performance as a boorish boxing coach in \"Irudhi Suttru\" fetched him Best Actor awards at the Filmfare, IIFA and SIIMA award ceremonies.",
"Ponthan Mada Ponthan Mada is a 1994 Indian Malayalam-language film written and directed by T. V. Chandran. The film stars Mammootty and Naseeruddin Shah. It is based on two short stories, \"Ponthan Mada\" and \"Sheema Thampuran\" by C. V. Sreeraman. The film won four awards at the National Film Awards including the Best Actor award for Mammotty. It also won the Kerala State Film Award for the best second film. Set in the 1940s British India, the film is about the extraordinary, uncanny and touching relationship between the so-called low-caste Ponthan Mada (Mammootty) and his colonial landlord Sheema Thampuran (Naseeruddin Shah), who was expelled to British India from England during his youth for supporting the Irish Republican Army. Crossing the class boundaries, the two communicate through Thampuran's window with Mada hanging from an areca palm tree. The film has won the following awards since its release: 1994 National Film Awards (India) 1994 Kerala State Film Awards (India) Other awards This is the only Malayalam-language film of Naseeruddin Shah.",
"Asuravithu (novel) Asuravithu () is a Malayalam novel written by M. T. Vasudevan Nair. Set in Kizhakkemuri, a fictional picturesque village in Kerala, the novel describes the plight of the protagonist Govindankutty, the youngest son of a proud Nair tharavadu, as he is trapped between the social scenario, social injustice and his own inner consciousness. As in many other M. T. novels, \"Asuravithu\" also has as its theme, the conflicts and problems of a Nair Family. The novel's English translation is titled \"The Demon Seed\". The novel was adapted into a film with the same title in 1968. The film, directed by A. Vincent and scripted by M. T. Vasudevan Nair himself, featured noted actor Prem Nazir as Govindankutty.",
"Midukkipponnamma Midukkipponnamma is a 1978 Indian Malayalam film, directed by A. B. Raj. The film stars Jayan, Jayabharathi and Paravoor Bharathan in the lead roles. The film has musical score by M. K. Arjunan.",
"Vanchiyoor Madhavan Nair Madhu\"('Vanchiyoor Madhavan Nair')\" was an Indian theatre artist and actor in Malayalam movies of the 1960s and 1970s. He appeared in several films of \"Neela Studios\" of Thiruvananthapuram. His popular movies are \"Navalokam\" (1951), \"Baalyasakhi\" (1954) and \"Chief Guest\" (1975). He had acted in dramas on more than 4000 stages. He was the elder brother of Malayalam actor T. K. Balachandran. He was born to Kunjan Pilla and Parukuttiyamma at Thiruvananthapuram.",
"Indian Cowboy Indian Cowboy is a 2004 South Asian independent feature film that belongs to a growing list of independently produced films in North America by filmmakers of South Asian descent. Featuring a bevy of South Asian actors including Sheetal Sheth, this film premiered at the Rhode Island International Film Festival in August 2004 and was released in North America on February 23, 2007. Indian Cowboy released on Amazon Prime streaming in May 2016. Writer/Filmmaker Nikhil Kamkolkar spoke about it with Mashable and referred to the true democratization of distribution for filmmakers.",
"Raghavan (actor) Raghavan (born 12 December 1941) is an Indian actor who has acted in more than 100 films. Malayalam actor Jishnu was his son. From early 2000s he is more active on Malayalam television serials . Raghavan was born in Taliparamba in Kannur district. His father was Alunkeyil Chathukutti and mother, Kalyani Amma. He did his education in Thaliparambu Moothedath High School, Kozhikode Guruvayoorappan School, Madhura Gandhigram. After completing higher secondary he worked in Tagore Drama Troupe. He pursued bachelors in Rural Education from Gandhigram Rural Institute. He got his Diploma from Delhi National School of Drama. His first film was \"Kayalkarayil\" in 1968. He married Sobha in 1974 and had a son, Jishnu Raghavan, and a daughter, Jyotsana.",
"Vallachira Madhavan Vallachira Madhavan (17 May 1934 – 20 October 2013) was a Malayalam novelist and short story writer from Vallachira in Thrissur District of Kerala state of India.",
"Vellayani Paramu Vellayani Paramu is a 1979 Indian Malayalam-language period drama film directed by J. Sasikumar, written by Pappanamkodu Lakshmanan, and produced by E. K. Thyagarajan. It is based on the life of Vellayani Paramu, an outlaw active in the Central Travancore region known for stealing from rich and giving to poor. The film stars Prem Nazir, Jayan, Jayabharathi and Adoor Bhasi. The film has musical score by G. Devarajan. The film was released on 23 February 1979. The music was composed by G. Devarajan and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi."
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[
"The Little Cowboy"
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When was the director of film Roses In Tyrol born?
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Roses in Tyrol Roses in Tyrol () is a 1940 German musical comedy film directed by Géza von Bolváry and starring Hans Moser, Marte Harell, and Johannes Heesters. It is based on the 1891 operetta "The Bird Seller" by Carl Zeller, which has been turned into several films. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Robert Herlth and Heinrich Weidemann. It was filmed in Prague and Zell am See in the Austrian state of Salzburg. It was a popular hit and was re-released by Gloria Film in 1950.
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[
"The Merry Wives of Tyrol The Merry Wives of Tyrol () is a 1964 West German musical comedy film directed by Hans Billian and starring Hannelore Auer, Gus Backus and Rudolf Prack. The film's sets were designed by the art director Sepp Rothauer.",
"Ivo Barnabò Micheli Ivo Barnabò Micheli (29 January 1942 - 20 July 2005) was an Italian Film director and screenwriter from the German-speaking South Tyrol / Alto Adige region.",
"Heinz Thiel Heinz Thiel (10 May 1920 – 9 March 2003) was a German film director and screenwriter. He directed more than 20 films between 1956 and 1977. His 1967 film \"Bread and Roses\" was entered into the 5th Moscow International Film Festival.",
"Rose of the Mountain Rose of the Mountain () is a 1952 West German musical comedy film directed by Hubert Marischka and starring Marte Harell, Grethe Weiser and Waltraut Haas. It takes its German title from a popular 1947 song of the same name, which is used in the film as a melody. The film's sets were designed by Willi Herrmann and Heinrich Weidemann. It was shot at the Spandau Studios in Berlin and on location in Carinthia at the Hotel Karawankenblick in Pörtschach and around the lake of Wörthersee. The Austrian-born dancer Kate Smith and the composer Jack Long meet while working on Broadway. Both are homesick and decide to return home. They go to stay at the country hotel run by Kate's sister Rose. However it turns out that Jack and Rose are old flames.",
"Zoltan Spirandelli Zoltan Spirandelli is a German film director, actor, producer, and screenwriter. Born in 1957 in Königstein, he has Italian ancestors of his father's side. His first name is Hungarian. As a child he was cantor in the choir of St. John Church in Kronberg. He has worked at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg while he made the short film \"Lulu\". For about ten years he directed short films gaining popularity with his interactive short film \"The Cock Is Dead\". He has since made numerous films for television and worked with actors such as Andrea Sawatzki, Matthias Schweighöfer, Daniel Brühl, Rufus Beck and Ottfried Fischer. He received the Bavarian film award for his only previous feature-length movie \"Vaya con Dios\". He is the father of Ivan Spirandelli and Karla Spirandelli. Today he lives in Berlin.",
"Love Hotel in Tyrol Love Hotel in Tyrol (German: Love-Hotel in Tirol) is a 1978 Austrian-West German sex comedy film directed by Franz Antel and starring Erich Padalewski, Teri Tordai and Fritz Muliar.",
"Peter Rosei Peter Rosei (born in Vienna on 17 June 1946) is an Austrian literary writer. Rosei attended the University of Vienna, where he earned a doctorate in law in 1968. He worked for a time as the personal assistant to the Viennese painter Ernst Fuchs and then as the director of a publishing house for textbooks and nonfiction. Since 1972 he has been a freelance writer, publishing novels, stories, essays, poetry, plays, travelogues, and children's literature. He has traveled extensively and intensively throughout the world and has been a guest writer at Oberlin College, Bowling Green State University, and the University of New Mexico at Taos, as well as guest professor at the University of Nagoya, Japan. His literary breakthrough came with the novel \"Wer war Edgar Allan\" (Who was Edgar Allan) in 1977, which was filmed by the Austrian director Michael Haneke, with a screenplay by Rosei, in 1984. His fictional texts portray the limits of knowledge and the discrepancies between thought and action in Western society. Rosei's prolific output includes the novels \"Die Milchstrasse\" (The Milky Way, 1981), \"Rebus\" (1990), and \"Persona\" (1995), as well as a six-part novel cycle titled \"Das 15 000-Seelen-Projekt\" (The 15,000 Souls Project) from 1984–1988. In 2005 he published a panoramic novel of Vienna during the postwar period, \"Wien Metropolis\" (Metropolis Vienna). Works that have been translated into English include \"Von hier nach dort\" (1978) (\"From Here to There\", translated by Kathleen Thorpe, 1991), \"Das schnelle Glück\" (1980) (\"Try Your Luck\", translated by Kathleen Thorpe, 1994), and \"Ruthless and Other Writings\" (translated by Geoffrey Howes, 2003), all published by Ariadne Press; and \"Wien Metropolis\" (2005) (\"Metropolis Vienna\", translated by Geoffrey C. Howes, published by Green Integer in 2009).",
"Gerhard Tötschinger Gerhard Tötschinger (26 June 1946 – 10 August 2016) was an Austrian actor, director, and writer. Tötschinger grew up in Vienna and studied theater and art history after gymnasium. He began his theatrical career in the 1960s, appearing in plays in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. In the 1970s, the actor first appeared as a director. He organized the \"Fest in Hellbrunn\" in Salzburg, the Festival \"Arteuropa\" in Todi and the Sommerspiele Perchtoldsdorf. Tötschinger wrote numerous books on the history of Austria, the Habsburgs and Franz Liszt. He ran for the Landtag in 2010 on the ÖVP ticket. In 2012 he received the Buchpreis der Wiener Wirtschaft. In 2015 he received the Goldenes Verdienstzeichen des Landes Wien. He suffered a serious fall in 2009 and had his left foot amputated. He died of a pulmonary embolism on 10 August 2016. He was vacationing in St. Gilgen with his partner, Christiane Hörbiger, whom he planned to soon marry.",
"Rose-Girl Resli Rose-Girl Resli () is a 1954 West German drama film directed by Harald Reinl and starring Christine Kaufmann, Josefin Kipper and Paul Klinger. The film made the child actress Kaufmann into a star. It was the debut film of the actress Karin Dor, who later married the director.",
"A Day of Roses in August A Day of Roses in August () is a 1927 German silent film directed by Max Mack and starring Eduard von Winterstein, Margarete Schön, and Ernst Rückert. The film takes place in August 1914 at the beginning of the First World War. The film's art direction was by Kurt Richter."
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[
"26 December 1897"
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Are the directors of films Maurya (Film) and The Fog both from the same country?
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The Fog (2005 film) The Fog is a 2005 American supernatural horror film directed by Rupert Wainwright and starring Tom Welling, Selma Blair, and Maggie Grace. It is a remake of John Carpenter's 1980 film of the same name and was produced by Carpenter and Debra Hill who co-wrote the original film. The film tells the story of a strange fog that sweeps in over an island town off the coast of Oregon, bringing with it the vengeful spirits of mariners who were murdered there 134 years prior. The townspeople find themselves trapped and fighting for their lives while discovering the truth of their dark history. The residents of Antonio Island prepare to honor their founding fathers - unaware they were the same men who burned the "Elizabeth Dane" – and a statue of them is to be unveiled on the town's anniversary. During a boating trip, Nick Castle and his friend Spooner unwittingly disturb a bag containing a pocket watch and a hairbrush from the "Elizabeth Dane" lying on the seabed. That night, Nick meets his former girlfriend, Elizabeth Williams, who has returned after six months. Elizabeth is shown the antique pocket watch by Machen, an old man who found it washed up on the beach. He warns her ominously ""if you touch it, things will change"". The watch begins ticking as Elizabeth holds it. She sees a hallmark on it, which includes a set of scales. Later, supernatural occurrences start to plague the town. Objects move by themselves, power outages occur, and the windows in Nick's truck inexplicably shatter. Nick and Elizabeth then encounter drunken priest Father Malone, who is ranting about murderers and retribution. Meanwhile, at the local radio station, host Stevie Wayne gets a phone call from weatherman Dan about a large fog bank off the coast. Out at sea on Nick's boat, Spooner and Nick's cousin Sean are partying with two young women, Mandi and Jennifer. As the fog reaches them, the boat's engine stops, and the instruments break. An old clipper ship appears in the fog next to them. Seemingly possessed, Jennifer draws a set of scales on a misted window inside the boat. Unseen forces then kill Mandi, Jennifer, and Sean. At Nick's beach house, Elizabeth has been dreaming about the "Elizabeth Dane".
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[
"Fog and Night Fog and Night () is a 2007 Turkish adventure film directed by Turgut Yasalar.",
"Mahuaa (film) Mahuaa is a Nagpuri film starring Stefy Patel and Prince Sondhi. It is directed by Sanjay Verma and produced by Satyen Srivastav. The film shows how women fight against social superstition and unsocial elements in order to enact societal change.",
"A Walk in the Fog A Walk in the Fog (Persian: \"Parse dar meh\") is a 2010 film by the Iranian director Bahram Tavakoli. Tavakoli also wrote the script for the film, which was lensed by Hamid Khozouie Abyane. Leila Hatami and Shahab Hosseini starred in the principal roles. Tavakoli won a Crystal Simorgh for Best First Film at the Fajr Film Festival.",
"Raju Mishra Raja Mishra (died 2 November 2020) was an Odia film director, actor, screen writer, cinematographer and music director. He was a gold medalist in cinematography from Film and Television Institute of India, Pune. In 1986 he directed his first Odia film Jor Jar Mulak Tar and he directed a total of 12 Odia films. He also directed seven Assamese language films. Mishra debuted in the Odia film industry as an actor through Ulka in 1981. Later he did the cinematography, wrote the screenplay, worked as an editor, and composed music for some Odia films. Some successful movies like 'Chaka Akhi Sabu Dekhuchi', 'Asuchi Mo Kalia Suna', 'Pua Mora Kala Thakura', 'Hari Bhai Harena' and 'Jibana Mrutyu' are directed by Raju Mishra. Mishra died on 2 November 2020 due to cardiac arrest at the age of 72.",
"Kraurya Kraurya ()() is a 1996 Indian Kannada language drama film directed by Girish Kasaravalli, based on a story written by T. N. Seetharam about an old woman who has to deal with complex relationships with people of different generations she is put up with. The title in Kannada literally means \"cruelty\". The cast includes Renukamma Murugodu in the lead role as Rangajji, and supporting roles played by Vishwas, H. G. Dattatreya and T. V. Gurumurthy. The film won two awards at the 43rd National Film Awards - Best Feature Film in Kannada and Best Child Artist (Vishwas). Kraurya is the story of Rangajji, a widow who loves to tell stories of fantasy to the children of her village. Rangajji's hardships start when her only son dies young mysteriously. Rangajji goes to live with a distant relative of hers, only to receive a cold welcome. Life goes on endlessly for Rangajji. She longs to tell stories to children, but her freedom is severely restricted. While she spends every day in boredom, Murty the youngest son of the family becomes close to Rangajji. Rangajji feels a new lease of life when the eldest son of the family Subbanna decides to go to Bangalore to start his own private business. Rangajji lends the money Subbanna needs, thinking that Subbanna might help her find her husband's close friend Mr. Padmanabiah in Bangalore. Subbanna leaves for Bangalore. After a few months Rangajji leaves for Bangalore along with Murty only to receive another cold welcome from Subbanna. She tries to find Mr. Padmanabiah with Murty's help. When her search ends, she discovers that Mr. Padmanabiah is no more. She feels hopeless and loses her will to live. Murty decides to return her to the village. But a spate of events during the journey back to the village leaves Rangajji physically wounded. Murty tries to take control of the situation, but fails. The climax of the film shows Rangajji in an unconscious state lying in the police station, while Murty, afraid that the police might arrest him for murder, escapes. \"Kraurya\" is a Kannada word meaning \"cruelty\". The story and the film deal with the violence of the human mind.",
"Fog (1932 film) Fog (Spanish: Niebla) is a 1932 French drama film directed by Benito Perojo. It was made as the Spanish-language version of the film \"The Last Blow\".",
"Maiya The Mahiya or Maiya are a landowning community found in the state of Gujarat in India.",
"Maatr Maatr () is an Indian thriller film written by Michael Pellico and directed by Ashtar Sayed. Michael Pellico is the executive producer under the banner CDB Musical. It features Raveena Tandon in the lead role alongside Madhur Mittal, Divya Jagdale, Shailendra Goel, Anurag Arora, Saheem Khan and Rushad Rana. Casting is by Rajesh Gautam. The music is created by a Pakistani Sufi rock band Fuzön. The film's principal photography commenced in March 2016. The film is shot in Delhi and Haryana. The film was released on 21 April 2017. It emerged as a commercial success. Vidya Chauhan (Raveena Tandon) is a school teacher living in Delhi with her husband Ravi (Rushad Rana) and teenaged daughter Tia (Alisha Khan). One night she is returning home from a school event that is an annual function with her daughter when she decides to take a deserted route to avoid a huge traffic jam. During the traffic jam, Vidya calls her friend Ritu and starts telling her about the school function; while talking on phone they met with an accident. Vidya and her daughter are kidnapped by the Chief Minister's son Apurva Malik (Madhur Mittal) and his friends who take the women to a farmhouse and gang rape them before dumping their bodies on the roadside. Tia dies as a result of the assault but Vidya survives. She names the CM's son and his friends as the attackers. However, those men use their influence to get away. Vidya moves in with her friend Ritu (Divya Jagdale) after her husband leaves her. She decides to hunt down and punish her daughter's killers. First up is Sikander Beniwal. She loosens the screws on tyres of his bike causing a severe accident that kills him. She notes down the numbers and names of his friends from his phone. She finds out that one of the men, Inder Jhangra has been abusing Meenal, one of her students and Tia's friend. She helps Meenal poison Inder when he tries to abuse her in a hotel room. The inspector on the case Akhil Sachdeva is starting to get suspicious of Vidya but has no proof. Apurva Malik and his friends have also become suspicious. They beat up Ravi in order to pressure Vidya to back off.",
"Vinod Bharathan Vinod Bharathan is an Indian filmmaker based in Copenhagen. He was educated in filmmaking at film schools in Copenhage. He is behind the cinematography and editing of most of his films. Limbo, a short film he shot using an iPhone was awarded Best Film at Indie Fone Fest, U.S.A. and Sony Circuito Off, Venice 2012. Karma Cartel which is his debut film had a two-member crew and was shot on HDV using Canon XH A1.",
"Maanaya Maanaya () is a 2019 Sri Lankan Sinhala action thriller film directed by Anju Dhananjaya as his debut direction and produced by Roshan Indika Ralapanawa for Dian Films. It stars Wasantha Kumaravila and Upeksha Swarnamali in lead role along with Hemantha Iriyagama and Pavithra Wickramasinghe. Music composed by Nilantha Siri Pathirana."
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"no"
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Are both Kahir-E Borz-E Pain and Abbasabad-E Kani Kabud located in the same country?
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Abbasabad-e Kani Kabud Abbasabad-e Kani Kabud (, also Romanized as ‘Abbāsābād-e Kānī Kābūd and ‘Abbāsābād-e Kon Kābūd) is a village in Mirbag-e Shomali Rural District, in the Central District of Delfan County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 53, in 10 families.
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"Abbasabad-e Bozorg Abbasabad-e Bozorg (, also Romanized as ‘Abbāsābād-e Bozorg) is a village in Saidabad Rural District, in the Central District of Savojbolagh County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,070, in 245 families.",
"Kani Kabud-e Maran Kani Kabud-e Maran (, also Romanized as Kānī Kabūd-e Marān; also known as Kānī Kabūd) is a village in Obatu Rural District, Karaftu District, Divandarreh County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 196, in 41 families. The village is populated by Kurds.",
"Abbasabad, Kahshang Abbasabad (, also Romanized as ‘Abbāsābād; also known as Kalāteh-ye ‘Abbāsābād) is a village in Kahshang Rural District, in the Central District of Birjand County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2016 census, its population was 30, in 9 families.",
"Abbas Ali Kash Abbas Ali Kash (, also Romanized as ‘Abbās ‘Alī Kash, ‘Abbās ‘Alī Kesh, and ‘Abbās ‘Alī Kosh; also known as ‘Abbāsābād) is a village in Rudpey-ye Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Sari County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 812, in 231 families.",
"Cham Kabud, Sonqor Cham Kabud (, also Romanized as Cham Kabūd) is a village in Gavrud Rural District, in the Central District of Sonqor County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 486, in 119 families.",
"Abbasabad, Qom Abbasabad (, also Romanized as ‘Abbāsābād) is a village in Qomrud Rural District, in the Central District of Qom County, Qom Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 126, in 27 families.",
"Abbasabad, Gonbaki Abbasabad (, also Romanized as ‘Abbāsābād) is a village in Gonbaki Rural District, Gonbaki District, Rigan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 91, in 18 families.",
"Kahir-e Borz Kahir-e Borz () may refer to:",
"Abbasabad, Bardsir Abbasabad (, also Romanized as ‘Abbāsābād) is a village in Golzar Rural District, in the Central District of Bardsir County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 99, in 21 families.",
"Zahirabad-e Pain Zahirabad-e Pain (, also Romanized as Z̧ahīrābād-e Pā’īn; also known as Ribāt-i-Bībi, Z̧ahīrābād, and Z̧ahīrābād Soflā) is a village in Azghand Rural District, Shadmehr District, Mahvelat County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 220, in 57 families."
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[
"yes"
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Did the movies Eccezzziunale... Veramente and The Enemy Strikes, originate from the same country?
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Eccezzziunale... veramente Eccezzziunale... veramente is a 1982 Italian comedy film directed by Carlo Vanzina. It was shown as part of a retrospective on Italian comedy at the 67th Venice International Film Festival. Diego Abatantuono portrays three different parts as a supporter of the three main football teams of Italy: A.C. Milan, Internazionale and Juventus. The three characters are: Donato Cavallo (A.C. Milan supporter), the chief of the hooligans of the southern stand in San Siro stadium; Franco Alfano, Inter supporter who believes he won the football lottery, but it's just a prank made by his friends; Tirzan, Juventus supporter, is a truck driver from Apulia, who decided to follow his beloved team to Belgium for a European Cup game.
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[
"Attack and Retreat Attack and Retreat (, ) is a Soviet-Italian war drama film directed by Giuseppe De Santis and Dmitri Vasilyev in 1964. The movie follows the steps of Italian soldiers of the Italian Army in Russia fighting on the Eastern Front on Hitler's side. Heavily based on diaries and memories of real war veterans.",
"Spies Strike Silently Spies Strike Silently (, , also known as Spies Kill Silently) is a 1966 Spanish-Italian Eurospy film written and directed by Mario Caiano and starring Lang Jeffries.",
"Paths of War Paths of War () is a 1970 Italian western-comedy film directed by Aldo Grimaldi. In 1858 in Italy, in Sicily, Franco and Ciccio defend the Bourbon army to prevent the unification of Italy built by Giuseppe Garibaldi. However, when the troops of Garibaldi defeated the Bourbons, Franco and Ciccio escape, taking refuge in a box, which is delivered in America. In the Far West, Franco and Ciccio find themselves involved in the American War of Independence against the Apache Indians. They, camouflage, disguise themselves first by warlike Americans, and then by Indian holy men, being able to save their skin.",
"My Enemy's Enemy My Enemy's Enemy (\"Mon Meilleur Ennemi\", My best enemy in french) is a documentary film directed by Kevin Macdonald in 2007. The story of Klaus Barbie through World War II and post-war hiding journey in Bolivia including his involvement in the assassination of Che Guevara before being tried in France for war crimes committed in Lyon and the assassination of Jean Moulin.",
"Armiamoci e partite! Armiamoci e partite! (Italian for \"Let US arm ourselves and YOU go!\") is a 1971 war comedy film directed by Nando Cicero and starring the comedy duo formed by Franco Franchi and Ciccio Ingrassia.",
"Brothers Till We Die Brothers Till We Die () is a 1977 Italian poliziottesco-action film by Umberto Lenzi. This film is the last collaboration among Lenzi and Tomas Milian. In this movie Milian plays two characters, Vincenzo Marazzi a.k.a. \"The Hunchback\" that he already played for Lenzi in \"Rome Armed to the Teeth\", and his twin brother Sergio Marazzi a.k.a. \"Er Monnezza\", a role that he played for the first time in Lenzi's \"Free Hand for a Tough Cop\" and later resumed in \"Destruction Force\" by Stelvio Massi. The notorious Italian criminal known as \"Hunchback\" (Italian: il gobbo) returns in Rome from Corsica after his imprisonment. Together with his younger brother and other accomplices he plans to raid an armoured truck. But things go awry. \"Brothers Til We Die\" was released in Italy on 18 August 1977 where it was distributed by Medusa. It grossed 1,523,844,720 Italian lire domestically.",
"Ecce bombo Ecce Bombo is a 1978 Italian comedy film, written and directed by and starring Nanni Moretti. It was filmed in 16 mm but released in 35 mm. It was Moretti's first commercial success. Michele Apicella, Goffredo, Mirko and Vito are four highschool friends who were on the forefront of the political protests that characterized the second half of the 1960s. Now a few years older, the four friends are no longer politically active and struggle to come to terms with their present. Intellectually marginalized and disenchanted with contemporary society, they form a collective consciousness group to try to understand what to do with themselves. Another friend, Cesare, decides to join them although he has mixed feelings about the whole experience, leading a relatively comfortable life. Things change when Michele starts a relationship with Cesare's girlfriend Flaminia.",
"Front in the Rear of the Enemy Front in the Rear of the Enemy () is a 1981 Soviet war film directed by and Victor Kulle. Mlynsky’s detachment is tasked with fostering the international unification of Poles, Czechs, and Slovaks in order to capture a training ground with them where they are testing secret fascist weapon.",
"Euro War Euro War, also known as Macaroni Combat, Macaroni War, Spaghetti Combat, or Spaghetti War, is a broad subgenre of war film that emerged in the mid-1960s. The films were named \"Euro War\" because most were produced and directed by European co-productions, most notably and commonly by Italians, as indicated by the subgenre's other nicknames that draw parallels to those films within the mostly Italian Spaghetti Western genre. The typical team was made up of an Italian director, Italo-Spanish technical staff, and a cast of Italian and Spanish actors and sometimes German and French, sometimes a minor or fading Hollywood star. The films were primarily shot in Europe and later, the Philippines. From the mid-1960s, much like in the case of the Italian spaghetti western in relation to American Hollywood Westerns, the Macaroni Combat film mimicked the success of American films such as \"The Guns Of Navarone\",\"The Dirty Dozen\" and \"Where Eagles Dare\". Like spaghetti westerns, Euro War films were characterized by their production in the Italian language, low budgets, added violence, and a recognizable highly fluid and minimalist cinematography. This was partly intentional and partly the context and cultural background of the filmmakers. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s the films were almost all set during World War II with a few about mercenaries in Africa following the success of \"Dark of the Sun\" and later, \"The Wild Geese\". In the 1980s most entries in the genre were set during the Vietnam War following the success of \"The Deer Hunter\". Two popular examples of the Italian-made World War II films were \"Anzio\" (1968) and \"Hornets' Nest\" (1970) with their A-list cast members. Today, one of the better-known films to fit the Macaroni Combat archetype is the 1978 film \"The Inglorious Bastards\" directed by Enzo G. Castellari. Influenced heavily by the aforementioned 1967 American film, \"The Dirty Dozen\", it would later inspire Quentin Tarantino's 2009 film \"Inglourious Basterds\", an American-produced film influenced by the genre as a whole.",
"Man Is Man's Enemy Man Is Man's Enemy (Georgian:Katsi katsistvis mgelia) is a 1923 Soviet silent adventure film directed by Ivane Perestiani."
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[
"no"
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What is the date of death of the director of film Love Problems?
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Love Problems Love Problems (, literally "The Age of Uneasiness") is a 1968 Italian drama film directed by Giuliano Biagetti. It stars actor Gabriele Ferzetti. The film is based on a novel by Dacia Maraini.
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"The Equation of Love and Death The Equation of Love and Death () is a 2008 Chinese dramatic film written and directed by Cao Baoping and starring Zhou Xun. The film is a Chinese (Huayi Brothers) and Hong Kong (Sundream Motion Pictures) co-production. It is Cao's second solo feature after 2006's \"Trouble Makers\". \"The Equation of Love and Death\" premiered in China on September 18, 2008 in Shanghai and had its North American premiere at the 2008 Vancouver International Film Festival where it was part of the Dragons and Tigers side competition. \"The Equation of Love and Death\" tells the story of Li Mi (played by Zhou Xun), a Kunming cab driver who longs for the day she can be reunited with her missing boyfriend. After a case of mistaken identity, a kidnapping, and a threat of extortion, Li Mi's dream may be on the cusp of becoming a reality. Li Mi, a chain smoking taxi driver in the Chinese city of Kunming has been searching fruitlessly for her lost boyfriend for years. One day she picks up two strangers which turn out to be desperate criminals (Wang Baoqiang and Wang Yanhui) engaged in drug smuggling and importation of narcotics ingested in their stomachs. The two men kidnap Li and force her to drive to a designated location, however midway on a refuel stop at a petrol station, she signals to the attendant to call for help. After escapes, Yanhui dies due to the leakage of the package inside his stomach resulting in organ failure. The film ends with her finding out the fate of her boyfriend who left her a safe deposit box of money and a letter telling her to start a grocery store. Early reviews by western critics suggested that Cao Baoping's sophomore film was a stylish thriller/drama, but that much depended on the power of Zhou Xun's performance as Li Mi. Shelly Kraicer, the Chinese film scholar and curator of the Vancouver International Film Festival's Dragons and Tigers competition noted that while director \"Cao Baoping is an expert at orchestrating frenzy,\" the film ultimately belonged to Zhou Xun. Despite the praise, the film would not go on to win the award (which went to Emily Tang's \"Perfect Life\"). \"Variety\" critic Derek Elley also wrote in his review that the film was \"motored by another saturated [performance] by the throaty-voiced Zhou.",
"Man Trouble (1930 film) Man Trouble is a 1930 American pre-Code drama film directed by Berthold Viertel and written by Marion Orth, George Manker Watters and Edwin J. Burke. The film stars Milton Sills, Dorothy Mackaill, Kenneth MacKenna, Sharon Lynn, Roscoe Karns and Oscar Apfel. The film was released on August 24, 1930, by Fox Film Corporation.",
"Los Problemas de papá Los Problemas de papá is a 1954 Argentine comedy film directed by Kurt Land. A couple sees their lives altered when they take care of their grandchildren while their children go on a trip.",
"I Love Trouble (1994 film) I Love Trouble is a 1994 American romantic comedy/crime film starring Julia Roberts and Nick Nolte. It was written and produced by the husband-and-wife team of Nancy Meyers and Charles Shyer, and directed by Shyer. Peter Brackett and Sabrina Peterson are two rival Chicago newspaper reporters. Sabrina is young and ambitious, whereas Peter is a fading star and has just published his first novel. They reluctantly join forces to unravel the mystery behind a train derailment. They argue over almost everything but discover a conspiracy involving genetically altered milk. In February 1993 it was announced Nolte had been cast as one of the leads. Nolte and Roberts notoriously did not get along with each other during the making of the film. Roberts has described him as \"disgusting,\" whereas Nolte has said she's \"not a nice person.\" The film grossed over $30 million in box-office receipts in the United States and less than $62 million worldwide. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 22% rating based on 46 reviews. The site's consensus states: \"There appears to be no \"Love\" lost between the fatally mismatched coupling of Julia Roberts and Nick Nolte in this screwball misfire that just isn't worth the \"Trouble\".\" Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B on scale of A to F. Todd McCarthy of \"Variety\" wrote: \"The goings-on seem lacking in wit and inspiration, tolerably entertaining but far from effervescent.\" Roger Ebert of the \"Chicago Sun-Times\" wrote: \"Maybe it would have been funnier if the evil cow conglomerate had been replaced by something sillier and more lightweight; it's hard to sustain a romantic comedy in the face of death threats.\" According to Nolte, it is the worst film in which he has ever appeared. He felt he sold his soul by doing it, and he did it only for the money. As a result, he was tense while on the set, and did not have a good working relationship with Julia Roberts. Roberts has, on her part, called Nolte the worst actor with whom she has ever worked. Elmer Bernstein originally wrote the underscore, but his music was thrown out, and David Newman was called in at such a late stage that posters with Bernstein's name on the credits were already displayed.",
"Beauty in Trouble Beauty in Trouble () is a 2006 Czech tragicomedy directed by Jan Hřebejk. Eddie Cockrell, writing in \"Variety\", said the \"[t]itle comes from the Robert Graves poem, itself adapted into a Czech popular song in the 1980s, and performed in the film by homegrown thrush Radůza. Germ of the pic's idea was the first line, 'Beauty in trouble flees to the good angel/On whom she can rely...'\" The script is based on Robert Grave's enigmatic poem, Beauty in Trouble and it begins with these words set to music sung by a chanteuse who accompanies herself with an accordion. The film is a naturalistic love story about the sex life of a beautiful woman, Marcela, and her concurrent relationships with three men; Jarda, her abusive husband, Risha, her abusive step-father, and Evzen, a dashing, older man she meets shortly after the film begins. With her husband, Jarda, she enjoys lustful sex and his physical abusiveness is an extension of a chauvinism that powers strong sexual encounters, but he is vain and not particularly bright about this. Richard, her mother's husband is unwittingly cruel, like an obnoxious and malicious child. He is played like one of Steve Martins \"wild and crazy guys\" but more repulsively. Evžen, who becomes Marcela's benefactor/meal ticket, is a man of sophisticated tastes and fortunate parentage, a Czech who has inherited vineyards in Tuscany, to which home he takes Marcela and her two children. At the beginning of the story, Marcela, Jarda and their children are living in Prague above the garage where Jarda operates his chop shop. She isn't happy with this situation. Jarda couldn't care less how she feels about their situation and is even less interested in the health of their son, who is suffering because of their living conditions. By chance, Jarda's associate steals Evžen’s car, which is equipped with a satellite tracking device and when Jarda goes to prison, Marcela takes her children to her mother's apartment, where they are met with Risha's venomous attention. Marcela despises her mother’s lecherous boyfriend and it eventually comes out that Risha fathered her first child and she escaped into marriage with Jarda at the age of seventeen.",
"Edward H. Griffith Edward H. Griffith (August 23, 1888 – March 3, 1975) (also known as E H Griffith, Lieut. Edward H. Griffith, Edward Griffith, and E. H. Griffith) was an American motion picture director, screenwriter, and producer. Born in 1888 in Bloomington, Illinois, Griffith directed 61 films from 1917 to 1946. In 1917 he directed\"In Love's Laboratory\", a short for Thomas A. Edison, Inc.'s Conquest Pictures division about a man inventing safety matches and finding his relationship match. He directed actress Madeleine Carroll in several films including \"Honeymoon in Bali\" (1939). Griffith died on March 3, 1975, at the age of 86.",
"Love (2020 film) Love is a 2020 Indian Malayalam-language black comedy psychological thriller film written and directed by Khalid Rahman and produced by Ashiq Usman under the banner of Ashiq Usman Productions. The film stars Rajisha Vijayan, Shine Tom Chacko in lead roles. Love marks the tenth project of Ashiq Usman and third film of Khalid Rahman after Unda and Anuraga Karikkin Vellam. The film is co-written and edited by Noufal Abdullah. The music is composed by Yakzan Gary Pereira and Neha Nair, while Jimshi Khalid was hired as the cinematographer. The film received mostly positive reviews from audiences and critics, who praised the dark theme, dialogues, acting, music and screenplay. The movie begins when Deepthi is doing scanning and the doctor confirms that she is 8 weeks pregnant. Her husband Anoop gets a text message \"I am pregnant\" but he continues to play a violent video game. Deepthi reaches home and soon they both start arguing. The fight turns violent and Anoop pushes her against their picture on the wall and Deepthi immediately collapses. Confused, Anoop decides to suicide and tries to cut his nerves using a shaving blade and then he hears a ring on the door. He takes the body of Deepthi to the bathroom. At the door, it was a friend of Anoop played by Gokulan and he starts talking about his life's problems and starts drinking of what was left in the bottle Anoop was having. Anoop tries to console his friend saying that he has to talk out the indifferences with his wife. Apparently he doubts his wife is having an affair with his partner and the partner is trying to steal all his money by cheating him in their combined business. His wife is blaming him for not having kids, but when Anoop says he had already impregnated his earlier girlfriend and his friend replies that he cannot tell that to his wife and prove himself. He wants to suicide because he is fed up with life but after speaking to Anoop he changes his mind and decides to kill his partner instead. Meanwhile, another friend played by Sudhi Koppa comes home with his girl friend and tells Anoop that they both need to spend half an hour in their bedroom. While the friend and his girl friend are talking in the room, the girl friend receives a message from a guy and he gets annoyed. He asks her to immediately delete all messages and stop talking to him.",
"Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski Scott Alexander (born June 16, 1963) and Larry Karaszewski (; born November 20, 1961) are an American screenwriting team. They are best known for writing postmodern biopics with larger-than-life characters. They coined the term \"anti-biopic\" to describe the genre they invented: Movies about people who don't deserve one. They are uninterested in the traditional \"great man\" story, focusing instead on obscure strivers in American pop culture. They met at the University of Southern California where they were freshman roommates; they graduated from the School of Cinematic Arts in 1985. Their first success was the popular but critically derided comedy \"Problem Child\" (1990). Alexander and Karaszewski claim that their original screenplay was a sophisticated black comedy, but that the studio replaced them and watered it down into an unrecognizable state. With the studio in a hurry to make a sequel, they returned to write \"Problem Child 2\". In 1992, dissatisfied with their career, they decided to write a biopic about Edward D. Wood, Jr. Rather than mocking him, they identified with the obscure filmmaker and his struggles. Tim Burton loved their script \"Ed Wood\" and agreed to direct it. They had written the screenplay in six weeks. \"Ed Wood\"’s acclaim led to a succession of offbeat biopics. They wrote \"The People vs. Larry Flynt\" and \"Man on the Moon\" (about the short life of comedian Andy Kaufman), both films directed by Milos Forman. They produced \"Auto Focus\", chronicling the downfall and subsequent murder of Hogan's Heroes star Bob Crane. A script they penned about the life of Robert Ripley of \"Ripley's Believe It or Not!\" was at one time attached to Jim Carrey, but like their script about The Marx Brothers, it has yet to be produced. They also adapted Stephen King's short story \"1408\", did uncredited rewrites on \"Mars Attacks!\", and worked on a number of family films, such as \"Agent Cody Banks\", a remake of \"That Darn Cat\", and \"Goosebumps\". In 2000, they made their directorial debut with \"Screwed\". In 2007, they both appeared in the documentary \"Dreams on Spec\", a film looking at the Hollywood creative process from the perspective of the writer.",
"Man Trouble Man Trouble is a 1992 American romantic black comedy film starring Jack Nicholson and Ellen Barkin. It was directed by Bob Rafelson and written by Carole Eastman, who together had been responsible for 1970's \"Five Easy Pieces\". The film is the fifth collaboration between Nicholson and Rafelson. Beverly D'Angelo and Harry Dean Stanton co-star. Harry Bliss (Nicholson) runs a guard dog service and is going through counseling with his wife, Adele (Lauren Tom). A serial killer is on the loose in Los Angeles, so when the apartment of classical singer Joan Spruance (Barkin) is ransacked and she starts receiving threatening phone messages, Joan moves into the Hollywood Hills home of her sister, Andy (D'Angelo). Joan does not feel safe there, either, because she is harassed by Andy's ex-lovers. She hires a guard dog from Harry's company, and Harry is soon providing more than protection for the beautiful singer. Harry is a natural-born liar who, because of his profession, feels that he lives by a code of honor – even if he cannot quite explain it – as one thing after another spins out of his control. Joan is soft and vulnerable as she is badgered by her conductor husband, harassed by unknown callers, menaced by men from her sister's past, and \"helped\" by Harry. \"Man Trouble\" was not well received by the majority of critics. It holds a 7% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 30 reviews. The consensus summarizes: \"\"Man Trouble\" has brilliant stars and the germ of an interesting idea in its favor, which makes the scattered, unfunny results even more of a disappointment.\" Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade of \"C\" on scale of A+ to F. \"The New York Times\" review said \"Not much about \"Man Trouble,\" a sad mess of a romantic comedy directed by Bob Rafelson, written by Carole Eastman and starring Jack Nicholson, suggests that these three collaborated on one of the most haunting and representative films of another day.\" \"Variety\"'s review said that \"Jack Nicholson fans should feel cheated by \"Man Trouble\", an insultingly trivial star vehicle. After some initial business attracted by his name on the marquee, film is fated for pay-cable use.",
"Problem (Natalia Kills song) \"Problem\" is a song by English singer Natalia Kills from her second studio album, \"Trouble\" (2013). It was released on 12 March 2013 as the album's lead single. The song has been used in films such as \"Pitch Perfect 2\" and \"We're the Millers\". \"Problem\" is written in common-time in E minor at a tempo of 85 bpm. With a vocal melody spanning from E to B, the harmony stays on an E pedal for the duration of the song. The song marked a shift in Kills's style, incorporating a grungy garage rock influence to her established pop sound. The music video for \"Problem\" was filmed in Los Angeles. Kills and her producer Guillaume Doubet co-directed the video, with Jacob Abrams as director of photography. The music video, released on 24 June 2013, features Canadian model Adonis Bosso as Kills's love interest. The video opens with police cars and the sound of sirens blaring. Kills engages in physical intimacy with her love interest in a variety of locations, including in a hotel room, in a convenience store, and in the back seat of a police car. In another scene, Kills masturbates in a public phone booth while participating in phone sex. At the song's climax, Kills sets fire to her fur coat. The video ends after a young girl spray paints a wall in an alley with Kills's face and the word \"problem\"."
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[
"29 March 1998"
] |
When is the director of film Anand (1986 Film) 's birthday?
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Anand (1986 film) Anand is a 1986 Indian Kannada-language film directed by Singeetham Srinivasa Rao. It stars Shiva Rajkumar and Sudha Rani with both making their debuts. The film went on to be a huge success running for 38 weeks. Shiva Rajkumar is introduced as an actor and a dancer in this film. This was his first of the three consecutive hits at the box-office on debut which gave him the title "Hat-trick Hero". He once said, "I can never forget "Anand", my first film which made me an actor. Singeetam was just explaining the scene to us and was telling this is what the work I expect from you people. He was bringing out such better performance from all of us." The music is composed by the duo Shankar–Ganesh with lyrics by Chi. Udayashankar.
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"Mukul S. Anand Mukul S. Anand (11 October 1951 – 7 September 1997) was an Indian film director and producer. He was the nephew of veteran film scriptwriter Inder Raj Anand and cousin of actor and director Tinnu Anand. Mukul S. Anand made his debut as a director with the suspense thriller \"Kanoon Kya Karega\" (1984), which was inspired by the Hollywood film \"Cape Fear\". His second film \"Aitbaar\" (1985) was inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's classic \"Dial M for Murder\". The film that first gained him recognition was the epic film \"Sultanat\" (1986), which brought together real-life father and son Dharmendra and Sunny Deol for the first time and introduced actress Juhi Chawla. That same year Anand also directed the thriller \"Main Balwan\", which was known for the hit songs \"Rock n Roll\" and \"Halla Gulla\". His first box-office success was \"Insaaf\" (1987), the film responsible for \"re-introducing\" Vinod Khanna to films after a hiatus. Anand's next film, \"Maha-Sangram\" (1990), reunited him with Vinod Khanna and was acclaimed for Aditya Pancholi's angry portrayal of a Thakur. At this point, Mukul was largely considered a skilful director, who held much promise but somehow never managed to deliver solid successes. He finally hit the big league with the \"Scarface\"-inspired crime thriller \"Agneepath\" (1990) with Amitabh Bachchan in the lead role, which won Amitabh a National Award for Best Actor. He was reunited with Bachchan for the family drama \"Hum\" (1991), which was a box-office success and featured the popular song \"Jumma Chumma\". He worked with Bachchan for the final time in the epic film \"Khuda Gawah\" (1992) which won him the Filmfare Best Director Award. His last completed film, \"Trimurti\" (1995), which had a multi-star cast including Jackie Shroff, Anil Kapoor and Shahrukh Khan, failed to do well at the box office. The film he was working on at the time of his death in 1997 was \"Dus\", which remained incomplete and unreleased, although the film's music did end up being released posthumously.",
"Love 86 Love 86 (Hindi: लव Urdu: ) is a 1986 Bollywood romantic drama film directed by Esmayeel Shroff, starring Tanuja, Govinda, Rohan Kapoor, Farha Naaz and Neelam. It was a remake of the 1982 Tamil film \"Ilanjodigal\". This was Govinda's Debut Movie. The film was commercially successful at box office and managed to collect ₹5.10 crores worldwide and declared Hit. Laxmidevi (Tanuja), a strict disciplinarian, wants her daughters, Leena (Farha Naaz) and Esha (Neelam Kothari), to marry brothers from a wealthy family, so that both girls can stay in the same household. But Leena and Esha fall in love with Omi (Rohan Kapoor) and Vicky (Govinda) respectively. The boys are poor orphans who have taken to petty crimes in order to survive. How the matter is resolved forms the rest of the story.",
"Anand (actor) Anand is an Indian actor known for his works predominantly in Tamil, Malayalam and Telugu films along with a few Kannada productions. He has also acted in several Malayalam TV serials. The actor's biggest film till date is Mani Ratnam's black comedy film \"Thiruda Thiruda\", but unlike his co-stars of that film, it failed to give him a breakthrough. He has also played second lead roles and supporting characters in several films including Kamal Haasan's \"Sathya\" and Vijayakanth's \"Poonthotta Kaavalkaaran\". He made his film debut in 1987 with \"Vanna Kanavugal\". He is best known for his works in films such as \"Sathya\" (1988), \"Anbe En Anbe\" (1988), \"Apoorva Sagodharargal\" (1989), \"Oor Mariyadhai\" (1992), \"Thalaivasal\" (1992), \"Thiruda Thiruda\" (1993), screened at the Toronto International Film Festival, and \"Enakku 20 Unakku 18\" (2003). Anand also produced and directed a Malayalam short film \"Kassu Panam Thuttu Money Money\". His recent works as a character actor include hits such as \"\" (2014), \"Ring Master\" (2014), \"Ivan Maryadaraman\" (2015), \"Srimanthudu\" (2015), and \" Gentleman\" (2016). Anand was born in Hyderabad as the youngest of four sons. His father V. S. Bharathi, worked for Brooke Bond India Ltd, and his mother Rajalakshmi is a house wife. His brothers are B. Ramesh, a Vice President of Finance with \"Times of India\", Dr. B. Suresh, a teacher at English Vivekananda College, and Bharat Arun, a former Indian cricketer and now bowling coach for Indian cricket team . Anand also owns a restaurant named Zenzerro in Thiruvananthapuram. Anand is married to actress Poornima since 2009. In 2000, the actor was involved in drunk driving hit and run case, where he hit a police officer who had tried to stop him. The police officer, Ramachandran, subsequently succumbed to his injuries and the actor faced a murder charge. The actor made a financial settlement with the victim's family.",
"Anandji Virji Shah Anandji Virji Shah (born 2 March 1933) is an Indian music director. Together with his brother he formed the Kalyanji-Anandji duo, and won the 1975 Filmfare Award for Best Music Director, for \"Kora Kagaz\". He is a recipient of the civilian honour of Padma Shri (1992). Anandji was born to Virji Shah on 2nd March 1933. Their father was a Kutchi businessman who had migrated from Kutch to Bombay to start a kirana (provision store). His younger brother and sister-in-law are the husband and wife duo Babla & Kanchan. The two brothers began to learn music from a music teacher. One of their four grandparents was a folk musician of some eminence. They spent most of their formative years in the hamlet of Girgaum (a district in Bombay) in the Marathi and Gujarati areas.",
"Prem Anand Prem Anand (Odia: ପ୍ରେମ ଆନନ୍ଦ) is an Indian music director and composer. He usually works in Odia Film and Television Industry. In 2006, he started his career as a music director through the Odia movie Tu Eka Ama Saha Bharasa and worked as a music director in more than 60 Odia films. Apart from Odia films, he composed music for Odia daily shops, Bhajans and Jatra songs. In 2009, Anand worked as a music director for the Hindi film Dekha Bhai Dekh in 2019, he composed music for Bollywood film Luv U Turn. Apart from Odia and Hindi films, he composed music for Marathi and Bengali films. Anand was born on 23 January 1975 at Saanagaan in Kendrapara district of Odisha to a Hindu family. He was the middle child of the family with an elder brother and a sister. His family was against his music career since childhood, but somehow he managed to learn harmonium from his village. After passing out from the Gopinathpur Sanskrit Vidyalaya in the early 1990s, Prem Anand joined the Utkal Sangeet Mahavidyalaya to learn music and trained himself in the Odissi. He honed his skills there under gurus like late Bhikari Bal, Gopala Chandra Panda, and Ramahari Das. He graduated in history in 1997 from the Marshaghai College and later trained himself in Hindustani classical music. Then he joined a school in Raygada as a music teacher, but later resigned from that post and started traveling from village to village and composing for plays and small opera troupes. After school, Anand was composing music for small theaters and plays, but in 1993, he got a chance to compose one song for Janani Gananaatya, one of the famous Opera companies in Odisha. There he composed a song for the play named \"Naalu Bhai Ra Mo Naali Gaamuchhaa\". Later, he worked for many other Opera troupes like Parbati Gananaatya, Kalinga Gananatya, Tulasi Ganantya, Gouri Gananatya, Trinaatha Gananaatya, Shivani Ganantya, Tarapur Opera, and Indrabhubana Gananaatya.",
"Anand Gandhi Anand Gandhi (born Anand Modi, 26 September 1980) is an Indian filmmaker, entrepreneur, media producer, innovator and systems researcher. He is also the founder/CEO of the Mumbai-based new media studio and systems think tank Memesys Culture Lab. His debut feature film \"Ship of Theseus\" (2013), which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival won the National Film Award for Best Picture. Gandhi's film as creative director, executive producer and co-writer, \"Tumbbad\" opened the Critics' Week at the 75th Venice Film Festival, released to a wide critical acclaim in October 2018. In 2017, he produced \"An Insignificant Man\" – a nonfiction thriller directed by Khushboo Ranka and Vinay Shukla on the rise of the Aam Aadmi Party in India. It was released to widespread international and domestic acclaim. The film was picked up by Vice for International distribution. Actor and producer Ajay Devgn bought rights to Gandhi's play \"Beta Kaagdo\". It has been made into the feature film \"Helicopter Eela\", starring Bollywood actress Kajol. Gandhi is also the co-creator of ElseVR, India's first virtual reality (VR) platform aiming to bring \"extraordinary and urgent stories\" to the digital mainstream. Gandhi delivered his INK Talk at the annual INK conference in 2013 where he enumerated his motivations behind making films while expounding on the role of memes in choice-creation. He was a mentor at the Xprize Visioneers 2016 Summit, an annual gathering of the Xprize enterprise, a leading global non-profit dedicated to encouraging \"radical breakthroughs for the benefit of humanity\" through incentivized prize competitions. While on the steering committee of the 48th International Film Festival of India (IFFI), Gandhi served as the creative director of the new VR chapter of the festival. Anand Gandhi unveiled a poster of his next project, \"Emergence\", on the seventh anniversary of his film \"Ship of Theseus\" on Sunday. Emergence, which is set in a post-pandemic world, is \"the story of bit by bit building of resilience through human ingenuity as scientists and everyday heroes create solutions,” says Gandhi. Anand walked out of college at the age of 18. Anand was fascinated by the idea of using neuroscience and evolutionary biology to answer deep and persistent questions of philosophy.",
"Rajiv Rai Rajiv Gulshan Rai (born 18 July 1955) is an Indian film director, screenwriter and film editor. He is the son of the producer Gulshan Rai. He has directed all his films under his father's production company \"Trimurti Films\". He made his debut as a director with the 1985 action film \"Yudh\". He went on to write and direct several hit films in the action and thriller genres: \"Tridev\" (1989), \"Vishwatma\" (1992), \"Mohra\" (1994), and \"Gupt\" (1997). His films are also notable for their hit music composed by Kalyanji-Anandji (in \"Tridev\") and Viju Shah in all his subsequent films. He married Bollywood actress Sonam, whom he had directed in \"Tridev\" and \"Vishwatma\" in 1989 and 1992 respectively. He has one child with her. They divorced in 2016. In 1997, he had to leave India with his family for the UK after a failed attempt to kill him by hitmen believed to be working for the Mumbai underworld leader Abu Salem. After a four-year hiatus from the Bollywood industry, he returned to directing by introducing Arjun Rampal with his comeback venture \"Pyaar Ishq Aur Mohabbat\" (2001). This was an attempt by Rai at directing a romantic drama, a change from his previous action films. The film failed at the box office and Rai returned to the action genre with his next film \"Asambhav\" (2004), again starring Arjun Rampal, which also failed to do well. Shortly after the release of \"Asambhav\" his father died at the age of 80 of a prolonged illness. He has not been active in Bollywood since 2004.",
"Ajay Kashyap Ajay Kashyap is an Indian Bollywood film director. His directorial debut was \"Jaan Ki Baazi\" (1985). He followed it by directing \"Mera Haque\" (1986), \"Naam O Nishan\" (1987), \"Do Qaidi\" (1989) among others. Six of his films had Sanjay Dutt in starring roles. His last direction venture was \"The Coal Mafia\" (2012).",
"Shart (1986 film) Shart is a 1986 Bollywood crime thriller directed by Ketan Anand. The film stars Naseeruddin Shah, Shabana Azmi, Kanwaljit Singh, Sarika and Tom Alter. When the city is rocked by a series of brutal murders of several prostitutes and a part of a photograph is the only clue, Inspector Arjun Dutt is assigned to crack the case. He is sure the murders have been committed by Vikram alias Devendra. But there is a sting in the tale as it is revealed that both Arjun and Vikram have been close friends and vying for the same woman, Kiran.",
"Anand Patwardhan Anand Patwardhan (born 18 February 1950) is an Indian documentary filmmaker known for his socio-political, human rights-oriented films. Some of his films explore the rise of religious fundamentalism, sectarianism and casteism in India, while others investigate nuclear nationalism and unsustainable development. Notable films include \"Bombay: Our City\" (\"Hamara Shahar\") (1985), \"In Memory of Friends\" (1990), \"In the Name of God\" (\"Ram ke Nam\") (1992), \"Father, Son, and Holy War\" (1995), \"A Narmada Diary\" (1995), \"War and Peace\" (2002) and \"Jai Bhim Comrade\" (2011), which have won national and international awards. Patwardhan was born on 18 February 1950, in Mumbai, Maharashtra. He completed a B.A. in English literature at Mumbai University in 1970, a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology at Brandeis University in 1972, and a Master of Arts in Communication Studies at McGill University in 1982. He is a member of the Oscar Academy Virtually all of Patwardhan's documentary films have faced censorship from the Indian government, eventually being cleared after legal action. His film \"\" was shown on TV after a four-year court case, while \"Father, Son, and Holy War\" (1995) was adjudged in 2004 as one of 50 most memorable international documentaries of all time by DOX, Europe's leading documentary film magazine. Father, Son, and Holy War was shown on India's National Network, Doordarshan, only in the year 2006, 11 years after its making, after a prolonged court battle which lasted ten years and ended with the nation's Supreme Court ordering the network to telecast the film without any cuts. The Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC), refused to certify his next film, \"War and Peace\", released in 2002. The board demanded 21 cuts before it would be certified. Patwardhan took the government to court, leading to the film being banned for over a year. However, after a court battle, Patwardhan won the right to screen his film without a single cut. As with his previous films, Patwardhan also successfully fought to force a reluctant national broadcaster, Doordarshan, to show this film on their national network."
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"21 September 1931"
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Which country the director of film The Swan Princess: Royally Undercover is from?
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Crystal Swan Crystal Swan () is a 2018 Belarusian drama film directed by Darya Zhuk. It was selected as the Belarusian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards, but it was not nominated. In the 1990s, Velya hopes to leave Belarus and become a DJ in the United States. Her plans change following an error on her visa application.
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"The Wild Swans (film) The Wild Swans (, \"Dikiye lebedi\") is a 1962 Soviet traditionally animated feature film directed by the husband-and-wife team of Mikhail Tsekhanovsky and Vera Tsekhanovskaya. The film is based on the story of the same name by Hans Christian Andersen. Unusual for Soviet films of this period, and especially for animated films, it was produced in widescreen. It was produced at the Soyuzmultfilm studio in Moscow. The princess Elisa and her eleven brothers live in peace and happiness until their father marries again and brings home a new queen. She turns out to be an evil witch. With her magic, she tries to curse Elisa, but Elisa's good heart repel the curse. Instead, the queen resorts to blackening Elisa's face and dirtying her hair, making her unrecognisable. She also attempts to turn the eleven princes into black, ugly birds, but because of their good hearts, the curse is only partly successful: they turn into beautiful white swans. The queen chases them out of the castle, and the next morning, Elisa is chased out as well because her father didn't recognise her. Left with nothing, she sets out to find her brothers. After many years, she finally finds them, and after learning from a crow that the curse can be broken by herself, she has to knit eleven sweaters out of tall, burning nettles, and has to take a vow of silence until the last sweater is finished and not be distracted. While she works on the sweaters, she meets a king who falls in love with her and lets her live in his castle. However, an archbishop conspires with the King's fiancé, his (the archbishop's) niece, to get rid of her by making people think she is a witch. She is almost burnt on the stake, but at the last second, her brothers come to the rescue. She throws the sweaters over them, the curse is broken, and she is able to tell her story and return the king's love. The film expert Pyotr Bagrov in the analysis of the Soviet \"andersen's\" filmography puts the animated film \"Wild Swans\" on a special place, separating its literary basis from other fairy tales of Andersen: \"It, in general, and not the fairy tale. It is an ancient Danish legend\".",
"Swandown Swandown is a 2012 film directed by Andrew Kötting. To make the film, Andrew Kötting and Iain Sinclair pedaled a swan pedalo from the seaside in Hastings to Hackney in East London, occasionally joined by guests including Alan Moore, Stewart Lee, Dudley Sutton, Dr Mark Lythgoe and Marcia Farquhar.",
"Shin Sang-ok Shin Sang-ok (; born Shin Tae-seo; October 11, 1926 – April 11, 2006) was a South Korean filmmaker with more than 100 producer and 70 director credits to his name. His best-known films were made in the 1950s and 60s, many of them collaborations with his wife Choi Eun-hee, when he was known as \"The Prince of South Korean Cinema\". He received the Gold Crown Cultural Medal, the country's top honor for an artist. In 1978, Shin and Choi were kidnapped by North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, for the purpose of producing critically acclaimed films. The two remained in captivity for 8 years until 1986, when they escaped and sought asylum in the United States. Shin continued to produce and direct films in America, now under the pseudonym \"Simon Sheen\", before eventually returning to South Korea for his final years. The son of a prominent doctor of Korean medicine, Shin was born Shin Tae-seo () was born in Chongjin, in the northeastern part of the Korean Peninsula, at the time occupied by Japan and currently a part of North Korea. Shin studied in Japan at Tokyo Fine Arts School, the predecessor of Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, before returning to Korea three years later. Shin started his film career as an assistant production designer on Choi In-kyu's \"Viva Freedom!\", the first Korean film made after the country achieved independence from Japan. During the \"Golden Age\" of South Korean cinema in the late 1950s and 1960s, Shin worked prolifically, often directing two or more films per year, earning the nickname the \"Prince of South Korean Cinema\". Shin featured the Western princess, female sex workers for American soldiers, in \"The Evil Night\" (1952) and \"A Flower in Hell\" (1958). The production company he started, Shin Films, produced around 300 films during the 1960s, including \"Prince Yeonsan\" (1961), the winner of the Best Film prize at the first Grand Bell Awards ceremony and a Grand Bell Award-winning 1964 remake of Na Woon-gyu's 1926 \"Beongeoli Sam-ryong\". During the 1970s, Shin became less active, while South Korea's cinema industry in general suffered under strict censorship and constant government interference.",
"Václav Marhoul Václav Marhoul (; born 30 January 1960 in Prague) is a Czech film director, screenwriter and actor. He studied at Prague's FAMU, graduating in 1984. He directed his first film \"Mazaný Filip\", based on Raymond Chandler's books, in 2003. In 2008, his second film \"Tobruk\" was premiered. His next film \"The Painted Bird\", based on Jerzy Kosiński's novel of the same title, premiered at the 76th Venice International Film Festival. He also starred in several films such as \"Gympl\" (2007), \"Ulovit miliardáře\" (2009) and \"Cesta do lesa\" (2012). He is set to make his English-language debut with a biographical film about Joseph McCarthy, with Michael Shannon in the lead role, and co-starring Emilia Clarke, Dane DeHaan and Scoot McNairy.",
"The Swan Princess (film series) The Swan Princess is an animated film series that began with the 1994 film \"The Swan Princess\". The Swan Princess is a 1994 American animated musical fantasy film based on the ballet \"Swan Lake\". Starring the voices of Jack Palance, John Cleese, Steven Wright, and Sandy Duncan, the film was directed by a former Disney animation director, Richard Rich, and produced by Nest Family Entertainment / Rich Animation Studios and with a music score by Lex de Azevedo. The story follows the relationship between Princess Odette and Prince Derek, who, pushed together by their respective parents, dislike each other as children and teenagers, but develop romantic feelings for each other as adults, get married, and are established as the future rulers of the kingdom. It was released theatrically on November 18, 1994, where it received mixed reviews from critics. The Swan Princess: Music from the Motion Picture is the soundtrack album of the first film. \"Far Longer than Forever\" is the theme song for the first film \"The Swan Princess\" and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song. It is performed by Regina Belle and Jeffrey Osborne. The Swan Princess: Escape from Castle Mountain / The Swan Princess: The Secret of the Castle is a 1997 American animated musical-fantasy film and the direct-to-video sequel to the animated film \"The Swan Princess\". Directed by Richard Rich (who also directed the original), the film follows Derek and Odette one year after their wedding. Their anniversary celebrations are suddenly disrupted by the actions of the wizard Clavius, who wants to regain the Forbidden Arts and destroy their happiness. The Swan Princess: The Mystery of the Enchanted Kingdom / The Swan Princess III: The Mystery of the Enchanted Treasure is a direct-to-video film and the third installment in \"The Swan Princess\" franchise. It was released in 1998, directed again by Richard Rich, and features the voices of Michelle Nicastro and Brian Nissen as Odette and Derek. This film follows Derek and Odette having to deal with Zelda, a sorceress who is seeking the Forbidden Arts and wishes to use it to destroy Odette and Derek's happiness. The Swan Princess Christmas is a 2012 American computer-animated fantasy film directed by Richard Rich, produced by Crest Animation Productions and Nest Family Entertainment.",
"Triad Princess Triad Princess () is a 2019 Taiwanese Netflix original series. It is Netflix's second original Mandarin series after \"Nowhere Man\". Directed by Neal Wu, a bestselling author and the director of film \"At Cafe 6\", it stars Eugenie Liu and Jasper Liu as the main cast. Growing up in the shadow of her Triad father, Angie craves an independent life of her own. Defying her father's wishes, she takes on a gig as an undercover bodyguard for a famous actress at an agency, where she must navigate the unfamiliar world of glitz, glamour and even love.",
"Wang Chao (director) Wang Chao (; born January 21, 1964 in Nanjing) is a Chinese film director and screenwriter, sometimes considered part of the loosely defined \"sixth generation.\" Wang began his career serving as an assistant director to the fifth generation auteur, Chen Kaige, working with the elder director on epics like \"Farewell My Concubine\" and \"The Emperor and the Assassin\". At the same time, he began to write fiction including several short stories and novellas, one of which would later go on to serve sa the basis of Wang's directorial debut, \"The Orphan of Anyang\". With \"Orphan\", Wang Chao would begin what was the first film of a trilogy of films based on modern life in China. He completed the trilogy with 2004's \"Day and Night\" and 2006's \"Luxury Car\". His 2014 film \"Fantasia\" was selected to compete in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.",
"Crown Prince of the Republic Crown Prince of the Republic () is a 1934 Soviet comedy film directed by Eduard Ioganson. The film tells about a couple who live easily and carefree. The wife becomes pregnant and gladly talks about it to her husband, but it upsets him and their life completely changes.",
"Undercover Princes Undercover Princes is a BBC Three reality TV show which took three royal claimants from foreign cultures and placed them in Brighton where they had to 'live and date' like normal people. The idea for the programme came from the 1988 Eddie Murphy movie Coming to America. The contestants were Remigius Jerry Kanagarajah, descendant to the royal family of the historical Jaffna Kingdom; Africa Zulu, a Zulu chief from South Africa; and Manvendra Singh Gohil of Rajpipla in north west India. The three men lived in a house together and the primary focus is on their search for a 'princess' (or in Gohil's case, prince) in the UK whilst at the same time getting used to having to do things for themselves. All three ultimately failed to find a lasting relationship. The series was narrated by Dawn Porter. A female counterpart, \"Undercover Princesses\", was made. In 2012 the Ukrainian TV channel 1+1 did a Ukrainian interpretation under the Russian title: \"Принц желает познакомиться\" with Prince Lorenzo de' Medici from Italy, Count Jacques von Polier from France, and Prince Daniel Nii Armah Tagoe from Ghana.",
"Tian Zhuangzhuang Tian Zhuangzhuang (; born April 1952 in Beijing) is a Chinese film director, producer and actor. Tian was born to an influential actor and actress in China. Following a short stint in the military, Tian began his artistic career first as an amateur photographer and then as an assistant cinematographer at the Beijing Agricultural Film Studio. In 1978, he was accepted to the Beijing Film Academy, from which he graduated in 1982, together with classmates Chen Kaige and Zhang Yimou. The class of 1982 collectively would soon gain fame as the so-called Fifth Generation film movement, with Tian Zhuangzhuang as one of the movement's key figures. Tian's early career was marked both with avant-garde documentary infused films (\"On the Hunting Ground\" (1985), \"The Horse Thief\" (1986)) to more commercial fare (\"\" (1991)). In 1991, Tian began work on a quiet epic about one of modern China's darkest moments. This film, \"The Blue Kite\" (1993), would eventually result in Tian's nearly decade long exile from the film industry, an exile he returned from with \"Springtime in a Small Town\" (2001). Throughout the 2000s, Tian Zhuangzhuang returned to the fore of Chinese cinema, directing films like the biopic \"The Go Master\" (2006) and the historical action film \"The Warrior and the Wolf\" (2009). Since his banning after the release of \"The Blue Kite\", Tian has also emerged as a mentor for some of China's newest film talents, and he has helped produce several important films for these new generations of directors. Tian Zhuangzhuang was born on April 23, 1952 in Beijing. He was the son of Tian Fang, a famous actor in the 1930s who became head of the Beijing Film Studio after 1949, and Yu Lan, an actress who later ran the Beijing Children's Film Studio. Given his parents' busy jobs as studio chiefs, Tian was raised primarily by his grandmother, though his parents' positions also allowed him to live a relatively comfortable childhood. But because of the Tians' prominence, Tian Zhuangzhuang suffered heavily during the Cultural Revolution, and both his parents were persecuted. Unlike fellow director Chen Kaige, however, Tian never joined the Red Guards, and was eventually sent to the countryside in Jilin, like many youths from so-called \"bad families."
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"American"
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Which album came out earlier, From The Cradle or Naked Truth (Jeanette Album)?
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Naked Truth (Jeanette album) Naked Truth is the sixth album by German pop singer Jeanette. It was released by Universal Records on 7 April 2006 in German-speaking Europe. A limited deluxe edition of the album was also released on 7 April 2006 with a bonus DVD.
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"The Cradle (1922 film) The Cradle is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by Paul Powell and written by Olga Printzlau. The film stars Ethel Clayton, Charles Meredith, Mary Jane Irving, Anna Lehr, Walter McGrail, and Adele Farrington. The film was released on March 4, 1922, by Paramount Pictures. The film is preserved in the Library of Congress collections. As described in a film magazine, Margaret Harvey's (Clayton) husband, physician Dr. Robert Harvey (Meredith), is won away from his home by an attractive patient. A divorce follows and the doctor marries the patient. Margaret marries an old admirer, and the child Doris (Irving) is assigned to the custody of both parents for alternate periods of six months each. Both the step-mother and step-father resent the child's presence in their homes, and estrangement disturbs both households. The serious illness of the child results in the realization that the bond of parentage is stronger than man-made marriage, and the film closes with two more divorces and the prospect of a remarriage.",
"Roulette of the Cradle Roulette of the Cradle is an album by German jazz saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock, which was recorded in 2014 and released on the Swiss Intakt label. It was the third recording by her Anti-House quintet, the first band that she formed on her relocation to New York with guitarist Mary Halvorson, pianist Kris Davis, bassist John Hébert and drummer Tom Rainey. They are joined by clarinetist Oscar Noriega on two tracks. The All About Jazz review by John Sharpe states \"Each cut abounds with abrupt switches in mood and tone delivered with such aplomb and invention that rather than seeming forced, the changes take on an aura of inevitability. Such richness means that there is delight to be found in close attention to the detail and each encounter reveals more of the underpinning without completely explaining the magic.\"",
"Moment of Truth: Cradle of Conspiracy Moment of Truth: Cradle of Conspiracy is a 1994 American made-for-television drama film directed by Gabrielle Beaumont. The film is a part of the \"Moment of Truth\" franchise and premiered on NBC on May 2, 1994. Filming took place in Los Angeles. Kristin Guthrie is a teenager growing up in an upper-class environment. She has trouble living up to her mother Suzanne's ideals and she starts to rebel by dating Kenny, a young man of whom her parents become immediately suspicious. Fearful of losing their daughter, they allow her to see him, until their nightmare comes true: Kristin runs away with Kenny. It soon turns out that Kenny is working in the black market, illegally selling babies he fathers with other girls. He also impregnates Kristin, planning to sell their baby after its birth as well. Meanwhile, her parents are desperately searching for their daughter.",
"The Naked Feeling Chìluǒ gǎnjué (赤裸感覺 The Naked Feeling) is the fifth studio album of cantopop singer Prudence Liew, released in January 1990. This is the first album that is not produced by Joseph Chan, Liew's longtime collaborator. Instead Liew decided to co-produce this album with Tony Kiang. Liew veered away from the normal conservative cantopop ballads and Europop dance songs and instead came up with this concept album surrounding sex, adultery and lust. The Naked Feeling is often referred to as Liew's most risqué studio release as the theme is considered taboo in Chinese culture. The album's content ultimately hurt the airplay of the third single, \"Afterwards 事後\", which deals with sexual pleasure. Several radio stations including RTHK Radio 2 banned this song from their playlist due to its explicit nature. However, Commercial Radio Hong Kong promoted the song on heavy rotation. Despite its mature content, the album still sold relatively well in Hong Kong, ensuring Gold Record status certified by the IFPI. This is the only Liew studio album released under Current Records/BMG Music that was not re-issued as part of the Legendary Collection in 2005 by Sony BMG.",
"A Stillness \"A Stillness\" is a song by New Zealand post-punk revival band The Naked and Famous, from their second studio album \"In Rolling Waves\". The song, was released for streaming on August 28, 2013. The song is about getting ahead of worry and psychoanalysis, re-encountering love, stability, safety, tranquility, not straying and combatting the sense of despair that a person may have. Following the release of the album, the song has been used as the first tune performed at live shows. EastScene describes the song as one having a galaxial theme of discovery while nonetheless remaining grounded, as the keyboards and percussion instruments stray in opposing paths while veering along the same trail. Christopher Sheridan of Band Wagon Magazine describes the song as starting off slowly while rising up gradually and setting the tone for the momentum the band is known for, with Lauren Brown from Rock on Philly comparing lead vocalist Alisa Xayalith's resonant vocals to those of Yeah Yeah Yeahs front woman Karen Orzolek. Brown went on to say that the song did not portray the ensemble's electropop talent. Credits adapted from the liner notes of \"In Rolling Waves\".",
"Jeanette Clinger Jeanette Clinger, is an American singer/vocalist who has toured and/or recorded with such artists as Kim Carnes, Bradley Joseph, Hiroshima (band), Sheena Easton, Julie Brown, Donovan, and Yanni for whom she is featured on the live concert video and album \"Tribute\". Published children’s fantasy book author, title: ‘The Crystal Prince’, screen play under the same name, Dream Maker Pictures and Books, and original sound track for the book and movie, ‘Love Is The Only Way’. CStar Music.",
"The Naked Truth (TV series) The Naked Truth is an American sitcom television series that aired on ABC from September 13, 1995, to February 28, 1996, and on NBC from January 16, 1997, to May 25, 1998. The series stars Téa Leoni and Holland Taylor. The show took place at the office of a tabloid news publication. Pulitzer Prize nominated photographer Nora Wilde (Téa Leoni) divorces her rich, philandering husband Leland Banks, asking for nothing in the settlement except the use of her maiden name. Broke and without prospects for employment, after Leland blackballs her from respectable mainstream work, Nora seeks work at \"The Comet\", a sleazy celebrity tabloid owned by Sir Rudolph Halley (Tim Curry) and run by ruthless Camilla Dane (Holland Taylor). Initially, Nora is repulsed by the depths to which she has to sink for her new job – she finds herself in demeaning situations such as stealing Anna Nicole Smith's urine to run a pregnancy test, and staking out the sewer for mutant alligators – but before long, she begins to feel at home. Nora's coworkers include egotistical Nicky Columbus (Jonathan Penner), a potential love interest; T.J. (Darryl Sivad), a humorless African-American man always clad in dark sunglasses; and Stupid Dave (Mark Roberts) who is mentally handicapped. At home, Nora deals with deranged building manager Mr. Donner (Jack Blessing) and Chloe Banks (Amy Ryan), her best friend and former step-daughter. In the second season, the show switched networks and was retooled. Meat-mogul Les Polanski (George Wendt) buys \"The Comet\", intending to make it a respectable publication. Gone were the outlandishly zany antics from the first season, and \"Stupid Dave\" was now merely referred to as \"Dave\". Chloe disappears without explanation, as does Mr. Donner (since Nora has a new apartment). Mary Tyler Moore (replacing Dyan Cannon from season one) and George Segal both make frequent guest appearances as Nora's parents in season two, eventually moving into the apartment across the hall. Most episodes centered on Nora's romantic life and how her job could intrude on that. Season three saw enormous changes.",
"Cradle to the Grave (album) Cradle to the Grave is the fourteenth studio album, and the thirteenth album of original material, by British rock band Squeeze. It was released in October 2015 and is their first studio album since 2010's \"Spot the Difference\". It also features their first new songs since their 1998 album \"Domino\". It is the only Squeeze album to feature bassist Lucy Shaw who departed before the band's 2017 album, \"The Knowledge\", which features Yolanda Charles on bass. \"Cradle to the Grave\" debuted at number 12 on the UK Albums Chart, making this the band's highest-charting album excluding hits compilations. Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote that \"Cradle to the Grave\" was \"a pop album first and foremost\". Stephen Thomas Erlewine of \"AllMusic\" concluded a praising 4-out-of-5-star review by complementing \"Cradle to the Grave\" as an \"affirmation of Difford and Tilbrook's special chemistry as songwriters and bandleaders\". All songs written by Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook, except as indicated. Deluxe edition tracks exclusive to both the vinyl and digital download releases. \"with\": Backing vocals and handclaps: Strings on 2, 5, 12: Strings on 8:",
"Naked (Joan Jett album) Naked is the tenth studio album released only in Japan by Joan Jett and the Blackhearts. The album was released on April 27, 2004.",
"Cradle of Thorns Cradle of Thorns is an American rock band from Bakersfield, California. The band put out one record as Videodrone on Korn's Elementree Records, as well as three albums under their original name. One was independently released, and the other two were released by Triple X Records. After Videodrone broke up, drummer Kris Kohls went on to join Adema, and frontman Ty Elam performed in a number of Bakersfield bands. In 2006, Ty Elam reformed the band as Cradle of Thorns with a new lineup. In 1988 vocalist Ty Elam formed the gothic rock band Cradle of Thorns. With a combination of male and female lead vocalists, a dark, atmospheric sound, and environmentally and socially conscious lyrics (\"Remember It Day\" especially is about pollution, violence, and ignorance), they toured extensively and earned an underground following. They released an independent record entitled \"Remember It Day\" in 1990. The band signed with Triple X Records (label of Jane's Addiction and Social Distortion) and in 1994 released \"Feed-Us\", produced by Ross Robinson. This was a more aggressive album with hip hop elements (emcee-style vocals and lyrics about race on \"Ignore-Your-Race\"), drug addiction (\"Lullaby for the Dead\", \"Dysfunctional Brady Bunch\"), S&M and voyeurism (\"Flesh\" and \"My Sister Sam (Bleed)\"), abuse and self-harm (\"Father's Day\"), and serial murder (\"Behave\"). The album also included a new, angrier version of \"Remember It Day\" with cleaner production that descends into screaming chaos. \"Feed-Us\" also established a band staple: the final track contains an extended, sample-based noise collage following the last song. 1996's \"Download This!\" saw the departure of female vocalist Tamera Slayton and bassist Scat Elis. With new bassist Purdy Spackle, the band shifted to a fusion of punk, rap, metal, and industrial rock, with more rapping and screaming than ever before and more extensive sampling and use of electronics. The song \"Bulimia Blowjob\" features an appearance by vocalist Aimee Echo of Human Waste Project and TheSTART, and Jeff Schartoff, of Human Waste Project and Professional Murder Music. Schartoff is also touring bassist for Peter Murphy."
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"From The Cradle"
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When did the composer of song Stiff Upper Lip (Gershwin Song) die?
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Stiff Upper Lip (Gershwin song) "Stiff Upper Lip" is a 1937 song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin. It references the British expression 'Stiff upper lip'. It was introduced by Gracie Allen in the 1937 film "A Damsel in Distress". The song is the occasion for an elaborate dance routine performed inside a funhouse by Fred Astaire, George Burns, and Miss Allen, and makes full use of all the trappings of the house, including the funhouse mirror. The number won an Academy Award for Best Dance Direction.
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"Raymond Hubbell John Raymond Hubbell (June 1, 1879 – December 13, 1954) was an American writer, composer and lyricist. He is best known for the popular song, \"Poor Butterfly\". Hubbell was born in Urbana, Ohio. He attended schools in Urbana and studied music in Chicago, where he formed a dance band. He worked for Charles K. Harris Publishers as a staff arranger and pianist. His first compositions for stage musicals were the songs for \"Chow Chow\" (lyrics and book by Addison Burkhardt), which ran for 127 performances in Chicago in 1902. Renamed and revised as \"The Runaways\" in 1903, the show ran for 167 days in New York and then toured for several years. Hubbell began composing music for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1911 and eventually scored seven editions. In 1915 he was hired as musical director for the New York Hippodrome after the previous music director, Manuel Klein, left abruptly after a disagreement with Lee Shubert and Jacob J. Shubert. Hubbell also wrote the score for \"Good Times\", which ran for 456 performances at the New York Hippodrome. He continued composing for the theater until 1923. The song he is most remembered for, \"Poor Butterfly\", was written for one of the first shows he wrote for the Hippodrome, \"The Big Show\". According to his obituary, he thought his best song was \"The Ladder of Roses\", written for the 1915 Hippodrome hit, \"Hip-Hip-Hooray\". His last Broadway work was the score for the 1928 musical \"Three Cheers\", starring Will Rogers. In reviewing the show, Brooks Atkinson wrote \"Most of the music is unpretentiously melodious.\" Soon after he retired to Miami, Florida. He was one of the nine founding members of ASCAP in 1914. For 23 years he was head of the membership committee, and for 7 years was its treasurer. At the age of 50, Hubbell opted for retirement Hubbell suffered a mild stroke on March 7, 1947. He suffered a serious stroke on November 28, 1954, and died on December 13. He was survived by his wife Estelle, whom he married in about 1914.",
"Joe Lipman Joseph P. Lippman (April 23, 1915 - January 21, 2007) was an American composer, arranger, conductor, pianist, and songwriter working in jazz and traditional pop. His musical career was over five decades long, having started at age 19 with the Benny Goodman orchestra in 1934 and writing for television, films, and Broadway in the 1980s. He composed and arranged for Bunny Berigan, Jimmy Dorsey, Sarah Vaughan, Charlie Parker and worked as staff arranger in television for Perry Como and \"Hollywood Palace\". Lipman was born Boston, Massachusetts on April 23, 1915. He started on the piano at the age of 7. After high school he attended college for two weeks but decided he to become a professional musician. At the age of 19, Lipman moved to New York City and joined the Benny Goodman orchestra on his \"Let's Dance\" radio show in 1934 and 1935 as a pianist. He encountered the arrangements and compositions that Goodman acquired from Fletcher Henderson. He arranged for Vincent Lopez, and worked as pianist and arranger for Bill Staffon in 1935 and Irving Aaronson in 1936, and became pianist and arranger with the Artie Shaw Orchestra in 1936. Lipman also played for and recorded with orchestra leader Nathaniel Shilkret in early 1937. In 1937 Lipman joined Bunny Berigan's band as pianist and remained in that position until Joe Bushkin took over in 1938. He re-orchestrated Berigan's second version of \"I Can't Get Started\" (1937). These Lipman arrangements included the 1938/39 concept album for RCA-Victor of Bix Beiderbecke's music featuring Berigan on re-arrangements of Beiderbecke's hits from the late 1920s (Bunny Plays Bix). On Saturday November 19, 1938, Berigan's group appeared on CBS's radio show, \"Saturday Night Swing Club\" with a contingent of nine musicians from his big band playing Lipman's new arrangement of Bix's composition \"In a Mist\". From that same album he also arranged \"Davenport Blues\", \"In the Dark\", and \"Candlelights\". Though not a great commercial success, the album was to help Lipman move into a greater position as an arranger for more jazz and dance bands of the era.",
"Irving Berlin Irving Berlin (born Israel Beilin; ; May 11, 1888 – September 22, 1989) was a Russian American composer and lyricist, widely considered one of the greatest songwriters in history. His music forms a great part of the Great American Songbook. Born in Imperial Russia, Berlin arrived in the United States at the age of five. He published his first song, \"Marie from Sunny Italy\", in 1907, receiving 33 cents for the publishing rights, and had his first major international hit, \"Alexander's Ragtime Band\", in 1911. He also was an owner of the Music Box Theatre on Broadway. For much of his career Berlin could not read sheet music, and was such a limited piano player that he could only play in the key of F-sharp; he used his custom piano equipped with a transposing lever when he needed to play in keys other than F-sharp. \"Alexander's Ragtime Band\" sparked an international dance craze in places as far away as Berlin's native Russia, which also \"flung itself into the ragtime beat with an abandon bordering on mania\". Over the years he was known for writing music and lyrics in the American vernacular: uncomplicated, simple and direct, with his stated aim being to \"reach the heart of the average American,\" whom he saw as the \"real soul of the country\". In doing so, said Walter Cronkite, at Berlin's 100th birthday tribute, he \"helped write the story of this country, capturing the best of who we are and the dreams that shape our lives\". He wrote hundreds of songs, many becoming major hits, which made him famous before he turned thirty. During his 60-year career he wrote an estimated 1,500 songs, including the scores for 20 original Broadway shows and 15 original Hollywood films, with his songs nominated eight times for Academy Awards. Many songs became popular themes and anthems, including \"Alexander's Ragtime Band\", \"Easter Parade\", \"Puttin' on the Ritz\", \"Cheek to Cheek\", \"White Christmas\", \"Happy Holiday\", \"Anything You Can Do (I Can Do Better)\", and \"There's No Business Like Show Business\". His Broadway musical and 1943 film \"This Is the Army\", with Ronald Reagan, had Kate Smith singing Berlin's \"God Bless America\" which was first performed in 1938.",
"Blah Blah Blah (Gershwin song) \"Blah, Blah, Blah\" is a 1931 song with music by George Gershwin, to lyrics by his brother Ira Gershwin. Originally written for the abortive \"East is West\" it was taken \"out of the trunk\" by the Gershwins for the 1931 film \"Delicious\". It was later used in the 2012 Broadway musical \"Nice Work If You Can Get It\", which features songs by George and Ira. It goes in part: The song is a parody of the clichés of contemporary love songs; Gerald Mast in \"Can't Help Singin\"' describes the \"treacly tune\" and Ira Gershwin's \"refusal to write coherent words except the hackneyed rhymes to conclude every line\".",
"Stan Applebaum Stanley Seymour Applebaum (March 1, 1922 – February 23, 2019) was an American composer, arranger, musician and conductor. He arranged the orchestration on many pop hit records, most notably in the early 1960s, including The Drifters' \"Save the Last Dance for Me\"; Ben E. King's \"Spanish Harlem\" and \"Stand By Me\"; Brian Hyland's \"Sealed with a Kiss\"; and Neil Sedaka's \"Breaking Up Is Hard to Do\". Applebaum was born in Newark, New Jersey, United States. He started playing piano aged 7, after a doctor suggested it would help heal a broken finger, and began taking lessons. By the age of 12 he had started writing arrangements for his school band, and played at local weddings and events, and in clubs. He wrote arrangements for Cootie Williams, Lucky Millinder, and others, before serving in World War II in Germany, where he joined the US Army band. After leaving the military, he joined music publishers Edwin H. Morris & Co, and began composing. His reputation as an arranger grew, and he worked with bandleaders such as Benny Goodman, Harry James and Charlie Ventura, as well as Jimmy Durante. He is co-credited as writer of the Billy Eckstine and Sarah Vaughan hit \"Passing Strangers\". Mort Palitz of Jubilee Records asked Applebaum to arrange songs on a 1958 album, \"Scotch Mist\", by Marilynn Lovell, and he also orchestrated Al Martino's 1959 album \"Swing Along\". He stated I learned different types of music and got gigs playing Greek, Polish, Italian and Jewish weddings. This diversity and understanding of different styles kept growing every day and became one of my most valuable skills for the rest of my life. He studied under German composer Stefan Wolpe, and became acquainted with fellow student Mike Stoller. Working with Leiber and Stoller, Applebaum began orchestrating some of their recordings. He arranged the orchestration on \"There Goes My Baby\" by the Drifters, the first R&B record to use strings, and continued to work with the two producers and lead singer Ben E. King on his solo hits \"Spanish Harlem\" and \"Stand By Me\". Among the other recording artists whose hits were arranged by Applebaum were Connie Francis, Neil Sedaka, Brook Benton, Brian Hyland, Joanie Sommers, and Bobby Vinton.",
"Who Cares? (Gershwin song) \"Who Cares?\" is a song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin, written for their 1931 musical \"Of Thee I Sing\". It was introduced by William Gaxton and Lois Moran in the original Broadway production.",
"Mel B. Kaufman Melville Bernd Kaufman (Newark, New Jersey, April 23, 1879 - New York City, February 21, 1932) was a prolific American ragtime piano composer Mel B. Kaufman was born in Newark, New Jersey, on April 23, 1879. He was a composer of popular songs and instrumental music from 1912 to 1932. Among his best known works were \"Me-Ow\", \"More Candy\", \"Taxi\", \"Step With Pep\" and \"Pick A Chicken\".",
"Mort Dixon Mort Dixon (March 20, 1892 – March 23, 1956) was an American lyricist. Born in New York City, United States, Dixon began writing songs in the early 1920s, and was active into the 1930s. He achieved success with his first published effort, 1923's \"That Old Gang of Mine\". His chief composer collaborators were Ray Henderson, Harry Warren, Harry M. Woods and Allie Wrubel. His composing output declined in the late 1930s, and he retired early in life to reside in Westchester County, New York. Among his lyrics are: \"That Old Gang Of Mine\" (1923), \"Bye Bye Blackbird\" (1926), \"I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover\" (1927), \"Nagasaki\" (1928), \"Would You Like to Take a Walk?\" (1930), \"I Found a Million Dollar Baby (in a Five and Ten Cent Store)\", \"You're My Everything\", and \"River, Stay 'Way from My Door\" (1931), \"Flirtation Walk\" and \"Mr and Mrs is the Name\" (1934) and \"The Lady in Red\" (1935). Dixon is a member of the Songwriters Hall of Fame. He died in Bronxville, New York.",
"David McCord Lippincott David McCord Lippincott (17 June 1924 – January 1984) was an American composer, lyricist and novelist. David McCord Lippincott wrote music and lyrics from an early age. The first evidence of that is a musical revue he wrote while attending the Hotchkiss School called \"Little Boy Blue\". He then went to Yale University, as did his father; was a member of Skull & Bones, as was his father William Jackson Lippincott. He graduated in 1949. After college, Lippincott worked for McCann Erickson as a creative director, writing copy and creating jingles. His original album musical, \"The Body in the Seine\" has become a collector's item. During this time, he also wrote books, several of which are still available. Some of the writings were turned into films. Titles include: \"Unholy Mourning\", \"Black Prism\", \"E Pluribus Bang!\", \"The Blood of October\", \"The Home\", \"Salt Mine\", \"The Voice of Armageddon\", \"Savage Ransom\", and \"Tremor Violet\".",
"Clap Yo' Hands \"Clap Yo' Hands\" is a song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin. It was introduced in the musical \"Oh, Kay!\" (1926), and was featured by Fred Astaire and Kay Thompson in a song and dance routine in \"Funny Face\" (1957)."
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[
"July 11, 1937"
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Where was the place of death of the director of film Paramanandayya Sishyula Katha?
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Tushar Ranganath Tushar Ranganath (31 March 1974 – 20 December 2011), also known as Ranganth or Ranganna, was a Sandalwood movie director. Born and raised in Bangalore, India, Ranganath made his directorial debut with "Gulama". He died due to cardiac arrest on 20 December 2011.
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[
"Kishore Sarja Kishore Sarja (died 27 June 2009) was an Indian film director who works in Kannada-language films. Kishore Sarja started his career as an assistant director before making his directorial debut with \"Alimayya\" (1993) starring his brother Arjun Sarja, which was a remake of the 1987 Tamil film \"Kalyana Kacheri\" starring Arjun. He is known for directing the film \"Thutta Mutta\" (1998) starring Ramesh Aravind, which was commercially successful and his only film that was not a remake. He also directed other films including \"Jodi\" (2001) and \"Baava Baamaida\" (2001), both starring Shiva Rajkumar. He introduced his nephew, Chiranjeevi Sarja with the film \"Vayuputra\" (2009), which was produced by Arjun Sarja. Sarja's father, Shakti Prasad, was an actor in Kannada cinema while his brother Arjun Sarja is a filmmaker and actor. Kishore died on 26 June 2009.",
"Babu Nanthankode Babu Nanthankode is a South Indian film director who works mainly in the Malayalam film industry. Born in Thiruvananthapuram, India, Babu Nanthankode displayed a storyteller's potential from an early age. He is known for his realistic and sensitive portrayal of village life in his movies.",
"Kranthi Kumar Talasila Kranthi Kumar was an Indian film director, producer, and screenwriter known for his works predominantly in Telugu cinema. He won two Filmfare Awards and four Nandi Awards. In 1985, he directed \"Sravanthi\", which won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Telugu that year. In 1991, he directed \"Seetharamayya Gari Manavaralu\", which was premiered in the Indian panorama section, at the 1991 International Film Festival of India. Born in Penamaluru in Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh, he studied M.A. and L.L.B. before entering the film world in 1968. He introduced Chiranjeevi as an actor in \"Pranam Kareedu\". He was instrumental in shaping K. Raghavendra Rao and Dasari Narayana Rao as ace directors. In 2000 he directed \"9 Nelalu\", premiered retrospective at the Toronto International Film Festival. He has garnered the National Film Award, five state Nandi Awards and two Filmfare Awards South. He died on 9 May 2003.",
"V. Madhusudhan Rao Veeramachineni Madhusudhan Rao (27 July 1917 – 11 January 2012) was an Indian film director, producer and screenwriter, known for his works predominantly in Telugu cinema. Rao directed over 45 films, including musical hits such as \"Annapurna\", \"Zamindar\", \"Antastulu\", \"Aradhana\", \"Aathma Balam\", \"Aatmiyulu\", \"Krishnaveni\" and produced \"Swati Kiranam\". In 1965 he received the National Film Award for directing Antastulu. Rao died on 11 January 2012 at the age of 94.",
"Siraj (director) Siraj (1952 – 24 July 2017) was an Indian film director, who worked in Tamil cinema. Throughout his career, he remained a close acquaintance to actor Ramarajan. In 1999, Siraj worked on the multi-starrer film \"Suyamvaram\" (1999), also being responsible for the film's screenplay. In 2014, Siraj was working on a film titled \"Minnal\" and cast NRI actress Angana Adya in dual lead roles, giving her an extra character after being impressed with her performance. The film's lead actors were to be played by debutants Abhinay and Aathava, who developed an eight-pack for the film. The film was supposed to have a theatrical release in October 2014, but eventually was shelved. Siraj died on 24 July 2017 at the age of 65 in Chennai after being admitted to hospital complaining of chest pains.",
"Halwa Vasu Vasu, popularly known as Halwa Vasu, (died 17 August 2017) was a comedian in the Tamil film industry in India. He worked in around 900 films. Vasu who hailed from Madurai district, came to Chennai to work in cinemas after his graduation. Vasu worked as an assistant to director-actor Manivannan, he carved a niche for himself in comedy films and has also acted alongside the likes of Vadivelu. He was given the name \"Halwa Vasu\" after the film \"Amaidhi Padai\" (1994), in which he brings halwa which is adulterated with abin, a drug, by the antagonist in the movie who uses it to rape an innocent girl. He was hospitalized for some time but died due to liver failure at his home on 17 August 2017.",
"M. S. Rajashekar M. S. Rajashekar (died 29 October 2018) was an Indian Kannada film director based in Bangalore. He made his directorial debut with \"Dhruva Thare\" starring Rajkumar which earned the Karnataka State Award for Second Best Film. His second movie \"Anuraga Aralithu\" was remade in Tamil, Telugu and Hindi. He went on to make successful films like \"Ratha Sapthami\" and \"Nanjundi Kalyana\". Most of his films were either remakes or adapted from novels. He is credited with having brought nativity element in remakes since he is known only to retain the core storyline in the remakes. He is the second director after Singeetam Srinivasa Rao to direct matinee idol Rajkumar and his two sons. He also has the distinction of having directed Shiva Rajkumar in highest no. of movies - 14 - including his second and third movie (which earned him the title \"Hat-trick Hero\") and also Raghavendra Rajkumar in highest no. of movies -8 (including his second and third movie). His movie \"Kanasina Rani\" earned Malashri a title of same name. He is the son of make up artist Subbanna. Rajasekhar's son Raghavendra (Dharani) made his directorial debut with \"Baalashiva\" (2003) and went on to direct \"Dhool\" (2011). After assisting director Vijay, Rajashekar made his directorial debut with \"Dhruva Thare\" starring Rajkumar which became super hit. His second film \"Anuraga Aralithu\" was also successful. He directed Rajkumar's son Shivarajkumar in \"Ratha Sapthami\" and \"Mana Mecchida Hudugi\". Both films alongside \"Anand\" became successful and earned Shivrajkumar the tag of \"Hat Trick Hero\". Rajasekhar again directed him in films during 1980s like Ade Raaga Ade Haadu and Aasegobba Meesegobba with former being average grosser and latter being a super hit. He introduced Rajkumar's second son in the leading role in family comedy \"Nanjundi Kalyana\" which also marked the debut of actress Malashree.",
"Sri Kanyaka Parameshwari Kathe Sri Kanyaka Parameshwari Kathe is a 1966 Indian Kannada-language film, directed and produced by Hunsur Krishnamurthy. The film stars Rajkumar, B. M. Venkatesh, Nagendra Rao and H. R. Shastry. The film has musical score by Rajan–Nagendra. H. R. Bhargava was the associate director of this movie. The music was composed by Rajan–Nagendra.",
"Mathur Krishnamurthy Mathoor Krishnamurthy was a Kannada writer and former Director of the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bangalore. He was also instrumental in establishing the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan in London. He was a Padma Shri awardee. He died on 6 October 2011 at the age of 82.",
"Tikkavarapu Pattabhirama Reddy Tikkavarapu Pattabhirama Reddy (19 February 1919 – 6 May 2006) was an Indian film screenwriter, producer, director, social activist, poet, and writer known for his pioneering works in Telugu cinema, and Kannada cinema. Reddy has received four National Film Awards for his works. In 1972 he produced and directed \"Samskara\" which garnered the National Film Award for Best Feature Film and Bronze Leopard at the Locarno International Film Festival. Reddy has actively participated the Indian Emergency opposition movement, human rights movement, and child labor movements as founder member of People's Union for Civil Liberties. In 1977, he produced and directed the bilingual \"Chandamarutha\" in Kannada, and English. The film was banned during the Emergency, and was later released to critical appreciation. He was born in Nellore, Andhra Pradesh. He studied at Shantiniketan, Calcutta University and Columbia University. He was married to Snehalata Reddy, and founded the organisation Concerned for Working Children. In 2003, he directed \"In the Hour of God\", a play based on Sri Aurobindo's classic \"\", inspired by the mythical woman who defied death for love, which he dedicated to his wife Snehalata Reddy. Pattabhirama Reddy died on 6 May 2006, at the age of 86."
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[
"Madras"
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Which country the director of film Valencia (1927 Film) is from?
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Valencia (1927 film) Valencia () is a 1927 German silent film directed by Jaap Speyer and starring , Dorothea Wieck, and Oskar Marion. It was made at the Emelka Studios in Munich.
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"Maximiliano Thous Orts Maximiliano Thous Orts, (1875 - 1947), also known as Maximilià Thous i Orts, was a Spanish journalist, writer, filmmaker, and playwright. Although he was born in Asturias, his family were from Alicante, but when he became older, they moved to Valencia. While at Valencia, he studied law at the University of Valencia, but he then quit studying to learn literature and writing. In 1909, he wrote the lyrics to \"Himne de l'Exposició\", which is officially the anthem of the Valencian Community. In 1923, he began directing films. During the 1930s, Maximiliano was a host of a radio program, named Radio Valencia Cadena SER. However, some of the recording were lost until 2017. Source:",
"Miguel Morayta Miguel Morayta (15 August 1907 – 19 June 2013) was a Spanish film director and screenwriter. He directed 74 films between 1944 and 1978. At the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, Morayta was a Spanish artillery officer, who joined the Republican side. After Francisco Franco's victory, he left Spain for France and Africa, finally arriving in Mexico in 1941, where he started his career. He was living in Mexico when he died aged 105.",
"The Heroes of the Legion The Heroes of the Legion (Spanish:Los héroes de la legión) is a 1927 Spanish silent film directed by Rafael López Rienda. It was filmed on location in Spanish Morocco.",
"La ilustre fregona (film) La ilustre fregona is a 1928 Spanish film directed by Armando Pou, starring Mari Muniain, Ángel de Zomeño, Modesto Rivas and Juan Romero. It is based on the story La ilustre fregona by Miguel de Cervantes. The film was produced for Venus Film Española. It premiered at the Palacio de la Música in Madrid on 26 March 1928.",
"Valencia (song) Valencia is a \"pasodoble\" song composed by José Padilla for the 1924 Zarzuela \"La bien amada\" and included in the 1926 silent film \"Valencia\", with lyrics translated by Lucien Boyer, Jacques Charles, and Clifford Grey. Recorded by Paul Whiteman & his Orchestra, it became one of the biggest hits of 1926, topping the charts for 11-weeks beginning March 30, 1926. Other popular recordings in 1926 were by Ben Selvin & His Orchestra (vocal by Irving Kaufman); The Revelers; Ross Gorman; and Jesse Crawford. That year Carlos Gardel recorded Valencia with different lyrics, as Maestro Padilla frequently worked in Buenos Aires. Tony Martin recorded the song in 1950, and his cover reached #18 on the U.S. chart. This song was one of tenor Mario Lanza classic performances since 1954. It also appears in \"El último cuplé\" (1957) soundtrack, sung by Sara Montiel, and in 1994 Sara Montiel would perform this song live during the Valencia Fallas celebrations. The song appears on the spanish The Shadows EP Los Shadows, released in 1963. In 2008 it was included in Placido Domingo's \"Because you're mine.\" This march is considered the informal hymn of Valencia. It is specially loved in Valencia, as in March every year during the Fallas in Valencia the \"Valencia\" pasodoble is heard during the L'Ofrena de flors (the offering of flowers) to \"Our Lady of the Forsaken.\" In the novel \"The Invention of Morel\", the Argentinian writer Adolfo Bioy Casares often quotes to this song, together with \"Tea for Two\". The main character is alone, in a wild island, when he starts to hear this unexpected music. In the plot the song stands for the lightheartedness of the high society, that somehow violates the wild space of a lonely island, where the main character is literally \"struggling for survival\". One can argue that Bioy Casares chose this song mainly because it was a strong symbol to represent the society of the 1940s. The saxophonist Pablo in Hermann Hesse's novel \"Steppenwolf\" mentions this song as an example of melodies quietly reproduced every night by dreamy people.",
"Valencia, Colombia Valencia () is a town and municipality located in the Córdoba Department, northern Colombia.",
"Frank Kesson Frank Kesson (27 August 1885 – 29 September 1939) was an American cinematographer. He worked with Byron Haskin in \"The Sea Beast\" (1926), the Spanish western film \"El hombre malo\" (1930), \"El cantante de Nápoles\" (1935) with William Rees, \"La dama atrevida\" (1931), \"La llamada sagrada\" (1931), \"Die heilige Flamme\" (1931), and \"Millionaires\" (1926). He also worked in \"How I Play Golf - Trouble Shots\" (1931), \"Beware of Bachelors\" (1928) with Norbert Brodin, \"Beware of Married Men\" (1928), \"Bobbed Hair\" (1925), \"Rinty of the Desert\" (1928), \"Why Girls Go Back Home\" (1926), \"Women They Talk About\" (1928), \"While London Sleeps\" (1926). He died on 29 September 1939.",
"Guillermo Valencia Guillermo Valencia Castillo (October 29, 1873 in Popayán, Colombia – July 8, 1943 in Popayán) was a Colombian poet, translator, and politician. Valencia was a pioneer of Modernism in Colombia and a member of the Colombian Conservative Party. He was the father of five children, including Guillermo León Valencia (1909–1971), Colombian president during 1962–1966, and Josefina Valencia Muñoz, Governor of Cauca. Valencia was the son of Joaquín Valencia Quijano and Adelaida Castillo Silva. He became an orphan at eight years old. He studied in Medellín. His first volume of poetry, \"Ritos\" (1899, rev. ed. 1914; “Rites”), containing original poems and free translations from French, Italian, and Portuguese, established his literary reputation at home and abroad as a leader of the experimental Modernist movement with its exotic imagery. He had the poetry Magazine Paginas de Anarkos, this treasure of poetry was the journal for the most prestigious Poets and artists of the time. It had illustrations by masters like Santiago Martinez Delgado. He was never a prolific poet; in later years, he abandoned original poetry almost entirely, concentrating on translations. One of these was Catay (1928; “Cathay”), which he translated from Franz Toussaint's La Flute de Jade (“The Jade Flute”), a French translation of an anthology of Chinese poems. He translated La balada de la cárcel de Reading (1932; “The Ballad of Reading Gaol”) from the English poem by the 19th-century writer Oscar Wilde. He also turned more frequently to writing essays, many of which are collected in Panegíricos, discursos y artículos (1933; “Panegyrics, Speeches, and Articles”). He led an active career as a statesman and a diplomat and was twice a candidate for the presidency of Colombia, in 1918 and 1930. In 1918, he lost to Marco Fidel Suárez. In 1930, he lost the presidential election to liberal Enrique Olaya Herrera. Valencia married Josefina Muñoz Muñoz in 1908. Together, they had five children. He was the grandfather of Pedro Felipe Valencia López, a Colombian politician. The house where he lived and died was turned into a museum.",
"Vicente Aranda Vicente Aranda Ezquerra (; 9 November 1926 – 26 May 2015) was a Spanish film director, screenwriter and producer. Due to his refined and personal style, he was one of the most renowned Spanish filmmakers. He started as a founding member of the Barcelona School of Film and became known for bringing contemporary Spanish novels to life on the big screen. Aranda was also noted for exploring difficult social issues and variations on the theme of desire while using the codes of melodrama. Love as uncontrollable passion, eroticism and cruelty are constant themes in his filmography. The frank examination of sexuality is one of the trademarks of his work, as seen in his most internationally successful film: \"Amantes\" (1990) \"(Lovers)\". Vicente Aranda Ezquerra was born in Barcelona on 9 November 1926. He was the youngest son in a large and impoverished family who had emigrated from Aragón to Barcelona twenty years before he was born. He barely knew his father, an itinerant photographer, who died when the child was only seven years old. The Spanish Civil War, in which his family took the side of the losing Republicans, marked his childhood. Thinking that the war was going to be more bearable in a small town than in Barcelona, the family moved early in the war to Peñalba, his mother's native village. The dire situation there, close to the front at Aragon, forced them to return to Barcelona in 1938. After the war ended, Aranda spent a lot of time in the local movie theatre, much against the wishes of his mother, who took to smelling him on his return for traces of the disinfectant that was sprayed in cinemas of the time. He never finished his formal studies. At age thirteen, he began to work in order to help support his family. He had a number of different jobs in his home town, trying a multitude of trades before following his brother Palmiro to Venezuela in 1952. He emigrated for economical and political reasons. In Venezuela, Aranda worked as a cargo technician for an American shipping business. Later he directed programs at NCR. After seven years, he returned to Spain in 1959. Wealthy and married upon his return, he intended to become a novelist, but found that he lacked enough talent as a writer. He fell in with the cultural elite of Catalonia and was encouraged to try his hand at filmmaking.",
"Amalia Molina Amalia Molina (Seville, 1881 - Barcelona, July 8, 1956) was a popular Spanish tonadillera and dancer. Raised in Triana, she moved at a young age to Madrid, where she debuted at the age of 17. Her career took her to Latin America and even Broadway. In Paris she premiered in the opera, \"Goyescas\". She starred in the film, \"Malvaloca\" (1926). She was married from 1904 to Trelles del Busto."
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Are Akbarabad, Tonekabon and Pontokomi both located in the same country?
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Akbarabad, Tonekabon Akbarabad (, also Romanized as Akbarābād) is a village in Baladeh Rural District, Khorramabad District, Tonekabon County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 217, in 54 families.
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"Yusefabad, Tonekabon Yusefabad (, also Romanized as Yūsefābād) is a village in Goli Jan Rural District, in the Central District of Tonekabon County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 81, in 30 families.",
"Salimabad, Tonekabon Salimabad (, also Romanized as Salīmābād) is a village in Goli Jan Rural District, in the Central District of Tonekabon County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 715, in 178 families.",
"Akbarabad, Rigan Akbarabad (, also Romanized as Akbarābād) is a village in Rigan Rural District, in the Central District of Rigan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11, in 4 families.",
"Akbarabad, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Akbarabad (, also Romanized as Akbarābād) is a village in Sarrud-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Boyer-Ahmad County, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,156, in 417 families.",
"Akbarabad-e Yek Akbarabad-e Yek (, also Romanized as Akbarābād-e Yek; also known as Akbarābād) is a village in Siriz Rural District, Yazdanabad District, Zarand County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 16, in 6 families.",
"Milad Tonekabon FSC Milad Tonekabon Futsal Club ( was an Iranian futsal club based in Tonekabon. The table below chronicles the achievements of the Club in various competitions.",
"Amirabad, Tonekabon Amirabad (, also Romanized as Amīrābād) is a village in Baladeh Rural District, Khorramabad District, Tonekabon County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 387, in 113 families.",
"Akbarabad, Hirmand Akbarabad (, also Romanized as Akbarābād) is a village in Qorqori Rural District, Qorqori District, Hirmand County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 148, in 31 families.",
"Akbarabad, Sonqor Akbarabad (, also Romanized as Akbarābād) is a village in Kivanat Rural District, Kolyai District, Sonqor County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 198, in 44 families.",
"Akbarabad, Najafabad Akbarabad (, also Romanized as Akbarābād) is a village in Najafabad Rural District, in the Central District of Sirjan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 260, in 68 families."
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Do both films Kilichundan Mampazham and Boss Of Boomtown have the directors from the same country?
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Boss of Boomtown Boss of Boomtown is a 1944 Western film directed by Ray Taylor. It stars Rod Cameron, Tom Tyler and Fuzzy Knight.
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"Blessy Blessy is an Indian film director and screenwriter who has made several critically acclaimed Malayalam films. His most notable film is \"Kaazhcha\". Blessy learned his trade as an assistant director with filmmakers such as Padmarajan, Lohithadas and Jayaraj. He scripted and directed his debut movie \"Kaazhcha\" in 2004. \"Kaazcha\" portrayed the story of an orphaned boy, a victim of Gujarat earthquake and how he changes the life of a small-town film operator (played by Mammootty) and his family. The film won three Kerala State Film Awards including Best Film and Best Actor for Mammootty. His next movie was \"Thanmathra\" (2005), which depicted the story of a middle-class government employee (played by Mohanlal) and his family, and portrayed the effects of Alzheimer's disease on his life and his family. The film won Blessy National Award for the Best Feature Film in Malayalam and five Kerala State Film Awards including Best Film, Best Director, Best Screenplay and Best Actor for Mohanlal. Blessy's next venture had Mammootty in \"Palunku\" (2006), followed by \"Calcutta News\" (2008), starring Dileep and Meera Jasmine, went on to be marginal hits. \"Bhramaram\" (2009), which had Mohanlal once again in the lead role was another successful movie. It was a story of Revenge against those that falsely accuse a man of murder and ruin his life. His 2011 film \"Pranayam\" includes Mohanlal, Anupam Kher, and Jaya Prada. His 2013 film Kalimannu starring Swetha Menon and Biju Menon in leading roles dwelled upon the theme of childbirth and the maternal and paternal connect towards a child. The director's upcoming venture \"Aadujeevitham\" starring Prithviraj Sukumaran is reported to bring back renowned composed A R Rahman to Malayalam film industry after a gap of 28 years. National Film Awards Kerala State Film Awards Filmfare Awards Asianet Film Awards",
"Mampazhakkalam Mambazhakkalam () is a 2004 Indian Malayalam-language family drama film directed by Joshiy, written by T. A. Shahid and produced by M. Mani. It stars Mohanlal and Shobana, alongside a large supporting cast. The film features original songs composed by M. Jayachandran and background score by S. P. Venkatesh. Following his father's (Nedumudi Venu) tragic suicide, Puramanayil Chandran (Mohanlal) was forced leave for Abu Dhabi at the young age of 22, to amortise all his father's debts. The film commences with his mother, Lakshmi (Kaviyoor Ponnamma), faking an illness to persuade Chandran to come back to India to get him married. Chandran takes care of his big family including his mother, uncle, aunt, his younger sister and brothers, and their spouses and children. From the money earned during his years of toil in the Persian Gulf region, Chandran has opened and runs a successful school in the name of his late father. During his vacation in India, Chandran has an excellent time with his family. However, Chandran's marriage doesn't take place because a suitable bride couldn't be found. Depressed by this, Chandran decides to go back to Abu Dhabi. On his way to the airport, Chandran sees his childhood friend Indira (Shobhana). Chandran's quest to meet Indira becomes unsuccessful and he decides to cancel his trip to Abu Dhabi. As the plot uncovers, Chandran's love for Indira is realised. However, Indira is now a single mother of ten-year-old Malu (Sanusha) after her ex-husband went to jail. One day Chandran sees Indira and her daughter. Malu does not like Chandran because of her bad experiences with her father. Indira's husband, Dr. Raghuram (Adithya Menon), is a drug addict and he used to physically abuse his ex-wife and kid. Malu warns Chandran to keep away from her mother. When Dr. Raghuram is released from the jail, he meets Chandran and warns Chandran not to see Indira again. However, Chandran meets Indira once again to enquire about Dr. Raghuram. Dr. Raghuram issues another threat against his family. This forces Chandran's siblings and their families to leave him because of this relation.",
"Super Subbarayan Super Subbarayan (born as P. Subbarayan) is a stunt director and actor in the Indian cinema, mainly in Kollywood. He has been working in the industry since 1980. Stunt masters like Rocky Rajesh, Thalapathy Dinesh, Ponnambalam, Ram Laxman, Miracle Michael, Kudrathur Babu, Indian Baskar, Rajasekhar, Dhilip Subbarayan, Thavasiraj and Dinesh Subbarayan have worked as fighters and assistants to him. His sons Dhilip Subbarayan and Dinesh Subbarayan are also a stunt masters. He has won four Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Stunt Coordinator.",
"Milan Jaleel Milan Jaleel is an Indian film producer and distributor mainly works in Malayalam cinema. He produce and distribute films under the banner of Galaxy Films. He started his production works in 1997 by producing the movie \"Kalyanappittannu\". At present he is the president of Kerala Film Producers' Association.",
"Sayahnam Sayahnam () is a 2000 Malayalam feature film that marks the directorial debut of R. Sarath with screenplay by himself. The film is a drama centred on the environmental and anti-nuclear issue in India. It stars O. Madhavan, Gomathi Mahadevan, Ebrahim Kutty and Alex Kadavil. It won seven Kerala State Film Awards and two National Film Awards. An old man K.K. Madhavan noted for his thinking and stance on social issues is proud of his scientist son Siddharthan but upset about the country's involvement in nuclear tests. He continues his crusade against nuclear weapons but together with his loyal wife Bharathi finds himself increasingly isolated as his own son, his party and the country celebrate the nuclear advances made in India.",
"Shafi (director) Rasheed M. H., better known by his stage name Shafi is an Indian film director who works in Malayalam cinema, best known for directing comedy films. He has also directed a Tamil film. Shafi made his directorial debut with \"One Man Show\" in 2001. The director Rafi of the Rafi Mecartin duo is his elder brother. Shafi started his film career in the mid-1990s by assisting director Rajasenan and the Rafi Mecartin duo. Shafi started his career through the movie \"One Man Show\" which was released in 2001. He has directed over 10 films. His notable movies are Dileep starrer \"Kalyanaraman\" (2002), \"Pulival Kalyanam\" (2003), Mammooty's \"Thommanum Makkalum\" (2005), \"Mayavi\" (2007), Chattambinadu(2009), \"Two Countries\" (2015). In 2018, Shafi directed Mega Stage Show Madhuram 18 performing in 15 stages in U.S.A and Canada. In 2019, Shafi directed the movie Children's Park.",
"Chezhiyan Chezhiyan is an Indian filmmaker and director of photography who works primarily in the Tamil film industry. He received critical acclaim for his work in \"Kalloori\" (2007), \"Paradesi\" (2013) and \"To Let\" (2017). Chezhiyan was born in Sivaganga, Tamil Nadu, where he did his early schooling. His parents were primary school teachers. His father was an artist who used to draw and would make toys with clays, his mother was a storyteller and also a singer. He completed his diploma in civil engineering from Alagappa Chettiar College in Karaikudi. Chezhiyan was also interested in photography right from his early days and was into drawing and painting. After completing his civil engineering degree, he started his career as an apprentice to P. C. Sreeram before establishing himself as a cinematographer. He worked as an assistant director in the film \"Thambi\" (2006). The film's cinematographer left the shoots after 60 days and hence the film director Seeman asked him to double up as cinematographer. He then shot the climax and all the songs and worked for the remaining 30 days. His name had featured as \"additional cinematographer\" in \"Thambi\". Chezhiyan made his debut as a full-fledged cinematographer with \"Kalloori\" (2007). \"Kalloori\" opened to critical acclaim in December 2007, with a critic stating that \"Chezhian's cinematography is perfection itself, capturing the dustiness of the surrounds and the college accurately\". He then worked in S. Shankar's production \"Rettaisuzhi\", in V. Gowthaman's \"Magizhchi\" and in Seenu Ramasamy's \"Thenmerku Paruvakaatru\", the latter won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil. He received critical acclaim for his work in Bala's \"Paradesi\" (2013) and went on to win many awards, including the Best Cinematography Award at the 2013 BFI London Film Festival Awards. He then worked in the thriller film \"Sawaari\" (2016), in \"Tharai Thappattai\" (2016), teaming up with director Bala for the second time, and the critically acclaimed film \"Joker\" (2016).",
"Rajavinte Makan Rajavinte Makan () is a 1986 Indian Malayalam-language Epic gangster film directed and produced by Thampi Kannanthanam and written by Dennis Joseph. It stars Mohanlal as crime boss Vincent Gomes, and also features Ratheesh, Ambika, Suresh Gopi and Mohan Jose in supporting roles. The plot is based on the rivalry between underworld don Vincent Gomes and Home minister N. Krishnadas (Ratheesh). The music was composed by S. P. Venkatesh. Rajavinte Makan was one of the major successes of the year 1986. The film was a milestone in the Malayalam film industry, achieving cult status in Kerala. The film was significant in heightening the stardom of Mohanlal. The character became a cult figure and his dialogues became popular among the youth. \"Rajavinte Makan\" was a commercial success. It was remade in Tamil as \"Makkal En Pakkam\", and in Kannada as \"Athiratha Maharatha\", with Ambika reprising her role in both the versions. It was also remade in Telugu as \"Ahuthi\" and in Hindi as \"Kanwarlal\". Some critics consider the story to be a loose adaptation of the 1980 novel \"Rage of Angels\" by Sidney Sheldon. The story begins with Krishnadas becoming the Kerala Minister of Home Affairs. After college graduation, Krishnadas started working for the crime boss Vincent Gomes. But soon, he cheats Gomes to gain favour among the people as well as the party. Thus, Krishnadas becomes the Home Affairs Minister of the state and becomes an enemy of Gomes. Gomes plans a payback and he successfully manages to do so by manipulating Nancy, an advocate who carries the case of his file which if submitted to the court may lead to imprisonment for several years. Gomes realises that Nancy has struggled a lot in life as an orphan and later, a single mother. However, because of Gomes's plan, Nancy loses her job. Gomes, now remorseful of his actions, makes amends to Nancy and become friends. He confesses to Nancy and tells her that he wants to halt all his activities, and asks for her hand in marriage. However, Nancy denies telling that she cannot accept anyone else as her husband. Krishnadas goes after Gomes with his political power and Gomes ends up losing all his wealth.",
"Singam Singam () is a 2010 Indian Tamil-language action film written and directed by Hari, and produced by K. E. Gnanavel Raja under his Studio Green banner in association with Reliance Big Pictures, and distributed by Sun Pictures. It stars Suriya in the lead role, marking his 25th film, with Anushka Shetty, Prakash Raj and Vivek in other lead roles. It is the first installment in the \"Singam\" franchise. The film was released on 28 May 2010. The film was a commercial success at the box office, and was remade in Kannada as \"Kempe Gowda\", in Hindi as \"Singham\", in Bengali as \"Shotru\" and in Punjabi as \"Singham\". It was followed by the sequels \"Singam II\" (2013) and \"Si3\" (2017). Durai Singam is an honest sub-inspector of Nallur, a small village in Thoothukudi district in southern Tamil Nadu, assisted by his bumbling colleague Yettu Yerimalai. He belongs to Nallur with his father Soundarapandi, having a respectable status in the village. His family business is provision stores, and Singam wants to join it, but he joined the police due to Soundarapandi's wishes. He resolves most of the problems in his village with nonviolence and mutual counselling. He uses force only when the situation demands it, thereby gaining much reputation and love from the villagers. Mahalingam, an industrialist in Chennai and friend of Soundarapandi, comes to the village with his daughters Kavya and Divya (Krishna Priya). Singam initially thinks of Kavya as a thief when she is about to prank her cousin by wearing a tiger costume. As Singam is roaming around the village, he accidentally slaps her. As Kavya is about to take revenge on Singam, he apologizes to her. Kavya gets moved by this and slowly falls in love with him. After some hilarious incidents, Kavya professes her love to Singam. Initially taken aback, Singam soon reciprocates Kavya's love. Chennai-based Mayil Vaaganam, a big-time extortionist with shady mafia dealings who blackmails people by complaining to the Income Tax Department, is required to travel to Nallur to sign a conditional bail.",
"P. L. Thenappan PL. Thenappan is an Indian film producer and actor who works predominantly in the Tamil film industry. He owns the production company Shree Rajalakshmi Films (P) Ltd. He debuted as a producer with the Tamil film \"Kaathala Kaathala\". He is a producer known for making big budget films and at the same time promotes encouraging fresh talents as well. Apart from mainstream cinema, Thenappan has produced two short films in French, which were screened at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival in France."
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Who is the paternal grandmother of Carlos, Prince Of Asturias?
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Carlos, Prince of Asturias Carlos, Prince of Asturias, also known as Don Carlos (8 July 154524 July 1568), was the eldest son and heir-apparent of King Philip II of Spain. His mother was Maria Manuela of Portugal, daughter of John III of Portugal. Carlos was mentally unstable and was imprisoned by his father in early 1568, dying after half a year of solitary confinement. His fate was a theme in Spain's Black Legend, and inspired a play by Friedrich Schiller and an opera by Giuseppe Verdi. Carlos was born at Valladolid on 8 July 1545, the son of the double first cousins Philip of Spain and María Manuela of Portugal. His paternal grandfather, Emperor Charles V, was the reigning king of Spain. Carlos's mother Maria died four days after the birth of her son from a haemorrhage she had suffered following the birth. The young Infante Carlos was delicate and deformed. He grew up proud and willful and, as a young adult, began to show signs of mental instability. Many of his physical and psychological afflictions may have stemmed from the inbreeding common to his family, the House of Habsburg, and the royal houses of Portugal (House of Aviz) and Spain. Carlos had only four great-grandparents instead of the maximum of eight, and his parents had the same coefficient of co-ancestry (1/4) as if they were half siblings. He had only six great-great-grandparents, instead of the maximum 8;(Parker suggests 16 great grandparents are possible) his maternal grandmother and his paternal grandfather were siblings, his maternal grandfather and his paternal grandmother were also siblings, and his two great-grandmothers were sisters. Carlos lost his mother four days after his birth. He was raised by his aunts and, after their marriages, with other family members. According to the courtesan Gramiz, Carlos was spoiled, emotionally unstable, and not very bright. He was educated in the Universidad de Alcalá de Henares along with Juan of Austria and Alexander Farnese. The descriptions of his behaviour suggest that he suffered from serious mental problems. Rumour in the Spanish court had it that he enjoyed roasting animals alive and on one occasion blinded all the horses in the royal stables. At age eleven he ordered the whipping of a serving girl for no known reason.
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" Her godparents were her paternal grandparents, King Juan Carlos I and Queen Sofía. She received the name of Leonor de Todos los Santos. Leonor's education began at the daycare for the children of the Spanish Royal Guard. She began her first year of primary school on 15 September 2008 at the Santa María de los Rosales School in Aravaca, just outside Madrid. Her father is an alumnus of the private school and her younger sister, Sofía, is also enrolled there. Leonor is fluent in both Spanish and English (the latter learnt from her British nanny and also from her grandmother, Queen Sofía) and has studied Mandarin. In May 2014, Leonor made her first official visit to the San Javier Air Force base in Murcia. On 18 June 2014, King Juan Carlos signed the instrument of abdication, and the following day at the stroke of midnight (18–19 June 2014) Leonor's father ascended the throne becoming King Felipe VI, and Leonor became his heir presumptive and Princess of Asturias. Spanish monarchy operates under a system of male-preference cognatic primogeniture, meaning that Leonor, as the elder of Felipe's two daughters, is first in line to inherit the throne. Under the current law, however, if her father has a legitimate son while still being king, Leonor would be displaced in the line of succession and again become an infanta. There have been discussions about changing the succession law to absolute primogeniture, allowing for the inheritance of the eldest child, regardless of sex; however, the birth of Leonor, followed by that of her younger sister Sofía, stalled these plans. Despite a change from male-preference to absolute primogeniture for Spanish titles of nobility in 2009, as of 2025 no legislation has been passed affecting the succession to the throne. In October 2014, a wax figure of Leonor was unveiled at the Museo de Cera in Madrid. On 20 May 2015, Leonor received First Communion as per Catholic custom. A day before her 10th birthday, she was granted the Order of the Golden Fleece by her father. In addition, the Council of Ministers approved the design of her personal standard and guidon.",
"Leoncio Alonso González de Gregorio, 22nd Duke of Medina Sidonia Leoncio Alonso González de Gregorio y Álvarez de Toledo, 22nd Duke of Medina Sidonia, GE (born 3 January 1956) is a Spanish aristocrat and historian. Born in Madrid, Medina Sidonia is the eldest son of Leoncio González de Gregorio y Martí and his wife Luisa Isabel Álvarez de Toledo, 21st Duchess of Medina Sidonia. The Duke is Professor of History at the University of Castile-La Mancha and of the Diplomatic School of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation. Medina Sidonia married firstly his distant cousin María Montserrat Viñamata y Martorell, younger daughter of Luis Viñamata y Emmanueli and The Countess of Alba de Liste, on 12 December 1983, and divorced in 1998. They had two children: The Duke married secondly Pamela García Damián, of Venezuelan origin, daughter of Armando García Liceaga y Pérez de Viñaspre and María Pilar Damián Gracia, in 2001.",
"Duke of Suárez Duke of Suárez () is a hereditary title in the Spanish nobility. The dukedom was bestowed by King Juan Carlos on Adolfo Suarez González on 25 February 1981, following his resignation as Spanish Prime Minister, in recognition of his role in the Spanish transition to democracy. The Duke of Suárez is also a Grandee of Spain. The current holder of the title is Alejandra Romero Suárez, Adolfo Suárez's granddaughter. Shortly after the first Duke's death in 2014, it was reported that in 2009 his son Adolfo Suárez Illana had unsuccessfully written to King Juan Carlos I to ask him to use the supposed historic powers of the Crown to alter the legal line of succession to make him heir to his father's title of Duke of Suárez instead of his niece Alejandra Suárez Romero, daughter and heir of Mariam Suárez Illana (his father's eldest child, who had died in 2004). This was on the basis that, although he himself cared little or nothing for the title, this had been the repeatedly expressed desire of his father, supported by the depositions of five witnesses. His father allegedly wanted the Dukes of Suárez to have his surname Suárez for many future generations, but Alzheimer's disease had made him both unable to decide the succession himself (as is permitted by Spanish law through \"Succession by Assignment\"), and also made him unaware that in 2006 the Equity Act for the Succession of Titles of Nobility () had removed male-preference cognatic primogeniture, thereby ensuring that the title would pass to his granddaughter rather than to his son. The failure of the petition was unsurprising given that the Royal family itself had already expressed its support for a constitutional change to eliminate the preference for male rather than female succession to the Spanish throne, a matter which Socialist Prime Minister, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero included in his inaugural speech in 2004.",
"Don Carlos of Spain Don Carlos of Spain or Infante Carlos of Spain may refer to:",
"Diego, Prince of Asturias Diego, Prince of Asturias and Portugal (Diego Felix; 15 August 1575 – November 21, 1582) was the fourth son of Philip II of Spain and his third son by his fourth wife, Anna of Austria. At the time of his birth, Diego's elder brother, Prince Ferdinand, was still the heir-apparent. On the death Ferdinand in 1578, Diego became heir-apparent to the throne. Diego also had another elder brother, Carlos Lorenzo, who died in infancy. His mother had just learned of the death of Carlos Lorenzo, and she was said to have suffered such a shock from word of his death that it caused her to go into premature labour, giving birth to Diego. He was formally invested as Prince of Asturias on 1 March 1580 by the Courts in Madrid. The poet Cristóbal de Virués dedicated a sonnet to the new Prince, where he proposed that Diego follow the steps of his father. In 1580, his father became King of Portugal as well, making Diego heir-apparent of that realm also. His mother, Anna, died during a trip to their new kingdom. Diego and his siblings remained in Madrid under the care of half-sisters, Isabella Clara Eugenia and Catherine Michelle. The letters of Philip II make clear that he was extremely proud of Diego: he wrote that his son had already learned the alphabet and dancing by the age of five. In a letter dated 1582 the king wrote to the Indian Viceroy Francisco de Mascarenhas commanding that he bring an elephant to the Prince of Asturias as a gift. Philip II taught his son the Portuguese language so that one day Diego could speak as king with his Portuguese subjects. In addition, Philip II planned to betroth Diego to one of the daughters of John, Duke of Braganza and Catherine of Portugal. Diego never became king. In late 1582 he contracted smallpox and died at the age of 7. At his death, Philip II was inconsolable, for the only heir-apparent to the throne remaining was the small and sickly Infante Philip, assuming the position of Prince of Asturias. The king gave orders that continuous prayers be said at the Church of Our Blessed Lady in Zaragoza for the health of the royal children remaining. Diego's younger brother became King Philip III upon his father's death in 1598. Thus continued the lineage of the Spanish Habsburgs.",
"María de las Mercedes, Princess of Asturias María de las Mercedes, Princess of Asturias (\"María de las Mercedes de Borbón y Habsburgo-Lorena\"; 11 September 1880 – 17 October 1904) was the eldest child of King Alfonso XII of Spain and his second wife, Maria Christina of Austria. She was Princess of Asturias, the heir presumptive to the Crown of Spain, for all 24 years of her life. Had her younger sibling, unborn at the death of Alfonso XII, been a daughter, Mercedes would have been Queen of Spain. The sibling proved to be a boy, Alfonso XIII, and on his birth in 1886, Mercedes turned out not to be queen. She resumed the position of heir presumptive, which she held until her own death, and was succeeded in it by her own infant son Alfonso, Alfonso XIII having not yet married and fathered a legitimate child. Mercedes married in Madrid on 14 February 1901, her second cousin, Prince Carlos of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, a nephew of the King of the then-defunct Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, who was elevated to the rank of Infante of Spain. The marriage was highly controversial due to her father-in-law's ties with the Carlists. She died three years later from complication while giving birth to her third child. Born on 11 September 1880 at the Royal Palace of Madrid, Mercedes was the eldest daughter of King Alfonso XII and his second wife, Maria Christina of Austria. She was christened María de las Mercedes Isabel Teresa Cristina Alfonsa. Her godmother was Queen Isabella II, her paternal grandmother, who came from retirement in Paris to attend the birth of her first grandchild. There was great disappointment because family and nation were hoping for a boy. To smooth things out, Queen Maria Christina suggested giving her daughter the name Mercedes in honor of her husband's first wife, Mercedes of Orléans. Mercedes was heir presumptive from her birth, but the disappointment was so great that she was initially treated only as an \"infanta\". Antonio Cánovas del Castillo, then head of the government, who disliked Maria Christina and did not want the crown to pass again to a female after the disastrous reign of Isabella II, decided to ignore the newborn.",
"Infante Carlos María Isidro of Spain Don Carlos María Isidro Benito de Borbón (29 March 178810 March 1855) was an Infante of Spain and the second surviving son of King Charles IV of Spain and of his wife, Maria Luisa of Parma. As Charles V, he was the first of the Carlist claimants to the throne of Spain. He was a reactionary who stridently opposed liberalism in Spain and the assaults on the Catholic Church. He claimed the throne of Spain after the death of his older brother King Ferdinand VII in 1833. His claim was contested by liberal forces loyal to the dead king's infant daughter. The result was the bloody First Carlist War (1833–1840). Don Carlos had support from Basque provinces and much of Catalonia, but lost the war and never became king. His heirs continued the traditionalist cause, fought two more Carlist wars and were active into the mid-20th century, but never obtained the throne. Carlos was born on 29 March 1788 at the Palacio Real de Aranjuez in Aranjuez, Community of Madrid. In 1808, Napoleon captured Madrid in the Battle of Somosierra, and he induced Carlos's father Charles IV and Carlos' older brother Ferdinand VII to renounce their rights to the throne of Spain. But Carlos, who was heir presumptive to his brother, refused to renounce his rights to the throne, which he considered to have been given to him by God. From 1808 until 1814, he and his brothers were prisoners of Napoleon at the palace of Valençay in France. In 1814, Carlos and the rest of the Spanish royal family returned to Madrid. In September 1816, he married his niece Infanta Maria Francisca of Portugal (1800–1834), daughter of King John VI of Portugal and Carlos' sister Carlota Joaquina. Francisca was also sister of the second wife of Carlos' brother, Ferdinand VII. The couple had three sons: Apart from several formal offices, Carlos took no significant part in the government of Spain. Ferdinand VII had found it necessary to cooperate with the moderate liberals and to sign a Constitution. Carlos, however, was known for his firm belief in the divine right of kings to govern absolutely, the rigid orthodoxy of his religious opinions, and the piety of his life.",
"Princess of Asturias (by marriage) This is a list of women who held the title Princess of Asturias (, ) by marriage. The title was created in 1388 for the future Henry III of Castile and Catherine of Lancaster. A part of the pact (\"Accord of Bayonne\") was to grant the young couple the title of Prince and Princess of Asturias, which was modelled after that of Prince of Wales in the Kingdom of England. The title was to belong to the official successor of the Castilian throne. Thus the first holder of the princedom was the young Henry of Castile and the first woman to hold the title by marriage was his wife, Catherine of Lancaster. Leonor, Princess of Asturias, elder daughter of King Felipe VI of Spain, holds the title in her own right, and not by marriage, as she is the heir presumptive to the Spanish crown. \"This is a list of Princesses of Asturias who held the title by their marriage to the Prince of Asturias:\"",
"Infanta Luisa Teresa of Spain Infanta Luisa Teresa of Spain (11 June 1824 - 27 December 1900) was a Spanish infanta. She was the daughter of Infante Francisco de Paula of Spain and Princess Luisa Carlotta of the Two Sicilies and married the Spanish aristocrat Don José María Osorio de Moscoso y Carvajal, Duke of Sessa in 1847. She was an intimate friend and favorite of her cousin and sister-in-law Queen Isabella II, who allowed her marriage despite the unprecedented unequal rank.",
"Spanish ship Principe de Asturias (1794) The Príncipe de Asturias (Prince of Asturias) was a Spanish three-deck 112-gun ship of the line, named after Ferdinand, eldest surviving son of Charles IV of Spain and heir apparent with the title Prince of Asturias. She served during the Napoleonic wars escorting convoys, and fought at different times against both the British and French navies. Her invocation name was \"Los Santos Reyes\" (the Holy Kings). She was built in Havana, Cuba in 1794 as part of the Santa Ana class designed by Romero Landa. She was the last one built of the eight ship class and launched on 28 January 1794. She arrived in Cádiz on 17 May 1795 after escorting a valuable convoy. In 1797 she was commanded by Antonio de Escaño,and was part of a squadron under general José de Córdova to escort another convoy. After completing that mission, but before reaching Cádiz, the squadron was surprised by a sudden storm which blew them further out to sea. While making their way back they encountered and were defeated by a British squadron on 14 February 1797 at the Battle of Cape St Vincent, The \"Príncipe de Asturias\" had 10 killed and 19 wounded, and helped save the Spanish flagship, the \"Santísima Trinidad\", while it was under attack by British Commodore Horatio Nelson. At the Battle of Trafalgar, she was part of the Franco-Spanish fleet and the flagship of Spanish admiral Federico Gravina, who died a year later from wounds he received during the battle, with Rafael Hore as his flag captain. During the battle Gravina found himself attacked by three British ships. The main mast and mizzen were shot through, rigging and sails shot to pieces. Gravina's left arm was shattered by grapeshot, and seeing a looming defeat, he managed to gather ten ships around the \"Príncipe de Asturias\" which suffered 50 killed and 110 wounded. After the battle the ship had to be towed by the French frigate \"Thémis\" and then underwent major repairs in Cádiz. After the French invasion of Spain in 1808, she then served during the Spanish War of Independence (from French occupation), which was part of the Peninsular War."
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"Isabella of Portugal"
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Which film has the director who was born first, Playing With Souls or The Romance Of Hine-Moa?
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The Romance of Hine-moa The Romance of Hine-Moa is a 1927 British film set in New Zealand, directed and produced for Gaumont British by Gustav Pauli. It is now lost. The trade journal "Bioscope" said it was a "charming love story illustrating an old Maori legend, acted entirely by Maoris in beautiful and interesting native surroundongs". The plot is the traditional story of the love of Hinemoa and Tutanekai from rival tribes. Pauli's version shifts the emphasis from Hinemoa's swim across the lake to meet her lover to Tutanekai's ordeal going through the Valley of Fire, the crater of an active volcano. Released in 1927, but New Zealand Prime Minister Gordon Coates attended a special showing by Gaumont in England on 16 December 1926.
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"In the Realm of the Senses In the Realm of the Senses (, Japanese: , \"Ai no Korīda\", \"Bullfight of Love\") is a 1976 erotic art film written and directed by Nagisa Ōshima. It is a fictionalised and sexually explicit treatment of a 1936 murder committed by Sada Abe. An international coproduction of France and Japan, the film generated great controversy at the time of its release. While intended for mainstream wide release, the film contains scenes of unsimulated sexual activity between the actors (Eiko Matsuda and Tatsuya Fuji, among others). In 1936 Tokyo, Sada Abe is a former prostitute who now works as a maid in a hotel. The hotel's owner Kichizo Ishida molests her, and the two begin an intense affair that consists of sexual experiments and various self-indulgences. Ishida leaves his wife to pursue his affair with Sada. Sada becomes increasingly possessive and jealous of Ishida, and Ishida more eager to please her. Their mutual obsession escalates until Ishida finds that she is most excited by strangling him during lovemaking, and he is killed in this fashion. Sada then severs his penis. While she is shown next to him naked, it is mentioned that she will walk around with his penis inside her for several days. Words written with blood can be read on his chest: \"Sada Kichi the two of us forever.\" The film was released under the title of \"In the Realm of the Senses\" in the U.S. and the U.K., and under \"L'Empire des sens\" (\"Empire of the Senses\") in France. The French title was taken from Roland Barthes's book about Japan, \"L'Empire des signes\" (\"Empire of Signs\", 1970). Strict censorship laws in Japan would not have allowed the film to be made according to Ōshima's vision. This obstruction was bypassed by officially listing the production as a French enterprise, and the undeveloped footage was shipped to France for processing and editing. At its premiere in Japan, the film's sexual activity was optically censored using reframing and blurring. In the United States, the film was initially banned upon its premiere at the 1976 New York Film Festival but was later screened uncut, and a similar fate awaited the film when it was released in Germany.",
"Drifting Souls Drifting Souls is a 1932 American Pre-Code drama film directed by Louis King and starring Lois Wilson, Theodore von Eltz and Raymond Hatton.",
"Hideo Ōba Hideo Ōba (大庭 秀雄, Ōba Hideo, 28 February 1910 - 10 March 1997) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter. Ōba was born on 28 February 1910, in Aoyama, Akasaka-ku, Tokyo. After graduating from Keio University's Department of Japanese Studies, Ōba started working at Shochiku. There he became an assistant director to film director Yasushi Sasaki, and made his debut as a director in 1939 with the film \"Otto no kachi\". A year before his directorial debut, he wrote \"Ai yori Ai he\" as a screenwriter. In 1953, Ōba made Kazuo Kikuta's radio drama \"Kimi no na ha\" aired on NHK into a movie, which became a major hit. \"Kimi no na ha\" continued as a movie trilogy until 1954. In his later years, he taught at the Japan Institute of the Moving Image. Ōba died on 10 March 1997, at the age of 87.",
"Akira Nobuchi Akira Nobuchi (野淵 昶, Nobuchi Akira, 22 June 1896 - 1 February 1968) was a Japanese stage director and film director. He launched the Elan Vital Shōgekijō little theatre in 1918 while he was at Kyoto Imperial University. He stage-managed plays by Anton Chekhov, Arthur Schnitzler, Lord Dunsany, Lady Gregory, John Millington Synge and Sean O'Casey as well as those by Japanese playwrights including Saneatsu Mushanokōji, Ujaku Akita, Masao Kume and Jun'ichirō Tanizaki. Having left the Elan Vital Shōgekijō in 1933, he entered Shinkō Kinema the following year. He made a debut with talkie \"Nagasaki Ryūgakusei\" (1935), after which he made more than 30 films until 1955.",
"The Romance of Maoriland The Romance of Maoriland was a 1930 New Zealand film, intended to be New Zealand's first \"talkie\" film with Ted Coubray’s Coubraytone sound system, though also having intertitles. The film was registered with the Chief Censor on 14 August 1930, but was never released. Producer and director Edward T. Brown had purchased some footage from the 1923 film \"The Birth of New Zealand\". Several episodes included pre-European culture, the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi and a robbery and kidnapping in the Gabriel's Gully goldfields. The holdup of a Cobb & Co coach incorporated stock Western cliches according to Sam Edwards; masked robbers, the driver holding his hands high and jewellery ripped from women passengers. The cast included Patch Mason, Tom Campbell and apparently Stella Southern as the mother of a boy passenger kidnapped during the holdup episode.",
"Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Deadly Fight in Hiroshima , also known as Hiroshima Death Match, is a 1973 Japanese yakuza film directed by Kinji Fukasaku. It is the second film in a five-part series that Fukasaku made in a span of just two years. It is the only movie in the series not to focus on Bunta Sugawara's character Shozo Hirono; instead it follows the rise and fall of Shoji Yamanaka, played by Kinya Kitaoji. In 1950 Hiroshima City, gambler Shoji Yamanaka is involved in a fight over cheating in a card game and stabs several men. He is sentenced to two years in prison, where he befriends Shozo Hirono, who is already serving time for murder. Following Yamanaka's release from prison, he visits a restaurant but can't pay his bill. The owner, Yasuko, offers to let him eat for free, but when he insists on paying her with his watch, a gang led by Katsutoshi Otomo, the rebellious son of yakuza patriarch Choji Otomo, beat him severely before the fight is stopped by the senior Otomo. Swearing to take revenge on his attackers, Yamanaka accepts an offer from Boss Muraoka, Yasuko's uncle, to join his yakuza clan. Yamanaka is assigned to the family of Muraoka's sworn brother, Kunimatsu Takanashi, until he is chased out of Hiroshima by Muraoka for beginning a romantic relationship with the widowed Yasuko; Takanashi arranges for him to temporarily join a family in Kyushu. Yamanaka redeems himself a year later by carrying out a hit for the yakuza family sheltering him, and Muraoka welcomes him back as a formal member in a ceremony witnessed by his associate, Kanichi Tokimori. Katsutoshi is kicked out of the Otomo Family by his father for trying to muscle in on Muraoka's territory and forms his own family with Tokimori's support in a bid to take over Hiroshima. In retaliation, Muraoka expels Tokimori, prohibiting him from conducting any business in the city. Tokimori flees to Kure, while Katsutoshi and his men spark a war by attacking the Muraoka family offices.",
"Savage Souls (film) Savage Souls () is a 2001 French costume drama film directed by Chilean filmmaker Raúl Ruiz. It is based on the 1949 novel \"Les Âmes fortes\" by Jean Giono. It was screened out of competition at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival.",
"Goro Kino Goro Kino (sometimes credited as Gordo Keeno) was a Japanese actor who worked in Hollywood during the silent era. Like many of his Japanese contemporaries, in Hollywood, he was often cast as a villain. According to contemporaneous reports, Kino had already established a career for himself in Japan on the stage before moving to San Francisco to work in a stock company and eventually Los Angeles to work in film. He was a founding member of the Japanese Photo Players' Association alongside performers like Sessue Hayakawa and Misao Seki. One of his biggest film roles was as Duck Sing in 1918's \"Little Red Decides\". He said of his \"evil\" look in \"The Lure of Jade\" that even he was afraid to look in the mirror, and that he scared the cameramen on set; however, he was regarded as one of the nicest people in the business in real life. Off-set, his hobbies included cultivating roses. He was married to Miso Kino, who also reportedly worked as an actress in Hollywood; she survived him when he died in 1922, but may have drowned a year later while crossing the Pacific.",
"Tadaoto Kainosho Tadaoto Kainosho (December 23, 1894 – June 16, 1978) was a Japanese actor and costume designer. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Costume Design for his work in the jidaigeki film \"Ugetsu\" (1953).",
"Carnival of Souls Carnival of Souls is a 1962 American independent horror film produced and directed by Herk Harvey and written by John Clifford from a story by Clifford and Harvey, and starring Candace Hilligoss. Its plot follows Mary Henry, a young woman whose life is disturbed after a car accident. She relocates to a new city, where she finds herself unable to assimilate with the locals, and becomes drawn to the pavilion of an abandoned carnival. Director Harvey also appears in the film as a ghoulish stranger who stalks her throughout. Filmed in Lawrence, Kansas, and Salt Lake City, \"Carnival of Souls\" was shot on a budget of $33,000, and Harvey employed various guerrilla filmmaking techniques to finish the production. It was Harvey's only feature film, and did not gain widespread attention when originally released as a double feature with the now mostly forgotten \"The Devil's Messenger\" in 1962. Set to an organ score by Gene Moore, the film has been contemporarily noted by critics and film scholars for its cinematography and foreboding atmosphere. The film has a large cult following and is occasionally screened at film and Halloween festivals, and has been cited as a wide-ranging influence on numerous filmmakers, including David Lynch, George A. Romero, and Lucrecia Martel. In Kansas, Mary Henry is riding in a car with two other young women when two men challenge them to a road race. During the race, the women's car is nudged by the boy's and plunges off a bridge into a muddy river. Three hours after the police start dredging the water to look for them, Mary miraculously surfaces on the river bank, but cannot remember how she survived. Mary moves to Salt Lake City, where she has been hired as a church organist. While driving through the desert, Mary's radio starts playing nothing but strange organ music, and she has visions of a ghoulish, pasty-faced figure (simply called \"The Man\" in dialogue). She also sees a large, abandoned pavilion on the shores of the Great Salt Lake. A gas station attendant tells her the pavilion was first a bathhouse, then a dance hall, and finally a carnival before it closed. In town, Mary rents a room. She meets the proprietor, who informs her that there is another lodger staying there. Mary unpacks her suitcase and goes to the church where she will be playing the organ."
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"The Romance Of Hine-Moa"
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When is the founder of Uec Saturn 's birthday?
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UEC Saturn UEC NPO Saturn, PJSC () is a Russian aircraft engine manufacturer, formed from the mergers of Rybinsk Motors and Lyul'ka-Saturn (after Arkhip Mikhailovich Lyulka) in 2001. Saturn's engines power many former Eastern Bloc aircraft, such as the Tupolev Tu-154. Saturn holds a 50% stake in the PowerJet joint venture with Safran Aircraft Engines. The company, founded by Pavel Soloviev, has its headquarters in the town of Rybinsk. UEC Saturn was established in 2001, following the merger of Rybinsk Motors and Lyulka-Saturn. Rybinsk Motors was established on 20 October 1916 as the Russian Renault automotive plant. In 1917 it started producing aviation engines for the Ilya Muromets aircraft. The company was nationalized in 1918. Rybinsk was originally known as the Kolesov Engine Design Bureau. Kolesov took over the organization from V.A. Dobrynin who founded it in the late 1930s or early 1940s. Under Kolesov's direction, the bureau designed turbojet engines for the Myasishchev M-50 Bounder experimental supersonic bomber, turbojets for the Tu-22 Blinder medium bomber, RD-36-35FVR lift engines for the Yak-38 Forger, RD-36-51A supersonic engines for the Tu-144 SST, RD-36-51V engines for the Myasishchev M-17 Mystic, and lift engines for the Yak-141 Freestyle. Lyulka-Saturn was named after its founder, A. M. Lyulka. Following the 2014 Crimean crisis, the Ukrainians refused to supply the Russian Navy with marine gas turbines from Zorya-Mashproekt, and so Saturn has been commissioned to design new engines for the "Admiral Gorshkov" and "Admiral Grigorovich"-class frigates. USC forecast these new engines will be available in 2017-18, allowing ships to be commissioned from 2020. UEC Saturn announced in April 2017 that Saturn's marine turbines are now in production and undergoing sea trials prior to delivery. This is the first venture by a Russian manufacturer into the production of large marine gas turbines, aimed at completely replacing the earlier Ukrainian equivalents.
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"William Saturno William Andrew \"Bill\" Saturno (born Albany, New York) is an American archaeologist and Mayanist scholar who has made significant contributions toward the study of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization. As of February 2015, Saturno holds a position as assistant professor in Archaeology at Boston University's (BU's) College of Arts and Sciences (CAS). He is also the director of the \"Proyecto San Bartolo-Xultun\" at the Instito de Antropologia e Historia in Guatemala, a national space research scientist at the Marshall Space Flight Center, as well as a research associate at the Peabody Museum at Harvard University. Prior to his position at BU, Saturno was a lecturer at the University of New Hampshire. Saturno is best known for his discovery in 2001 of one of the oldest extant murals in the Maya region, at the site of San Bartolo in northeastern Guatemala. He said this discovery was his favorite and most challenging experience of his career, and that \"being the first person to see [the murals] after more than 2,000 years, uncovering them bit by bit, with each part more beautiful than the last, is an experience unlikely to be matched.\" In 2010, Saturno and Franco Rossi discovered what they believe to be a workroom of a Xultún record keeper. The Mayan hieroglyphics at the site included representations of dates roughly 7,000 years in the future, casting doubt on the speculation that the conclusion of the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar would result in a 2012 doomsday scenario. His current research interests are New World and Mesoamerican civilizations, landscape archaeology, remote sensing, geographic information systems (GIS) applied to archaeology, Mesoamerican iconography and religion, the evolution of complex societies, and archaeology in pop culture. Saturno wanted to be an archaeologist since he was a small child, and first became interested in the ancient Maya civilization when he visited the Maya site of Palenque while working in Mexico. Having worked in archaeology for over 20 years, in an interview with National Geographic he stated: \"I see being an archaeologist as both a great privilege and a great responsibility. I have been entrusted with the recovery, interpretation, and preservation of the material remains of the past, with the history of an ancient people, and the heritage of a modern one.",
"Saturn LX Saturn LX, provisionally known as S/2004 S 29, is a natural satellite of Saturn and a member of the Inuit group. Its discovery was announced by Scott S. Sheppard, David C. Jewitt, and Jan Kleyna on October 7, 2019 from observations taken between December 12, 2004 and January 17, 2007. It was given its permanent designation in August 2021. Saturn LX is about 4 kilometres in diameter, and orbits Saturn at an average distance of 16.981 Gm in 826.44 days, at an inclination of 45.1° to the ecliptic, with an eccentricity of 0.440.",
"Saturn (store) Saturn is a German chain of electronics stores in Germany and Luxembourg. With Media Markt it constitutes Media-Saturn Holding, owned by the retail trade company Ceconomy, which was spin-off from Metro Group in 2017. As of December 2021, there are 137 Saturn stores in Germany and 2 in Luxembourg. The Saturn store in Hamburg is the largest electronics store in the world. On 1 July 2011 the 34 Saturn stores in France were sold to the HTM Group. Saturn stores in Austria, Belgium, Greece, Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Spain, Switzerland and Turkey have been rebranded as Media Markt and in Italy as Media World. Saturn is known for its slightly coarse German-language advertising slogan \"\"Geiz ist geil!\"\" (\"Stinginess is cool!\") which was used from 2002 to 2011 and sparked a nationwide debate about consumer behavior and the situation of the German economy. The slogan quickly became common language and became synonymous with the German economic crisis. The first Saturn-Hansa-Markt was opened in July 1961 by Friedrich Wilhelm and Anni Waffenschmidt at Cologne's Hansaring. Consumer electronics items were mainly sold to \"diplomats from all over the world\" on 120 m². In 1968 the two founded the company Hansa-Foto. Since 1969, private customers have also been able to shop at Saturn and Hansa-Foto. In 1972, the Waffenschmidts opened the first technical department store in Cologne with what they claimed to be the \"largest phonograph record in the world\". In the early 1980s, a large branch was opened on the Theresienhöhe in Munich, followed in 1985 by a branch in Frankfurt with the participation of Kaufhof. Saturn was acquired by the Media Markt holding company in 1990, both of which were merged into the MediaMarktSaturn Retail Group. In 1992 there were seven Saturn Hansa stores (Cologne, Frankfurt, Munich, Dortmund, Hanover, Nuremberg, Gelsenkirchen). The area of a market is usually between 2,000 m² and 10,000 m². An exception can be found in Hamburg with 18,000 m² and six floors which makes it one of the largest electronics stores in the world.",
"Saturn (band) Saturn () is a progressive rock band from Islamabad, Pakistan, formed in 2003. The group was founded by lead guitarist and songwriter Salman Zaidi and vocalist & lyricist Shahbaz Zaidi, who were later joined by bassist Aashir, drummer Shahbaz Asad, and rhythm guitarist Usman Ahmad Khan. The band is well known for being one of the pioneering progressive rock groups in Pakistan. Saturn became famous after releasing their debut track \"Raakh\" which is Urdu for \"Ashes\". They later gained more popularity for their energetic performances and stage presence. Saturn is known as one of the loudest bands of Pakistan. Their debut album \"Naya Din\" was released on April 7, 2013. Saturn was formed by brothers Salman and Shahbaz in 2003 and was joined by Hasham Kazi with whom they started recording \"Raakh,\" their debut track, at S & M Studios Islamabad. Hasham left the band due to personal reason shortly after the release of the song and the two brothers moved on. In 2004 Saturn released their second song with a completely new line up and started playing concerts regularly until late 2005. In the start of 2006 Saturn disbanded and the band went into idle years. From 2006 to 2007 Saturn remained out of the music scene, occasionally performing at music festivals, but not playing many concerts. It was later revealed that the band had been working on their debut album \"Naya Din\". In 2008 Saturn announced that they were back and now in studio to record their untitled album with Sarmad Ghafoor at S & M Studio. In 2008 Saturn played almost forty concerts for U ROCK, a project run by Ufone Telecom of Pakistan. The band's line-up had again changed but this time they were not willing to change it and went straight to studio. On July 7, 2011 Saturn finally released the long-awaited video for their second song \"Kuch Nahi\" and later that same year announced on radio that they were ready for their debut album’s release which was still untitled. It took almost three years to record all the songs but in December 2011 they announced that the album would be called \"Naya Din\". In 2012 Saturn collaborated with Kuch Khaas, a non-profit organization, and released a song with video called \"Kuch Khaas\".",
"Bestla (moon) Bestla or Saturn XXXIX is a retrograde irregular moon of Saturn. Its discovery was announced by Scott S. Sheppard, David C. Jewitt, Jan Kleyna, and Brian G. Marsden on 4 May 2005, from observations taken between 13 December 2004 and 5 March 2005. Bestla is about 7 kilometres in diameter, and orbits Saturn at an average distance of 20,192,000 km in 1088 days, at an inclination of 147° to the ecliptic (151° to Saturn's equator), in a retrograde direction and with an eccentricity of 0.5145. Early observations from 2005 suggested that Bestla had a very high eccentricity of 0.77. Like many of the outer irregular moons of the giant planets, Bestla's eccentricity may vary as a result of the Kozai mechanism. Bestla's rotation period is hours. This moon was named in April 2007 after Bestla, a frost giantess from Norse mythology, who is a mother of Odin.",
"Raymond Heacock Raymond L. Heacock (January 9, 1928 – December 20, 2016) was an American engineer who spent his career at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory where he worked on the Ranger program in the 1960s and on the Voyager program in the 1970s and 1980s. A Caltech engineering graduate, he was the winner of the James Watt International Medal for 1979. Heacock joined the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 1953, after receiving his Master of Science Degree in Engineering from the California Institute of Technology. Prior to joining the Voyager Project in 1972 as Spacecraft Systems Manager he had advanced through various positions of responsibility at the Laboratory. In October 1977, he was appointed Deputy Manager of the Voyager Project and became Manager in 1979. He was a member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics and has served as Secretary, Treasurer, Vice-President and President of the Board of Directors of the Caltech Alumni Association. Heacock is a native of Santa Ana, California and now lives in La Crescenta. Since the inception of the Voyager Project in 1972, Heacock was deeply involved in guiding and shaping the successful development and operation of the sophisticated craft. The scientific data from the flight experiments carried aboard them have yielded startling new information on Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus. Heacock was a leader in the design, development and flight operations of these craft as well as of their scientific instruments complement. As Spacecraft System Manager, Deputy Project Manager, and Project Manager he contributed personally to the development of various advanced design features leading to the Project's outstanding success. NASA's two robot spacecraft, \"Voyager 1\" and \"Voyager 2\", were launched in the Summer of 1977 on their journeys to Jupiter of more than 625 million miles. A fitting tribute to the efforts and ingenuity of many engineers and scientists, the spacecraft have now completed the exploration of the outer Solar System. \"Voyager 1\" reached Saturn in November 1981, and then left the Solar System. Nearly 10 years later \"Voyager 1\" turned around to point its cameras towards Earth and took the famous \"Pale Blue Dot\" image. \"Voyager 2\" reached Saturn in August 1981, then went on to Uranus in 1986, and Neptune in 1989.",
"Saturn Cafe The Saturn Cafe is a vegetarian diner in Los Angeles with former locations in Santa Cruz and Berkeley. Its original Santa Cruz location was established in 1979 and closed in 2021; the Los Angeles restaurant opened in 2020. The Santa Cruz location has been variously owned by Don Lane, a husband and wife team, and former employees of the diner. The Berkeley location of Saturn Cafe was open from 2009 to 2018. The Saturn offers an entirely vegetarian menu, as well as vegan, gluten-free, and soy-free options. Its vegetarian take on classic American diner food also features local and organic ingredients. It has been critically acclaimed by numerous publications for its large menu, variety of vegan interpretations of dishes, and appeal to customers who regularly eat meat. The Saturn is also known for its progressivism, especially its commitments to environmental and social justice. The Saturn Cafe was established in Santa Cruz, California, in 1979. It was founded by City Council candidate and future Mayor of Santa Cruz Don Lane on Mission Street. It moved to a larger building across the street in 1982, and in 1984 Lane was joined by the husband and wife team of Cary and Melissa Sunberg as co-owners, by which time it had developed a reputation for value. In 1988, while under Lane's ownership, the Saturn Cafe was damaged by a fire deemed suspicious by local authorities. In May 1993, two of the Saturn Cafe's workers tested positive for hepatitis A; although no one was positively infected at the restaurant, a public health notice caused a noticeable drop in business while over 550 customers obtained virus inoculations and a public gathering of local artists, politicians, and others at the restaurant was organized to support the Saturn. In March 1994, the Saturn Cafe celebrated its 15th anniversary, by which point Lane estimated that it had served over one million customers and made over 500 donations to local organizations. In May 1995, the Saturn's employees picketed the restaurant and voted 13–6 to unionize, joining Local 415 of Service Employees International Union. In December 1995, co-owners Cary and Melissa Sundberg closed the Saturn, but did not elaborate on their reasons for doing so.",
"Perry Saturn Perry Arthur Satullo (born October 25, 1966) is an American retired professional wrestler known by his ring name, Perry Saturn. Since debuting in 1990, Saturn wrestled for promotions including Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW), World Championship Wrestling (WCW), the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) and Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA). He was a former ECW World Tag Team Champion, WCW World Tag Team Champion, WCW World Television Champion, WWF European Champion and WWF Hardcore Champion. He has been recognized by commentators as one of the more relevant stars in WCW and ECW in the late 1990s. Satullo enlisted in the United States Army for four years at the age of seventeen, before eventually embarking on a career in professional wrestling. Satullo finished a bachelor's degree before he became a full-time wrestler. Satullo is also a certified graduate of the U.S. Army Ranger School and has served in the United States Army Rangers. Satullo began training as a professional wrestler at Killer Kowalski's school in Malden, Massachusetts around 1988, taking the ring name Saturn from the Roman god of the same name before later tweaking it to Perry Saturn. He debuted on October 27, 1990, in Waltham, Massachusetts, wrestling for the United States Wrestling Association (USWA). Satullo also wrestled in Kowalski's International Wrestling Federation as \"The Iron Horseman\", a cowboy complete with black leather stetson and chaps. Satullo eventually won the IWF Light Heavyweight Championship. Satullo began wrestling for independent promotions throughout New England, as well as touring Japan with New Japan Pro-Wrestling in 1993. In 1992 he worked as enhancement talent in WWF. While working as the manager of a nightclub in Boston, Satullo met bouncer George Caiazzo, who expressed an interest in becoming a wrestler. Satullo sent Caiazzo to Kowalski's school to train, and then offered to form a tag team with him. The Greek equivalent of the god Saturn was Cronus, so Satullo chose the ring name \"John Kronus\" for Caiazzo. As Saturn and Cronus were their cultures' respective gods of the harvest, Satullo proposed that they be known as \"The Harvesters of Sorrow\". Promoter Jerry Lawler advised Satullo that the significance of the name would not be evident to many fans, so they became known as The Eliminators.",
"Saturn, Indiana Saturn is an unincorporated community in Jefferson Township, Whitley County, in the U.S. state of Indiana. A post office was established at Saturn in 1857, and remained in operation until it was discontinued in 1900. Saturn is located at .",
"Saturn LV Saturn LV, provisionally known as S/2004 S 22, is a natural satellite of Saturn. Its discovery was announced by Scott S. Sheppard, David C. Jewitt, and Jan Kleyna on October 7, 2019 from observations taken between December 12, 2004 and February 1, 2006. It was given its permanent designation in August 2021. Saturn LV is about 3 kilometres in diameter, and orbits Saturn at an average distance of 20.636 Gm in 1107.13 days, at an inclination of 177° to the ecliptic, in a retrograde direction and with an eccentricity of 0.251."
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"June 26, 1917"
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Where did the director of film Mice And Men (Film) die?
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Of Mice and Men (1992 film) Of Mice and Men is a 1992 American period drama film based on John Steinbeck's 1937 novella of the same name. Directed and produced by Gary Sinise, the film features Sinise as George Milton, alongside John Malkovich as Lennie Small, with Casey Siemaszko as Curley, John Terry as Slim, Ray Walston as Candy, Joe Morton as Crooks, and Sherilyn Fenn as Curley's wife. Horton Foote adapted the story for film. Its plot centers on George and the intellectually disabled Lennie, two farm workers who travel together and dream of one day owning their own land. The film explores themes of discrimination, loneliness, and the American Dream. "Of Mice and Men" took part in the 1992 Cannes Film Festival, where Sinise was nominated for the Palme d'Or award, given to the director of the best-featured film. After the film debuted in the United States on October 2, 1992, it received acclaim from critics. The movie opens with George in a boxcar, reminiscing on the events that occurred. During the Great Depression, the quick-witted George Milton looks after his physically strong yet mentally disabled companion Lennie Small. The two are fleeing from their previous employment as workmen in Weed, California, where Lennie was accused of attempted rape when he touched and held on to a young woman and her red dress, prompted by his love of stroking soft things. George and Lennie escape and travel to Soledad, which is near the ranch where they have work. While walking, George catches Lennie petting a dead mouse that he had accidentally killed. Despite Lennie's pleas to keep the dead mouse, George forcibly takes the mouse and throws it away, which causes Lennie to cry. George tries to explain to Lennie that he did so because the mouse "wasn't fresh", and that if he were to find another, fresher mouse, he could pet that one for a while. Lennie, sobbing hysterically, states that "there is no other mouse". As they camp that evening, Lennie asks George to tell him again about their dream, as he has numerous times, and George reluctantly agrees. George describes how the two will one day have their own piece of land, and how Lennie will tend (and pet) their rabbits.
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"Peter Harris (director) Peter Harris (1933 – 23 February 2021) was an English television director, best known for his work on \"The Muppet Show\", \"Spitting Image\" and \"Bullseye\". Harris was one of just two directors on the original \"The Muppet Show\", working on the first 73 episodes. In 1984, Harris became the director of the British satirical television puppet show \"Spitting Image\". He was chosen for the role due to his previous work on \"The Muppet Show\". During the 1980s, Harris also directed the British game show \"Bullseye\", and coined several of the catchphrases of presenter Jim Bowen, including \"Stay out of the black and in the red, there's nothing in this game for two in a bed\". Behind the scenes, Harris was also tasked with finding the prizes for the show, which included a range of speedboats. He died from COVID-19 in a nursing home in Ferndown, Dorset, on 23 February 2021, at the age of 88.",
"Charles Jarrott Charles Jarrott (16 June 1927 – 4 March 2011) was a British film and television director. He was best known for costume dramas he directed for producer Hal B. Wallis, among them \"Anne of the Thousand Days\", which earned him a Golden Globe for Best Director in 1970. Although \"Anne\" was nominated for several awards, critic Pauline Kael wrote in her book \"Reeling\" (Warner Books, p. 198), that as a director, Jarrott had no style or personality, and that he was just \"a traffic manager.\" Nevertheless, his next film, \"Mary, Queen of Scots\", was nominated for six Academy Awards and several Golden Globes. Jarrott was the son of English racing car driver and businessman Charles Jarrott, and was married to Rosemary Palin (1949–57), actress Katharine Blake (1959–82) and Suzanne Bledsoe (1992-2003). Jarrott also served in the Royal Navy during World War II. Jarrott died on 4 March 2011 from prostate cancer.",
"Gloria Katz Gloria Katz (October 25, 1942 – November 25, 2018) was an American screenwriter and film producer, best known for her association with George Lucas. Along with her husband Willard Huyck, Katz created the screenplays of films including \"American Graffiti\", \"Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom\" and \"Howard the Duck\". Katz was of Jewish descent. Though uncredited, Katz and Huyck edited Lucas's \"Star Wars\" script as they acted as script doctors for Lucas. Katz and Huyck are responsible for much of the humor and development of the iconic Princess Leia in the \"Star Wars\" script. Katz died from ovarian cancer in 2018 at the age of 76.",
"Peter MacDonald (director) Peter MacDonald (born 20 June 1939) is an English film director, cinematographer, and producer from London, England. A prolific second unit director, MacDonald has worked on various Hollywood blockbusters including \"Guardians of the Galaxy, The Bourne Ultimatum, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban\", and \"The Empire Strikes Back.\" Starting his career in the camera department, MacDonald subsequently spent 10 years as camera operator for renowned cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth, working on films including \"Superman\", \"The Return of the Pink Panther\", \"Murder on the Orient Express\" and \"Cabaret\". After Unsworth's death in 1978, MacDonald increasingly worked as a second unit director, and as a cinematographer himself. MacDonald's debut as director, \"Rambo III\", came about at extremely short notice. \"I started it without \"any\" preparation,\" he explained in an interview, \"because Russell Mulcahy [\"Rambo III\"'s original director] left after two weeks, so I came into it totally ill-prepared - I was directing the \"second unit\" on the film. Literally the day before I left America to start \"Rambo III\" I'd finished photographing a film, \"Shag\", in America; came to Israel, thinking I was going to do a second unit which I could slowly get into, and within a week or two I was directing one of the most expensive films ever made.\" MacDonald has since directed other productions including \"The NeverEnding Story III\", and the television mini-series \"The Monkey King\" (also known as \"The Lost Empire\"). In 2016, MacDonald was hired to direct reshoots during post-production on \"Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.\" MacDonald currently works most frequently as a second unit director. He has said about this role, \"The most important thing about any second unit is that you can't tell the difference between the second unit and the first unit. It must have the stamp of the first unit, both in photography and the style of direction. That's why, when I do second unit, I always photograph \"and\" direct, so you try and copy what the first unit does as much as possible. You mustn't be on an ego trip and try and do your own style, because your material has to cut into theirs and it mustn't jar, it must fit in exactly so no-one can tell the difference.",
"Vernon Sewell Vernon Campbell Sewell (4 July 1903 – 21 June 2001) was a British film director, writer, producer and, briefly, an actor. Sewell was born in London, England, and was educated at Marlborough College. He directed more than 30 films during his career, starting with \"Morgenrot\" (1933) and ending with \"Burke & Hare\" (1971). He worked chiefly in B-movies, some of which were, according to the BFI Screenonline, \"well above the usual cut-price standards of film-making at this level.\" He was married to the actress Joan Carol (born Joan Roscoe Catt 1905-1986) in 1950. Vernon Sewell died on 21 June 2001 in Durban, South Africa, at age 97.",
"Alan Tomkins Alan Tomkins (19 January 1939 – 21 September 2020) was a British art director. He was nominated for an Academy Award in the category Best Art Direction for the film \"The Empire Strikes Back\". Tomkins was born in Fulham, London in 1939. He died on 21 September 2020, at the age of 81.",
"Robby Müller Robby Müller, NSC, BVK, (4 April 1940 – 3 July 2018) was a Dutch cinematographer. Known for his use of natural light and minimalist imagery, Müller first gained recognition for his contributions to West German cinema through his acclaimed collaborations with Wim Wenders. Through the course of his career, he worked closely with directors Jim Jarmusch, Peter Bogdanovich, Barbet Schroeder, and Lars Von Trier, the latter with whom he pioneered the use of digital cinematography. His work earned him numerous accolades and admiration from his peers. He died on 3 July 2018, aged 78, having suffered from vascular dementia for several years. Müller was born in Curaçao (at the time in the Netherlands Antilles) in 1940, and moved to Amsterdam in 1953. He studied at the Netherlands Film Academy from 1962 to 1964. He worked as cinematographer on a number of shorts before collaborating with Wim Wenders on his first feature, \"Summer in the City\" (1970). They made many more films together, such as \"Alice in the Cities\" (1974), \"Kings of the Road\" (1976), \"The American Friend\" (1977) and \"Paris, Texas\" (1984). Apart from the movies with Wenders, Müller contributed to both mainstream U.S. productions and independent films. His other work included Joan Micklin Silver's \"Finnegan Begin Again\" (1984), the hazy, yellow-tinted cinematography of William Friedkin's \"To Live and Die in LA\" (1985), Sally Potter's \"The Tango Lesson\" (1997), Dom Rotheroe's \"My Brother Tom\" (2001), Lars von Trier's starkly shot films \"Breaking the Waves\" (1996) and \"Dancer in the Dark\" (2000), and Jim Jarmusch's gritty-looking films \"Down by Law\" (1986), \"Mystery Train\" (1989), \"Dead Man\" (1995) and \"\" (1999). He died on 3 July 2018 at the age of 78. On September 4, 2018, the movie \"Living the Light - Robby Müller\" premiered at the Venice Film Festival. This documentary by Claire Pijman is a visual essay about the life and work of Robby Müller.",
"Charles Gormley Charles Gormley (19 December 1937 – 22 September 2005) was a Scottish film director and screenwriter. Having found a liking towards film, he left his job as an optician and joined the International Film Associates in the mid-1960s. He first appeared in film as a commentary writer for a documentary short called Three Scottish Painters (1963). In 1970, he co-founded Tree Films with fellow Scotsman Bill Forsyth, which specialised in industrial documentary films. His first turn at directing was with the documentary short \"Polar Power\" in 1974. His films included the screenplay for \"Blue Movie\" (1971, co-written with Wim Verstappen) along with directing/writing \"Living Apart Together\" (1982) and \"Heavenly Pursuits\" (1985). His made-for-television work includes \"The Bogie Man\" (1992) and \"Down Among the Big Boys\" (1993). He also acted in a film as a playwright in \"Twice a Woman\" (1979). He was diagnosed with cancer just over a year prior to his death, although he finished one more effort in directing William McIlvanney's The Prisoner play in 2004. He was survived by his three sons and wife Martina.",
"Mice and Men (film) Mice and Men is a lost 1916 silent romance film directed by J. Searle Dawley, starring Marguerite Clark, and based on a 1903 Broadway play, \"Mice and Men\" by Madeleine Lucette Ryley.",
"Otto Heller Otto Heller, B.S.C. (8 March 1896 – 19 February 1970) was a Czech cinematographer long resident in the United Kingdom. He worked on more than 250 films, including \"Richard III\" (1955), \"The Ladykillers\" (1955) and \"Peeping Tom\" (1960). Otto Heller was born in a Jewish family in Prague on 8 March 1896. As a teenager, he became a projectionist in the Lucerna cinema. During World War I, he worked in a film laboratory in Vienna. After the war, he started to work as a documentary cameraman at Pragafilm. During the 1920s, he was the most requested cinematographer in Czechoslovakia. Together with Karel Lamač, Anny Ondra and Václav Wasserman, he made many movies both for domestic and international audience. He often worked with Svatopluk Innemann, Martin Frič and Jan S. Kolár. Because of the rise of Nazism, he left Czechoslovakia in 1938 with Lamač. He became a British citizen in 1945. Heller continued to live and make movies in UK until his death. He died in London on 19 February 1970."
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"Hollywood"
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When is the director of film All The Light In The Sky 's birthday?
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All the Light in the Sky All the Light in the Sky is an American drama film, directed, photographed and edited by Joe Swanberg. It was written by Swanberg and Jane Adams, who also stars in the film, along with Sophia Takal, Kent Osborne, Lawrence Michael Levine, Larry Fessenden, and Lindsay Burdge. The film had its world premiere at the AFI on November 3, 2012. The film was released on video on demand on December 3, 2013, before being released in a limited release on December 20, 2013, by Factory25. The film follows Marie (Jane Adams), an actress struggling with the prospect of aging, which becomes all the more apparent when her 25-year-old, aspiring actress niece Faye (Sophia Takal) arrives for a weekend stay. Director Joe Swanberg served as the film's cinematographer and editor. The film had its world premiere on November 3, 2012, at the AFI Film Festival. In November 2013, it was announced, Factory25 had acquired distribution rights to the film. It was released on video on demand on December 3, 2013, prior to a limited release on December 20, 2013. "All the Light in the Sky" has been positively received by critics. The film holds a 78% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Andrew Barker, writing for "Variety", wrote that the film delivered "clever pacing, solid technique and a deeply soulful lead performance from co-scripter Jane Adams". It has a 62/100 on Metacritic.
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"All Light Will End All Light Will End is a 2018 American thriller film written and directed by Chris Blake, in his feature-length directorial debut, starring Ashley Pereira, Sam Jones III, Sarah Butler, John Schuck, and Andy Buckley. Young, successful horror novelist Savannah Martin's (Ashley Pereira) new book is taking the genre by storm. Her father (Andy Buckley), the police chief of her small hometown, investigates murders and foul play too grim for their bucolic life. As she and her friends settle in for a relaxing weekend at her childhood home, the dark secret at the crux of Savannah's success stirs in her dreams and seeps into her reality. Amidst sexual tensions and fireside stories, Savannah's despondency and her father's case collide with gruesome and horrifying reveals, leaving little distinction between the subconscious and reality. The film was shot on location in various areas of Nashville, Tennessee. The film premiered on March 24, 2018, at the HorrorHound Film Festival in Cincinnati, Ohio, then held its Canadian premiere at the Toronto International Spring of Horror on April 8, 2018. It was announced that the film would also screen at the Tupelo Film Festival on April 19 and April 21, 2018, as well as the International Horror Hotel Film Festival in June. The film was acquired for distribution by Gravitas Ventures and is set for release in November 2018.",
"Kathryn Bigelow Kathryn Ann Bigelow (; born November 28, 1951) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. Covering a wide range of genres, her films include \"Near Dark\" (1987), \"Point Break\" (1991), \"Strange Days\" (1995), \"\" (2002), \"The Hurt Locker\" (2008), \"Zero Dark Thirty\" (2012), and \"Detroit\" (2017). Bigelow is the first woman to win the Academy Award for Best Director, with \"The Hurt Locker\" the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing, and the BAFTA Award for Best Direction. Kathryn Bigelow is also the first woman to win the Saturn Award for Best Director for the 1995 film \"Strange Days\". Bigelow can also be found on the 2010 \"Time\" 100 list of most influential people of the year. Bigelow was born in San Carlos, California, the only child of Gertrude Kathryn (née Larson; 1917–1994), a librarian, and Ronald Elliot Bigelow (1915–1992), a paint factory manager. Her mother was of Norwegian descent. She attended Sunny Hills High School in Fullerton, California. Bigelow's early creative endeavors were as a student of painting. She enrolled at San Francisco Art Institute in the fall of 1970 and received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in December 1972. While enrolled at SFAI, she was accepted into the Whitney Museum of American Art's Independent Study Program in New York City. For a while, Bigelow lived as an impoverished artist, staying with painter Julian Schnabel in performance artist Vito Acconci's loft. She had a minor role in Richard Serra's video \"Prisoner's Dilemma\" (1974). Bigelow teamed up with Philip Glass on a real-estate venture in which they renovated distressed apartments downtown and sold them for a profit. Bigelow entered the graduate film program at Columbia University, where she studied theory and criticism and earned her master's degree. Her professors included Vito Acconci, Sylvère Lotringer, and Susan Sontag, as well as Andrew Sarris and Edward W. Said, and she worked with the Art & Language collective and Lawrence Weiner. She also taught at the California Institute of the Arts.",
"Light from Light Light from Light is a 2019 American drama written and directed by Paul Harrill and starring Marin Ireland, Jim Gaffigan, Josh Wiggins, Atheena Frizzell and David Cale. Single mom Shelia (Marin Ireland) moonlights as a paranormal investigator while working at a car-rental service counter and raising her teenage son, Owen (Josh Wiggins). After her appearance on a local radio program, she's contacted about Richard (Jim Gaffigan), a recent widower who thinks his wife may be haunting his East Tennessee farmhouse. Agreeing to help, Shelia brings along Owen and his classmate Lucy (Atheena Frizzell) in hopes of understanding the mystery. The film was shot in Knoxville, Tennessee in July and August 2018. , the film holds approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on reviews with an average rating of . The website's critics consensus reads: \"A paranormally tinged drama with a deceptively gentle touch, \"Light from Light\" sinks its hooks into the audience gradually but isn't quick to let go.\"",
"Fire in the Sky Fire in the Sky is a 1993 American biopic science fiction mystery film directed by Robert Lieberman and adapted by Tracy Tormé. It is based on Travis Walton's book \"The Walton Experience\", which describes an extraterrestrial abduction. The film stars D. B. Sweeney as Walton, and Robert Patrick as his best friend and future brother-in-law, Mike Rogers. James Garner, Craig Sheffer, Scott MacDonald, Henry Thomas and Peter Berg also star. \"Fire in the Sky\" grossed 19.9 million domestically on a 15 million budget and received mixed reviews. It was nominated for four Saturn Awards. On November 5, 1975 in Snowflake, Arizona, logger Travis Walton, and his co-workers — Mike Rogers, Allan Dallis, David Whitlock, Greg Hayes and Bobby Cogdill — head to work in the White Mountains. Driving home from work, the loggers come across an unidentified flying object. Curious, Walton gets out of the truck and is struck by a bright beam of light from the object and is sent flying several feet backwards as if pushed by an unseen force. Fearing Walton has been killed, the others escape from the scene. Rogers decides to go back to the spot to retrieve Walton, but he is nowhere to be found. Making their way back to town to report the incident, the loggers are met with skepticism by investigators Sheriff Blake Davis and Lieutenant Frank Watters. Watters, realizing that there was a great deal of tension between Dallis and Walton and that Dallis has a criminal record, suspects foul play, a belief that quickly spreads to the rest of the town, leaving the loggers as social pariahs. After a large search party turns up no sign of Travis, the loggers are offered the chance to take a lie detector test. Though Dallis is initially hesitant, the loggers ultimately take the test in the hopes of proving their innocence. However, Watters declares that the tests were inconclusive and that they will have to return the next day to retake it. Rogers is outraged and he angrily declines, the other loggers following suit. The test's administrator reveals to Watters and Davis that, with the exception of Dallis (whose test results were inconclusive), the loggers seem to be telling the truth. Five days later, Rogers receives a call from someone claiming to be Walton.",
"The Wonder of It All (film) The Wonder of It All is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jeffrey Roth and distributed by Quiver Distribution. The film is composed of first-person interviews with seven of the 12 Apollo astronauts who walked on the Moon (Buzz Aldrin, Alan Bean, Edgar Mitchell, John Young, Charlie Duke, Eugene Cernan, and Harrison Schmitt). The astronauts explain their backgrounds, their Moon missions, and how walking on the Moon changed their lives.",
"Roland Emmerich Roland Emmerich (; born 10 November 1955) is a German film director, screenwriter, and producer. He is widely known for his science fiction and disaster films and has been called a \"master of disaster\" within the industry. His films, most of which are English-language Hollywood productions, have made more than $3 billion worldwide, including just over $1 billion in the United States, making him the country's 15th-highest-grossing director of all time. He began his work in the film industry by directing the film \"The Noah's Ark Principle\" (1984) as part of his university thesis and also co-founded Centropolis Entertainment in 1985 with his sister. He is also known for directing films such as \"Universal Soldier\" (1992), \"Stargate\" (1994), \"Independence Day\" (1996), \"Godzilla\" (1998), \"The Patriot\" (2000), \"The Day After Tomorrow\" (2004), \"2012\" (2009), \"White House Down\" (2013), \"\" (2016), \"Midway\" (2019), and \"Moonfall\" (2022). He is a collector of art and an LGBT activist, and is openly gay. Emmerich was born in Stuttgart, West Germany, and grew up in the nearby town of Sindelfingen. As a youth, he traveled extensively throughout Europe and North America on vacations financed by his father, Hans, the wealthy founder of a garden machinery production company. In 1977, he began attending University of Television and Film Munich with the intention of studying to become a production designer. After watching \"Star Wars\", he instead decided to enroll in the school's film director program. Required to create a short film as his final thesis in 1981, he wrote and directed the full-length feature \"The Noah's Ark Principle\", which was screened as the opening film of the 34th Berlin International Film Festival in 1984. In 1985, he founded Centropolis Film Productions (now Centropolis Entertainment) in partnership with his sister, producer Ute Emmerich, and directed his major film debut, a fantasy feature named \"Joey\". He subsequently directed the 1987 comedy \"Hollywood-Monster\" and the 1990 science-fiction film \"Moon 44\".",
"All Light, Everywhere All Light, Everywhere is an 2021 American documentary film, written and directed by Theo Anthony. It follows the biases on how humans see things, focusing primarily on the use of police body cameras. The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 31, 2021, where the film won the U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Nonfiction Experimentation. It was released on June 4, 2021, by Super LTD. The film follows the biases inherent to the way humans physically see the world, focusing primarily on the usage of police body cameras and other forms of police surveillance, but also tracing studies of solar eclipses as well as the parallel development of automatic weapons with the motion picture camera. The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 31, 2021. Shortly after, Super LTD, the boutique film division of Neon, acquired U.S. distribution rights to the film. It was released on June 4, 2021. \"All Light, Everywhere\" received positive reviews from film critics. It holds a 93% rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 57 reviews, with a weighted average of 7.90/10. The site’s critical consensus reads, “ All Light, Everywhere poses thought-provoking questions about our view of objective reality -- and the implications for our growing reliance on surveillance technology”. On Metacritic, the film holds a rating of 74 out of 100, based on 9 critics, indicating \"generally favorable reviews\". The \"Hollywood Reporter\" picked the film to be among the best of films released so far in 2021 as to early July 2021.",
"Allie Light Allie Light is an American film producer, film director and film editor. Light co-directed, edited and produced the 1991 documentary film, \"In the Shadow of the Stars\", with her husband, Irving Saraf. Light and Saraf won the Academy Award for producing \"In the Shadow of the Stars\". Light married film producer Saraf, becoming his second wife. The couple formed a professional producing partnership beginning in 1971. In 1995, Light and Saraf were jointly nominated for a News and Documentary Emmy for their work on the PBS show, \"Dialogues with Madwomen\". Light's husband of thirty-eight years, Irving Saraf, died from Lou Gehrig’s disease at their home in San Francisco, California, on December 26, 2012, at the age of 80.",
"Rebecca Thomas Rebecca Ann Thomas (born December 10, 1984) is an American filmmaker and television director, best known for writing and directing the film \"Electrick Children\" and episodic television, including \"Stranger Things\", \"Limetown\", and \"When the Streetlights Go On.\" Thomas was raised as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Las Vegas; she served a mission for 18 months in Japan. She is married to Mark Garbett (of The Moth & The Flame). Thomas' short film called \"Nobody Knows You, Nobody Gives a Damn\" premiered at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. Her debut feature, \"Electrick Children\", debuted at the Berlin International Film Festival on 10 February 2012. It also played in the U.S. at the South by Southwest Film Festival on 15 March 2012. Thomas directed episode seven, \"The Lost Sister\", of the second season of the Netflix series, \"Stranger Things\". Thomas directed all 10 episodes of \"Limetown\", starring Jessica Biel, and also directed all 10 episodes of \"When the Streetlights Go On\". Short film Feature film Television Other credits",
"The Sky at Night The Sky at Night is a monthly documentary television programme on astronomy produced by the BBC. The show had the same permanent presenter, Sir Patrick Moore, from its first broadcast on 24 April 1957 until 7 January 2013. The latter date was a posthumous broadcast, which followed Moore's death on 9 December 2012. This made it the longest-running programme with the same presenter in television history. Many early episodes are missing, either because the tapes were wiped, thrown out, or because the episode was broadcast live and never recorded in the first place. Beginning with the 3 February 2013 edition, the show was co-presented by Lucie Green and Chris Lintott. Since December 2013 Maggie Aderin-Pocock has also been a presenter. Pete Lawrence has presented an observing section on the programme since 2004 as well as producing an online monthly online star Guide on the BBC Sky at Night web page. The programme's opening and closing theme music is \"At the Castle Gate\", from the incidental music to \"Pelléas et Mélisande\", written in 1905 by Jean Sibelius, performed by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham. The programme covers a wide range of general astronomical and space-related topics. Topics include stellar life cycles, radio astronomy, artificial satellites, black holes, neutron stars and many others. The programme also covers events happening in the night sky at the time of broadcast, such as a bright comet or a meteor shower, and recent developments in space and astronomy, such as the Rosetta space mission and the detection of phosphine in Venus' atmosphere. Explaining the show's enduring appeal, Moore said: \"Astronomy's a fascinating subject. You look up... you can't help getting interested and it's there. We've tried to bring it to the people.. it's not me, it's the appeal of the subject.\" Many of the world's leading astronomers have appeared on the show through the years, including Harlow Shapley (the first to measure the size of the Milky Way galaxy), Fred Hoyle, Carl Sagan, Jocelyn Bell Burnell, Samuel Tolansky, Harold Spencer Jones, Martin Ryle, Richard Ellis, Carlos Frenk and Bart Bok. Other guests have included Arthur C."
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[
"August 31, 1981"
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Are director of film The Brides Of Fu Manchu and director of film The Walking Dead (1995 Film) both from the same country?
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Ang Lee Ang Lee (; born 23 October 1954) is a Taiwanese filmmaker. Born in the Pingtung County of southern Taiwan, Lee was educated in Taiwan and later in the United States. During his filmmaking career he has received international critical and popular acclaim and a range of accolades. Lee's early successes included "Pushing Hands" (1991), "The Wedding Banquet" (1993), and "Eat Drink Man Woman" (1994), which explored the relationships and conflicts between tradition and modernity, Eastern and Western; the three films are informally known as the ""Father Knows Best"" trilogy. The films were critically successful both in his native Taiwan and internationally. His first entirely English-language film was "Sense and Sensibility" (1995), for which he received critical praise and a number of accolades. He went on to direct films in a broad range of genres, including the drama "The Ice Storm" (1997); the Civil War epic "Ride with the Devil" (1999); the martial arts "wuxia" drama "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" (2000); the superhero blockbuster "Hulk" (2003); the romantic drama "Brokeback Mountain" (2005); the erotic espionage period film "Lust, Caution" (2007); and the magic realist survival drama "Life of Pi" (2012). Much of Lee's work is known for its emotional charge and exploration of repressed, hidden emotions. Lee has been nominated for nine Academy Awards, of which he has won three: Best Foreign Language Film for "Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon" and Best Director for "Brokeback Mountain" and "Life of Pi", becoming the first non-white director to win the latter. For "The Wedding Banquet" and "Sense and Sensibility", Lee won the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival; for "Brokeback Mountain" and "Lust Caution", he won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival. Lee is one of four directors to win the Golden Lion twice and the sole filmmaker to have been awarded the Golden Bear twice. Lee has also been awarded Directors Guild of America Awards, Golden Globes and British Academy Film Awards, among others, and is the recipient of the Order of Brilliant Star, the second highest civilian honor bestowed by the government of Taiwan.
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[
"Xie Fei (director) Xie Fei (; born August 14, 1942) is a Chinese film director. Xie was born in Yan'an city of Shaanxi Province, China. A graduate of the Beijing Film Academy, Xie has also taught at his almamater as a vice-president of that institution.",
"Fu Zhengyi Fu Zhengyi (; 1925 – 15 November 2019) was a Chinese film editor. He edited more than 200 films and over 400 television shows or episodes. He won the inaugural Golden Rooster Award for Best Editor in 1982 and the Golden Rooster Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2011. Fu was born in 1925 in Fujiawan, Huanggang, Hubei, Republic of China. His father died when he was three, and he lived on the meagre income of his mother, a weaver. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, he fled Hubei for the wartime capital Chongqing, where he studied at a school for refugee children in Geleshan. In 1940, Fu entered China Film Studio as an apprentice, working under Wu Tingfang 邬廷芳, Qian Xiaozhang 钱筱璋, and Situ Huimin. After the end of World War II, Fu joined the Kunlun Film Studio in Shanghai, where he participated in the editing of many classical films, including \"The Spring River Flows East\", \"Eight Thousand Li of Cloud and Moon\", \"Myriad of Lights\", \"Women Side by Side\", and \"Crows and Sparrows\". In 1948, Fu was appointed the lead editor of the film \"The Adventures of Sanmao the Waif\", which received positive reviews when it screened in 1949. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Fu was appointed deputy editor of the Shanghai Film Studio. A year later, he was transferred to the Changchun Film Studio as chief editor. He was transferred again in 1956, to serve as chief editor of the Beijing Film Studio, where he worked until his retirement. As Shanghai was the centre of China's film industry at the time, Fu introduced the more advanced techniques of the Shanghai studios to Changchun and Beijing. During the PRC period, he edited many acclaimed films such as \"The Life of Wu Xun\", \"Letter with Chicken Feather\" , \"Song of Youth\" , \"Women Generals of the Yang Family\" , and \"Little Soldier Zhang Ga\" . After retiring from Beijing Film Studio in the mid-1980s, Fu began working in the then booming television industry, and edited numerous TV series including \"Romance of the Three Kingdoms\", \"The Legend of Di Renjie\", \"Zheng He Xia Xiyang\", and \"Dream of the Red Chamber\".",
"Huang Feng Huang Feng (黃楓) (born 7 January 1919) is a Chinese-born Hong Kong-based film director, screenwriter and actor. Huang was a native of Hefei, Anhui, China. He started his career as an actor, then became a screenwriter and assistant director, before being promoted to a director by Raymond Chow. He is credited with discovering martial artist and actress Angela Mao. Huang announced his retirement in 1980.",
"Yang Fudong Yang Fudong ( born 1971 in Beijing) is a Chinese contemporary artist. In the early 1990s, he began to work with film. He began creating films and videos using 35 mm film. Currently Yang directs films, creates photographs, and creates video installations. Yang is known to explore themes that are historical, social, and political by juxtaposing contradictions between current social issues, with cultural norms. A fan of the abstract and fragmented storyline, he tends to create sequences that are long and suspended, with the use of black-and-white as a constant. Yang's work has a nostalgic feel that incorporates the lyrical harmony of traditional handscrolls with the expressiveness of new wave cinema that is reminiscent of Jim Jarmusch, someone he admires. His work has been exhibited in China through avant-garde exhibitions in the late 1990s and has been consequently shown in many countries including solo presentations in Parasol Unit, London (2011); National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens (2010); Asia Society, New York (2009); Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna (2005); Castello di Rivoli, Torino (2005); and the Renaissance Society, Chicago (2004). In 2013, Kunsthalle Zurich and Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive co-organized his first retrospective exhibition. Recent exhibitions include Yang Fudong at the Wolverhampton Art Gallery, UK; Moving Mountains, OCAT Xi'an, China (both 2017) and Filmscapes, at ACMI, Melbourne (Australian Centre for the Moving Image) which traveled to the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, New Zealand (2015-2016). Yang Fudong has participated in prestigious international art events including the Sharjah Biennial, UAE (2013); Venice Biennale, Italy (2003 and 2007); The Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, Australia (2006); Documenta XI, Germany (2002). He is represented by and regularly exhibits his work at Chinese contemporary art gallery ShanghART Gallery. Yang graduated in oil painting from China Academy of Fine Arts in Hangzhou in 1995. East of Que Village is a six-channel film with black and white color. It shows a wild pack of dogs looking to scavenge in a small northern Chinese town on the outskirts of Beijing. This small rural town seems to bring up memories of Yang's own childhood and his hometown.",
"Li Yang (director) Li Yang (; born 1959) is a Chinese writer-director. Though often grouped with the so-called Sixth Generation of Chinese filmmakers, he is in fact closer in age to the Fifth Generation and in interviews has denied membership with either group, claiming that such labels are only artificial differentiations. Born in Xi'an, China in 1959, Li studied at the Beijing Broadcasting Institute from 1985 to 1987, after which he moved to Germany. There he made several documentary films and spent some time acting on German television before eventually enrolling and graduating from the Academy of Media Arts in Cologne in 1995. Upon his return to China, Li made his first non-documentary film, the critically acclaimed \"Blind Shaft\" (2003). The film's bleak story of two murderous con-men plying their trade in China's dangerous mines proved a major success in the international film festival circuit. Critics particularly noted how Li’s background in documentaries showed through in the film's Cinéma vérité and Italian neorealist style, in particular Li's use of handheld cameras and an ambient sound soundtrack. In China, however, the film’s critical eye toward the notoriously dangerous mining industry proved controversial and \"Blind Shaft\" was banned by the Beijing Film Bureau. However, neither the precise reasoning nor the length of the ban was made known to Li. After his ban, Li Yang split his time between Hong Kong and Germany and gave at least one interview where he claimed, Despite his worries, the ban was eventually lifted and Li was allowed to begin work on his follow up to \"Blind Shaft\". Entitled \"Blind Mountain\" (2007), it debuted at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival in the Prix un certain regard competition and was one of only three Asian films vying for an award at the prestigious event. Like Li's previous film, \"Blind Mountain\" turns a sharply critical eye towards another one of China's continuing social problems, this time the illegal selling of women for marriage. \"Blind Mountain\" also shares the same realistic style as \"Blind Shaft\" as seen in the latter film's cast of mostly non-professional actors and its use of diegetic music.",
"Don Sharp Donald Herman Sharp (19 April 192114 December 2011) was an Australian-born British film director. His best known films were made for Hammer in the 1960s, and included \"The Kiss of the Vampire\" (1963) and \"Rasputin, the Mad Monk\" (1966). In 1965 he directed \"The Face of Fu Manchu\", based on the character created by Sax Rohmer, and starring Christopher Lee. Sharp also directed the sequel \"The Brides of Fu Manchu\" (1966). In the 1980s he was also responsible for several hugely popular miniseries adapted from the novels of Barbara Taylor Bradford. Sharp was born in Hobart, Tasmania, in 1921, according to official military records and his own claims, even though reference sources cite 1922 as his year of birth. He was the second of four children. He attended St Virgil's College and began appearing regularly in theatre productions at the Playhouse Theatre in Hobart, where he trained under a young Stanley Burbury. He later said this was prompted \"by a desi re not to study to become an accountant, which is what my parents wanted for me.\" Among the plays Sharp appeared in were \"You Can't Take It With You\" and \"Our Town\". He also directed a production of \"Stage Door\". He studied accountancy in the evenings but this was interrupted by war service. Sharp enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force on 7 April 1941 and was transferred to Singapore. In addition to his military duties he appeared in radio and on stage with a touring English company. Among his radio performances were \"Escape\" and \"the Barretts of Wimpole Street\". \"The acting bug had definitely gotten hold of me,\" says Sharp, \"and I did a bit of it while I was in the RAAF as well, in the odd moment.\" Sharp was invalided out before the city fell to the Japanese. He returned to Melbourne and recuperated at Heidelberg Hospital. He spent the majority of his war service in Melbourne, appearing in amateur theatre productions of \"Quality Street\" and \"The Late Christopher Bean\" as well as recorded broadcasts and ABC plays. In early 1943 he moved to Hobart. He appeared in a theatre production of \"Interval\" by Sumner Locke Elliott, also serving as assistant director.",
"Dayyan Eng Dayyan Eng, known as Wu Shixian in China (), born in Taiwan in 1975, is a Chinese-American filmmaker of Chinese, English, and Persian ancestry, who grew up in three continents. He studied film arts at the University of Washington and transferred to the Beijing Film Academy, where he finished his undergraduate studies in directing. Eng started his career directing numerous TV commercials and music videos for the Asian market before he segued into films. In 2001, he wrote and directed \"Bus 44\" () starring Chinese film star Gong Beibi. The film premiered and won awards at the 2001 Venice Film Festival and 2002 Sundance Film Festival, and was invited to 2002 Cannes Film Festival \"Directors' Fortnight\" - becoming the first Chinese short film to be invited in all three festivals' history. The film was covered extensively in the Chinese media and was critically acclaimed in both China and Europe and gained TV and theatrical distribution in territories worldwide. In 2005, Eng wrote and directed a Chinese independent feature film \"Waiting Alone\" (), starring an ensemble cast of Chinese stars including Xia Yu, Gong Beibi, Li Bingbing, and featuring cameos from some of Asia's most well-known actors including Chow Yun-fat. The film has been called one of 2005 \"best films\" by over 50 media. \"Waiting Alone \" became a hit after its September 2005 domestic China wide-release, and went on to receive 3 nominations (including Best Picture) at the Chinese Academy Awards (Golden Rooster Awards) -- the first ever in the history of the awards by a foreign director. The film remains the highest-rated romantic comedy in China on Douban and other review sites. Eng was invited, in 2007, to direct the first-ever opening short for the Chinese academy awards. He got some of Asia's biggest stars, Ziyi Zhang, Liu Ye and Ge You, to spoof the action-movie genre in a humorous send-up on national TV in China. In 2011, Eng wrote, directed, and produced \"Inseparable\" starring Oscar-winner Kevin Spacey, Daniel Wu, Gong Beibi, Yan Ni, and Peter Stormare. The quirky psychological suspense/dramedy debuted at the Busan International Film Festival in 2011 to positive reviews and was released in China in May 2012.",
"Hou Yao Hou Yao (1903–1942) was a pioneering Chinese film director, screenwriter, and film theorist. He wrote and directed many films including \"The Discarded Wife\" (1924), \"Romance of the Western Chamber\" (1927), the first Chinese film shown in Western countries, and \"Mulan Joins the Army\" (1928). He wrote \"Techniques of Writing Shadowplay Scripts\", the first theory book on Chinese filmmaking. He founded the Culture Film Company, which was merged into a predecessor of the Shaw Brothers Studio. He has been called the Chinese Henrik Ibsen for his advocacy for gender equality, which he shared with his wife Pu Shunqing. After the Empire of Japan invaded China in 1937, Hou Yao wrote and directed a series of patriotic films against Japanese aggression. In 1942, he was murdered by the Japanese during the Sook Ching massacre in Singapore. Hou Yao was born in 1903 in Panyu, Guangdong province. In the 1920s, he attended Nanjing Advanced Normal School (now Southeast University) in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, majoring in education. He joined the influential Literary Association () at the school, and wrote the stage play \"The Discarded Wife\". After graduating in 1924, Hou joined the Great Wall Film Company in Shanghai, where he adapted \"The Discarded Wife\" into a film, which he co-directed with Li Zeyuan. It was Great Wall's first film. He then wrote the scripts for the films \"In the Dream of Loved Ones\" (1925) and \"The Star-Plucking Girl\" (1925), and directed \"Cupid's Dolls\" (1925, co-directed with Mei Xuechou) and \"The Hypocrite\" (1926). Each of his films of this period sought to reflect a social issue, such as women's rights, marriage, and war. Along with his wife Pu Shunqing, he was a strong advocate for gender equality, acknowledged as the Chinese Henrik Ibsen. In 1925, Hou Yao published \"Techniques of Writing Shadowplay Scripts\", the first theory book on Chinese filmmaking. In the same year, he joined the China Sun Motion Picture Company founded by Li Minwei. He directed \"Peace of God\" in 1926 and \"Romance of the Western Chamber\" in 1927.",
"Shen Fu (director) Shen Fu (; 23 March 1905 – 27 April 1994) was a Chinese film director, screenwriter and actor, born in Tianjin. During 1930s he was associated with Lianhua Film Company in Shanghai. His \"Myriad of Lights\" (1948) was selected as one of the 100 best 20th-century Chinese films by \"Asia Weekly\". It also ranks #91 in Hong Kong Film Academy's poll of the 100 best Chinese-language films.",
"The Christ of Nanjing The Christ Of Nanjing () is a 1995 erotic romantic drama film directed by Tony Au, starring Tony Leung Ka-fai and Yasuko Tomita. The film is based on the work of famed Japanese novelist Akutagawa Ryunosuke. Tomita won the award for best actress at 1995 Tokyo International Film Festival for her performance in the film."
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"no"
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When is the performer of song Do Ya Thang (Rihanna Song) 's birthday?
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Do Ya Thang Do Ya Thang may refer to:
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"Boo Thang \"Boo Thang\" is a song by American rapper Verse Simmonds, featuring singer Kelly Rowland. It was released by Bu Vision, a label run by Akon's brother Bu Thiam, in association with Konvict Muzik and The Island Def Jam Music Group. \"Boo Thang\" peaked at No. 44 on both the \"Billboard\" Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart. The song was ultimately included on Simmonds' mixtape \"Sextape Chronicles 2.\" A music video, directed by Gil Green, was released to accompany the single. Filmed in Miami, Florida, it features appearances by Rowland, Verse’s fellow Konvict Muzik member Akon, and stand-up comedian Lil Duval.",
"Ya Di Ya \"Ya Di Ya\" is a song by American R&B singer, Gina Thompson. It features guest vocals by Missy \"Misdemeanor\" Elliott and was released as the lead single from Thompson's unreleased album, \"If You Only Knew\" (1999). The song became a minor hit, where it peaked at #38 on \"Billboard\" Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and scored Thompson her second top 40 R&B hit and Elliott's fifteenth overall top 40 R&B hit. Because of its strong radio airplay and charting outside the United States, a \"Rufftime\" remix was issued via international pressings of \"Ya Di Ya\". To date, \"Ya Di Ya\" is Thompson's only single as a leading artist to chart outside the United States. The music video for the song premiered in early July 1999 on The Box. It begins with Gina Thompson, alongside background dancers dressed in white, dancing and lip-syncing to the song. Thompson is then seen arguing with the song's antagonist over the phone before throwing the phone in a fish-tank. Missy Elliott is later shown in a silver attire performing her part.",
"Cupid (singer) Bryson Bernard (born December 22, 1982), better known by his stage name Cupid, is an American singer and songwriter from Lafayette, Louisiana. He is best known for the 2007 line dance single \"Cupid Shuffle\", which peaked at number 68 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100. Bernard started singing in his church's choir, encouraged by his pastor father. He initially enrolled at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette with a full athletic scholarship in track and field. He left the track team to form a singing group known as Fasho, which later changed its name to Fifth Element. After Fifth Element was dissolved, Bernard pursued a solo career. He sang at venues such as talent shows, weddings and funerals. With a five-octave vocal range, Bernard earned the nickname \"Cupid\" for an impressive performance of the late-'90s 112 hit single \"Cupid\". The singer first received radio airplay in 2001 with his self-released first single, \"Do Ya Thang\". His second self-released album, 2005's \"The King of Down South R&B\", gained airplay throughout the region, from Florida to Texas. In January 2007, shortly before the release of his third album, \"Time For a Change\", he was signed to Atlantic Records. His first single from that album, \"Cupid Shuffle\", peaked at No. 66 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 21 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. Since then the song has gone double platinum and gets roughly 6,500 new downloads each week. His other singles include \"Say Yes\", \"Happy Dance\", \"The Love Slide\" and \"Do My Ladies Run This Party\". In 2008, Cupid broke the Guinness World Record for the largest line dance assembled with over 17,000 people in Atlanta at Ebony's Black Family Reunion Tour. In addition, Cupid's music can be heard in the films \"\", \"P.S. I Love You\", \"Nancy Drew\", and \"Jumping the Broom\". In 2012, he auditioned for the third season of the American music competition \"The Voice\" singing for his blind audition his own hit \"Cupid Shuffle\" in a varied version. None of the four judges Adam Levine, Cee Lo Green, Christina Aguilera or Blake Shelton pressed their \"I Want You\" button, thus eliminating him from further competition.",
"Pose (Rihanna song) \"Pose\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her eighth studio album, \"Anti\" (2016); it is one of three bonus tracks included on the deluxe edition. She wrote the song in collaboration with Bibi Bourelly, Hit-Boy and Travis Scott, and it was produced by the latter two. Kuk Harrell was also enlisted as Rihanna's vocal producer. On April 14, 2017, Rihanna released a four-track EP which included remixes of \"Pose\" by the Far East Movement, Salva, Deadly Zoo and Eva Shaw. \"Pose\" is a grime song with \"trap&B\" influences and a \"grungy\" and \"garbling\" production. The song features bragging lyrics in which the singer confronts her critics. Critical response to \"Pose\" was positive; a number of critics praised its composition and drew comparisons between the song and her 2015 single \"Bitch Better Have My Money\". Following the release of \"Anti\", the song made an appearance on French charts. Shortly after the release of the \"Pose (Dance Remixes)\" EP, the song debuted at number 45 on the US Dance Club Songs chart, before peaking at number one. In doing so it became Rihanna's thirtieth number one on the chart and her sixth from Anti. \"Pose\" was featured on the set list of Rihanna's 2016 Anti World Tour. Songwriter Bibi Bourelly had been working with producer, Paperboy Fabe, who arranged a session with Kanye West. The sessions resulted in three songs – \"Yeah, I Said It\", \"Higher\" and \"Pose\". On December 27, 2015, songwriter, Glass John, took to Twitter to express his dissatisfaction about the delay of \"Kiss It Better\" release and its parent album, which he blamed on rapper Travis Scott, this led the media to believe that Scott would be either featured or working on \"Anti\". \"Pose\" was written by Hit-Boy, Bibi Bourelly, Travis Scott and Rihanna. It was produced by Hit-Boy and Travis Scott, with vocal production being carried out by Kuk Harrell respectively. The song was recorded at Westlake Recording Studios in Los Angeles and Twin Studios in Paris. The vocal recording was done by producer Kuk Harrell and Marcos Tovar, while Thomas Warren served as a recording assistant.",
"Elle Royal Danielle Prendergast (born September 8, 1990), better known by her stage name Elle Royal (formerly known as Patwa), is an independent Hip-Hop artist hailing from The Bronx, New York. Her breakthrough came in 2010 when her video \"What Can I Say\" went viral after WorldStarHipHop featured her as the “Female Artist of the Week”. Elle Royal later released the mixtape One Gyal Army under Patwa in 2010, followed by the singles “Jammin”, “Lights”, and “Statements” in 2015 under her current stage name, Elle Royal. Elle Royal (formerly Patwa) was born in New York and raised in the Wakefield area of the Bronx, and later, Lawrenceville, Georgia. Both of her parents are from Kingston, Jamaica. Growing up, Elle lived in a multi-family home shared with many cousins, one of which had a studio in his home. It was here that Elle constructed her first rhyme at 14. From there, Elle began writing and recording music in a studio she built in her room. During High School, Elle self-recorded her first mixtape “One Gyal Army” and later released its first single “What Can I Say” in 2010. Elle describes her career as Patwa as a time when she was making music for the intent of acquiring commercial success. As she grew older her desire to shed light on topics of importance grew also. It was her belief that females were losing their power and self-worth in a male-dominated society. In an effort to promote higher consciousness and self-esteem among women, Patwa changed her name to Elle Royal and her focus to inspire and empower females. In 2015 she signed and collaborated with female singers, rappers, models and dancers under a new label she founded. She then changed her name to Elle Royal to reflect her new purpose of empowering women. As she explains, “Elle” comes from her first name, Danielle and “Royal” comes from “having the status of a King or Queen”. Elle attended Georgia State University in Atlanta Georgia and graduated cum laude with a bachelor's degree in journalism and political science. She has stated that she has worked as a paralegal throughout her time pursuing music and would be a lawyer if she did not pursue music. Elle Royal is very passionate about her support of young women. She has marched at several events for women's causes and supports many female platforms.",
"My Thang \"My Thang\" is a funk song written and recorded by James Brown. Unlike most of his songs, this song was released not as a two-part single, but instead issued with three different B-sides. It spent two weeks at number one on the R&B singles chart - Brown's second #1 in a row, following \"The Payback\" - and reached No. 29 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 in July 1974. The song also appeared on Brown's 1974 double album \"Hell\". \"My Thang\" is also sampled on various songs, including:",
"Thang Thang can refer to:",
"Ye Lay Ye Lay (; born Ye Htun Min; on 11 January 1984) is a Burmese hip hop singer-songwriter, musician, actor and model. He is one of the stars of the Burmese entertainment industry. In 2011, he was the subject of a hoax that claimed he had been stabbed in a fight. He published a 212-page autobiography entitled \"Mad...Sea\" () on 25 March 2012. In May 2013, he married Aye Mya Aung, the daughter of Burmese minister Aung Min. He was involved as a Judge in \"Myanmar Idol\" season 1 (2015-2016).",
"Verse Simmonds Maurice \"Verse\" Simmonds is a Puerto Rican/Virgin Islander rapper, singer, composer, record producer, and record executive. Based in Los Angeles, California but raised in the Virgin Islands, he moved to the United States after high school and he formed the production duo the Jugganauts in the 1990s. The duo has since co-written and produced tracks such as \"Man Down\" by Rihanna and \"Who Gon Stop Me\" by Kanye West and Jay-Z, both of which charted prominently on \"Billboard\". Around 2007, Simmonds began releasing his own solo material, and his 2011 single \"Boo Thang\" featuring Kelly Rowland on Def Jam peaked at No. 44 on the \"Billboard\" Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. He has also released a number of full-length mixtapes, rapping and singing over many of the tracks and also bringing in guest artists such as Young Jeezy, Akon, Snoop Dogg, and Travis Porter. Under his birth name or as Verse Simmonds he has co-written a number of charting R&B songs, such as \"Confident\" by Justin Bieber and Chance the Rapper, and \"New Flame\" by Chris Brown, Usher and Rick Ross. The latter earned Simmonds his first Grammy Award nomination for Best R&B Song in 2015. Maurice Simmonds was born in Puerto Rico. Raised in the Virgin Islands, he spent his youth on the island of Saint Thomas. Introduced to music primarily through the radio, in high school he and several friends formed the musical group 2 Xtreme, performing at local venues and talent shows. He moved to Fort Lauderdale in Florida after graduating high school, where he continued to work on hip hop production and songwriting. In 1996 in Fort Lauderdale Simmonds met and befriended the producer and songwriter Shama Joseph, and together they formed the production duo the Jugganauts. The Jugganauts moved to Los Angeles, California in 2003 to work on a number of projects for major record labels. Several years later Simmonds was contacted by Theron Thomas, a childhood friend and member of the production duo Rock City. Thomas convinced the Jugganauts to move to Atlanta, Georgia, where they began recording with producers such as Rodney Jerkins and Akon.",
"Yarwana Yarwana (; born Ye Lin Naung on 25 September 1992) is a Burmese singer who rose to fame with his album \"Answer\". His hit song \"Kyal Kalay\" was the longest leading No 2 in Myanmar Top Chart on JOOX. Yarwana began his music career in 2015, as a singer in the underground music. He released his debut album \"One Percent\" on 16 September 2018. His second album \"MIXED\" was released in 2019. On 20 September 2020, he released a single song with featured artists, Yaw Yazt, called \"Tine Ser\" which peaked at number one on Myanmar Top Chart on Joox. He released his third album \"Answer\" on 1 March 2020 which was officially distributed to all parts of Myanmar. The album was a success, gaining him a large following, and planted him as a popular singer in the Burmese music scene. He held an album release show in Yangon where a crowd of thousands of fans gathered. He released a single called \"Kyal Kalay\" on 20 March 2020 which peaked at number one on Myanmar Top Chart on Joox, and was listed the longest leading No 2 in Myanmar Top Chart. Yarwana is named in Joox's \"Top Artists\"."
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"February 20, 1988"
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Are both bands, The Palace Guard and Vital Information, from the same country?
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Vital Information Steve Smith and Vital Information is an American jazz fusion group led by drummer Steve Smith. The first line-up of Vital Information — Steve Smith (drums), Tim Landers (bass), and Dave Wilczewski (sax) — met in 1971 during their high school years while playing together in the Bridgewater State College Big Band, a Boston area college band under the direction of Vincent Gannon. By 1977 Smith was touring with Jean-Luc Ponty, Landers with Al Di Meola, and Wilczewski with Freddie Hubbard. They reunited annually in Boston with guitarists such as Dean Brown, Daryl Stuermer, or Barry Finnerty to complete the band. From 1977–1982 the three man band members wrote many compositions, played a number of gigs, and developed the sound and concept that became the first edition of Vital Information. After Smith was in the band Journey for a few years, he signed a contract with Columbia to make his first solo album. The group recorded "Vital Information" (1983), consisting of Landers, Wilczewski, and guitarists Dean Brown and Mike Stern. The album was recorded in Warren, Rhode Island in January 1983 and released that summer. In September 1983 the band toured the U.S with Dutch guitarist Eef Albers, who was on tour with Miles Davis and Jaco Pastorius. At the end of the tour the group returned to Rhode Island and recorded "Orion" (1984). After leaving Journey in 1985, Smith continued as bandleader of Vital Information. Tim Landers and Dave Wilczewski eventually left the group to pursue their own careers. Landers became a studio musician in Los Angeles while Wilczewski moved to Stockholm, Sweden. He died on August 22, 2009. Tom Coster (keyboards), formerly of Santana, joined Vital Information in 1986 and appeared on "Global Beat" (1987), which integrated hand percussion and steel drums. Kai Eckhardt (bass) joined Vital Information in 1986 and 1987 for tours in the U.S. and Europe. He appeared on the album "Fiafiaga" (1988), which continued with the "Global Beat" direction with computer-based and funkier sounds.
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"Republican Guard (Guinea) The Republican Guard of Guinea () is the state organization of Guinea responsible for protection of government officials and buildings, and acts as a reserve force for the National Gendarmerie. It often aids the gendarmerie by assisting them in rural areas, and providing equipment and personnel for other operations. The guard is under command of the Republic of Guinea Armed Forces, and has about 2,500 personnel. It provides a military band and guard of honour for ceremonies of state as well as provides motorcycle escorts to Sekhoutoureah Presidential Palace. At independence in 1958 the \"Orchestré de la Garde Républicaine\" (Band of the Republican Guard) became Guinea's first state orchestra. On 1 November 1959, it was instructed to remove all European tunes in order to nationalize the military. In later years they were split into two groups: the 1st formation (which later became the Super Boiro Band) and 2nd formation.",
"Information Libre Information Libre is an album by punk band Sham 69, released in 1991. All songs by Jimmy Pursey and Dave Parsons unless noted",
" After leaving Journey in 1985, Smith continued as bandleader of Vital Information. Tim Landers and Dave Wilczewski eventually left the group to pursue their own careers. Landers became a studio musician in Los Angeles while Wilczewski moved to Stockholm, Sweden. He died on August 22, 2009. Tom Coster (keyboards), formerly of Santana, joined Vital Information in 1986 and appeared on \"Global Beat\" (1987), which integrated hand percussion and steel drums. Kai Eckhardt (bass) joined Vital Information in 1986 and 1987 for tours in the U.S. and Europe. He appeared on the album \"Fiafiaga\" (1988), which continued with the \"Global Beat\" direction with computer-based and funkier sounds. A jazzier version of the band consisting of Smith, Coster, Larry Schneider (saxophone), Frank Gambale (guitar), and Larry Grenadier (double bass) recorded \"Vitalive!\" (1990). Jeff Andrews (bass) joined the band in the early 1990s, recording \"Easier Done Than Said\" (1992) and \"Ray of Hope\" (1996). Vital Information became more groove-oriented on \"Where We Come From\" (1998). Baron Browne (bass) joined the band in 1998, which continued their funk-oriented approach. Smith, Coster, Gambale, and Browne recorded \"Live Around the World\" (2000), \"Show 'Em Where You Live\" (2001), and \"Live from Mars\" (2002). On \"Come on In\" (2004) Smith introduced Indian rhythms to the band's music. Vinny Valentino joined on \"Vitalization\" (2007). Smith continued his interest in Indian rhythm by adding konnakol, a form of vocal percussion. Smith toured with a version of the band called \"Vital Information NYC Edition\" that included Valentino, Browne, Mark Soskin on keyboards, and Andy Fusco on alto saxophone. Fusco and Soskin are from Smith's other bands, Buddy's Buddies and Jazz Legacy.",
"France Info (radio network) France Info () is a radio network operated by the French public service radio broadcaster Radio France. It provides continuous live news and information. Broadcasting on FM (as well as being streamed on the internet), France Info is receivable across France and audible too in the border regions of neighbouring countries, including southern parts of the United Kingdom, especially the southeastern coastal region of England. France Info was founded in 1987 by Roland Faure and Jérôme Bellay. Year on year its audience has grown, notably after the social conflicts of 1995, 2003, and 2006. It is frequently estimated to be the fourth largest French radio network in terms of listener numbers, after RTL, NRJ and France Inter. France Info has offices in Paris, Lyon, Marseille, and Toulouse, and also makes use of local-news input from the France Bleu network. Main transmitters: These frequencies were de-activated at midnight local time on the night of 31 December 2015, except for Lyon and Rennes: Rennes transmitter continued to broadcast until 2 January 2016 0900 UTC, while Lyon continued to broadcast until midnight on 4 January 2016, for the Holy Mass for the sick held by Notre Dame des Ondes on Sunday 3 January.",
"Republican guard A republican guard, sometimes called a national guard, is a state organization of a country (often a republic, hence the name \"Republican\") which typically serves to protect the head of state and the government, and thus is often synonymous with a presidential guard. The term is derived from the original French Gendarmerie unit. Several other countries also have adopted the term and have active guard units.",
"The Palace Guard The Palace Guard was an American garage rock band formed in Los Angeles, California in 1964. Though the band never obtained national success, they made a huge splash in Southern California with their song \"Falling Sugar\". The group is also notable for featuring the first commercial appearance of Emitt Rhodes, later a member of the Merry-Go-Round. The foundation of the Palace Guard was set in early 1964 with the formation of the Emerals in Los Angeles. (The Emerals are sometimes incorrectly noted as the Emeralds; however, The Emerals chose their name after deciding it sounded more \"exclusive\" than \"Emeralds.\") Several members of the Emerals left the band after a contract dispute, including drummer Emitt Rhodes. However, Rhodes then had a change of heart, reconciling with some of his former Emerals bandmates and rechristening themselves the Palace Guard. The earliest lineup consisted of Rhodes, Rick Moser (bass guitar), Mike Conley (rhythm guitar), Chuck McClung (piano), and brothers David (tambourine, vocals), John (tambourine, vocals), and Don Beaudoin (lead guitar). For a brief period, the band also featured actor Don Grady—contributing vocals, keyboards, and drums—of \"My Three Sons\" fame, who went on to become a member of the sunshine pop band the Yellow Balloon. Grady stayed with the Palace Guard to record one obscure single, \"Little People\", in early 1965, which was credited to Don Grady and the Palace Guard. The band was known for their style of dress, clothing themselves in military-themed red coats, as if they were members of the Queen's Guard. After months of rehearsal, the Palace Guard's big break came when KRLA deejay Casey Kasem invited the group to perform on his local television dance show \"Shebang\". In mid-1965, the group began an extended residency at the Hullabaloo club, on Sunset Boulevard, earning popularity as a need-to-see attraction in Los Angeles. Two singles followed on the Orange-Empire record label, before the group scored a regional hit with \"Falling Sugar\" in early 1966, described by music historian Lenny Kaye as \"a catchy Moptop-ish toe tapper brimming with youthful fervor\". \"Falling Sugar\", like most of their material, derived from a blend of folk rock and the harmonic sound of the Beatles.",
"Royal Guards (Sweden) The Royal Guards () is the King of Sweden's cavalry and infantry guards of honour of the Swedish Armed Forces, tasked with the protection of the Swedish Royal Family. The Royal Guard is normally divided in two parts, the main guard stationed at the Stockholm Palace, and a smaller detachment at Drottningholm Palace. The Royal Guards units has continuously guarded the Swedish royal family in Stockholm since 1523. The duty of forming a \"Royal Guard\" is rotated by all serving regular and reserve armed forces, including the Home Guard. However, these detachments only serve for about 5–7 days in each rotation, so most of the year the duty is carried out by the Life Guards regiment of Stockholm, consisting of four battalions, one light infantry, two security, and one guard battalion. Tracing its history through the Household Brigade and Svea Life Guards and Life Guard Dragoons back to the original Royal Guards, this is what constitutes the regiment's claims to being one of the oldest military units and formations in continuous operation. Between April and August, the mounted squadrons in light blue full dress uniforms and silver pickelhaube helmets and the companies in dark blue full dress uniforms with black pickelhaube helmets, both of the Life Guards, can be seen in Stockholm street parades and around the Royal Palace. Accompanied by the mounted band, they depart from the K1 Cavalry barracks in Gärdet, and arrive at the Palace around noon (1 p.m. on Sundays and public holidays) for the changing of the guards ceremony. These events attracts large numbers of tourists each summer. In the regular guard mounts, the regular royal guard contingent is composed of the personnel from the King's Guards Battalion, Life Guards.",
"Aitebar Aitebar was the third album of the Pakistani band Vital Signs. All music arranged, composed and produced by Vital Signs. All songs written by Shoaib Mansoor. All information is taken from the CD.",
"Guards (band) Guards are an American three piece rock band. They consist of Richie Follin, Loren Humphrey, and Kaylie Church. They released their debut album, \"In Guards We Trust\", in February 2013. Guards formed in New York City when Follin finished a European tour and went to a recording studio. He began writing and recording with his sister's band, Cults, and he ended up singing the songs. They put the songs on the internet and began to get show offers, so he formed Guards consisting of himself, Loren Humphrey and Kaylie Church. Follin and Humphrey were originally of the band The Willowz. The trio caught the attention of 3 Syllables Records and they released their eponymous debut EP on the label in 2010. They released their first single, \"Resolution of One\", on Small Plates Records in December 2010. The single was re-released in May, 2011, on Kitsuné Music, with B-sides \"Hear You Call\" and \"Swimming After Dark\". NPR stated the band has \"\"a sound deconstructed through the minds of musicians who look more to memories than they do to the future, and in the process find something that sounds like a new discovery.”\". Dazed and Confused had this to say about the band, \"\"the songs are uncompromisingly raw harnessing pessimistic heartache to craft tracks about birth, death and any emotional malaise you might experience in between.”\". The Guardian simply stated, \"\"It's pretty fucking impressive”\". The band released their first full length album \"“In Guards We Trust\"\" in 2013. The Wall Street Journal touted the record as \"“one of the years best albums.”,\" and Pitchfork proclaimed \"“...slack verses with palm-muted guitars give way to a monster chorus delivered with the confidence that tells you Guards know they have a hit on their hands.”\". The NME would refer to the band as \"“Cali reverb scuzz kings”\". NPR stated, “At a time in music when pop, rock, country and hip-hop acts all strain to create anthems that will inspire sing- along devotion in large-size audiences, Guards — a band that's only been around for a few years and has released comparatively little music — is already well on its way to giving the anthem form more interest and gravitas than musicians with far more experience.”.",
"Monarchy (band) Monarchy were a British-based Australian electronic music duo consisting of Andrew Armstrong (also known as Andrew \"Friendly\" Kornweibel; producer, DJ) and Ra Black (also known as Ra Khahn; vocals, lyrics). Based in London, the duo was previously known as Milke. They have released four studio albums and two extended plays. In November 2009, Monarchy was featured as \"Band of the Day\" on \"The Guardian\" website. Monarchy's debut single \"Gold in the Fire\" was released on 1 February 2010 on Neon Gold Records, containing the B-side \"Black, the Colour of My Heart\". They have created remixes for Ellie Goulding, Kelis, Lady Gaga, Marina and the Diamonds, Jamiroquai, Kylie Minogue, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark and Fyfe Dangerfield. Their first live show was broadcast into space from Cape Canaveral, Florida in June 2010, making them the first band ever to perform live into space. They have since performed at various London and UK venues including XOYO and HMV Forum, and festivals including The Big Chill, Popaganda in Sweden, Bestival, Eurosonic Festival in the Netherlands, Midem in Cannes, as well as Paris, Dijon, Rouen, Amsterdam, and across Europe. In 2011 they performed at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, Hay Festival and Melt! festival, amongst others. Monarchy played the Together Winter Music Festival in London at the Alexandra Palace on 26 November 2011. After signing to Mercury Records in February 2010, Monarchy was set to release their self-titled debut album that August. However, the duo were dropped by Mercury a few months later, and the album's release was cancelled. Their debut album was ultimately released on 11 July 2011 by independent label 100% Records under a new title, \"Around the Sun\", with a slightly different track listing. \"The Guardian\" gave the album three out of five stars and stated that \"[t]he lyrics are often arrant nonsense [...] but there are many pleasures here.\" \"NME\" rated the album five out of 10, comparing Monarchy to Hurts, The Sound of Arrows and Steps. Popjustice placed \"Around the Sun\" at number fourteen on its list of the best albums of 2011."
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[
"yes"
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Do both films Serpico and Trás-Os-Montes (Film) have the directors from the same country?
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Trás-os-Montes (film) Trás-os-Montes is a Portuguese independent docufictional and ethnofictional feature film, written, directed and edited by António Reis and Margarida Cordeiro and released in 1976. It takes its name from the Portuguese region of Trás-os-Montes from which the film emanated. Uppon watching "Trás-os-Montes" the French filmmaker and anthropologist Jean Rouch wrote about the film: "For me, this film reveals a new cinematographic language." Since its release, the film has been part of the official selection of numerous film festivals and events, from 1976 to nowadays, where it has been awarded several prizes. Among them are: In 2011, "Trás-os-Montes" was screened at the Jeonju International Film Festival, marking the beginning of the international rediscover of the work of António Reis and Margarida Cordeiro. In 2012, the film was screened in the United States at the Harvard Film Archive, the Anthology Film Archives, at the UCLA Film and Television Archives and at the Pacific Film Archive as part of "The School of Reis" program.
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[
"Serpico (TV series) Serpico is an American crime drama series that aired on NBC from September 24, 1976 until January 28, 1977. The series was based on the book by Peter Maas and the 1973 film of the same name that starred Al Pacino in the title role. A television movie, \"Serpico: The Deadly Game\", served as pilot and aired in April 1976. David Birney stars as the unorthodox NYPD detective Frank Serpico who battles corrupt members of the police force. Tom Atkins co-stars as Lieutenant Tom Sullivan. The series aired 14 episodes before being canceled in January 1977 and replaced with \"Quincy M.E. Iranian director Reza Badiyi served as one of several directors of the series. \"Serpico\"'s theme song was written by Elmer Bernstein.",
"Monte Criollo Monte Criollo is a Argentine musical film directed and written by Arturo S. Mom. It is a tango film and starred Nedda Francy and Francisco Petrone.",
"João Pedro Rodrigues João Pedro Rodrigues (born 24 August 1966) is a Portuguese film director. He is considered to be part of \"The School of Reis\" film family. Having studied at the School of Theatre and Cinema of Portugal, Rodrigues started his career as an assistant director and editor in several features, directed, for example, by Alberto Seixas Santos and Teresa Villaverde, among others. In 1997 Rodrigues directed his first film. \"O Fantasma (Phantom)\" (2000). Apart from the minor controversy it generated in Portugal, the film was shown in Spain, Italy, France, Brazil and the United States with modest results. \"Two Drifters\" (2005), his second feature film, has garnered relative international acclaim and was shown at the Cannes Film Festival. His features have been produced and released by the production company Rosa Filmes. He is openly gay.",
"O Desejado O Desejado (, also known as \"O Desejado ou As Montanhas da Lua\" and \"Mountains Of The Moon\") is a 1987 Portuguese-French drama film written and directed by Paulo Rocha and starring Luís Miguel Cintra. The film was entered into the main competition at the 44th edition of the Venice Film Festival. The production of the film, and the experience of Yves Afonso, a French actor of Portuguese descent who first visited Portugal because of this film, later inspired \"Voyage to the Beginning of the World\" by Manoel de Oliveira.",
"Ruy Guerra Ruy Alexandre Guerra Coelho Pereira (born August 22, 1931) is a Portuguese-Brazilian film director and screenwriter. Guerra was born a Portuguese citizen in Lourenço Marques (today Maputo) in Mozambique, when it was still a Portuguese colony. Guerra studied at IDHEC film school in Paris from 1952. In 1958 he started his career as an assistant director in several French films. He subsequently immigrated to Brazil, where he directed his first feature film, \"Os Cafajestes\" (1962). It was entered into the 12th Berlin International Film Festival. In 1964, Guerra directed \"Os Fuzis\", which placed him in the forefront of the emerging Cinema Novo movement. The film was entered into the 14th Berlin International Film Festival where it won the Silver Bear Extraordinary Jury Prize. After that he directed the international production \"Tendres Chasseurs\" (1969) starring Sterling Hayden, and \"Os Deuses e os Mortos\" (1970). The tumultuous political landscape in 1970's Brazil forced Guerra to stop filming until 1976, when he directed \"A Queda\". The film was entered into the 28th Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Silver Bear - Special Jury Prize. In 1980 he returned to Mozambique where he shot \"Mueda, Memória e Massacre\", that country's first feature film. While in Mozambique, Guerra shot many short films and helped the creation of the National Institute for Cinema. In 1982 Guerra shot \"Eréndira\" in Mexico, based on the work by Gabriel García Márquez. He also directed the musical comedy \"A Ópera do Malandro\" (1985), based on Chico Buarque's free theatrical adaptation of Bertold Brecht's \"Threepenny Opera\"; the TV film \"Os Amores Difíceis\", another adaptation of García Márquez; and \"Kuarup\" (1989). In 2000 Guerra's \"Estorvo\" was nominated for the Golden Palm at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival. It was Guerra's third nomination in the festival, after \"Erêndira\" and \"Kuarup\". His 2004 film \"Portugal S.A.\" was the only film he did in Portugal and entered into the 26th Moscow International Film Festival.",
"Manuel Esteba Manuel Esteba (17 April 1941 – 4 February 2010) was a Spanish director and screenwriter, notable for writing a spoof of Steven Spielberg's \"E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial\" called \"El E.T.E. y el Oto.\" Manuel Esteba was active as a director and a screenwriter for 30 years beginning in the 1960s. Credits include \"Saranda\" in the 1970s, also known as \"Twenty Paces to Death\", starring Dean Reed, and \"A Cry of Death\", starring Pierre Brice and Steven Tedd. As a director, he worked with the Calatrava Brothers on 3 comedies. In 1992, he wrote and directed a documentary called \"Un jardinero en tu casa\", with Julian Silvestre as host. Manuel Esteba died on 4 February 2010 at the age of 68 in Barcelona, Spain.",
"Mauricio de la Serna Mauricio de la Serna (26 November 1902 – 20 March 1986) was a Mexican film director, screenwriter, and producer. De la Serna studied architecture, a profession he abandoned in 1938 to join the film industry as producer of the film \"Refugiados en Madrid\" (\"Refugees in Madrid\") by Alejandro Galindo (who was his friend and brother-in-law), a film in which de la Serna also wrote the story. De la Serna would continue working as a producer during the 1940s, not resuming his activity writing stories until 1950 with the film \"La edad peligrosa\" (\"The Dangerous Age\") by José Díaz Morales. He headed the production company Films Mundiales and participated in the founding of Estudios Churubusco in 1944, along with Emilio Azcárraga Vidaurreta, Jesús Grovas, Juan Bustillo Oro, Miguel Zacarías and Fernando de Fuentes. In 1951 he wrote his first script, \"Stolen Paradise\", directed by Julio Bracho. In 1953, Luis Buñuel directed \"Illusion Travels by Streetcar\", based on an argument by de la Serna and adapted by Buñuel, José Revueltas, Juan de la Cabada and Luis Alcoriza. In 1955 he retired from production with the films \"La Desconocida\" (\"The Unknown\") and \"La rival\" (\"The Rival\"), both by Chano Urueta, and the same year he debuted as director-screenwriter with the film Caras nuevas (\"New Faces\"). From then on, he performed this double work in various films, continuing in the first half of the following decade. He joined the General Society of Writers of Mexico (SOGEM) on November 30, 1967. Throughout his career, de la Serna was an active member of the directors' section of the Union of Workers in Film Production (STPC), but he also directed some films for the Motion Picture Industry Workers Union (STIC). In the 1970s, de la Serna retired from the film industry and began working for television. In this medium, he held administrative positions on Canal 13, where he was in charge of acquiring foreign programs, and on Canal 11, where he established a cycle dedicated to showing Mexican films.",
"Do Risos e Lagrimas Do Risos e Lagrimas is a 1926 Brazilian drama film directed by Alberto Traversa. The film premiered in Rio de Janeiro on 25 August 1926.",
"Tampico (film) Tampico is a 1944 drama/war film directed by Lothar Mendes and starring Edward G. Robinson, Lynn Bari, Victor McLaglen, Marc Lawrence, and Mona Maris. It was released by 20th Century Fox. Capt. Bart Manson is the captain of an oil tanker during World War II, who rescues Katherine Hall when her ship is sunk by a German U-boat. The couple marry, but Manson's ship is subsequently sunk as well. Hall becomes a prime suspect for involvement as she was carrying no identification when rescued. However Manson later discovers that his First Mate Fred Adamson is in fact a German agent responsible for the sinking, and Hall is cleared of any culpability.",
"Tim Despic Tim Despic is a Canadian-born London-based British composer. His style of composition has been described as ‘moody and evocative’ (\"Variety\", 2009). Tim Despic was born in Montreal, Quebec, and at age three his family immigrated to the United Kingdom. He was educated at the University of Bath where he graduated with an honours degree in Politics and Economics. He been classically trained from a young age as a pianist and returned to university for a master's degree in Creative Music Technology from Newcastle University. He is a multi-instrumentalist specialises in traditional orchestrations fuzed with contemporary acoustic and electronic soundscapes. He cites Bernard Herman, Danny Elfman and Scott Walker amongst his main influences. In 2005 along with fellow composer and collaborator James Edward Barker he co-founded Veneration Music Ltd with a UK-based music production company, co-ordinating and composing scores for feature films. His first feature, \"The Best Man\" was an $11 m romantic comedy starring Seth Green, Stuart Townsend, Amy Smart and Simon Callow and was directed by \"Shooting Fish\" director Stefan Schwartz. He then went on to work with veteran director Robert Young, known for his comedies such as \"Fierce Creatures\", the sequel to \"A Fish Called Wanda\". In 2007, he scored the $7 m British ITV television production, \"The History of Mr Polly\", starring Lee Evans, and the DVD–BBC release of Jim Threapleton's \"Extraordinary Rendition\", starring Andy Serkis and Omar Berdouni. The film received critical acclaim and was nominated for awards or screened at a number of festivals including the British Independent Film Awards, Locarno and Edinburgh Film Festivals. In 2007 he composed the score for Ashley Judd's role as a manic depressive in the Sundance selected \"Helen\", directed by the critically acclaimed Sandra Nettelbeck of \"Mostly Martha\". The score, described by \"Variety\" magazine as ‘moody and evocative’ , also featured cello performed by the Grammy Award-winning David Darling. He has also worked in tandem with the Relentless energy drink's company as an additional composer to score two features, Powers of Three and the groundbreaking – \"Lives of the Artists\" featuring Gallows and world-renowned snowboarder Xavier de Le Rue."
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[
"no"
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Who is the paternal grandfather of Ahmad Riayat Shah Of Johor?
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Ahmad Riayat Shah of Johor Paduka Sri Sultan ‘Ahmad I Ri’ayat Shah Zilu’llah fil’Alam Khalifat ul-Muminin ibni al-Marhum Sultan ‘Abdu’l Jalil (1752–1770) was the 14th Sultan and Yang di-Pertuan Besar of Johor and Pahang and their dependencies who reigned from 1761 to 1770. He is the elder son of the 13th Sultan of Johor, Abdul Jalil Muazzam Shah by his second wife, Tengku Puteh binti Daeng Chelak, third daughter of Yamtuan Muda of Riau, Daeng Chelak. He succeeded on the death of his father on January 29th, 1761. Crowned in February 1761 at the age of nine, Ahmad Riayat Shah reigned under a Council of Regency. He died of poisoning in 1770, possibly by a Bugis chief, at Bulang, Riau and buried in Batangan. He was succeeded by his younger brother, Mahmud Shah III.
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[
"Abdullah Ma'ayat Shah of Johor Sultan Abdullah Ma'ayat Shah was Sultan of Johor from 1615 to 1623. Before he became sultan of Johor, Abdullah Ma'ayat Shah was also known as Raja Bongsu, Raja Seberang or Raja di Ilir. According to the testimony of Dutch Admiral Cornelis Matelief de Jonge, Raja Bongsu was one of four surviving sons of Raja Ali bin Abdul Jalil (alias Raja Omar) of Johor. The other remaining male (half-) siblings were described by Admiral Matelief as Raja Siak, Raja Laut, and Alauddin Riayat Shah III. The latter ruled as the 6th sultan of Johor between the death of his father Raja Ali Jalla in 1597 and the Acehnese attack on Johor in 1613. In 1603 Raja Bongsu was instrumental in forging the early diplomatic relations with the Dutch by lending assistance to Admiral Jacob van Heemskerk on 25 February 1603 in attacking and plundering the Portuguese carrack, the Santa Catarina, in the Johor River estuary off present-day Singapore. He was also responsible for sending one of the first diplomatic missions of a Malay ruler to the Dutch Republic in the same year. Headed by Megat Mansur, the Johor embassy sailed to Europe on the ships of Admiral van Heemskerk in 1603. Megat Mansur did not survive the voyage, but other members of the Johor embassy did and returned with the fleet under the command of Admiral Cornelis Matelief de Jonge in 1606. In that year, Raja Bongsu formally ratified two treaties with the Dutch (dated 17 May and 23 September 1606) and signed himself as the co-ruler of Johor. He also lent active assistance to Admiral Matelief during his seaborne attack on Portuguese Melaka in or around May 1606. In early 1609 Raja Bongsu received Dutch Admiral Pieter Willemsz. Verhoeff at Batu Sawar. On this occasion one of the German officers serving in Verhoeff's fleet, one Johann Verken, described the physical appearance of Raja Bongsu. He wrote that the Raja was \"a young man in his 30s.",
"Abdul Jalil Muazzam Shah of Johor Paduka Sri Sultan ‘Abdu’l Jalil V Mu’azzam Shah Zilu’llah fil’Alam Khalifat ul-Muminin ibni al-Marhum Sultan Sulaiman Badr ul-‘Alam Shah (11 March 1738–29 January 1761) was the 13th Sultan and Yang di-Pertuan Besar of Johor and Pahang and their dependencies who reigned from 1760 to 1761. Styled as Raja di-Baroh before his accession, he is the second son of the 12th Sultan of Johor, Sulaiman Badrul Alam Shah. Installed as Heir Apparent with the title of 'Raja Muda' in October 1759. He succeeded on the death of his father on August 20, 1760. His reign ended less than a year when he died of poisoning, possibly by a Bugis chief, at Kuala Selangor on January 29, 1761. He was buried at Batangan, Riau, having had issue, two sons.",
"Alauddin Riayat Shah III of Johor Sultan Alauddin Riayat Shah III was the Sultan of Johor who reigned from 1597 to 1615. He resided at the new capital of Johor at Batu Sawar, but later moved his administration to Pasir Raja around 1609. In 1612, at the instigation of his co-ruler and half-brother Abdullah, better known from period historical documents as Raja Bongsu or Raja Seberang (who after 1613 ruled as Abdullah Ma'ayat Shah) Bendahara Tun Sri Lanang oversaw the editorial and compilation process of \"Sejarah Melayu\" (Malay Annals), the most important Malay literary work of all time. In 1606 Alauddin allied with the Dutch to fight the Portuguese in an attempt to oust them from Melaka in a joint military campaign. To this end he ratified two treaties with the Dutch Admiral Cornelis Matelieff de Jonge in May and September 1606. Following a crippling blockade of the Johor River in 1608 and 1609, he signed a peace agreement with the Portuguese in October 1610. His fate and death remain uncertain. Some claim that he fled Batu Sawar at the time of the Acehnese attack in 1613 and died in exile on Lingga while others claim that he had been captured twice by the Acehnese between 1613 and 1615 and subsequently sentenced to death around 1615. He is buried in Kota Tinggi, Johor.",
"Muhammad Shah of Malacca Sultan Muhammad Shah ibni Almarhum Sultan Megat Iskandar Shah (died 1444) was the third sultan of Malacca. He is the son of Megat Iskandar Shah of Malacca. He ruled Malacca from 1424 to 1444. He was succeeded by Abu Syahid Shah. He was popularly known as Raja Tengah or Radin Tengah. He had two sons, Raja Kassim and Raja Ibrahim. It was said that one night the king had a dream. He dreamt that he saw Prophet Muhammad clearly and the Prophet subsequently told him to repeat 'there is no God but Allah and Muhammad is His messenger'. After the king repeated these words, the Prophet said that a ship from Jeddah would anchor at the time for afternoon prayers, and the king was to follow the directions of the man who would come out of the ship to pray. With that, the Prophet disappeared from sight. Sure enough, everything described in the dream happened. The king is the inventor of Baju Melayu or initially known as Baju Kurung.",
"Ibrahim Ismail of Johor Sultan Ibrahim ibni Almarhum Sultan Iskandar (Jawi: ; born 22 November 1958) is the 25th Sultan of Johor and the 5th Sultan of modern Johor, since January 2010. He is the son of Sultan Iskandar. A motorcycle enthusiast, Sultan Ibrahim is the founder of the annual motorcycling tour event, Kembara Mahkota Johor. Tunku Ibrahim Ismail was born on 22 November 1958 in Sultanah Aminah Hospital, Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaya during the reign of his great grandfather, Sultan Ibrahim. He was the eldest son of Sultan Iskandar by his first wife (2 December 1935 – 1 June 2018), an English lady from Torquay, whom Sultan Iskandar (then Tunku Mahmood) met while he was studying in England. Trevorrow, a proprietor by profession, took on the name of \"Kalsom binti Abdullah\" for a time following her marriage to Tunku Iskandar. His mother has since remarried and lived in England. His great-grandfather, Sultan Ibrahim died in London on 8 May 1959, thus, Tunku Ibrahim Ismail's grandfather, Ismail of Johor succeeded him as Sultan of Johor. Ibrahim Ismail moved up to second in line to the throne, after his father. The late Sultan Iskandar sent him to complete his secondary education at Trinity Grammar School in Sydney, Australia from 1968 until 1970. After finishing his high school, he was sent to Pusat Latihan Tentera Darat (PULADA) in Kota Tinggi for basic military training. He also received military training in the US–at Fort Benning, Georgia and later at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Tunku Ibrahim Ismail was appointed as the Tunku Mahkota of Johor on 3 July 1981, and had been primarily residing at Istana Pasir Pelangi since then. Tunku Ibrahim was the regent of Johor between 26 April 1984 and 25 April 1989 when his father served his term as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia.",
"Alauddin Riayat Shah II of Johor Sultan Alauddin Riayat Shah II ibni Almarhum Sultan Mahmud Shah (died 1564) was the first sultan of Johor. He ruled Johor from 1528 to 1564. He founded the Johor Sultanate following the fall of Malacca to the Portuguese in 1511. He was the second son of Mahmud Shah of Malacca. Thus, Johor was a successor state of Malacca and Johor's sultans follow the numbering system of Malacca. Throughout his reign, he faced constant threats from the Portuguese as well as the emerging Aceh Sultanate. In 1529, Alauddin Riayat founded his first capital in Hujung Tanah, known as Pekan Tua, 11 km upriver from Kota Tinggi, following the death of his father. A river fort, Kota Kara was also founded down the river. In 1535, about 400 Portuguese troops led by Estêvão da Gama invaded Johor. Kota Kara was bombarded but the Malays withstood the attack. After a few days, Portuguese troops landed and bombarded the fort but they also had to retreat. Their morale boosted by this initial success, the Malays left their fort and launched a counter-attack on the Portuguese. However, the Malays were scattered by the crossfire of the Portuguese which resulted in the capturing of the fort and its burning by the Portuguese. Alauddin Riayat retreated upstream the Johor River to Sayong Pinang. His official, Seri Nara Diraja, died in Sayong Pinang. Alauddin Riayat returned to Pekan Tua after a short period and rebuilt it. Pekan Tua was attacked by 400 Portuguese troops under Estêvão da Gama again because his brother, Paulo da Gama, and about 30 other Portuguese troops were killed by Malays. Following this attack, a peace treaty was signed between Johor and the Portuguese. In 1540, Alauddin Riayat Shah moved his capital to Johor Lama, which is closer to the estuary of Johor River. Johor was also threatened by Aceh, on the northern tip of Sumatra.",
"Ataullah Muhammad Shah II of Kedah Paduka Sri Sultan Ataullah Muhammad Shah II ibni al-Marhum Sultan Dziaddin Mukarram Shah I (died 17 November 1698) was the 16th Sultan of Kedah. His reign was from 1688 to 1698. He became Regent for his aged father, 1682. He removed his capital to Kota Bukit Pinang. On 23 March 2017, his tomb was believed to be found along with another 8 tombs by the Malaysian Historical Society on the river banks at Kampung Bukit Pinang, near Alor Setar.",
"Mahmud Shah III of Johor Mahmud Ri’ayat Shah Zilu’llah fil’Alam Khalifat ul-Muminin ibni al-Marhum Sultan ‘Abdu’l Jalil Shah (24 March 1756–1811) was the 15th Sultan and Yang di-Pertuan Besar of Johor of the Old Johor Sultanate Empire and their dependencies who reigned from 1770 to 1811. Born on 24 March 1756, Mahmud Shah III is the younger son of the 13th Sultan of Johor, Abdul Jalil Muazzam Shah by his second wife, Tengku Puteh binti Daeng Chelak. To maintain their de facto control of Johor Empire, the Bugis continued to install puppet rulers on the throne, including the infant grandson of Sulaiman Badrul Alam Shah, Mahmud Shah III, who succeeded on the death of his elder brother, Ahmad Riayat Shah in 1770. During the early part of his reign, the office of Yamtuan Muda was held by the powerful Bugis chief, Daeng Kemboja. Mahmud Shah III came of age at a time when Bugis-Dutch trade rivalry was intensifying. He exploited the rivalry by concluding a treaty of protection with VOC on board the \"Utrecht\" on 10 November 1784 in which he was accorded the style of 'Most Serene Prince' (\"Doorlugtigen Vorst\"). The treaty called for the end of the Bugis monopoly over the office of Yamtuan Muda and prohibited other Bugis from holding office within Johor's administration. It also demanded the expulsion of all Bugis not born or bred in Riau. Additionally, the treaty allowed the Dutch to post a Resident in Johor. Shortly thereafter. Mahmud Shah III retreated to Pahang. All-out conflict soon erupted between the Dutch and the Bugis. Hostilities between the two powers continued until 1795, when the Dutch finally succeeded in ousting the Bugis chief, Raja Ali from Riau, allowing Mahmud Shah III to return to his capital. The same year, however, the Netherlands came under French occupation and the Dutch allowed the British to temporarily take over their territories in the Malay world. This enabled Raja Ali to make a comeback.",
"Raja Ali Haji Raja Ali Haji bin Raja Haji Ahmad (1808–1873) was a 19th-century Bugis-Malay historian, poet and scholar. He was elevated to the status of National Hero of Indonesia in 2004. Raja Ali Haji was born in Selangor (although some sources stated that he was born in Penyengat) in 1808 or 1809, and was the son of Raja Ahmad, who was titled Engku Haji Tua after accomplishing the pilgrimage to Mecca. He was the grandson of Raja Ali Haji Fisabilillah (the brother of Raja Lumu, the first Sultan of Selangor). Fisabilillah was a scion of the royal house of Riau, who were descended from Bugis warriors who came to the region in the 18th century. His mother, Encik Hamidah binti Malik was a cousin of her father and also of Bugis descent. Raji Ali Haji soon relocated to Penyengat as an infant, where he grew up and received his education. Most sources stated that Raja Ali Haji died in 1872 at Penyengat Island in Riau, but the date of his death was being debated as scattered evidences surfaced to oppose this claim. Among the best-known evidences was a letter written in 1872 when Raja Ali Haji wrote a letter to Herman Von De Wall, a Dutch cultural expert, who later died at Tanjung Pinang in 1873.",
"Rijaluddin Muhammad Shah of Kedah Paduka Sri Sultan Rijaluddin Muhammad Shah ibni al-Marhum Sultan Sulaiman Shah II () (died 4 October 1652) was the 13th Sultan of Kedah. His reign was from 1626 to 1652. He assumed the regency when his father was carried off to Aceh in 1619 as a prisoner. He appealed for help from the King of Siam, in an attempt to counter Acehnese hegemony. He removed his capital to Kota Naga in August 1626. He entered into diplomatic relations with the Dutch in Batavia. Hukum Kanun Kedah and Undang-Undang Pelabuhan Kedah which was a law very similar to Undang-Undang Melaka was written during his reign."
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"Sulaiman Badrul Alam Shah"
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Where did the director of film Follies Girl die?
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Follies Girl Follies Girl is a 1943 American musical comedy film directed by William Rowland and starring Wendy Barrie, Doris Nolan and Gordon Oliver. It was made by the poverty row studio Producers Releasing Corporation. Much of the film takes place in or around a burlesque house. It was the final film appearance of Barrie apart from a cameo role in "It Should Happen to You".
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"Ziegfeld Follies (film) Ziegfeld Follies is a 1945 American musical comedy film released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, primarily directed by Vincente Minnelli, with segments directed by Lemuel Ayers, Roy Del Ruth, Robert Lewis, and George Sidney, the film's original director before Minnelli took over. Other directors that are claimed to have made uncredited contributions to the film are Merrill Pye, Norman Taurog, and Charles Walters. It stars many MGM leading talents, including Fred Astaire, Lucille Ball, Lucille Bremer, Fanny Brice (the only member of the ensemble who was a star of the original Follies), Judy Garland, Kathryn Grayson, Lena Horne, Gene Kelly, James Melton, Victor Moore, William Powell, Red Skelton, and Esther Williams. Producer Arthur Freed wanted to create a film along the lines of the Ziegfeld Follies Broadway shows, and so, the film is composed of a sequence of unrelated lavish musical numbers and comedy sketches. Filmed in 1944 and 1945, it was released in 1946 to considerable critical and box-office success. The film was entered into the 1947 Cannes Film Festival. Dance director was Robert Alton, Astaire's second-most-frequent choreographic collaborator after Hermes Pan. All of Astaire's numbers were directed by Vincente Minnelli. The movie's opening featured William Powell as Ziegfeld, who does the prologue. An early concept was to have the film introduced by a stop motion animated puppet of Leo the Lion. Although cut before release, this outtake footage survives today. \"The New York Times\": \"The film's best numbers are a couple of comedy skits, especially one done by Red Skelton. Fanny Brice plays a Bronx hausfrau quite funnily. Judy Garland is also amusing as a movie queen giving an interview. \"Ziegfeld Follies\" is entertaining – and that's what it's meant to be!\" (Bosley Crowther). \"Newsweek\": \"At least three of the numbers would highlight any review on stage and screen. In \"A Great Lady has an Interview\", Judy Garland, with six leading men, displays an unexpected flair for occupational satire. With \"Numbers Please\" Keenan Wynn demonstrates, once again, that he is one of Hollywood's foremost comedians.",
"Raoul Lévy Raoul Levy (14 April 1922 – 31 December 1966) was a French film producer, writer and director best known for a series of movies he made starring Brigitte Bardot. He was born in Antwerp. He committed suicide after losing most of his fortune making a film about the life of Marco Polo. He shot himself in the chest outside the front door of a female friend's house in St Tropez. The female friend was Isabelle Pons, who had recently ended a two-year affair with Levy. Levy was survived by a wife and fifteen-year-old son.",
" For the \"Kissin' Cousins\" screenplay he received a Writers Guild of America award nomination for best written musical. In the late 1980s, he taught in the Theater Arts Department at San Francisco State University. He starred as Buddy in the 1971 Broadway musical \"Follies\", for which he received a 1972 Tony Award nomination for Featured Actor in a Musical. The production featured a score by Stephen Sondheim, was co-directed by Michael Bennett and Harold Prince, and co-starred Alexis Smith and Dorothy Collins. In 1990, for contributions to the motion picture industry, Nelson was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame. His star is located at 7005 Hollywood Boulevard. Nelson died of cancer, aged 76, in Los Angeles.",
"Robert Alton Robert Alton (2 January 1902 – 12 June 1957) was an American dancer and choreographer, a major figure in dance choreography of Broadway and Hollywood musicals from the 1930s through to the early 1950s. He is principally remembered today as the discoverer of Gene Kelly, for his collaborations with Fred Astaire, and for choreographic sequences he designed for Hollywood musicals such as \"The Harvey Girls\" (1946), \"Till the Clouds Roll By\" (1946), \"Show Boat\" (1951), and \"White Christmas\" (1954). Born Robert Alton Hart in Bennington, Vermont, United States, Alton studied dance with Ralph McKernan in Springfield, Massachusetts and spent his summers in New York studying with Bert French and Mikhail Mordkin, formerly of the Bolshoi Ballet and Sergey Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. His Broadway stage dancing début was with Mordkin's company in \"Take It from Me\" (1919), followed by \"Greenwich Follies\" (1924) and \"Some Day\" (1925) which failed to make it to Broadway. He also choreographed. With his wife, Marjorie Fielding, he created a dance act and subsequently managed a line of chorus girls in vaudeville. When his wife took a sabbatical to have a baby, he took over dance direction at St. Louis movie theatres while teaching at Clark's Dance School in St. Louis. There his students included Donn Arden and Betty Grable. After a series of successful stagings at New York's Paramount Theatre in 1933, he began a choreographic career which encompassed many of the most successful Broadway hits of the 1930s and 1940s including The Ziegfeld Follies of 1934, 1936 and 1942. He collaborated with Cole Porter, Rodgers and Hart and Rodgers and Hammerstein on Me and Juliet in 1953. He learned stage direction from John Murray Anderson and during his Broadway career he was instrumental in furthering the careers of Ray Bolger, John Brascia, Don Crichton, Betty Grable, Gene Kelly, Sheree North, Vera-Ellen and Charles Walters, among others.",
"Ashley Miller (director) Ashley Miller (August 11, 1877 – November 19, 1949) was an American director, screenwriter, playwright, and actor. He directed 133 films between 1909 and 1923. Miller was born in Cincinnati and attended schools in Detroit, Michigan. Miller's stage debut came in September 1904 when he portrayed Francois in a production of \"Richelieu\". He went on to act with stock theater companies in Boston, Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia. Plays in which he performed include \"Prince Otto\", \"Romeo and Juliet\", \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\", \"My Lady Peggy Goes to Town\", and \"The Parisian Model\". His roles in the latter two productions were singing parts. Miller formed a troupe that presented plays in New York City's schools and settlement houses. He also worked as a director of silent films for the Edison Biograph Studio. In 1933, Miller became executive secretary of the State Relief Fund, an organization created by \"prominent actors, producers and playwrights\". Miller was married to actress Ethel Browning from 1899 until his death in 1949, and they had a son, Ashley. He died on November 19, 1949, in New York.",
"James Follett James Follett (27 July 1939 – 10 January 2021) was an English author and screenwriter. Follett became a full-time fiction writer in 1976, after resigning from contract work as a technical writer for the Ministry of Defence. He wrote over 20 novels, several television plays and many radio dramas. He died in January 2021 at the age of 81. An asterisk * after the year means the play has been repeated on BBC7.",
"Magda Foy Magda Foy (July 13, 1905 – February 2, 2000), also known and often credited as \"The Solax Kid\", was a child actor in the silent film era who worked for Solax Studio, the largest pre-Hollywood studio in the United States from 1910 to 1913. Magda Foy was born on July 13, 1905 in Manhattan, New York to Mary and Patrick Foy as Magdelena Patricia Foy. She died on February 2, 2000 in Port Jefferson, New York. Foy, along with her parents, was a member of the Solax stock company and she appeared in 23 of the studio's films. She often was directed by Alice Guy-Blaché, the founder of Solax and its artistic director. Foy played the lead in \"A Child's Sacrifice\" (1910), the first film produced by Solax. She was cast in leading and minor roles, and portrayed both girls and boys. Her last film, \"Man's Woman\" (1917), made independent of Solax Studios, was directed by Travers Vale. One of Foy's better known roles was that of Little Trixie Thompson, the lead character in \"Falling Leaves\". The film cast Magda as a young girl who, overhearing the doctor say that her elder sister will die of tuberculosis before the last leaf falls, determines to save her by tying the leaves onto the trees outside their home.",
"Jacques Demy Jacques Demy (; 5 June 1931 – 27 October 1990) was a French director, lyricist, and screenwriter. He appeared in the wake of the French New Wave alongside contemporaries like Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut. Demy's films are celebrated for their visual style, which drew upon diverse sources such as classic Hollywood musicals, the plein-air realism of his French New Wave colleagues, fairy tales, jazz, Japanese manga, and the opera. His films contain overlapping continuity (i.e., characters cross over from film to film), lush musical scores (typically composed by Michel Legrand) and motifs like teenage love, labor rights, chance encounters, incest, and the intersection between dreams and reality. He was married to Agnès Varda, another prominent director of the French New Wave. Demy is best known for the two musicals he directed in the mid-1960s: \"The Umbrellas of Cherbourg\" (1964) and \"The Young Girls of Rochefort\" (1967). After working with the animator Paul Grimault and the filmmaker Georges Rouquier, Demy directed \"Lola\", his first feature film, in 1961, with Anouk Aimée playing the eponymous cabaret singer. The Demy universe emerges here: Characters burst into song (courtesy of composer and lifelong Demy-collaborator Michel Legrand); iconic Hollywood imagery is appropriated, as in the opening scene with the man in a white Stetson in the Cadillac; plot is dictated by the director's fascination with fate and stock themes of chance encounters and long-lost love; and the setting, as with many of Demy's films, is the French Atlantic coast of his childhood, specifically the seaport town of Nantes. \"La Baie des Anges\" (\"The Bay of Angels\", 1963), starring Jeanne Moreau, took the theme of fate further, with its story of love at the roulette tables. Demy is perhaps best known for his original musical \"Les Parapluies de Cherbourg\" (\"The Umbrellas of Cherbourg\", 1964), with a score by Legrand. The whimsical concept of singing all the dialogue sets the tone for this tragedy of the everyday. The film also sees the emergence of Demy's trademark visual style, shot in saturated supercolour, with every detail—neckties, wallpaper, Catherine Deneuve's bleached-blonde hair—selected for visual impact.",
"Annabelle Moore Annabelle Moore (born Annabella Whitford, July 6, 1878 – November 29, 1961), also known as Peerless Annabelle, was an American dancer and actress who appeared in numerous early silent films. She was the original Gibson Girl in the 1907 Ziegfeld Follies. Annabelle Whitford was born in Chicago. She made her debut at age 15 dancing at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. She later moved to New York City, where she performed in several films for the Edison Studios and appeared on Broadway. Annabelle was quite popular in her youth. The sale of her films was further boosted in December 1896 when it was revealed that she had been approached to appear naked at a private dinner party at Sherry's Restaurant. It was said she introduced eroticism in film. She married Edward James Buchan in 1910. He died in 1958. Although she was very popular before her marriage, Annabelle died penniless in Chicago in 1961.",
" In the 1920s, Ashley regularly appeared on stage with American writer Dorothy Fields in the comedy duo \"Silly and Dotty\" in \"Midnight Follies\" at the London Metropole. On 1 March 1941, Lady Ashley filed articles of incorporation to establish an organisation known as the British Distressed Areas Fund. Organised along with her sister, Vera Bleck, Constance Bennett, and Virginia Fox Zanuck, as directors, the Fund focused on soliciting financial support to provide food, clothing and medical aid for refugees of World War II. The headquarters of the organisation was located in Los Angeles, California. In their joint memoir \"Bring on the Girls!\", P. G. Wodehouse and Guy Bolton relate the story of Ashley's audition for George Grossmith Jr. for the 1924 musical \"Primrose\": Ashley was married five times: Lady Ashley died of cancer on 29 June 1977 at age 73 in Los Angeles. She is interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, Hollywood; her grave is 680 feet north of that of her second husband, Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., at the north end of the \"Garden of Legends\", aka \"Section 8\"."
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"Wilford"
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What is the date of birth of the director of film Reservation Road?
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Reservation Road Reservation Road is a 2007 American crime drama film directed by Terry George and based on the book of the same title by John Burnham Schwartz, who, along with George, adapted the novel for the screenplay. The film, starring Joaquin Phoenix and Mark Ruffalo, deals with the aftermath of a fatal car crash. It was released to theaters on October 19, 2007. Dwight Arno is an attorney who is divorced from his wife Ruth. Ruth controls custody of their son Lucas while Dwight maintains visitation rights. Dwight and Lucas are at a baseball game when Ruth calls, informing Dwight that he is late returning their son home. Dwight drives Lucas home in a hurry, thinking he might otherwise forfeit his visitation privileges. When he loses control of his vehicle, he strikes a young boy, Josh Learner, who is standing by the roadside. Aware that he has struck the boy, Dwight decides to flee the scene. He further lies to Lucas, who has a minor injury from the incident, saying that they had collided with a tree log. Dwight later hears on a newscast that Josh died in the collision. Subsequently, he tries to cover up the evidence which implicates him in the hit-and-run. After the initial shock, Josh's mother Grace gradually tries to get on with life, but her husband Ethan obsesses over finding the perpetrator. Frustrated with the lack of progress the police are making, Ethan eventually decides to hire a lawyer, who oddly enough turns out to be Dwight. Consumed with guilt, Dwight thinks of turning himself in. At the police station he is at the point of confessing, but, being a coward, he doesn't go through with it. The investigating officer, thinking he has come as Ethan's lawyer, admits that the case is going nowhere and leaves the room before Dwight says anything. While picking up his daughter Emma, who has begun taking piano lessons from Ruth, Ethan encounters Dwight again. In anticipation of going to jail later, Dwight asks Ruth to have Lucas for a week stating that it will be the last week for a long time. Sensing desperation, Ruth reluctantly agrees. Ethan eventually discovers the truth and fears that Dwight would be sentenced to only a short time in prison. He buys a gun and arrives at Dwight's house just as Lucas has gone to bed. Dwight begs Ethan to take him outside and spare Lucas the trauma. Ethan forces Dwight into the trunk of his car and lets him out after a short drive.
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"Jia Aur Jia Jia Aur Jia () is a 2017 Indian Hindi-language road film directed by Howard Rosemeyer. It stars Richa Chadda and Kalki Koechlin in lead roles. The movie is about how Jia teaches Jia how to live. \"Jia Aur Jia\" is the directorial debut of Howard Rosmeyer. Principal photography for the film took place in Sweden.",
"Deepak Rauniyar Deepak Rauniyar (; born in 29 August 1978) is a Nepalese director, writer and producer. He is one of the few internationally acclaimed cinema directors from Nepal. He debuted as a director with \"Highway\", the first Nepali movie to be screened at a major international festival. He was named in \"The New York Times\" in 2017 as one of \"The 9 New Directors You Need to Watch\" for his second feature \"White Sun\".",
"Bauddhayan Mukherji Bauddhayan Mukherji aka 'Buddy' (born 1 June 1973) is a national award winning Indian filmmaker based in Mumbai. He is the co-founder—along with this wife Monalisa—of Little Lamb Films, which has produced three feature films, \"Teenkahon\", \"The Violin Player\" and \"Manikbabur Megh (The Cloud & The Man)\" and one documentary short, \"Kiske Liye\" (Who Is This Women's Day For?); His forthcoming films include \"Marichjhapi\" and \"The Bookkeeper's Wife\". Bauddhayan Mukherji, popularly known as Buddy, is an Indian filmmaker known for his advertising films and indie features. He was born and brought up in Kolkata. His father Banaj Mukherji was a poet while his mother Mira Mukherji was a school teacher. At 11, he was gifted a copy of the book \"Ekei Bole Shooting\" (All About Shooting) written by Satyajit Ray. The book changed his life and Bauddhayan decided to become a filmmaker! He studied in South Point School and later St. Xavier's College, Kolkata where he majored in Economics. Later he studied at the Clarion College of Communication, eastern India's first advertising college. Bauddhayan lives in Mumbai with his wife Monalisa and daughter Aarsha. Bauddhayan Mukherji's work life began with Shyamanand Jalan's Kolkata based production house Audio Visual Arts and later he joined Black Magic Motion Pictures where he joined as the assistant director but rose up the ranks to become a partner of the company. He was part of the team that created Patalghar (The Underground Chamber) the cult Bengali film in 2002. Today Bauddhayan runs his own production house called Little Lamb Films which he founded with wife Monalisa in 2007 and is considered a path breaker in Indian advertising filmmaking. He has directed more than 400 TVCs and has helped create brands like Procter & Gamble, Nokia, Unilever, Honda, GlaxoSmithKline, Coke, Colgate, Heinz, Johnson & Johnson, Hyundai Motor Company, to name a few. In 2010, Bauddhayan directed the Bell Bajao campaign for Breakthrough which went on to win the prestigious Silver Lion at Cannes – the Oscars of advertising films.",
"Sachin Yardi Sachin Yardi is a Hindi film director and screenwriter from India. His directorial debut \"C Kkompany\" (2008) was after writing scripts for \"Kyaa Kool Hai Hum\" (2005) and Madhur Bhandarkar's award-winning \"Traffic Signal\" (2007).",
"Dibakar Banerjee Dibakar Banerjee (born 21 June 1969) is an Indian film director, screenwriter, producer and advertisement-filmmaker known for his work in Hindi films. Banerjee started his career in advertising, being a feature filmmaker, he still continues to be an ad-filmmaker. He also runs his own film production company, Dibakar Banerjee Productions. As a film maker, he is known for \"Khosla Ka Ghosla\" (2006), \"Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye!\" (2008), both of which won National Film Awards. His next film was the experimental \"Love Sex Aur Dhokha\" (2010). It was followed by the political drama \"Shanghai\" (2012) and \"Bombay Talkies\" (2013), which was made as a celebration of the centenary year of Indian cinema. In 2015, he directed \"Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!\", a film based on the fictional character Byomkesh Bakshi. Dibakar Banerjee was born and brought up at New Rohtak Road near Karol Bagh, in West Delhi, and studied at Bal Bharati Public School, Delhi. After finishing his schooling, he joined the National Institute of Design, at Ahmedabad to study visual communications and graphic design, but left it two and a half years later. Back in New Delhi, he worked briefly with audio-visual filmmaker Sam Mathews. He is married to Richa Puranesh, who has an FMCG marketing background, and the couple lived in Delhi for many years. After the success of \"Khosla Ka Ghosla\", they moved to Mumbai and live in Parel, Mumbai with their two daughters. Banerjee joined advertising as a copywriter first with Shems Combit, TBWA Anthem, and then he joined Contract Advertising, Delhi, where he worked with Pradeep Sarkar, who was then a creative director at the agency. Screenwriter Jaideep Sahni was also one of his colleagues, who later penned Khosla Ka Ghosla's story, screenplay, dialogues and lyrics. In 1997, he left Contract to launch his own company named 'Watermark', with two ex- NID friends, to develop promos for Channel V and MTV and Ad films for major brands.",
"Mira Nair Mira Nair (born 15 October 1957) is an Indian born-American filmmaker based in New York City. Her production company, Mirabai Films, specializes in films for international audiences on Indian society, whether in the economic, social or cultural spheres. Among her best known films are \"Mississippi Masala\", \"\", \"The Namesake\", the Golden Lion winning \"Monsoon Wedding\", and \"Salaam Bombay!\", which received nominations for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and the BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language. Mira Nair was born on 15 October 1957 in Rourkela, Orissa, India, and grew up with her two older brothers and parents in Bhubaneswar. Her father, Amrit Lal Nair, was an officer of the Indian Administrative Service and her mother, Parveen Nayyar, is a social worker who often focused on children. She lived in Bhubaneswar till age 18, and attended a convent, following which she left to attend Loreto Convent, Tara Hall, Shimla, an Irish-Catholic missionary school, where she developed an infatuation with English literature. Following Tara Hall, Nair went on to study at Miranda House at Delhi University, where she majored in sociology. In order to gain the best education available, Nair applied for transfer to Western schools and, at 19, she was offered a full scholarship to Cambridge University, but ultimately turned it down and instead accepted a full scholarship to Harvard University. Before she became a filmmaker, Nair was originally interested in acting, and at one point she performed plays written by Badal Sarkar, a Bengali performer. While she studied at Harvard University, Nair became involved in the theater program and won a Boylston Prize for her performance of Jocasta's speech from Seneca's \"Oedipus\". Nair commented on film-making in a 2004 interview with FF2 Media's Jan Huttner:It’s all in how I do it. Keeping the buns on the seats is very important to me. It requires that ineffable thing called rhythm and balance in movie-making. Foils have to be created, counter-weights. From the intimacy, let’s say, of a love scene to the visceral, jugular quality of war. That shift is something in the editing, how one cuts from the intimate to the epic that keeps you there waiting. The energy propels you.",
"Raj Nair Raj Nair is an Indian author and filmmaker who writes in his native language Malayalam and English. His first poem was published at the age of eleven followed by short stories and his first novel in the year 2000, \"Nishabdathayile Theerthadakan\" (\"Pilgrim of Silence\", DC Books). He has written and directed films including, \"Kaazhchavasthukkal\" (\"The Exhibits\", 2004) and \"Punyam Aham\" (\"Limpid Souls\", 2010). Nair was born in Alappuzha and spent most of his younger years in Thakazhy and Kalarcode. He is currently a Professor of Oral Medicine in Australia. He was educated at Harvard University, University of London and holds a PhD from The University of Hong Kong. He is the grandson of acclaimed Malayalam writer, Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai.",
"Reservation Dogs Reservation Dogs is an Indigenous American teen comedy drama streaming television series created by Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi for FX Productions. It is a notable first in that it features all Indigenous writers and directors, along with an almost entirely Indigenous North American cast and production team. It is also the first series to be filmed entirely in Oklahoma. The series premiered on Hulu under FX on Hulu branding on August 9, 2021 (International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples). In September 2021, the series was renewed for a second season. The series follows the lives of four Indigenous teenagers in rural Oklahoma, as they spend their days committing crime and fighting it. After the death of their friend Daniel one year prior to the events of the series, the gang wrestles with a desire to move to California, the way Daniel dreamed of. But first they need to tie up loose ends in their lives and community, and make preparations to leave. The series was first reported on in November 2019 and was confirmed by Taika Waititi on Twitter shortly after. The initial report announced that Waititi would be co-writing the series with Native American filmmaker Sterlin Harjo, who would also share executive producer and directing duties with Waititi. After the pilot had been shot in Okmulgee, Oklahoma, FX announced a series order for the project in December 2020. The casting for the four lead actors, D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Devery Jacobs, Paulina Alexis, and newcomer Lane Factor, was also confirmed at this time, alongside a group of guest stars to be featured in the pilot episode. Filming sites for principal photography for season one, which had wrapped by July 2021, included Okmulgee, Tulsa, Sand Springs, Beggs, Inola, and Terlton, all in northeast Oklahoma. On September 2, 2021, FX renewed the series for a second season. Discussing their creative partnership and respective roles in the production, Waititi stressed, \"I really believe people need to tell their own stories and especially from whatever area they are from\", leading to Harjo, who is from Oklahoma, taking the lead on the project and Waititi taking a more supporting role. Additionally, many of the storylines in the show are inspired by events from Harjo's childhood. Part of the development process included casting unknown actors from Indigenous communities, and the young leads in particular forming a working rapport, often around their shared love of Indigenous comedy.",
"The Road (2015 film) The Road' (Al Tarik) is a 2015 film by Lebanese director Rana Salem. Member of the main competition of the Moscow International Film Festival and Montreal Film Festival. Young couple Rana and Guy live in Beirut. Rana decides to get away from work but now doesn't know what to do with her life. Her husband, a man of purpose, cultivates the land while simultaneously being an independent video artist who creates live performances. Cut off from reality and having lost all sense of time and space, Rana plunges into memories and dreams. Guy decides they need to travel to help ease her mind. After leaving the city, they find themselves among untouched nature and abandoned villages. The travels bring to mind pictures of the past and eventually leads them home in the mountains where Guy spent his childhood.",
"Thunder Road (2018 film) Thunder Road is a 2018 American comedy-drama film directed, written by, and starring Jim Cummings, based on his 2016 short film of the same name. Cummings also served as co-editor, composer and visual effects artist. It also stars Kendal Farr, Nican Robinson, Macon Blair, Jocelyn DeBoer, Chelsea Edmunson, Ammie Leonards, and Bill Wise. It won the Grand Jury Award at the 2018 SXSW Film Festival. The production began with a Kickstarter campaign. Unlike the short, the feature version is neither shot in nor edited to appear as a single long-take, but it does employ the use of the technique in select scenes. At his mother's funeral, police officer Jim Arnaud gives an awkward speech about her, and how she would sing the Bruce Springsteen song \"Thunder Road\" to him. Jim attempts to dance to the song, but his CD player malfunctions and he stumbles away in tears. Aside from his mother's death, Jim is going through a rough divorce with his unfaithful wife Rosalind, as they are in a toxic custody battle for their young daughter Crystal, though Jim is willing to pursue joint custody. Jim ignores orders from his captain to take time off work and causes a public disturbance when he tackles a homeless man who assaulted him. The captain angrily sends him home where he spends his time off repairing a dance academy his mother used to run in an attempt to make money for him and his siblings and to preserve his mother's legacy. A few days later, Jim goes back to work, helping to catch a thief. One night, he drives a girl home after he finds her in a parking lot with two teenage boys. Jim attempts to bond with Crystal, redecorating her room and learning a game she learned at school after struggling with it and becoming frustrated. Jim takes Crystal to school, but becomes upset when he discovers makeup applied to her face, telling her she does not need it to be one of the \"pretty girls\". After dropping her off, Jim notices Crystal hold hands with a boy, and sees the girl he drove home. Jim receives divorce papers while at work, with Rosalind seeking full custody of Crystal and planning to move away so that Jim will not be able to see her. Jim's friend at work, Nate, refers him to his former divorce lawyer, Donna."
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[
"20 December 1952"
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Where did the director of film The Valley Of The Bees die?
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The Valley of the Bees The Valley of the Bees () is a 1968 Czechoslovak historical drama film directed by František Vláčil. The film follows a young man Ondřej who's sent to join Teutonic order by his father. When he flees the order and returns home, his friend Armin is determined to bring him back. The film is set in the 13th century. The lord of Vlkov marries much younger Lenora. His son Ondřej gives live bats to Lenora as a wedding gift, which enrages his father who almost kills him. He prays for the boy to survive. He promises to God that he will give Ondřej to the Teutonic Order if he survives. Ondřej is healed and sent to the Baltic Sea, where he joins the Teutonic Order. He befriends Armin who becomes his mentor and protector. Armin participated in the Crusades to the Holy Land and is a fanatic who is devoted to God. Knight Rotgier tries to leave the order and escapes. Ondřej, Armin and other members chase him. He is found by Ondřej and tries to convince Ondřej to leave the order. Ondřej hesitates to arrest him but declines. Rotgier injures him and steals his horse. Rotgier is eventually captured and executed for attacking Ondřej. Ondřej is punished by penitence for his weakness. Ondřej decides to run away. Armin decides to track him down. Armin travels to Bohemia where he hears about Ondřej from charcoal burners who wanted to steal his sword. Armin joins them and when they surprise Ondřej, he attacks the one who wanted to steal his sword which makes the other charcoal burners attack him. But Armin draws his sword and kills or scares them away saving Ondřej's life. Ondřej's sword has been broken in the fight and Armin forces him to go with him. Later, near a brook when Armin bends over to drink, Ondřej hits him with a stone which causes Armin to fall unconscious and Ondřej escapes. Ondřej returns home only to find out his father is dead. He takes care of his father's business, but feels remorse about what he did to Armin. Ondřej falls in love with Lenora and convinces a local priest to marry them. When they are getting married, Armin shows up. Ondřej invites him to the wedding but tension between them runs out.
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"Keeper of the Bees (1947 film) Keeper of the Bees is a 1947 American drama film directed by John Sturges. It was based on the novel by the same name, written by Gene Stratton Porter. The film was shot over three weeks. \"Keeper of the Bees\" (1947) is the third film adaption of the novel \"The Keeper of the Bees.\" There have been two previous film adaptations of the novel in 1925 and 1935. The novel was written by Gene Stratton Porter towards the end of her life, and the novel was published posthumously after a car accident. The film \"Keeper of the Bees\" was released in theaters on July 10, 1947, but the film seems to have been lost since then. The plot of the third film adaptation was changed greatly compared to the first two film adaptations. When the film was originally released by Columbia Pictures, audiences seemed to enjoy the film. An aging apiary owner (bee-keeper) Michael Worthington meets a young ex-painter, Jamie McFarlane, on the road one day and in the process of conversation, attempts to persuade him to end his nomadic lifestyle. Jamie listens, but considers the \"Bee Master's\" advice useless. But shortly after, when Michael has a near fatal heart attack; Jamie promises to look after the bees until his return. Shortly after, Worthington is surprised by a twelve-year-old girl who goes by the nick-name - 'Little Scout' who would visit the apiary nearly every day. He discovers that she is an orphan and likewise takes her into his care. In her child like way, she develops a crush on Jamie while he cares for the bees that have been left in his charge. When Jamie meets Alice, the daughter of the orphanage supervisor, Mrs Ferris, he falls in love. This unexpected encounter begins to loosen his hardened heart and he begins to paint again. Jamie eventually confides in Alice that he was once married, but that he had been divorced some time ago. In reality the divorce hasn't gone through yet. He sends his paintings to a gallery in New York, where he used to be a reputed artist. His soon to be ex-wife (Marcia) finds out about his recovered ability to paint and the success his paintings make, and wants to reconcile. Alice hears about Marcia contacting Jamie, calling herself Mrs. McFarlane and is very distressed.",
"The Valley of Ghosts (film) The Valley of Ghosts is a 1928 British silent mystery film directed by G. B. Samuelson and starring Miriam Seegar, Ian Hunter and Leo Sheffield. It was an adaptation of the 1922 novel \"The Valley of Ghosts\" by Edgar Wallace. It was made at Beaconsfield Studios. It is currently a lost film.",
"Wallace Fox Wallace Fox (March 9, 1895 – June 30, 1958) was an American film director. He directed more than 80 films between 1927 and 1953. He was born in Purcell, Oklahoma, and died in Hollywood, California.",
"Harry Neumann Harry C. Neumann (sometimes billed as Harry Neuman, Harry Newman, or Harry Newmann; February 11, 1891 – January 14, 1971) of Chicago, Illinois, was a Hollywood cinematographer whose career spanned over forty years, including work on some 350 productions in a wide variety of genres, with much of his work being in Westerns (including several John Wayne films), and gangster films. He began working as a cinematographer or director of photography in 1918, the Golden Age of the silent film era; his last film was the 1959 science fiction-horror film, \"The Wasp Woman\". Over the course of his career, he also worked on early attempts at a 3-D film, including William Cameron Menzies' last film, \"The Maze\". Neumann also did cinematography for episodes of TV series, including \"The Court of Last Resort\", \"The Adventures of Champion\", and \"Death Valley Days\". Neumann died on January 14, 1971, in Hollywood, California.",
"Michael McCarthy (film director) Michael McCarthy (27 February 1917 – 7 May 1959) was a British screenwriter and television and film director. He died aged 42, survived by a wife and three children. A \"Variety\" obituary said he was \"regarded as a director of considerable promise\".",
"Víctor Erice Víctor Erice Aras (; born 30 June 1940) is a Spanish film director. He is best known for his two feature fiction films, \"The Spirit of the Beehive\" (1973), which many regard as one of the greatest Spanish films ever made, and \"El Sur\" (1983). Erice was born in Karrantza, Biscay. He studied law, political science, and economics at the University of Madrid. He also attended the Escuela Oficial de Cinematografia in 1963 to study film direction. He wrote film criticism and reviews for the Spanish film journal \"Nuestro Cine\", and made a series of short films before making his first feature film, \"The Spirit of the Beehive\" (1973), a critical portrait of 1940s rural Spain. Erice was among other filmmakers, such as Luis Buñuel, who lived in “such restricted societies as Franco’s Spain,” to take aim at the authoritarian rule in power. At the time his first film was released in 1973, Francisco Franco was still in power. One of the things \"The Spirit of the Beehive\" is known for is its use of symbolism to portray what life was like in Spain under Franco’s rule. Setting the movie in 1940, at the start of Franco’s rule, was a risk for Erice, given that the film “wasn’t a propagandist effort in which stalwart Francoists won victories against evil, priest-massacring Republicans.” Ten years later, Erice wrote and directed \"El Sur\" (1983), based on a story from Adelaida García Morales, another highly regarded film, although the producer Elías Querejeta only allowed him to film the first two-thirds of the story. His third movie, \"The Quince Tree Sun\" (1992) is a documentary about painter Antonio López García. The film won the Jury Prize and the FIPRESCI Prize at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival. He was a member of the jury at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival in May. At the 2014 Locarno Film Festival, Erice was awarded with a Golden Leopard award for lifetime achievement. Geoff Andrew, in the \"Time Out Film Guide\", praises Erice's contribution to \"\" (\"Lifeline\") as \"quite masterly\", adding \"it only makes you wish he worked more frequently\".",
"Antonio Román Antonio Román (9 November 1911 – 16 June 1989) was a prolific Spanish film director, screenwriter, film producer. Antonio Román was born Ourense, Spain on November 9, 1911. Román began directing films in the later 1930s starting with documentaries. His first dramatic feature film was \"Esquadrilla\". His other work include an adaptation of \"Lola Montes\" and \"La Fierecilla domada\", a retelling of \"The Taming of the Shrew\". Many of this films star his wife, actress Yvonne Bastien. Román has won several international awards such as Golden Olive Tree from the Cine de Humor de Bordighera in Italy for \"Bombas para la paz\" and an award for \"Pacto de silencio\" from the Cork Festival in Ireland. Román died on June 16, 1989. Prior to his death, he worked with Radio Exterior. The Spanish newspaper \"El País\" stated on his death that Román was one of the most \"prominent names in post-war Spanish cinema\" directing over 30 films.",
"Joseph Franz (director) Joseph J. Franz (October 12, 1883 – September 9, 1970) was an actor and film director during the silent film era in the United States. Franz was born in Utica, New York. He died in Los Angeles in 1970. He was sometimes credited as Joseph J. Franz. He features in a Frontier advertisement with two of the studio's other stars. Franz acted on stage in stock theater for three years before he began acting in films.",
"Everett Freeman Everett Freeman (February 2, 1911 – January 24, 1991) was an American screenwriter and producer. He died of kidney failure on January 24, 1991, in Westwood, Los Angeles, California at age 79. From 1935 to 1970, Freeman's screenplay credits are:",
"Robert Vas Robert Vas (\"Vas Róbert\", 3 March 1931 in Budapest – 10 April 1978) was a Hungarian film director who settled in England. He came to England after the Hungarian uprising in 1956. He was committed to documentary, like \"Refuge England\" (1959) and, after a short period working for the National Coal Board, he went on to make a seminal series of films for the BBC. These include \"The Golden Years of Alexander Korda\" (1968) and \"Heart of Britain\" (1970), \"The Issue Should be Avoided\" (1971), \"My Homeland\" (1976), a three-hour examination of the life of Joseph Stalin (1973), and \"Nine Days in '26\" (1974). He had planned to make films about the \"Gulag Archipelago\" and the wartime bombing of Dresden before his untimely death on 10 April 1978. In the BBC documentary tribute to Vas directed by Barrie Gavin, Karel Reisz said of him that his aim was to \"inspire thought, to remind and warn\"."
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[
"Prague"
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Who is the child of the director of film Shubha Kamana?
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Shubha Kamana Shubha Kamana is a 1991 Bengali film directed by Anup Sengupta. This film produced by Rajib Das and Saibal Mitra. This film has been music composed by Ajoy Das.
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[
"Sunil Sikand Sunil Sikand is an Indian film Director and son of veteran actor Pran. He directed his first film in 1984 called \"Farishta\" and second film in 1991 called \"Lakshmanrekha\" starring Jackie Shroff, Naseeruddin Shah, Shammi Kapoor, Danny Denzongpa and his father Pran. Sunil Sikand was married to Jyoti Sikand and they have one son Siddharth Sikand. The couple separated in 1982.",
"Antara Kak Antara Kak is an Indian film director and producer, predominantly based in India. She is daughter of Siddharth Kak (of Surabhi fame) and his wife, Gita Siddharth. Antara won acclaim and an award for her debut venture: \"A Life in Dance - Daksha Sheth\". Antara studied English literature at Mithibai College. Antara started off as an assistant to her father.",
"Shubha Milana Shubha Milana (Kannada: ಶುಭಮಿಲನ) is a 1987 Indian Kannada film, directed by H. R. Bhargava and produced by N. Mamatha and N. Indukala. The film stars Vishnuvardhan, Ambika, Uday and Nagesh Yadav in the lead roles. This movie ran for more than 100 days and became a hit at the boxoffice. The film has musical score by M. Ranga Rao. The film is a remake of the Telugu movie \"Aalu Magalu\" (1977).",
"Shobha Kapoor Shobha Kapoor (born 1 February 1946) is an Indian television, film and web series producer. She is the managing director of Balaji Telefilms Limited, a film, TV and web series production house in Mumbai, India, run by her and her daughter Ekta Kapoor. Kapoor takes care of the overall administrative and production activities of Balaji Telefilms. Before marriage she was an airhostess. Kapoor is married to actor Jeetendra. The couple has two children, Ekta Kapoor (b. 1975), who is a producer, and Tusshar Kapoor (b. 1976), who is an actor. The following is the long list of motion pictures produced by Kapoor under her banner Balaji Motion Pictures.",
"Ushmey Chakraborty Ushmey Chakraborty is an Indian filmmaker, actor, and screenwriter. He is the son of actors Mithun Chakraborty and Yogeeta Bali. Ushmey was born to Mithun Chakraborty and Yogeeta Bali in Mumbai. He is the second son of Mithun. He has two brothers, Mimoh and Namashi and a sister Dishani. He also attended the New York Film Academy.",
"Kamna Jethmalani Kamna Jethmalani (born 11 December 1985) is an Indian actress. She debuted in 2005 with the Telugu film \"Premikulu\" and had her first commercial success with her third feature film \"Ranam\". Subsequently, she played the lead role in a number of Telugu-language films, while also debuting and appearing in Tamil, Malayalam and Kannada films. Born into a Sindhi Hindu family in Mumbai. Jethmalani is a granddaughter of businessman Shyam Jethmalani. Her pet name is \"Dinky\". Her mother Divya is a housewife and her father Nimesh Jethmalani is a businessman. She has two siblings - brother Kapil and sister Karishma. Ram Jethmalani is her great-uncle. She was the runner-up at the Miss Mumbai contest in 2004 and also appeared in the music video of the pop song 'Chhod do Aanchal Zamaana Kya Kahega' by Bombay Vikings. On 11 August 2014, Kamna married Suraj Nagpal, a Bangalore-based businessman. She appeared in the video of \"Chhod Do Aanchal Zamaana Kya Kahega\" by Neeraj Shridhar – Bombay Vikings in 2004. The following year, she made her movie debut with the Telugu film \"Premikulu\". Though that film flopped, her subsequent film \"Ranam\" was a big hit. Her first Tamil film was Idhaya Thirudan with Jayam Ravi. She did an item number in the film \"Sainikudu\". She has acted in \"Machakaaran\" opposite Jeevan. Since then, she has done several south Indian films, in which she performed the lead role.",
"Kishore Sarja Kishore Sarja (died 27 June 2009) was an Indian film director who works in Kannada-language films. Kishore Sarja started his career as an assistant director before making his directorial debut with \"Alimayya\" (1993) starring his brother Arjun Sarja, which was a remake of the 1987 Tamil film \"Kalyana Kacheri\" starring Arjun. He is known for directing the film \"Thutta Mutta\" (1998) starring Ramesh Aravind, which was commercially successful and his only film that was not a remake. He also directed other films including \"Jodi\" (2001) and \"Baava Baamaida\" (2001), both starring Shiva Rajkumar. He introduced his nephew, Chiranjeevi Sarja with the film \"Vayuputra\" (2009), which was produced by Arjun Sarja. Sarja's father, Shakti Prasad, was an actor in Kannada cinema while his brother Arjun Sarja is a filmmaker and actor. Kishore died on 26 June 2009.",
"Anand Shankar Anand Shankar is an Indian film director and screenwriter, primarily working in Tamil cinema. Shankar started his career as an assistant director to Siddharth Anand in \"Anjaana Anjaani\" (2010). He also assisted producer-director AR Murugadoss in movies such as \"Thuppakki\" and \"7aum Arivu\". He successfully finished his work as debut director on \"Arima Nambi\" starring Vikram Prabhu and Priya Anand, a Tamil thriller film. He directed \"Iru Mugan\" and Arima Nambi, both of them became blockbusters at the box-office. In 2018, he directed \"NOTA\", starring Vijay Devarkonda in his Tamil debut. The film was released on October 5, 2018. Anand Shankar is the grandson of National Award Winning playwright Komal Swaminathan. Anand Shankar got a mechanical engineering degree in Chennai from Sri Venkateswara College of Engineering (SVCE), after which he studied Film Making at the New York Film Academy. He is married to Divyanka Jeevanantham.",
"Shahana Goswami Shahana Goswami (born 6 May 1986) is an Indian actress. She is the daughter of Indian economist and writer Omkar Goswami. Through her theater circle Goswami met talent consultant Shaanu Sharma who asked her to audition for a role in Naseeruddin Shah's directorial debut \"Yun Hota Toh Kya Hota\". Subsequently, she stumbled upon the small role of Boman Irani's daughter in Reema Kagti's \"Honeymoon Travels Pvt. Ltd.\", when she visited the production house for some other work. Meanwhile, a cinematographer who noticed her work in \"Yun Hota Toh Kya Hota\" recommended her and she auditioned for the lead role in Percept Picture Company's \"Ru Ba Ru\", directed by Arjun Bali, with Randeep Hooda as her co-star. For Goswami, \"Ru Ba Ru\" happened while she was still in college completing her graduation. She gave her first shot for the film in Bangkok, much before she was signed on for \"Rock On!!\". Her friends Shaanu Sharma and Simran, who were in the middle of casting for \"Rock On!!\", at that time suggested her name to the film's director, Abhishek Kapoor. Later, she auditioned for the film and got her big break in the role of Debbie. Her performance earned her the Filmfare Best Actress (Critics) award. She then appeared in the music video for Dido's \"Let's Do the Things We Normally Do\" as a taxi driver in Mumbai. The video was shot by Siddharth Sikand. In between, she also featured in a Fevicol commercial set in a village in Rajasthan. Goswami's first international project was Deepa Mehta's \"Midnight's Children\" (2013), an adaptation of Salman Rushdie's Booker Prize winning novel. Goswami played the female lead in \"\" directed by Khyentse Norbu (director of \"The Cup\" and \"Travellers & Magicians\", which was shot in Sri Lanka. She received the Asian Award for best actress for her performance in the film. Goswami will be next seen in the upcoming web series 'Bombay Begums', directed by Alankrita Shrivastava. Starring Pooja Bhatt, Amruta Subhash, Plabita Borthakur and Aadhya Anand.",
"Shuvoda Shuvoda () is a 1986 Bangladeshi Bengali language film directed by Chashi Nazrul Islam from Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay's novel of the same name. Haran (Golam Mustafa) family consists of his wife Shuvoda (Anwara), two daughters - Lolona and Chholona, one son Madhab, and a widowed sister. Lolona becomes widowed after one month of marriage and is sent back to her father's home. Haran is addicted to gambling and lives from hand to mouth. The music of this film was directed by Khondokar Nurul Alam and the lyrics were penned by Mohammad Rafiquzzaman and Nazrul Islam Babu. Nilufar Yasmin, Sabina Yasmin, Subir Nandi and Nazmul Huda sang in this film."
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[
"Bonny Sengupta"
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Where was the place of burial of the performer of song I'M Sorry For You, My Friend?
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I'm Sorry for You My Friend I'm Sorry for You My Friend is the sixth album by country singer Moe Bandy, released in 1977 on the Columbia label recorded at Columbia Recording Studio "B". The track "Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind" would later become a No. 1 hit for George Strait in 1984 for his album of the same name.
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"Viktor Reznikov Viktor Mikhailovich Reznikov (; 9 May 1952 in Leningrad – 25 February 1992 in Saint Petersburg) was a Russian Soviet composer, lyricist and singer. He was mostly known for his songs written for Soviet artists such as Alla Pugacheva, Mikhail Boyarsky, Larisa Dolina, Anne Veski, Valery Leontiev, Sofia Rotaru, ensemble Pesniary, Irina Ponarovskaya, Dmitry Malikov, Roza Rymbayeva, Jaak Joala, Irina Otieva, American group The Cover Girls and the Soviet-American group \"SUS\". On 22 February 1992 Reznikov crashed his car while driving his VAZ-2106 to take daughter Anna to his mother. The daughter was not injured. The accident occurred in front of the composer's mother, who stood on the other side of the street. Reznikov spent two days at the Military Medical Academy in St. Petersburg, but he died on 25 February. He was buried at a Komarovskoye cemetery in the suburbs of St. Petersburg.",
"Majid Al-Majid Majid Al-Majid (1966 – 5 August 2018) was a Saudi folk singer who started his career in the mid-1980s, and produced 14 albums, including \"Stronger Hajar\", \"Remember Me\" and \"Ya Hajri\". Al-Majid collaborated with many poets and composers, like Khalid Abdul Rahman in the song \"Ra'ash Alby Sahar Einak\" and \"From the torment of dimension\". He also collaborated with Khalid Al-Olayan, Mubarak Al Mansour, Salah Mohammed, Ahmed Al-Jufi, Fahad Al-Madi and Khalid Al Majed. Majed al-Majid was shot in the head by mistake and was transferred to intensive care after the incident. He died on Sunday evening 5 August 2018. His funeral was held at Al-Bawardi Mosque in Al-Azizia district in Riyadh and he was buried in the Mansurian cemeteries.",
"Sorry (band) Sorry (previously named Fish) is an English indie rock band from North London. The band consists of the members Asha Lorenz, Louis O'Bryen, Lincoln Barrett, Campbell Baum and Marco Pini. The band's debut studio album, \"925\" (2020), was released following the release of several mixtapes and singles. Sorry is signed to London-based record label Domino. Before embarking as a group of five members, the band consisted of only Lorenz and O'Bryen. They had known each other since an early age and during their GCSE years, they started releasing solo music projects on SoundCloud, competing with each other regarding who of the two that could make the best songs. Later on, they realized they worked better together and therefore started to create music as a pair, mostly Jimi Hendrix covers at the time. Even though the band now consist of more members than just Lorenz and O'Bryen, they have stated that the other members are mostly present when they are doing live performances. O'Bryen has said that \"Well, we're [Sorry's] kind of a duo in the way we write songs, but the live thing is more a band.\" Sorry released a handful of singles and mixtapes during the years 2017–2020, containing many of the songs that later would appear on its debut studio album. On 27 March 2020, Sorry released its debut studio album, \"925\". It contains the previously released singles \"More\", \"Right Round the Clock\", \"Snakes\" and \"Starstruck\". Reportedly, it took four years to record and it received positive reviews from music critics at its release, many of whom particularly praised the album's cohesiveness and its innovating sound. Stereogum also called \"925\" album of the week on 24 March 2020. However, Kitty Empire of \"The Guardian\" gave the album a mixed review, stating that \"\"925\" packs in more than a few disruptive ideas. But Sorry haven't yet acquired the musical vocabulary to pull them off.\" Moreover, the album charted on the UK Independent Albums Chart and peaked at number 13. It also charted on the Scottish Albums Chart, peaking at number 49. The band planned to embark on a UK headline tour to promote the album's release, but have had to postpone the tour dates due to the COVID-19 pandemic.",
"Al Goodhart Al Goodhart (January 26, 1905 – November 30, 1955) a member of ASCAP, was born in New York City and attended DeWitt Clinton High School. During his lifetime he was a radio announcer, vaudeville pianist and special materials writer. He also owned a theatrical agency. Following his 1931 hit \"I Apologize\", he concentrated on composing music, being most prolific during the 1930s. He traveled to England and wrote music there from 1934 to 1937. With collaborators Al Hoffman and Maurice Sigler, Goodhart scored music for the stage and screen, particularly musical films starring Jessie Matthews. During WWII, Goodhart travelled with the USO, entertaining troops in the United States and abroad. His other chief collaborators included Mann Curtis, Sammy Lerner, Ed Nelson, Kay Twomey and Allan Roberts. He died in 1955, aged 50. 1930: 1931: 1932: 1933: 1934: 1935: 1936: 1937: 1939: 1942: 1947: 1948: 1949: 1950:",
"Sorry (Grace Jones song) \"Sorry\" is a single by Jamaican singer and actress Grace Jones, released in 1976. \"Sorry\" was Jones' second single, released before her international breakthrough, on the Orfeus label in France and Beam Junction in the US. The single B-side was \"That's the Trouble\", which was later released as an A-side track. In certain territories the single was released as a double A-side single. Both songs later appeared on Jones' debut album \"Portfolio\"; 7\" version of \"Sorry\" and an alternate mix of \"That's the Trouble\" were placed there. Both the original single version and the instrumental of \"That's the Trouble\" remain unreleased on CD. The extended 12\" mixes of both tracks were released on Grace's box set \"Disco\".",
"Alexey Pokrovsky Alexey Nikolayevich Pokrovsky (; March 1, 1924 – August 30, 2009) was an actor and singer, People's Artist of the RSFSR (1981). In 1945 he was accepted into the troupe of the Moscow Art Theater. In 1977 he left the theatre because of divergences in his views with Oleg Yefremov. From the end of the 1940s he appeared in films, including in the films \"The Star\" (1953) and \"True Friends\" (1954). He became well known as a performer of songs and romances. In the 1960s and 1980s, he sang 12 musical and poetic compositions on television, in which the best poems and songs of the era were presented in the interpretation of the artist, who accompanied himself on a small Viennese seven-string Russian guitar. Laureate of the festivals Pesnya goda 1974 and 1975. He died on August 30, 2009. He was buried in Moscow at the Vagankovskoye Cemetery (plot 26).",
"I'm Sorry (Delfonics song) \"I'm Sorry\" is a R&B/Soul song by the American vocal group The Delfonics, released in April 1968. The song was the Delfonics' second chart single and the follow up to their smash hit La-La (Means I Love You), which went to #4 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100; indeed, \"I'm Sorry\" was quite reminiscent of their earlier hit, complete with similar-sounding \"la la las\". \"I'm Sorry\" just missed the pop Top 40 (peaking at #42), but was a solid performer on the soul charts, hitting #15. \"I'm Sorry\", and several other soul tunes, were unintentionally included in the background of Jim Jones' infamous Death tape, an audio recording made during the Jonestown Massacre of November 18, 1978. The music (which sounds muffled and played at off-speed, resembling a church organ in spots) was originally recorded onto the source tape, then recorded over by Jones, resulting in a \"ghost recording\". \"I'm Sorry\" can be heard at the very end of the tape after Jones stops talking, played at half-speed.",
"Willie Robinson William Lorenzo Robinson (July 6, 1926 – December 30, 2007), known as \"Weepin'\" Willie Robinson or \"Weep\" Robinson, was an American blues singer who began his career in the 1950s, and performed with, among others, Susan Tedeschi, Steven Tyler and Bonnie Raitt. Robinson was born in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Robinson had been a sharecropper, a soldier and a boxer. A steady position as an emcee/comedian at a Trenton, New Jersey nightclub led to his singing career. He eventually sang with B.B. King's 21-piece orchestra. He and King became friends. Robinson settled in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1959 and played in clubs, but by 2004 he was homeless. Musicians and other concerned individuals, when they learned of Robinson's situation, held a benefit concert on his behalf, making sure he was fed and clothed. He died, aged 81, from a fire accidentally started by a cigarette he had been smoking in bed at his home in Jamaica Plain, Boston. His wife, Alice, long predeceased him. He was survived by a daughter.",
"I've Suffered for My Art...Now It's Your Turn I've Suffered For My Art…Now It's Your Turn is a live album by singer/songwriter Marshall Crenshaw. It was recorded at the fabled venue The Stone Pony in Asbury Park, N.J. on February 16, 2001. It includes many of Crenshaw's best known songs, four tunes from his most recent studio album, \"#447\", and a pair of vintage covers; Jody Reynolds' \"Endless Sleep\" and The Left Banke's \"Walk Away Renée\". The acoustic show was performed by Crenshaw solo but for a few songs accompanied by bass and accordion. In 2002, BMG Special Products released the album \"Marshall Crenshaw: Greatest Hits Acoustic\". It was made up of ten tracks from the \"I've Suffered For My Art…Now It's Your Turn\" performance in a different order. All songs written by Marshall Crenshaw, except where noted.",
"Greenwood Memorial Park (Renton, Washington) Greenwood Memorial Park is a cemetery in the northwest United States, located in Renton, Washington, a suburb southeast of Seattle. It is notable as the resting place of rock guitarist Jimi Hendrix (1942–1970), a Seattle native; over 14,000 fans visit his memorial annually. Also interred at Greenwood are professional football players Clancy Williams (1942–1986) and Nesby Glasgow (1957–2020)."
] |
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[
"Alabama"
] |
When is the director of film Non-Stop New York 's birthday?
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Non-Stop New York Non-Stop New York (also known as Lisbon Clipper Mystery) is a 1937 British science fiction crime film directed by Robert Stevenson and starring John Loder, Anna Lee and Francis L. Sullivan. It is based on the 1936 novel "Sky Steward" by Ken Attiwill. A woman who can clear an innocent man of the charge of murder is pursued by gangsters onto a luxurious transatlantic flying boat. On New Year's Eve 1938 in New York, lawyer Billy Cooper notices stranded English showgirl Jennie Carr (Anna Lee) gazing hungrily at other diners' plates in a restaurant and offers to buy her a meal. However, the restaurant has run out, so he invites her to his apartment. Before they arrive, Abel, another hungry, unemployed person, sneaks in for a chicken leg. Hearing them coming, he hides in a bedroom. When Jennie enters to remove her coat, he begs her not to cause trouble. She sympathizes with his plight and says nothing to Cooper. Just then, Hugo Brant (Francis L. Sullivan), Cooper’s gangster employer, and his men barge in. They make Jennie leave. When Cooper admits that he is quitting, Brant shoots him dead. To get rid of loose ends, Brant sends Jennie aboard the ocean liner for Southampton, escorted by his sidekick Harrigan. He frames Jennie for robbery. Meanwhile, Abel, who was caught by the building watchman as he tried to leave, is tried and sentenced to death for Cooper's murder. The woman he insists can exonerate him is in prison, unaware of his plight. Brant and gang member Mortimer travel to England to deal with Jennie. When Jennie is released from her prison sentence for robbery, her mother introduces her to her new tenant, a priest named Mr. Mortimer. After reading in the newspaper about Abel's impending execution, she goes to Scotland Yard, despite Mortimer's warning that she might become a suspect. She finds that other women have turned up, all claiming to be the missing witness. Inspector Jim Grant is skeptical, and that turns into certainty when Mortimer shows up and discredits her. Meanwhile, Brant, under the alias of would-be Paraguayan dictator "General Costello", receives a message informing him of developments.
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[
"Non-Stop Production Non-Stop Production is a major Russian motion pictures studio founded in 2005 by Sergey Melkumov, a Russian film producer. The company produces movies and TV-series.",
"James Goldstone James Goldstone (June 8, 1931 – November 5, 1999) was an American film and television director whose career spanned over thirty years. Goldstone was noted for the momentum and \"fifteen-minute cliffhangers\" that he brought to TV pilots such as \"\" (\"Where No Man Has Gone Before\", 1966), \"Ironside\", and \"\". His later career helped pioneer the concept of \"thirty-second attention span\" pacing over detailed content in his dramatizations of Rita Hayworth, Calamity Jane, and the Kent State shootings for which he won the Emmy. He directed several feature films, including the large-scale suspense \"Rollercoaster\" (1977). During his Hollywood career, he directed Paul Newman, Robert De Niro, George Segal, Robert Shaw, James Garner, Richard Dreyfuss and Sidney Poitier and collaborated with composer and musician, Lalo Schifrin. He \"discovered\" Tiny Tim. In addition to his work in film and television, Goldstone was a longtime leader in the Director's and Writers Guilds. In his later life, he taught both at Bennington College and in the masters program at Columbia University. During the 1990s he directed a number of theatrical productions in New England. He was also central in the establishment of National Public Radio presence in Vermont and was the moving force behind the creation of the Vermont Arts Council which named its award for new talent the James Goldstone Award. Goldstone was the son of Hollywood agent and early television producer, Jules Goldstone.",
"Paolo Genovese Paolo Genovese (born 20 August 1966) is an Italian director and screenwriter. Born in Rome, after graduating in Economics and Business Genovese started his career at McCann Erickson, directing over one hundred commercials and winning several awards. In 1998 he started collaborating with Luca Miniero co-writing and co-directing the short film \"La scoperta di Walter\"; the duo made their feature film debut in 2002, with the critically acclaimed comedy film \"A Neapolitan Spell\". Genovese made his solo-directing debut in 2010, directing \"The Santa Claus Gang\". In 2016, his film \"Perfect Strangers\" won the Award for Best Screenplay in an International Narrative Feature Film at the Tribeca Film Festival and was awarded best film at the David di Donatello Awards. On November 9, 2019, it was announced that Hollywood Gang, Leone Film Group and Lotus Productions will co-produce the Genovese's \"The First Day Of My Life\" from a screenplay by Kirk Jones, Marco Belardi, Andrea Leone and Raffaella Leone. Principal photography began on January 18, 2021 and was scheduled to conclude on March 19, 2021 in Rome, Italy.",
"Steven A. Adelson Steven A. Adelson is an American film director and television director. Besides directing, Adelson worked as a camera operator on the films \"Jingle All the Way\", \"The Players Club\", the Christopher Nolan films \"Insomnia\", \"Batman Begins\" and among others. He is alumnus of Syracuse University.",
"Martin Scorsese filmography Martin Scorsese (born 1942) is an American film director, producer, screenwriter, actor, and film historian whose career spans more than fifty years. Scorsese has directed twenty-five feature length narrative films and sixteen feature-length documentary films to date. His films \" Mean Streets\", \"Taxi Driver\", \"Raging Bull\", \"\", and \"Goodfellas\" are often cited among the greatest films ever made.",
"Francis Thompson (film director) E. Francis Thompson (January 3, 1908 – December 26, 2003) was an influential American film director, producer, and writer. Thompson was born Ebenezer Francis Thompson on January 3, 1908, in Titusville, Pennsylvania, and commenced his career as a painter and art teacher before he directed his first film \"Evolution of a Skyscraper\". He is best known for the films, \"N.Y., N.Y.\" (1957) and \"To Be Alive!\" (1964), and is credited with making the first IMAX film, \"To Fly\" (1976). Thompson's style can most accurately be described as ciné-poème. In many of his films, Thompson employs a variety of kaleidoscopic lenses, distorting devices, and secretive techniques, turning his work into more of an abstract art installation than feature film. He won the 1965 Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject) for \"To Be Alive!\" (1964), which he co-directed with Alexander Hammid. He was a member of the Directors Guild of America and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, with a 50-year career in filmmaking, retiring in 1987. Thompson died on December 26, 2003 in New York at the age of 95.",
" New York has undergone a renaissance in film-making with 276 independent and studio films in production in the city in 2006, an increase from 202 in 2004 and 180 in 2003. More than a third of professional actors in the United States are based in New York. One of the filmmakers most associated with New York is Woody Allen, whose films include \"Annie Hall\" and \"Manhattan\". Other New Yorkers in film include the actor Robert De Niro, who started the Tribeca Film Festival after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, and the directors Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola, Spike Lee, Jim Jarmusch, Joel and Ethan Coen, and many others. While major studio productions are based in Hollywood, New York has become a capital of independent film. The city is home to a number of important film festivals, including the Tribeca Film Festival, the New York Film Festival and the Human Rights Watch Film Festival, as well as major independent film companies like Miramax Films. New York is also home to the Anthology Film Archives, which preserves and exhibits hundreds of avant-garde works from the entire span of film history. The oldest public-access television in the United States is the Manhattan Neighborhood Network, well known for its eclectic local programming that ranges from a jazz hour to discussion of labor issues to foreign language and religious programming. There are eight other Public, educational, and government access (PEG) cable TV channels in New York, including Brooklyn Cable Access Television. New York's municipally owned broadcast television service, NYC Media, creates original programming that includes Emmy Award-winning shows like \"Blue Print New York\" and \"Cool in Your Code\", as well as coverage of New York City government. Other popular programs on NYC TV include music shows; \"New York Noise\" showcases music videos of local, underground, and indie rock musicians as well as coverage of major music-related events in the city like the WFMU Record Fair, interviews of New York icons (like The Ramones and Klaus Nomi), and comedian hosts (like Eugene Mirman, Rob Huebel, and Aziz Ansari). \"The Bridge\", similarly, chronicles old school hip hop. The channel has won 14 New York Emmys and 14 National Telly awards. The early 20th century saw the emergence of modern dance in New York, a new, distinctively American art form.",
"Bruce Goldstein Bruce Goldstein (born July 5, 1952) is a New York City based film programmer, distributor, documentarian, writer, producer, and publicist. He is best known for his work as the repertory programmer for Film Forum in New York. The magazine \"Time Out New York\" named him “one of the 101 essential people or places of New York,” citing him “for keeping showmanship alive.” Bruce Goldstein, the son of Murray and Betty (Horowitz) Goldstein, was born in Amityville, New York, on Long Island and raised in nearby Hicksville. He attended Hicksville High School and went on to Boston University, dropping out to run a movie theater in Provincetown, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod, where he created his first repertory film calendars. In the mid-1970s, he moved to Greenwich Village in New York City to work at the revival houses Bleecker Street Cinema and Carnegie Hall Cinema, where he supervised the production of the monthly film calendars and contributed to the programming. The first films he booked were two films by John Waters (who he'd known in Provincetown): Multiple Maniacs and Mondo Trasho, which had their New York premieres at the Bleecker. After a two-year stint in London, working as production manager for a fashion forecasting company in Chelsea, Goldstein returned to New York to work as programmer, publicist, and co-director of the Thalia Theater, a revival house on the Upper West Side. While at the theater, he and Thalia owner Richard Schwarz produced a compilation film called \"Hollywood Out-takes and Rare Footage\", which had national distribution through their own company, Manhattan Movietime. Both Hugh Hefner and then-First Lady Nancy Reagan requested prints for their own private screenings. While at the Thalia, Goldstein developed his flair for ballyhoo, putting on well-publicized events like a “Fay Way Scream-Alike” contest on the 50th anniversary of the premiere of \"King Kong\" at Radio City Music Hall. He'd later create similar events for Film Forum, including a Betty Boop Look-A-like Contest, and recreations of William Castle gimmicks \"Percept-o\" and \"Emerge-O\" for \"The Tingler\" and \"House on Haunted Hill\", respectively. After leaving the Thalia in 1984, Goldstein began the p.r.",
"Nick Gomez Nick Gomez (born April 13, 1963) is an American film director and writer. He has directed for a number of television and film. His first feature-length film was the 1992 movie \"Laws of Gravity\", which won awards at both the Berlin International Film Festival and the Valencia International Film Festival. Gomez's next film was the 1995 crime drama \"New Jersey Drive\", which was screened and competed for a Grand Jury Prize during that year's Sundance Film Festival. Gomez was born to an American advertising copywriter mother, Adeline, and Chilean artist, Andres Monreal, in Providence, Rhode Island. Realizing he was not going anywhere fast with his life, he obtained his GED, moved to New York and attended State University of New York at Purchase with an interest in sound design, music, and movies. It was there he met a group of filmmakers, producers, and actors that he would work with for the next decade; producer Bob Gosse, director Hal Hartley, actors Edie Falco, Paul Schulze, Saul Stein, Adam Trese, all of whom Gomez would use in his films. After SUNY, Gomez worked on commercials and features in NYC and wrote a few scripts that caught some attention around NYC. In the early 1990s Gomez's SUNY friend, Bob Gosse and Larry Meistrich started TSG Pictures in downtown New York to be a home for independent filmmakers. With them, Gomez would make \"Laws Of Gravity\" (1992) starring Edie Falco, Adam Trese, and Paul Schulze – heralding a return of American (specifically, New York City, and Brooklyn) \"cinema verité\", for the first time since Sidney Lumet and Martin Scorsese in 1970s. A reviewer for \"The Washington Post\", De Segonzac, said \"Laws of Gravity\" \"fills the screen with beautifully framed scenes that need little verbal underpinning.\" From there, Gomez made \"New Jersey Drive\" (1995) starring Shar-Ron Corley, Gabriel Cassius, Saul Stein, and Donald Faison. Spike Lee, and his company; 40 Acres and A Mule, produced. Gomez received Independent Spirit Award nominations for best director on both the critically acclaimed, \"Laws of Gravity\" and \"New Jersey Drive\". \"New Jersey Drive\" would also receive the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance in 1995 along with a nomination and win at the Torino and Berlin festivals.",
"Ric Menello Richard \"Ric\" Menello (August 20, 1952March 1, 2013) was an American filmmaker and screenwriter. Menello co-directed the landmark music video for the Beastie Boys' 1987 single, \"\"(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party!)\"\". His contributions to music during the era led MTV to call him, \"one of the most influential visionaries behind the emergence of commercial hip-hop in the 1980s.\" Menello's screenwriting credits included the 1988 Run–D.M.C. film, \"Tougher Than Leather\", directed by Rick Rubin; the 2008 film, \"Two Lovers\", starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Joaquin Phoenix; and the 2013 film, \"The Immigrant\", which stars Joaquin Phoenix. Menello was raised in Brooklyn, New York. He earned a bachelor's degree in dramatic literature and cinema from New York University. He continued to take graduate courses in cinema studies at NYU after completing his bachelor's. Menello started writing film criticism in college for the NYU Journal and the Arts and Humor magazine \"Cold Duck\", and his articles appeared in \"Film Comment\", \"Photon\" and \"Blood Times\". He later became a regular contributor to \"European Trash Cinema\", where he critiqued Italian and French genre films. One of those early articles, \"Dark Universe: The World of Dario Argento\" (Photon July 1975) is cited in Maitland McDonagh's book \"Broken Mirrors, Broken Minds: The Dark Dreams of Dario Argento\". Wishing to broaden his experiences in the Arts, Menello acted onstage in such Off and Off-Off Broadway groups as Theater At Riverside Church, Program in Educational Theater and Sammarkind Players. He appeared in productions of \"Romeo And Juliet\", \"She Stoops to Conquer\", \"Guys And Dolls\", \"The Miracle Worker\", \"Wind In The Willows\" and \"Bell, Book & Candle\". At NYU, he studied acting with and assisted the legendary filmmaker Nicholas Ray, director of \"Rebel Without a Cause\". He continued to act in many of his music videos and in the feature films \"Tougher Than Leather\" and \"Drop Dead Rock\" (both of which he co-wrote)."
] |
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[
"31 March 1905"
] |
Are the movies The Rebel Rousers and Romero (Film), from the same country?
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The Rebel Rousers The Rebel Rousers is a 1970 American independent outlaw biker film starring Cameron Mitchell, Jack Nicholson, Diane Ladd, Bruce Dern, and Harry Dean Stanton. Filmed in 1967, it did not receive a release until 1970 following the success of "Easy Rider" . It is one of several motorcycle gang films of the period to feature Nicholson, Dern and Stanton. The film was co-written, produced and directed by Martin B. Cohen in his only directorial effort. Paul Collier searches for Karen, his girl friend who is going to have his child but ran away from him instead of marrying him. As the two attempt to reconcile a small motorcycle gang called the Rebel Rousers comes into the town. Their leader, J.J. Weston went to school and played football with Paul, but rather than catch up with each other, Paul goes to search for Karen and J.J. goes with his gang. The gang's exuberant behaviour in a local diner causes the sheriff to run them out of town. Outside of the town, Paul and Karen are captured by the gang with Paul beaten up and the gang vying for who will be the first to have their way with Karen. Though J.J. tries to help the couple the gang pull a pistol on him. J.J. seeks to delay Karen's fate by holding a motorcycle drag race to determine who will "win" Paul's pregnant girlfriend. Paul makes his way to the town where the sheriff is away taking a prisoner to another town to serve his sentence. No one in town will help Paul free his girlfriend until he comes across a group of Mexicans who confront the Rebel Rousers. Martin B. Cohen was the manager of Bruce Dern and his then wife Diane Ladd, formed his own film company Paragon International Pictures. Following the success of "The Wild Angels", Cohen cast Dern and Ladd who was pregnant with Laura Dern in the motorcycle gang film. Bruce Dern brought his friend Jack Nicholson in the film along with Nicholson's former roommate Harry Dean Stanton and their friend Neil Nephew. John 'Bud' Cardos acted as production manager, performed stunts and appeared in the film. Cohen, who recalled the film as the worst thing he ever made told Dern that he was friends with Cameron Mitchell whose name would be above the title as he was a big star. Cameron Mitchell remembered Jack Nicholson picking out a pair of striped pants and a stocking hat to in order to stand out in the film.
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[
"Franco Romero Franco Romero may refer to:",
"Jorge Romero Jorge Romero may refer to:",
"Carlos Romero Carlos Romero may refer to:",
"George A. Romero filmography George A. Romero (1940–2017) was an American-Canadian film director, writer, editor and cinematographer. He contributed to many projects as either the writer, director, editor, cinematographer or a combination of the four. Romero's first project was the 1968 horror film \"Night of the Living Dead\", which he produced independently. Romero was also a contributing producer for the anthology television series \"Tales from the Darkside\", which aired from 1983 to 1988. Romero was featured alongside Sarah Michelle Gellar, Robert Englund, Danny Trejo and Michael Rooker in a downloadable content pack in \"\" as a zombie boss in \"Call of the Dead\", the zombie map included in the content pack named \"Escalation\".",
"Luis Romero Luis Romero may refer to:",
"Henry Romero Henry Romero may refer to:",
"Francisco Romero Francisco Romero may refer to:",
"Emiliano Romero Emiliano Romero may refer to:",
"Peter Romero Peter Romero may refer to:",
"Rafael Romero (boxer) Rafael Romero (born 30 May 1968) is a Dominican Republic boxer. He competed in the men's light welterweight event at the 1992 Summer Olympics."
] |
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[
"yes"
] |
Which film whose director is younger, Season In Salzburg (1952 Film) or Klann – Grand Guignol?
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Klann – grand guignol Klann – grand guignol is a 1969 French-Belgian mystery film directed by Patrick Ledoux. It was entered into the 20th Berlin International Film Festival.
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[
"Salzburg Stories Salzburg Stories (German: Salzburger Geschichten) is a 1957 West German romantic comedy film directed by Kurt Hoffmann and starring Marianne Koch, Paul Hubschmid and Peter Mosbacher. The film's sets were designed by the art director Ludwig Reiber. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich.",
"Holiday in Tyrol Holiday in Tyrol ( or ) is a 1956 West German drama film directed by Wolfgang Schleif and starring Hans Söhnker, Edith Mill and Michael Ande. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Hans Ledersteger and Ernst Richter. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich and on location in Bavaria, Austria and Switzerland.",
"KlangBogen Wien KlangBogen Wien was an annual festival offering a month of opera productions and classical concerts at different venues in the city of Vienna from 1995 to 2006. There was a range from early to contemporary operas, and from medieval chamber music to experimental 21st century compositions. In prior years the festival has included performances of \"Don Quixote\", \"La bohème\" and \"Dialogues des Carmélites\" at Theater an der Wien, the new opera house in the city. The festivities concluded with a concert by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in the Wiener Musikverein's Golden Hall.",
"Ingrid Gfölner Ingrid Schmid-Gfölner (born 13 September 1952) is an Austrian former alpine skier.",
"The Song of Kaprun The Song of Kaprun or The Song of the Hohe Tauern (German: Das Lied der Hohen Tauern) is a 1955 Austrian-German drama film directed by Anton Kutter and starring Waltraut Haas, Albert Lieven and Eduard Köck. It is set in Kaprun in the High Tauern mountain range. The film's sets were designed by the art director Sepp Rothaur. It was shot on location in the state of Salzburg.",
"Hans Senger Hans Senger (25 May 1925 – 11 May 2004) was an Austrian alpine skier. He competed in two events at the 1952 Winter Olympics.",
"Klangforum Wien The Klangforum Wien is an Austrian chamber orchestra, based in Vienna at the Konzerthaus, which specialises in contemporary classical music. Founded by composer and conductor Beat Furrer in 1985, it is run on collective principles, having no official principal conductor. Sylvain Cambreling is principal guest conductor emeritus. Principal guest conductor is since the 2018/2019 concert season. The group is often cited as Austria's leading contemporary music ensemble, and is particularly noted for its performances of music by composers of the German-speaking countries, including Helmut Lachenmann, Wolfgang Rihm, and Hans Zender. Klangforum Wien has been in residence at multiple music festivals, including the Donaueschingen Musiktage, Wiener Festwochen and Wittener Tage für neue Kammermusik. The ensemble holds the Professorship in Performance Practice in Contemporary Music at the University of Music and Performing Arts Graz. Klangforum Wien records for KAIROS.",
"Grand Hotel (1927 film) Grand Hotel (German:Grand Hotel...!) is a 1927 German silent drama film directed by Johannes Guter and starring Mady Christians, Dagny Servaes and Günther Hadank. The film's art direction was by Erich Czerwonski.",
"Season in Cairo Season in Cairo () is a 1933 German musical comedy film directed by Reinhold Schünzel and starring Renate Müller, Willy Fritsch and Gustav Waldau. A French-language version \"Idylle au Caire\" was released, also featuring Müller. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Robert Herlth and Walter Röhrig. It was shot on location in Egypt at Giza and Cairo, with studio filming taking place at Babelsberg in Berlin.",
"The Roaring Fifties The Roaring Fifties ( ) is a 1983 West German comedy film directed by Peter Zadek and starring Juraj Kukura, Boy Gobert and Peter Kern. It is based on the novel \"Hurra, wir leben noch\" by Johannes Mario Simmel. It is set around the German Wirtschaftswunder economic miracle of the 1950s, with the title alluding to the Roaring Twenties. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich and on location at Neuschwanstein Castle. The sets were designed by the art directors Herbert Strabel and Rolf Zehetbauer."
] |
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[
"Klann – Grand Guignol"
] |
What is the place of birth of the director of film Close To My Heart?
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Close to My Heart Close to My Heart is a 1951 American drama film directed by William Keighley, written by James R. Webb (based on his novel "A Baby for Midge"), and starring Ray Milland and Gene Tierney. Brad Sheridan (Milland), a newspaper columnist, and wife, Midge Sheridan (Tierney), cannot have children of their own; and, they decide to adopt. The adoption agency tells Midge the waiting list is long; however, Midge learns of an abandoned child left at the police station. The police tell Midge the child, a boy named Danny, is a ward of the juvenile court. Brad and Midge visit the child under the ruse of Midge being Brad's secretary. Brad thinks their chances to adopt Danny are slim if the child is placed with the adoption agency because of the long wait. Midge continues to visit Danny and becomes attached. Brad, not wanting to become too emotionally involved, writes a column disclosing the child's abandonment, angering Midge. Mrs. Morrow, from the adoption agency, inspects the Sheridan's home, but warns them that adopting Danny is risky due to the child's un-investigated background. Danny is not wanted by other prospective adoptive parents because he is a "foundling," which clears a path for the Sheridans to adopt him. Brad is told of a well-known local couple's adopted son becoming an adult criminal, with his adoptive parents only then discovering he came from an irreputable background. Brad's investigation leads him to an apartment and a woman named Arlene who tells Brad that Danny's mother, named Martha, died giving birth at the apartment building. Arlene lied to authorities that the child's father took the baby, and she took the child herself. She gives Brad a ring belonging to Martha. Without Midge's knowledge, Brad begins an investigation of Martha's history. The operator of a boarding house where Martha stayed, gives Brad a sweater that belonged to Martha. Brad tells Midge of his efforts to investigate Danny's background. Mrs. Morrow from the adoption agency warns Midge that Brad should stop his investigation; and, the agency cannot go forward with the adoption unless he does. Meanwhile, Brad discovers Martha was a reputable schoolteacher who was keeping company with a man, named Edward Hewitt, who Brad suspects accompanied Martha to Reno to marry her. Brad directs a photo of Hewitt be published for identification. Mrs.
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"Vidi Bilu Vidi Bilu (Hebrew: וידי בילו; born 6 January 1959) is an Israeli film director. Vidi Bilu was born in Jerusalem in 1959. She studied between 1983 and 1985 at the photography department of Hadassah College. She began to study cinema in 1986, at the School of Beit Zvi, and specialised in direction in 1989. The director of many publicity films, and at the same time, editor and producer, she has directed many films, such as \"Close to Home\" in 2005.",
"At Close Distance At Close Distance, also known or At Close Range () is a 2021 Russian-Lithuanian drama film directed by Grigoriy Dobrygin. The film tells about a successful actress who met an unconscious migrant in her house and she decides to take him to her place, but with one condition...",
"So Close, So Far So Close, So far (, \"Kheili Dour, Kheili Nazdik\") is a 2005 Iranian drama film directed by Reza Mirkarimi. The film was also selected as Iran's representative for Best Foreign Language Film at the Oscars. An arrogant neurologist must examine the meaning of his life when his son is diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor. His trek through the desert to catch up with his son's astronomy field trip leads him to encounter a number of seemingly ordinary people who challenge his views and values.",
"Close to Home (2005 TV series) Close to Home is an American crime drama television series co-produced by Warner Bros. Television and Jerry Bruckheimer Television for CBS. While in pre-production the series was known as \"American Crime\". It first aired from October 4, 2005 to May 11, 2007 and starred actress Jennifer Finnigan as Annabeth Chase, a Deputy Prosecutor for Marion County, Indiana (which contains Indianapolis). Created by Jim Leonard, the series was primarily filmed in Southern California. The score composer was Michael A. Levine. On May 16, 2007, CBS canceled the series after two seasons. Annabeth Chase is a criminal prosecutor with a near perfect conviction record. Throughout the series, she lost only three cases. In Season 1, Episode 21 \"David and Goliath\", Chase tried a case against a professional baseball player, who killed his pregnant girlfriend. His not guilty verdict was attributed to his fame. Chase lost the case of a man prosecuted for a rape he committed 11 years prior, in Season 2, Episode 18, \"Making Amends.\" In this case the victim was unable to recall the assault, as she unknowingly ingested Rohypnol, known as \"The Date Rape Drug\", which causes amnesia. In Season 2, Episode 21, \"Drink the Cup\", Chase was unable to convict a corrupt cop named Veeder of the murder of a fellow police officer. In the following episode she successfully tried Veeder for the murder of a young girl he exploited. She is married to a construction worker, Jack Chase (Christian Kane), and has an infant daughter, Hailey Chase. The show revolves around her balancing her career and family life, as a prosecutor in the city of Indianapolis. In the pilot episode, Chase returns from a 12-week maternity leave to find herself with a new boss, Maureen Scofield (Kimberly Elise), who has been promoted instead of her. Maureen is a no-nonsense, workaholic woman who admires Chase's dedication to her family and her personal life. Above her is County Prosecutor Steve Sharpe (John Carroll Lynch). Chase wins the first case she prosecutes upon her return to work: an abusive husband who is sentenced to 25 years in prison without parole. Annabeth returns to work four months after her husband was killed by a drunk driver in the first-season finale.",
"Juan Ruiz Anchía Juan Ruiz Anchía (born June 12, 1949) is a Spanish cinematographer. His work includes James Foley's adaptation of David Mamet's \"Glengarry Glen Ross\" and \"At Close Range\". Anchía attended the Escuela Official de Cinematografia in Madrid, graduating in 1972, followed by a graduate in the AFI Conservatory with a Master in Visual Arts as a Director of Photography in 1981. His AFI television movie, \"Miss Lonelyhearts\" (1983), won the Cannes Film Festival for Best Foreign Film.",
"Derek Cianfrance Derek M. Cianfrance (; born January 23, 1974) is an American film director, cinematographer, screenwriter, and editor. He is best known for writing and directing the films \"Blue Valentine,\" \"The Place Beyond the Pines and The Light Between Oceans\" as well as the HBO miniseries \"I Know This Much Is True\". For his contributions to the story of \"Sound of Metal\", he received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay with its director Darius Marder and Abraham Marder. Cianfrance grew up in Lakewood, Colorado, and graduated Green Mountain High School, and then attended the University of Colorado Boulder, studying film production under avant-garde filmmakers Stan Brakhage and Phil Solomon. At 23, he wrote, directed, and edited his first feature film, \"Brother Tied\", which premiered and was awarded at the International Filmfestival Mannheim-Heidelberg and was well received at festivals including Sundance. His second feature, \"Blue Valentine\", starred Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams. The two actors became familiar with their roles several years before filming but never met in person. The project was originally slated to shoot in California, but Cianfrance relocated to Brooklyn so that Williams could be with her daughter. There were no rehearsals and Cianfrance rarely shot more than one take per shot. The film was originally given an NC-17 rating, despite having little nudity and no violence. It has since been changed to an R-rating after an appeal was filed by The Weinstein Company. \"Blue Valentine\" star Gosling worked with Cianfrance again on \"The Place Beyond the Pines\" (2013), which followed a motorcycle stunt rider (Gosling) who becomes a bank robber to support his newborn son. Bradley Cooper also stars in the film. Principal photography was done in the summer of 2011. Location filming was done in upstate New York - Schenectady, Niskayuna, and Glenville areas in 2011. Next, Cianfrance wrote and directed \"The Light Between Oceans (\"2016) a romantic drama based on the 2012 novel of the same name by M. L. Stedman. An international co-production between the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, and New Zealand, the film stars Michael Fassbender, Alicia Vikander, Rachel Weisz, Bryan Brown, and Jack Thompson.",
"Heart to Heart (1949 film) Heart to Heart is a 1949 American short documentary film about heart disease directed by Gunther von Fritsch. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.",
"Alex Infascelli Alex Infascelli (born 9 November 1967) is an Italian director, screenwriter and producer. Born in Rome, the son of the producer Roberto and the nephew of the producer Carlo, Infascelli started his career as an assistant director for commercials and music videos. After directing he himself a number of music videos, in 1994 he directed a segment of the anthology film \"DeGenerazione\". In 2000 he made his feature film debut with the thriller \"Almost Blue\", which was well received both by critics and audience. For this film he won the David di Donatello for Best New Director as well as the Ciak d'oro and the Nastro d'Argento in the same category.",
"Near and Far Away Near and Far Away () is a 1976 Swedish drama film directed by Marianne Ahrne. Ahrne won the award for Best Director at the 13th Guldbagge Awards.",
"So Close to Paradise So Close to Paradise () is a 1998 Chinese film directed by Wang Xiaoshuai, a member of Chinese cinema's so-called Sixth Generation. It is alternatively known by the English title Ruan's Song or by its original Chinese title, The Girl From Vietnam (). The film was a coproduction of the Beijing Film Studio, and Beijing Jin Die Yingshi Yishu, as such, it is Wang's first major film production within the Chinese studio system. The film's literal title, The Pole-Carrier and the Girl, refers to two of the main characters played by Shi Yu and Wang Tong. The film follows two migrants, Dong Zi and Gao Ping, as they travel through Wuhan's underground and in the process kidnap a nightclub singer. \"So Close to Paradise\" takes place in the 1980s in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. The film follows two young migrant workers. Young innocent Dong Zi (Shi Yu) is a pole carrier or coolie eking out a meager existence carrying heavy loads from place to place. His friend and roommate Gao Ping (Guo Tao) is from the same home village, but unlike Dong Zi, is older, more cynical, and has fallen into a life of petty crime. As the film begins, Gao has been cheated out of a small amount of money from a local gangster Su Wu (Wu Tao). Enraged, Gao drags his friend into Wuhan's underworld. Their first stop is a local bar, the Li Li Club where they go looking for Ruan Hong (Wang Tong), a Vietnamese singer who is said to know Su Wu. After speaking with her, Gao and Dong kidnap the young woman and drag her to their apartment. Gao asks Dong to leave the room after which he proceeds to rape her, while Dong peers through a crack in the door. Soon afterwards, however, Gao and Ruan suddenly become lovers, much to Dong Zi's surprise and consternation. As Gao and Ruan continue their relationship, Dong Zi becomes sullen and seemingly jealous, though it is unclear of whom. Later Ruan and Gao appear to get in a fight as Gao Ping continues to obsess over the small amount of money he has lost. Enraged, Ruan leaves the apartment with a curious Dong Zi in tow. The two talk throughout the night and Ruan reveals that she only wants to become a professional singer, though such dreams seem out of reach."
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"Philadelphia"
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Do both films, Velli Vizha and A Year Ago In Winter, have the directors who are from the same country?
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Velli Vizha Velli Vizha () is a 1972 Indian Tamil film, directed by K. Balachander and produced by B. Duraisami. The film stars Gemini Ganesan, Jayanthi, Vanisri and S. Varalakshmi in lead roles. The film had musical score by V. Kumar. The music was composed by V. Kumar.
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"Madhu Kaithapram Madhu Kaithapram () was an Indian film director who worked primarily in the Malayalam film industry based in Kerala. He made his directorial debut with the feature film \"Ekantham\" in 2006 that won him the National Film Award for the best debutant director and followed it up with the critically acclaimed \"Madhya Venal\" (2009) and the family-drama \"Orma Mathram\" (2011). His last venture \"Velli Velichathil\" was released on 19 September 2014. He died on 29 December 2014. He was under treatment for diabetes.",
"Vellachi Vellachi is a 2013 Indian Tamil-language romance film written and directed by Velu Vishwanath. The film stars Pintu and Suchitra Unni. It was released on 1 March 2013. \"Vellachi\" was written and directed by Velu Vishwanath, and produced by Ambur K. Ananthan Naidu under Geethalaya Movies. The film marked the acting debut of actor Pandu's son Pintu. Cinematography was handled by Sai Natraj. Principal photography began in June 2012, taking place in locations like Vellore, Vaniyambadi, Palamathi, Yelagiri, and Krishnagiri. As of December 2012, the film was in post-production. The soundtrack was composed by Bhavatharini. It marked her return to music composing after \"Ilakkanam\" (2006). \"Vellachi\" was released on 1 March 2013. \"Maalai Malar\" wrote that though the opening scenes were moving slowly, the latter part of the story was fast paced with love and conflict. The critic also appreciated Sai Natraj's cinematography, and the songs composed by Bhavatharini. Sidharth Varma from \"The Times of India\" wrote, \"Tamil films with rural themes have helped several debutants make a mark, but sadly \"Vellachi\" does not work for comedian Pandu's son Pintu. For, the movie suffers from several inconsistencies in the script and pacing.\"",
"Venu (cinematographer) Venugopal (born 26 August 1961), popularly known as Venu, is an Indian cinematographer and film director who works mainly in Malayalam cinema. An alumnus of the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune and CMS college Kottayam. He has been the recipient of four National Film Awards, including three for Best Cinematography and one Indira Gandhi Award for Best Debut Film of a Director, and four Kerala State Film Awards. He is a founding member of the Indian Society of Cinematographers (ISC). Venu is married to Beena Paul, a film editor who works predominantly in Malayalam films. Venu is the grandson of Malayalam author Karur Neelakanta Pillai. His mother B. Saraswathi is also a writer. Venu is married to Indian film editor Beena Paul since 26 August 1983.The couple has a daughter Malavika who is married to an Englishman, is an Outreach Programme Manager at Cambridge University. Venu graduated from the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, with a diploma in motion picture photography in 1982. He has worked as cinematographer in over 80 feature films with directors like Mani Kaul, K G George, John Abraham, Buddhadeb Dasgupta, Pamela Rooks, Padmarajan, Bharathan and M. T. Vasudevan Nair. In 1987, Venu received his first National Film Award (jointly for \"Amma Ariyan\" and \"Namukku Parkkan Munthiri Thoppukal\"). He went onto receive two more awards for \"Miss Beatty's Children\" (1993) and \"Ponthan Mada\" (1994). In 1998, he made his directorial debut with \"Daya\", a period fiction written by M. T. Vasudevan Nair. The film won the Kerala State Film Award for Best Debut Director and Indira Gandhi Award for Best Debut Film of a Director. In 2014, he directed his second film, \"Munnariyippu\", starring Mammootty. His latest work is Carbon, starring Fahadh Faasil.",
"Vellam (2021 film) Vellam () is a 2021 Indian Malayalam-language biographical survival drama film written and directed by Prajesh Sen. It features Jayasurya and Samyuktha Menon in lead roles with Siddique, Sreelakshmi, Santhosh Keezhattoor, Johny Antony in other supporting roles. The film is based on the life of a Kerala-born businessman Murali Kunnumpurath who turned his life from a full time alcoholic to a successful businessman. The film was released on 22 January 2021. The music was composed by Bijibal. Murali Nambiar is an alcoholic who becomes a burden for his family and the society around him. His family life comes under strain and his wife and parents watch helpless his decline. He even takes money and valuables from his home and his friends to buy alcohol, upsetting those close to him. He is even shown selling the furniture from his home once. After getting drunk, he often ends up sleeping on sidewalks and shop fronts. Once he is accused of stealing a golden ring at an engagement but this proves to be wrong. He makes a scene at his friend's funeral because of some misunderstanding. Although he is often seen as a drunkard by his family and neighbors, a few people still talk about his cool demeanor and hardworking nature. One day he talks about his addiction with one of his friends who takes him to a de-addiction center where Dr. Subhramaniyam is the chief doctor. Dr. Subhramaniyam takes Murali under his wing, offering to treat his addiction. But Murali slacks off and continues to drink. The doctor contacts Murali's wife who has left him earlier because of his excessive drinking and tells her that Murali needs love and care as part of the treatment. After the treatment he returns to his homeplace where his friends continue to treat him as before, a drunkard. Murali gets back to his home and finds that his parents have sold their house and moved on. Seeing that no one is concerned about him, he jumps into a well to kill himself. But he is rescued and rushed to hospital. When Dr. Subhramaniyam learns of this, he convinces Murali's family that he requires love and support. Murali then slowly becomes a successful entrepreneur and launches a product called \"Waterman\" tiles and even starts exporting them. The movie ends with Murali bringing another drunkard to Dr.",
"Vel (film) Vel () is a 2007 Indian Tamil-language action film written and directed by Hari and produced by Mohan Natarajan. It stars Suriya, Asin and Kalabhavan Mani. Suriya plays a dual role as identical twins. The film also features Vadivelu, Lakshmi, Saranya Ponvannan, Charan Raj, Ambika, and Nassar in supporting roles. The film's score and soundtrack was composed by Yuvan Shankar Raja. Priyan handled the cinematography, while V. T. Vijayan handled the editing. The film released on 8 November 2007, coinciding with Diwali. Thiyagarajan and Sharadha, a couple who have twins, lose one of them while traveling between Tirunelveli and Chennai. The child stolen by a beggar for its gold chain is abandoned at the door of a rich feudal landlord. He is brought up in the family as Vel and becomes the darling of everybody including Appatha, the family head. Meanwhile the other twin grows up and becomes a private detective Vasu, who falls in love with a television hostess, Swathi. At the same time Vel is given a tough time by Sakkara Pandi, a former minister and local strongman who has his own axe to grind. Vasu is filled with smiles and happiness, while Vel lives with sickles and rage in his battle against Sakkara Pandi. Vel encounters Vasu while in Madras, and Vasu learns about Vel through Swathi, who spotted Vel while in his village doing a television broadcast. Vasu goes to Vel's village believing he was his long-lost brother. While Vasu was in a bus, Sakkra Pandi planted bombs in the nearby canal believing Vel was in the bus, fortunately, Vasu escapes by jumping out the bus before the bus went past the canal. Vasu is saved by Vel's family who tried to hide him violently inside a car while Vel returned home. They blow their cover when Vasu angrily kicks Vel's uncles outside of the car windshield, enraging Vel to almost slice Vasu's neck until he realizes that Vasu is his look-alike. Vasu and Vel meet and the truth about Vel being adopted is revealed and Appatha breaks down. Vel gets mad and states that despite this, Appatha and her family is his family, and tells Vasu to leave.",
"Orange Marangalude Veedu Orange Marangalude Veedu () is a 2020 Malayalam-language film written and directed by Dr. Biju. The film stars Nedumudi Venu, P. Balachandran, Prakash Bare, Lally, Lakshmi Marikar, and Master Yedhu. The film is about a grandfather and grandson. It examines their relationship as well as agriculture, politics, communalism and other socially relevant subjects. It takes place in Thiruvananthapuram, as well as Alappuzha, Wagamon, and Nagpur. The music is by Bijibal. The film is the first Indo-Chinese co-production. It was also the debut of cinematographer Yedhu Radhakrishnan (Kannan), the son of MJ Radhakrishnan. Production was done by Studio Media. The film was selected for the Indian Film Festival of Cincinnati in 2021. It was also selected for the 24th Kolkata International Film Festival.",
"Veera Thalattu Veera Thalattu () is a 1998 Indian Tamil-language action drama film written and directed by Kasthuri Raja. The film stars Murali, Vineetha and Khushbu, while Rajkiran, Raadhika and Lakshmi play other supporting roles. The film, which has music by Ilaiyaraaja, released in April 1998. The film experienced delays in its production, taking over a year and half to complete. Music was composed by Ilaiyaraaja, all songs were written by Kasthoori Raja. The film received mixed reviews upon release, with a critic from Indolink.com noting it was an \"old wine in new bottle\" and that the director has \"attempted to give a new look to the age old story of avenging the death of the hero's father\".",
"Vizhithiru Vizhithiru () is a 2017 Indian Tamil-language action thriller film written and directed by Meera Kathiravan, who debuted with \"Aval Peyar Thamizharasi\". The film which began production in 2012 after numerous delays released in 2017. The film has Krishna playing the lead, with Venkat Prabhu, Dhansika, Vidharth, Abhinaya, \"Deiva Thirumagal\" Sara Arjun, Thambi Ramaiah, Nagendra Babu (brother of Chiranjeevi) and new faces Rahul Bhaskaran and Erica Fernandes in important roles. Playback singer Sathyan Mahalingam made his debut as a music composer, and Vijay Milton will handle the cinematography, Praveen K. L. and N. B. Srikanth have been hired as editors. The film's first look photo shoot took place recently. Set in Chennai, the film happens within 12 hours. It was shot completely around Ritchie Street, Mount Road and Vepery. It was first reported that talks were on with Yuvan Shankar Raja to compose music, but singer Sathyan Mahalingam was finalized as the composer. \"Behindwoods\" wrote \"Vizhithiru has a decent script, but lacked execution\". \"Times of India\" wrote \"A not-so-bad message towards the end and the writing in some sequences make the film a tolerable watch\". \"Sify\" wrote \"Vizhithiru’s core story has the potential of a classic thriller, the characters too are interestingly written but what works against the movie is the flat execution\".",
"January 1 (film) January 1 is a 1984 Indian Tamil-language film directed by Manivannan, starring Vijayakanth, Sulakshana and Sathyaraj.",
"Veyil Veyil ( or \"Sun Blaze\") is a 2006 Indian Tamil-language drama film written and directed by Vasanthabalan. Pasupathy and Bharath are the male leads whereas Bhavana, Priyanka and Sriya Reddy plays the female leads. Upon release, the movie met with highly positive reviews and was commercially successful. The film was remade in Bengali Bangladesh as \"Antor Jala\" starring Zayed Khan and Pori Moni The story is an emotional drama involving a father and his two sons. Mayandi Thevar, is a butcher who works hard to bring up his four children (two boys and two girls) and have a happy family. Mayandi's sons are Murugesan and Kathir, and Murugesan dotes on his younger brother Kathir. Murugesan's weakness, like any other adolescent, is a love for movies (especially MGR films) that are screened in a local theatre. One day, life changes for Murugesan when his father catches him red-handed from the theatre after he bunks school. Murugesan is severely punished and runs away from home, taking money and jewels. Along the way, Murugesan gets sidetracked from his intended destination of Chennai by an MGR movie poster. He is shown watching several MGR shows, buying a change of clothes, and eating a hearty meal with his ill-gotten money. After spending the night at local temple, he wakes up to find his money and other possessions missing. Murugesan is then taken under the wings of a theatre projectionist in a nearby town. Slowly, the theatre becomes his home. As adults, Murugesan and Kathir, fall in love with Thangam and Meenakshi respectively. Thangam is a beautiful girl who lives opposite the theatre, and Meenakshi is an innocent girl. Parallel narration, Kathir starts an advertising agency, and faces opposition from Bose and Annachi, the local gangster. Murugesan's love ends in Thangam's suicide because her father and his relatives beat up and hang Murugesan as they are trying to kill him due to their dislike of him. At that moment, Thangam shows up with a knife and threatens to kill herself if they do not release Murugesan; as they do not release him, she cuts her throat and dies."
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Where did the composer of song Fünf Lieder, Op. 105 (Brahms) die?
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Fünf Gesänge, Op. 104 (Brahms) Fünf Gesänge (Five songs), Op. 104, is a song cycle of five part songs for mixed choir a cappella by Johannes Brahms. Composed in 1888 when Brahms was a 55-year-old bachelor, the five songs reflect an intensely nostalgic and even tragic mood. Brahms has chosen texts which centre on lost youth, summer turning into fall and, ultimately, man's mortality. While the score and the parts themselves are not that difficult for the singers, the sombre nature of the texts coupled with intense soaring melodies and complex harmonies make it quite a demanding work for any choir. The songs are set for a choir of four to six voices, SATB to SAATBB
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"Christian Liebe Christian Siegmund Liebe (5 November 1654 – 3 September 1708) was a German composer. Liebe was born in Freiberg, Saxony. He studied in Leipzig, then was a private teacher in Dresden and from 1684 Rektor and organist in Frauenstein, then from 1690 Rektor in Zschopau till his death. Many vocal works survive in a rather conservative style. He died in Zschopau, aged 53.",
"Fannie Lovering Skinner Fannie Lovering Skinner (1856 - June 8, 1938) was an American composer and singer. Skinner was born in New Hampshire to Albert and Jennie Lovering. By 1895, she had married George Skinner and was living in New York, where she died in 1938. She studied voice with Hermine Küchenmeister-Rudersdorf. Skinner taught voice in New York City and gave a series of recitals with her students there which attracted 100 or more attendees. She composed the following songs:",
"Leo Fall Leopold Fall (2 February 187316 September 1925) was an Austrian Kapellmeister and composer of operettas. Born in Olmütz (Olomouc), Leo (or Leopold) Fall was taught by his father Moritz Fall (1848–1922), a bandmaster and composer, who settled in Berlin. The younger Fall studied at the Vienna Conservatory before rejoining his father in Berlin. His teachers in Vienna were Robert Fuchs and Johann Nepomuk Fuchs. In 1895 he began a new career as an operetta conductor in Hamburg, and started to compose. From 1904 onwards he devoted himself to composition. While less successful than his contemporary Franz Lehár, he was nevertheless capable of producing melodious and well orchestrated work. After working in Berlin, Hamburg and Cologne he settled in Vienna in 1906, where he died. He is buried at the Vienna Central Cemetery. His brothers and Richard were also composers; both were murdered by Nazi concentration camps. His best known operettas in the English-speaking world are \"The Dollar Princess\" and \"Madame Pompadour\", which had successful runs in London and New York and remained in the repertory in Germany and Austria throughout the 20th century. \"\" (1912; \"Princess Caprice\" in London) is reported to have been given an unprecedented 3,360 performances. Fall wrote incidental music to numerous plays, and three unsuccessful operas; he is mainly known as a composer of operettas in the Silver Age of Vienna operetta. Operas: Operettas: Notes Sources",
"Death of a Composer The Death of a Composer is a series of ten opera libretti by Peter Greenaway dealing with the deaths of ten 20th-century composers from Anton Webern to John Lennon. All ten composers left behind ten common clues related to their deaths. Greenaway was interested in this commonality and explored this in the operas, each written or to be written by a different composer. Louis Andriessen finished \"Rosa - A Horse Drama\" in 1995. Geoffrey Fallthius is a fictional character from Greenaway's \"The Falls\", a pupil of Tulse Luper. Indeed, aside from Webern and Lennon, all of the composers are fictitious.",
"Franz Isidor Proschko Franz Isidor Proschko, pseudonym \"Franz von Hohenfurth\" (2 April 1816 in Hohenfurth, Bohemia – 6 February 1891 in Vienna), was an Austrian author. From 1828 Proschko attended the high school in České Budějovice and then studied Civil and Criminal Law at the University in Prague. After he finished studies at the University of Vienna with a legal dissertation was finished, he took a job as a trainee at police headquarters in Linz. Proschko was a police officer and after a stop in Graz, he was transferred to Vienna in 1867 one was awarded the title Police Council awarded in 1883, he went on board. At the age of 75 years of age Franz Isidor Proschko died on 6 February 1891 in Vienna. His final resting place he found in a \"grave of honor\" () in the Vienna Central Cemetery between the composer Josef Mayseder and Johannes Baptist Moser.",
"Heinrich Lemacher Heinrich Lemacher (26 June 1891 – 16 March 1966) was a German composer and music educator. Born in Solingen, Lemacher studied from 1911 to 1916 at the Cologne Conservatory and at Bonn University, where he received his doctorate in musicology in 1916. From 1925 to 1965 he taught composition, theory and music history at the Hochschule für Musik Köln, where he had been professor since 1928. Important students of Heinrich Lemacher were Heinrich Weber, Bernd Alois Zimmermann, and his long-time colleague at the Cologne Academy of Music Hermann Schroeder, who was also co-author of his most important teaching works. Lemacher died at the age of 74 in a Cologne hospital. He was widowed by Maria Augusta Horst, whom he had married in Cologne in 1927.",
"Robert Hermann (composer) Robert Hermann (1869–1912) was a Swiss composer, born at Bern. He studied music at the Frankfurt Conservatory in 1891, and with Engelbert Humperdinck (1893–94). In 1895 the Berlin Philharmonic premiered his Symphony in C, and much of his further career was spent in Germany. His works include pieces for violin and piano, songs, a concert overture in D minor, a piano quartet, a piano trio, a violin sonata, etc. In 2009 Sterling Records released a recording of Hermann's 2 symphonies conducted by Christopher Fifield.",
"Heinrich Gattermeyer Heinrich Gattermeyer (9 July 1923 – 5 July 2018) was an Austrian composer and music educator. Born in Sierning, Gattermeyer, son of the local poet Karl Gattermeyer, graduated in 1941 at the and was subsequently drafted for military service. After the war, he studied piano with Bruno Seidlhofer, Choral conducting and conducting with Ferdinand Grossmann, as well as composition with Alfred Uhl at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna from 1945 to 1950. He also completed studies in German at the University of Vienna, graduating in 1948/49 with a teaching certificate. Initially Gattermeyer taught at Viennese grammar schools and from 1964 at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna. Gattermeyer was president of the for eleven years from 1973, from 1984 to 1990 president of the , from 1992 to 2001 president of the and from 1996 was president of the Dommusikverein am St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna, which existed until 2005. Gattermeyer also served as choirmaster for several Viennese choirs, including the Wiener Schubertbund from 1960 to 1973. Gattermeyer died in Vienna at the age of 94 and was buried at .",
"Elkan Bauer Elkan Bauer was an Austrian composer and friend and contemporary of Johann Strauss II born in Nikolsburg, on April 4, 1852. Despite being unable to neither read nor write music, he whistled melodies which were then transcribed and performed in the outdoor kiosks of Vienna. After being taken prisoner by the Germans in 1942, the Nazis burned all his possessions including his house, his documents and his scores. He was killed in the concentration camp of Theresienstadt at the age of ninety, on September 20, 1942. Miraculously, thanks to a cousin, who had fled with his family to England before the Kristallnacht, there survived two scores of his unpublished musical waltz (\"Aeroplane waltz\" and \"Diana waltz\"). The writer Elisa Springer, his maternal granddaughter, who wrote a book, \"Das Schweigen der Lebenden\" (\"The Silence of the Living\"), preserved these scores.",
" Melanie visited him faithfully during his decline until his death on 22 February 1903, but her unfaithfulness to her husband tortured her and she killed herself in 1906. Wolf is buried in the Zentralfriedhof (Central Cemetery) in Vienna, along with many other notable composers. Wolf's greatest musical influence was Richard Wagner, who, in an encounter after Wolf first came to the Vienna Conservatory, encouraged the young composer to persist in composing and to attempt larger-scale works, cementing Wolf's desire to emulate his musical idol. His antipathy to Johannes Brahms was fueled equally by his devotion to Wagner's musical radicalism and his loathing of Brahms' musical \"conservatism\". He is best known by his lieder, his temperament and inclination leading him to more intimate, subjective and terse musical utterances. Although he initially believed that mastering the larger forms was the hallmark of a great composer (a belief his early mentors reinforced), the smaller scale of the art song proved to provide an ideal creative outlet for his musical expression and came to be regarded as the genre best suited to his peculiar genius. Wolf's lieder are noted for compressing expansive musical ideas and depth of feeling, fed by his skill at finding the just right musical setting for the poetry that inspired him. Though Wolf himself was obsessed with the idea that to compose only short forms was to be second-rate, his organization of lyrics of particular poets (Goethe; Mörike; Eichendorff; Heyse and Geibel in the Spanish and Italian Songbooks) into semicyclical anthologies, finding connections between texts not explicitly intended by the poets he set and his conceptions of individual songs as dramatic works in miniature, mark him as a talented dramatist despite having written only one not particularly successful opera, \"Der Corregidor\". Early in his career Wolf modelled his lieder after those of Franz Schubert and Robert Schumann, particularly in the period around his relationship with Vally Franck; in fact, they were good enough imitations to pass off as the real thing, which he once attempted, though his cover was blown too soon."
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"Vienna"
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Which film has the director who was born first, Of Unknown Origin or We Steal Secrets: The Story Of Wikileaks?
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We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks is a 2013 American independent documentary film about the organization established by Julian Assange, and people involved in the collection and distribution of secret information and media by whistleblowers. Directed by Alex Gibney, it covers a period of several decades, and includes background material. Gibney received his fifth nomination for Best Documentary Screenplay from the Writers Guild of America Awards for this film. The 1989 WANK worm attack on NASA computers, originally thought to threaten the Galileo spacecraft, is depicted in the film as the work of Australian hackers, including Assange. The founding of Wikileaks in 2006 is followed by coverage of several key events: its 2009–2010 leaks about the Icelandic financial collapse, Swiss banking tax evasion, Kenyan government corruption, toxic-waste dumping, Chelsea Manning's communications with Adrian Lamo, the release by Wikileaks of the Collateral Murder video, the Iraq War documents, the Afghanistan War documents, US diplomatic cables, Lamo's exposure of Manning to the FBI and the accusations of sexual assault made against Assange. Interview subjects include Julian Assange, Heather Brooke, James Ball, Donald Bostom, Nick Davies, Mark Davis, Jason Edwards, Timothy Douglas Webster, Michael Hayden, Adrian Lamo, J. William Leonard, Gavin MacFadyen, Smári McCarthy, Iain Overton, Kevin Poulsen and Vaughan Smith. Assange did not participate in the production, so previously recorded interviews were used. Manning was also unavailable. John Young and Deborah Natsios contributed contacts and research material, but declined to be interviewed for the film upon learning it was tentatively titled "Unnamed Wikileaks Project". About 35 minutes of chat animations, headline effects, and other visual effects were designed and rendered by Framestore in New York. WikiLeaks published a transcript of the film, annotated with comments by WikiLeaks, which it said were corrections. Director Gibney responded that the transcript released by Wikileaks was incomplete, lacked Private Manning's words, and was from an unreleased, incomplete version of the film. Later, Gibney published his own annotated version of the WikiLeaks transcript, responding to the criticisms made by Wikileaks. One of the points mentioned by Wikileaks in its annotated transcript was the possible existence of a sealed US indictment against Assange.
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"Stealing Images Stealing Images is a Canadian short drama film, directed by Alan Zweig and released in 1989. The film centres on a film director who is exploring the city for inspiration. The film premiered at the 1989 Toronto International Film Festival, where it won the award for Best Canadian Short Film.",
"What No One Knows What No One Knows () is a 2008 Danish political thriller film written and directed by Søren Kragh-Jacobsen, and starring Anders W. Berthelsen, Maria Bonnevie, Ghita Nørby, and Lars Mikkelsen. The film was produced by Nimbus Film. A young woman is found drowned on a winter night by the sea. The dead woman's brother, Thomas, discovers that her death is connected to their father, now deceased, and his work in military intelligence. As Thomas digs deeper into the case his family is brought into sudden danger.",
"Hackers Wanted Hackers Wanted is an unreleased American documentary film. Directed and written by Sam Bozzo, the film explores the origins and nature of hackers and hacking by following the adventures of Adrian Lamo, and contrasting his story with that of controversial figures throughout history. The film is narrated by Kevin Spacey. Originally named \"Can You Hack It?\" in 2007, the film failed to get a conventional release, according to Lamo, because of conflicts between its producer and others on the team. The more commonly cited reason is a problem with the quality of the finished product. On May 20, 2010, a version of the film was leaked to BitTorrent. Lamo has stated that he had no involvement in the leak. On June 12, 2010, a director's cut version of the film was also leaked onto torrent sites. This version of the film contains additional footage and is significantly different from the one previously leaked.",
"Robert Greenwald Robert Greenwald (born August 28, 1945) is the founder of Brave New Films, a nonprofit film and advocacy organization whose work is distributed for free in concert with nonprofit partners and movements in order to educate and mobilize for progressive causes. With Brave New Films, Greenwald has made investigative documentaries such as \"\" (2004), \"\" (2004), \"\" (2005), \"\" (2006), \"Rethink Afghanistan\" (2009), \"Koch Brothers Exposed\" (2012), and \"\" (2013), \"Suppressed 2020: The Fight to Vote\" (2020), as well as many short investigative films and internet videos. Before launching Brave Films in 2000, Greenwald produced and/or directed more than 65 TV movies, miniseries and films as well as major theatrical releases. His early body of work includes \"Steal This Movie!\" (2000), starring Vincent D'Onofrio as 60s radical Abbie Hoffman; \"Breaking Up\" (1997), starring Russell Crowe and Salma Hayek; \"A Woman of Independent Means\" (1995) with Sally Field; \"The Burning Bed\" (1984) with Farrah Fawcett; and \"Xanadu\" (1980), for which he won the inaugural Golden Raspberry award for Worst Director. Greenwald has earned 25 Emmy Award nominations, two Golden Globe nominations, the Peabody Award and the Robert Wood Johnson Award. He was awarded the 2002 Producer of the Year Award by the American Film Institute. Greenwald was born and raised in New York City. He is son of the prominent psychotherapist Harold Greenwald, and the nephew of choreographer Michael Kidd. He attended the city's High School of Performing Arts. Greenwald started his directing career in the theater, with \"The People Vs. Ranchman\" (1968), \"A Long Time Coming and A Long Time Gone\" (1971), \"Me and Bessie\" (1975) and \"I Have a Dream\" (1976), a play based on the life of Martin Luther King Jr., with Billy Dee Williams playing King. Greenwald moved to Los Angeles in 1972, where he continued working as a theater director at the Mark Taper Forum.",
"Secret Defense (2008 film) Secrets of State is a 2008 French thriller film directed by Philippe Haïm.",
"Stolen Secrets Stolen Secrets is a 1924 American silent mystery film directed by Irving Cummings and written by Rex Taylor. The film stars Herbert Rawlinson, Kathleen Myers, Edwards Davis, Henry Herbert, Arthur Stuart Hull, and William Conklin. The film was released on March 10, 1924, by Universal Pictures. As described in a film magazine, the exploits of the gentleman crook known as the Eel (Rawlingson) were puzzling the police and matters came to a showdown before the mayor (Davis) when the chief of police (Girard) declared that the underworld was protected by a powerful political ring. He turned in his star and the mayor called in the city attorney to discuss the proposition. That night the Eel pulled two more sensational jobs, both of them within the political group declared by the former police chief to be shielding criminals. This proved the Eel to be a free lance and outside the clique. This political clique was cutting close to the mayor’s pockets and the mayor knew it. So the Eel became the object of nets thrown out by the mayor’s forces and the opposition political ring as well. The mayor’s daughter Cordelia (Myers), blonde, pretty, intelligent and adventuresome, took the matter of helping her father into her own hands and an interview was arranged with the Eel through the personal columns of the morning paper. That night found the Eel and the mayor’s daughter in the home of the head of the political group which sought the Eel. The Eel desired certain papers, he told the girl, which should present a clear expose of the mayor’s opposition and the graft involved. But the Eel, clever as he appeared to be, seemed to have pulled a faux pas. Three men stepped into the room and he and the girl were trapped on a neat count of burglary and in a wonderful position for a blackmail shakedown. But the Eel had only begun to take action to end the graft and win her heart. With no prints of \"Stolen Secrets\" located in any film archives, it is a lost film.",
"Of Unknown Origin Of Unknown Origin is a 1983 horror film directed by George P. Cosmatos. Based on the novel \"The Visitor\" by Chauncey G. Parker III, it stars Peter Weller as a New York banker who must fend for himself against a giant rat loose in his renovated brownstone. It was filmed on location in Montreal, Quebec but set in New York City. The film won two awards at the Paris Film Festival. Mild-mannered everyman Bart Hughes has a great life in New York City. When his wife and child leave for a vacation, Bart stays behind to work on a project that should get him a promotion. Some sort of rodent in his basement starts to bother him and consumes his time. Bart becomes obsessed with it and eventually starts losing his mind while trying to kill the creature, destroying most of his house in the process. The film's title comes from research Bart does and which he shares at a dinner party, stating erroneously that rats have no known origin. Principal photography began November 16, 1982 in Montreal, with additional photography taking place in New York City. Vincent Canby of \"The New York Times\" had nothing but disdain for the movie, but lightly praised Weller's performance and opens his review: Warner Bros. released the film on VHS and DVD. Scream Factory released the film on Blu-ray for the first time on May 22, 2018 featuring a new 2K scan from an interpositive element.",
"Unknown (2011 film) Unknown is a 2011 action-thriller film directed by Jaume Collet-Serra and starring Liam Neeson, Diane Kruger, January Jones, Aidan Quinn, Bruno Ganz, and Frank Langella. The film, produced by Joel Silver, Leonard Goldberg and Andrew Rona, is based on the 2003 French novel by Didier Van Cauwelaert published in English as \"Out of My Head\" which was adapted as the film's screenplay by Oliver Butcher and Stephen Cornwell. The narrative centers around a professor who wakes up from a four-day long coma and sets out to prove his identity after no one recognizes him, including his own wife, and another man claims to be him. Released on 18 February 2011, the film received mixed reviews from critics and grossed $136 million against its $30 million budget. Martin Harris (Liam Neeson) and his wife Liz (January Jones) arrive in Berlin for a biotechnology summit. At their hotel, Harris realizes he left his briefcase at the airport and takes a taxi to retrieve it. The taxi is involved in an accident and crashes into the Spree, knocking him unconscious. The driver rescues him but flees the scene. Harris regains consciousness at a hospital after being in a coma for four days. When Harris returns to the hotel, he discovers Liz with another man (Aidan Quinn). Liz says this man is her husband and declares she does not know Harris. The police are called, and Harris attempts to prove his identity by calling a colleague named Rodney Cole, to no avail. He writes down his schedule for the next day from memory. When he visits the office of Professor Leo Bressler, whom he is scheduled to meet, \"Dr. Harris\" is already there. As Harris attempts to prove his identity, \"Harris\" provides identification and a family photo, both of which have his face. Overwhelmed by the identity crisis, Harris loses consciousness and awakens back at the hospital. A terrorist named Smith kills Harris's attending nurse, but Harris is able to escape him. Harris seeks help from a private investigator and former Stasi agent Ernst Jürgen. Harris's only clues are his father's book on botany and Gina (Diane Krueger), the taxi driver, an undocumented Bosnian immigrant who has been working at a diner since the crash.",
"Lies We Tell Lies We Tell is a 2017 British crime thriller film directed by Mitu Misra and starring Gabriel Byrne, Sibylla Deen and Harvey Keitel. It is Misra's directorial debut. A trusted driver must deal with his dead boss' Muslim mistress, her dark past pulling him into a life-and-death showdown with her notorious gangster cousin/ex-husband. , \"Lies We Tell\" holds a 0% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 16 reviews with an average rating of 3.75/10. Glenn Kenny of RogerEbert.com awarded the film two stars. Nick De Semlyen of \"Empire\" awarded the film two stars out of five.",
"The Unidentified The Unidentified is a 2008 drama film by writer-director Kevan Tucker in his directorial debut for Floodgate Features. It won \"Best New Director\" at the 2008 Brooklyn International Film Festival and \"Best First Feature\" at the 2008 FirstGlance Film Festival in Philadelphia. It also screened at the Asheville Film Festival and Methodfest Film Festival in 2008, and is available on DVD through Vanguard Cinema. It is considered part of the mumblecore movement. The film was shot on the Panasonic AG-DVX100A with a Redrock M2 attachment. Estlin is a journalist in New York City, fresh out of college and ready to make a difference in an all-too cynical world. He struggles with defining career and relationships, and after his best friend Brooke moves away, finds himself falling for Sophie, a downtown photographer. Estlin must confront whether his dogged pursuit of truth helps or hinders his attempt to find a place in the world."
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[
"Of Unknown Origin"
] |
Do both directors of films Om Shanti Om and The Table Of The Poor have the same nationality?
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The Table of the Poor The Table of the Poor (Italian: La tavola dei poveri) is a 1932 Italian drama film directed by Alessandro Blasetti and starring Raffaele Viviani, Leda Gloria and Salvatore Costa. It was based on a play by Viviani set in Naples. It was shot at the Cines Studios in Rome. The film's sets were designed by Gastone Medin. It portrays the adventures of an impoverished Marquis who continues to lead a grand lifestyle.
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"Om Shanti Om Om Shanti Om is a 2007 Indian Hindi-language musical romantic satirical fantasy comedy-drama film written and directed by Farah Khan, co-written by Mayur Puri and Mushtaq Shiekh, and produced by Gauri Khan under the banner of Red Chillies Entertainment. The film stars Shah Rukh Khan and Deepika Padukone in lead roles with Arjun Rampal, Kirron Kher, and Shreyas Talpade in supporting roles. Spanning three decades, the film is about Om Makhija (Khan), a poor junior film artist in 1977 who falls in love with film actress Shanti Kashyap (Padukone). Her secret-husband Mukesh Mehra (Rampal) who is a producer, betrays her and murders her in a fire. Om witnesses this and gets injured while trying to rescue her, resulting in his death as well. Being reborn as a rich film actor in 2007, he sets out to avenge Shanti's death by making Mukesh realise his mistake. The film also saw cameos from many Bollywood celebrities in several sequences and songs. \"Om Shanti Om\" was produced by Gauri Khan on a budget of 30 crore. Farah conceived the film while directing the musical \"Bombay Dreams\" (2002), which was based on the Indian film industry. After Shah Rukh rejected the first version of her next film \"Happy New Year\", she was reminded of \"Om Shanti Om\"; the film's title derives from a similar titled popular song from the 1980 film \"Karz\". The soundtrack album was composed by Vishal–Shekhar, with lyrics written by Javed Akhtar. The background score was performed by Sandeep Chowta. The album received positive reviews and was also commercially successful, becoming the highest-selling album of the year in India. The film was theatrically released in India on 9 November 2007 during Diwali weekend, \"Om Shanti Om\" earned over ₹149 crore worldwide becoming the highest grossing Bollywood film of the year; it received positive reviews, with praise for the performances and the film's soundtrack and narrative. The film won several awards in major Indian film award ceremonies. At the 53rd Filmfare Awards, it received a leading 12 nominations, winning for Best Female Debut and Best Special Effects, and also won the National Film Award for Best Production Design.",
"Om Namo Om Namo is a book written by Shantinath Desai. Author received 2000's Sahitya Akademi Award posthumously for this work. This book translated to Hindi by Dharenendra Kurakuri and to English by G. S. Amur. This work has his study of Jainism in Karnataka. \"Om Namho\" tells two interrelated stories. The first of these which is a love story of two young British citizens, Adam Desai and Ann Eagleton, who come to India for a research on social anthropology. The second related to an old family belonging to Krishnapur located in the northern parts of Karnataka. This family undergoes modernization because of English exposure during India's twentieth century social changes.",
"Aditya Datt Aditya Datt is an Indian filmmaker known for directing Bollywood films such as \"Aashiq Banaya Aapne\" and \"Table No.21\". He is the grandson of film lyricist Anand Bakshi Datt is the grandson of lyricist Anand Bakshi.",
"Dharti Ke Lal Dharti Ke Lal ( \"Children of the Earth\") is a 1946 Hindustani film, the first directorial venture of the noted film director Khwaja Ahmad Abbas (K. A. Abbas). It was jointly written by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas and Bijon Bhattacharya, based on plays by Bhattacharya and the story \"Annadata\" by Krishan Chander. The film had music by Ravi Shankar, with lyrics by Ali Sardar Jafri, Nemichand Jain, Vamiq, and Prem Dhawan. The film was based on the Bengal famine of 1943, which killed millions of Bengali people, and was one of the first films in Indian cinema's social-realist movement. In 1949, \"Dharti Ke Lal\" also became the first Indian film to receive widespread distribution in the Soviet Union (USSR), which led to the country becoming a major overseas market for Indian films. \"Dharti Ke Lal\" was critically acclaimed for its scathing view of the notorious Bengal famine of 1943, in which millions of Bengali people died. It is considered an important political film as it gives a realistic portrayal of the changing social and economic climate during World War II. The film uses the plight of a single family caught in this famine, and tells the story of human devastation, and the loss of humanity during the struggle to survive. During the Bengal famine of 1943, members of the IPTA travelled all over India, performing plays and collecting funds for the survivors of the famine, which has destroyed a whole generation of farmer families in Bengal. Thus Abbas was deeply influenced by the work of IPTA, and hence based his script upon two of IPTA's plays, \"Nabanna\" (Harvest) and \"Jabanbandi\" by Bijon Bhattacharya, and the story \"Annadata\" by Krishan Chander. Even the cast of the film was mainly actors from IPTA. The film marked another chapter in the influential new wave in Indian cinema, which focussed on socially relevant themes as in \"Neecha Nagar\" (1946), made by Chetan Anand, also scripted by Abbas, and which continued with Bimal Roy's \"Do Bigha Zamin\" (1953). It was the first and perhaps the only film produced by IPTA (Indian People's Theater Association) and remains one of the important Hindi films of that decade.",
"Sisir Mishra Sisir Mishra is an Indian film director and screenwriter best known for directing Hindi and Odia language films including \"Bheegi Palkein\", \"Samay Ki Dhara\", \"Billoo Baadshaah\", \"TADA\" and \"Aseema\". In 2018 he was awarded the Padma Shri, India's fourth-highest civilian award. He was born in Bomkei, near Digapahandi, Brahmapur in the Ganjam district of Odisha. He is the son of Purushottam Mishra, and his father was an engineer who worked for the British Raj. Mishra completed his B.Sc degree at Khallikote College, Brahmapur and an M.Sc in Physics from Ravenshaw College, Cuttack. In 1965, Mishra left his academic career as a physics lecturer, moved to Mumbai and started his film career as an Assistant Director under Mehboob Khan (director of \"Mother India\") and Jyoti Swaroop (director of \"Padosan\"). Mishra went on to direct many box office hit films in the Odia language such as \"Sindura Bindu\", \"Suna Sansaara\", \"Subarna Seeta\", \"Samaya Bada Balawaan\", \"Ei Ama Sansaara\", \"Bastra Harana\", \"Suna Bhauja\", \"Sabata Maa\" and others. In addition, he directed several Hindi films. Popularly known as the Dronacharya of Oriya Cinema, Sisir Mishra pioneered modern film making in Oriya cinema. He won many awards. Following are some of his prestigious awards: Mishra is married to Kadambini Mishra, who has also acted as co-scriptwriter for a number of his films. He has two sons, Sagar and Sameer.",
"Sadgati Sadgati () is an 1981 Hindi television film directed by Satyajit Ray, based on a short story of same name by Munshi Premchand. Ray called this drama of a poor Dalit \"a deeply angry film [...] not the anger of an exploding bomb but of a bow stretched taut and quivering.\" The film is a vicious indictment of the Indian system. When a poor and low-village cobbler, Dukhiya (Om Puri), who lives with his wife Jhuria (Smita Patil), goes to the village Brahmin (Mohan Agashe) to fix the date of his daughter's marriage, the Brahmin asks for unpaid labour in exchange. The cobbler is made to sweep the house and cut wood for him. Dukhi does all of these work without having eaten since morning. The ensuing events turn the tables against the priest, who in the end has to forgo the lofty traditions, including that of untouchability, that he has held so dearly all his life.",
"Om Katare Om Katare, (born Datia, Madhya Pradesh, is a famous actor in the Bollywood and theater industries. He is also a director and playwright under the banner of the Yatri Theatre, which he established in 1979. Katare's theatre group has presented over 50 plays with over 4,700 shows. He, along with his group, regularly holds performances in Mumbai and the rest of India and internationally. He also conducts theater workshops promoting and encouraging new talent.",
"Utpal Dutt Utpal Dutta () (29 March 1929 – 19 August 1993) was an Indian actor, director, and writer-playwright. He was primarily an actor in Bengali theatre, where he became a pioneering figure in Modern Indian theatre, when he founded the \"Little Theatre Group\" in 1949. This group enacted many English, Shakespearean and Brecht plays, in a period now known as the \"Epic theatre\" period, before it immersed itself completely in highly political and radical theatre. His plays became an apt vehicle for the expression of his Marxist ideologies, visible in socio-political plays such as \"Kallol\" (1965), \"Manusher Adhikar\", \"Louha Manob\" (1964), \"Tiner Toloar\" and \"Maha-Bidroha\". He also acted in over 100 Bengali and Hindi films in a career spanning 40 years, and remains most known for his roles in films such as Mrinal Sen’s \"Bhuvan Shome\" (1969), Satyajit Ray’s \"Agantuk\" (1991), Gautam Ghose’s \"Padma Nadir Majhi\" (1993) and Hrishikesh Mukherjee's breezy Hindi comedies such as \"Gol Maal\" (1979) and \"Rang Birangi\" (1983). He also did the role of a sculptor, Sir Digindra Narayan, in the episode \"Seemant Heera\" of Byomkesh Bakshi (TV series) on Doordarshan in 1993, shortly before his death. He received National Film Award for Best Actor in 1970 and three Filmfare Best Comedian Awards. In 1990, the Sangeet Natak Akademi, India's National Academy of Music, Dance and Theatre, awarded him its highest award, the Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowship for lifetime contribution to theatre. Utpal Dutta was born on 29 March 1929 in Barisal. His father was Girijaranjan Dutta. He graduated with English Literature Honours from St. Xavier's College, Calcutta, University of Calcutta. Though he was active primarily in Bengali theatre, he started his career in English theatre. As a teenager in the 1940s, he developed his passion and craft in English theatre, which resulted in the establishment of \"The Shakespeareans\" in 1947.",
"Kiran Shantaram Kiran Shantaram (born 1942) is an Indian film personality and former Sheriff of Mumbai. He is the son of V. Shantaram and Jayashree. He is chairman of V. Shantaram foundation and head of Asian Film Foundation. He is also the chairman of Prabhat Chitra Mandal. He is the trustee of V. Shantaram trust that owns Plaza cinema, Mumbai and is also its general manager. He is the president of The Mercedes Benz Club of India. He is the chairman of Federation of Film Societies of India. He was a jury for the \"Feature films section\" of the 43rd National Film Festival, 1996. Shantaram made his debut working as assistant director of the film \"Navrang\"; he was responsible for \"continuity shots\" and shot a fantasy song.",
"Do Boond Pani Do Boond Pani (meaning: Two Drops of Water) is a 1971 Hindi social drama film produced and directed by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas. Made under the \"Naya Sansar\" banner; the story, screenplay and dialogues were by K. A. Abbas, with additional dialogues by Inder Raj Anand. The music was composed by Jaidev. The cast included Simi Garewal, Jalal Agha and Madhu Chanda and was the debut film of actor Kiran Kumar. The film won the award for Best Feature film on National integration. Set against the backdrop of Rajasthan, the film focused on the scarcity of water, and the eventual building of a dam. Ganga Singh (Jalal Agha) goes to work on the dam, but loses his life, leaving behind his widow and a young son in the village. His sacrifice helps transform the desert land into a fertile area with the dam being called Ganga Sagar dam. Ganga Singh (Jalal Agha), newly married to Gauri (Simi Garewal), brings his wife to his village, in Rajsthan where he lives with his father Hari Singh (Sajjan), and sister Sonki (Madhu Chanda). They live hand to mouth in this poor village which is suffering from drought and villagers have to travel a long distance to get water. Ganga Singh hears of a dam being constructed and leaves his wife to join in the building of it. His family goes through misfortunes, with his father dying and his sister being raped by the dacoit Mangal Singh. Ganga himself dies preventing a disaster at the dam. The dam is eventually built bringing greenery to an arid region. His wife bears a son and lives on in the village. The film was referred to as an \"inspirational melodrama\" and the music by Jaidev was stated as a \"magisterial score\", however, the film was not a commercial success and flopped at the box office. Composer Jaidev got Asha Bhosle to sing for \"Do Boond Pani\", for the song \"Ja Ri Pawaniya\". The lyricists were Kaifi Azmi, Balkavi Bairagi and M. R. Mukul."
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[
"no"
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Are Tahaneh-Ye Olya and Valuja both located in the same country?
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Valuja Valuja (, also Romanized as Valūjā) is a village in Gahrbaran-e Shomali Rural District, Gahrbaran District, Miandorud County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,904, in 519 families.
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"Valam-e Olya Valam-e Olya (, also Romanized as Valam-e ‘Olyā; also known as Valam and Valam-e Bālā) is a village in Harazpey-ye Shomali Rural District, Sorkhrud District, Mahmudabad County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 285, in 72 families.",
"Tazeh Kand-e Olya, Heris Tazeh Kand-e Olya (, also Romanized as Tāzeh Kand-e ‘Olyā; also known as Tāzeh Kand and Tāzeh Kand-e Bālā) is a village in Khanamrud Rural District, in the Central District of Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2016 census, its population was 177, in 33 families.",
"Abu Alayej-e Olya Abu Alayej-e Olya (, also Romanized as Abū ‘Alāyej-e ‘Olyā; also known as Albū ‘Alāyej-e Bālā and Albū ‘Alāyej-e ‘Olyā) is a village in Jarahi Rural District, in the Central District of Mahshahr County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. As of the 2006 census, its population was 363, in 61 families.",
"Sarujeh-ye Olya Sarujeh-ye Olya (, also Romanized as Sārūjeh-ye ‘Olyā) is a village in Mahmudabad Rural District, in the Central District of Shahin Dezh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 571, in 101 families.",
"Tash-e Olya Tash-e Olya (, also Romanized as Tāsh-e ‘Olyā; also known as Tāsh and Tāsh-e Bālā) is a village in Kharqan Rural District, Bastam District, Shahrud County, Semnan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 138, in 40 families.",
"Tazeh Kand-e Olya, Maragheh Tazeh Kand-e Olya (, also Romanized as Tāzeh Kand-e ‘Olyā) is a village in Qareh Naz Rural District, in the Central District of Maragheh County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 539, in 142 families.",
"Jarqavieh Olya Jarqavieh Olya () may refer to:",
"Tazeh Kand, Jolfa Tazeh Kand (, also Romanized as Tāzeh Kand and Tāzekand) is a village in Shoja Rural District, in the Central District of Jolfa County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 45, in 13 families.",
"Khvajeh Vali-ye Olya Khvajeh Vali-ye Olya (, also Romanized as Khvājeh Valī-ye ‘Olyā and Khvājeh Valī-ye Bālā) is a village in Behnamvasat-e Jonubi Rural District, Javadabad District, Varamin County, Tehran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 18, in 6 families.",
"Dunay-e Olya Dunay-e Olya (, also Romanized as Dūnāy-e ‘Olyā; also known as Dūnā, Dūnā-ye ‘Olyā, and Dūnā-ye Bālā) is a village in Owzrud Rural District, Baladeh District, Nur County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 290, in 68 families."
] |
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[
"yes"
] |
Who is the spouse of the director of film Under Siege 2: Dark Territory?
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Under Siege 2: Dark Territory Under Siege 2: Dark Territory is a 1995 American action thriller film directed by Geoff Murphy, starring Steven Seagal as the ex-Navy SEAL, Casey Ryback. Set on board a train traveling through the Rocky Mountains from Denver to Los Angeles, it is the sequel to the 1992 film "Under Siege" also starring Seagal. The title refers to the railroading term that the subject train was travelling through dark territory, a section of railroad track that has no train signals and in which communications between train dispatchers and the railroad engineers were impossible. The film was produced by Seagal along with Arnon Milchan and Steve Perry. The film's cast also included Eric Bogosian, Everett McGill, Morris Chestnut, Peter Greene, Kurtwood Smith and Katherine Heigl. In addition to Seagal, Nick Mancuso, Andy Romano, and Dale Dye also reprised their roles from the first film. Following his retirement from the United States Navy, Casey Ryback settles in Denver, Colorado, where he starts and runs a restaurant business. Sometime later, his estranged brother, James Ryback, perishes in a plane crash. Upon receiving news of the incident, Casey meets James's daughter, Sarah, whom he will accompany to Los Angeles to attend his funeral. The two board the Grand Continental, a train traveling through the Rocky Mountains from Denver to Los Angeles. On board, they befriend a porter named Bobby Zachs and the train's chefs. As the train reaches the Rocky Mountains, a group of terrorists flag it down and murder the engineer and brakeman. The group, led by former U.S. government employee and computer genius Travis Dane and his second-in-command Marcus Penn, cuts the train phone lines and takes passengers and staff hostage, herding them into the last two cars. Casey kills one terrorist, then slips away. Dane worked on Grazer One, a top secret military satellite particle weapon for underground targets. The military fired Dane, who later faked his suicide. Dane threatens two former Department of Defense colleagues with burning needles in their eyes unless they reveal codes to take over Grazer. Despite their disclosures, after the codes are confirmed to work, they are thrown from the train over a deep valley. Middle Eastern terrorists have offered Dane $1 billion to destroy the Eastern seaboard by using Grazer to target a nuclear reactor located under the Pentagon.
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[
"Jennifer Dale Jennifer Ciurluini (born January 16, 1956 in Toronto), known professionally as Jennifer Dale, is a Canadian television actress and former dancer. She is the sister of Canadian actress Cynthia Dale. From 1980 to 1986 she was married to Robert Lantos; they have 2 children, Sabrina and Ariel. In 1987, she appeared in the docudrama \"Hoover vs. the Kennedys: The Second Civil War,\" which deals with a feud between J. Edgar Hoover and the Kennedys, as First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy. She also voiced a character in \"Resident Evil 2\", Annette Birkin. In 2003, she received the Earle Grey Award recognizing her lifetime achievements in the Canadian entertainment industry.",
"Roberta Findlay Roberta Findlay (born 1948) is an American film director, cinematographer, producer and actress. She is best known for her work in the exploitation field. Her work has received increasing critical appreciation in recent years. She was married to Michael Findlay and they made a number of films together. After his death she continued to make movies.",
"Carine Adler Carine Adler, Baroness Reid of Cardowan (born 1948) is a Brazilian screenwriter and film director. Adler's break came when the British Film Institute asked her to develop her short film \"Touch and Go\" into a full-length feature. The result was \"Under the Skin\", the screenplay for which took her two years to write. According to Richard Armstrong in \"The Rough Guide to Film\", \"What distinguishes her small oeuvre is the fusion of her protagonists' desire and their sense of inferiority.\" Adler is the second wife of former British government minister Dr John Reid, Baron Reid, whom she married in 2002. She has a son, Hal, from a previous marriage, and two stepsons with Reid.",
"Fortress (1992 film) Fortress is a 1992 science fiction action film directed by Stuart Gordon and shot at Warner Bros. Movie World in Queensland, Australia. The story takes place in a dystopian future. The main character in the movie, John Henry Brennick (Christopher Lambert) and his wife Karen B. Brennick (Loryn Locklin) are sent to a maximum security prison because they are expecting a second child, which is against strict one-child policies. The film was a financial success, but critical reviews were mixed. A sequel, \"\", was released in 2000, with Lambert reprising his role. In 2017, ex-army officer John Henry Brennick and his wife Karen are attempting to cross the Canada–United States border to Vancouver to have a second child. Strict one-child policies forbid a second pregnancy, even after their firstborn has died, so Karen wears a magnetic vest to trick the security scanners. A guard notices and raises the alarm. Brennick is caught, believing Karen to have escaped, and sentenced to 31 years at the Fortress, a private maximum 30-level security prison run by the Men-Tel Corporation. To maintain discipline, all inmates are implanted with \"Intestinators\" which induce severe pain or death as a form of physical control and mental conditioning. The prison is run by Director Poe, who oversees Zed-10, a computer that monitors day-to-day activities. The prison is located underground, in the middle of the desert, inside a deep pit that can only be crossed by a retractable bridge, while the prisoners are kept in overcrowded cells secured by laser walls. John is imprisoned with inmates Abraham, a model prisoner who works as Poe's manservant and is awaiting parole; D-Day, a machine and demolitions expert; Nino Gomez, and Stiggs, who tries to extort John. John learns his wife has been captured and is held in an upper level with his unborn child who, being illegal, is now officially owned by Men-Tel and will be confiscated at birth. Stiggs has a friend, Maddox, who repeatedly intimidates John; the two are involved in a brawl which culminates with Maddox being shot by a security turret before he falls to his death. John manages to grab Maddox's Intestinator and gives it to D-Day before he is taken away to be subjected to a mind-wipe procedure as punishment.",
"Melora Walters Melora Walters (born October 21, 1959) is an American actress. She starred in the television series \"Big Love\" and has appeared in several Paul Thomas Anderson films. She married cinematographer Alex Vendler on June 21, 2008. She filed for divorce in 2010. She has two children from her previous marriage with Dylan Walsh. Some of her filmmaking influences are Ingmar Bergman, Federico Fellini, François Truffaut, John Cassavetes and Jean-Luc Godard. Walters first appeared as Debbie, the nail technician on \"Roseanne\". Walters directed and wrote the script for the film \"Waterlily Jaguar\". She starred in an episode of \"\".",
"Ira Sachs Ira Sachs (born November 21, 1965) is an American filmmaker. His first film was the short \"Lady\" (1993). Sachs was born in Memphis, Tennessee. His films include \"The Delta\" (1997), \"Forty Shades of Blue\" (2005), \"Married Life\" (2007), \"Keep the Lights On\" (2012), and \"Love Is Strange\" (2014). His newest film, \"Little Men\", premiered at Sundance in 2016. Sachs is Jewish and openly gay. He described \"Keep the Lights On\" as semi-autobiographical film. In January 2012, Sachs married artist Boris Torres in New York city, a few days before their twins were born. Sachs and Torres co-parent the children with documentary cinematographer and filmmaker Kirsten Johnson, who bore them. He appeared in the German documentary \"Wie ich lernte die Zahlen zu lieben/How I Learned to Love the Numbers\" (2014) by Oliver Sechting and Max Taubert. As a Director",
"Fortress: Sniper's Eye Fortress: Sniper's Eye, also known as Fortress 2, is an upcoming American action film directed by Josh Sternfeld as a sequel to \"Fortress\". It stars Jesse Metcalfe, Bruce Willis, Chad Michael Murray, Kelly Greyson, Ser'Darius Blain, Michael Sirow, Welker White, and Natali Yura. The film is set to be released on April 29, 2022, by Lionsgate Films. \"Fortress 2\" was announced on May 3, 2021, as the second film in a trilogy and a sequel to \"Fortress\". Principal photography began in Puerto Rico in May 2021, with the first two films being shot back-to-back. Filming for \"Fortress 2\" wrapped by November 2021. A first-look image was released at the 2021 American Film Market, where Highland Film Group is looking to sell the film's distribution rights in the United States and Canada.",
" He delivered the 2013 commencement address at Chapman University Dodge College of Film and Media Arts, and was a featured speaker at the 2019 Renaissance Weekend. Koch is a vocal advocate for diversity and representation in film and television, as well as diversity within the entertainment industry's professional guilds and organizations. As of 2020, Koch serves on the board of directors for AMC Entertainment, Cast and Crew, the Motion Picture and Television Fund, the Producers Guild of America, and the National Film Preservation Foundation. Koch is married to Jungian analyst and writer Molly Jordan Koch. He was previous married to Rita Litter, mother of his children Billy Koch and Emily Anne Koch; to Marcia (no last name given), mother of Robby Koch; and to Actor Joanna Pacuła. He was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted.",
"Jim Threapleton James Edward Threapleton (born 1973, Wharfedale, West Riding of Yorkshire, England) is an English film director. Threapleton has worked as an assistant director on many films, including \"Hideous Kinky\". His first work as a director (and writer) was the film \"Extraordinary Rendition\", starring Omar Berdouni and Andy Serkis, which premiered at the 2007 Locarno Film Festival. The elder of two boys, he has a younger brother Robin. He and Kate Winslet, who he met on the set of \"Hideous Kinky\", married on 22 November 1998 in Reading, Berkshire, Winslet's hometown. They have a daughter, Mia Honey Threapleton (born 12 October 2000 in London). The couple separated in September 2001 and divorced on 13 December 2001. In 2008 Threapleton married his second wife, Julie Vuorinen, a school administrator and teacher to special needs students. They have two daughters, Olivia, born in 2009, and Georgia, born in 2013.",
"Andy Siege Andy Siege (born Andreas Madjid Siege, 1985, in Nairobi, Kenya) is a director. His debut feature film \"Beti and Amare\" (2014), which he directed, wrote, cinematographed, edited and acted in, was made with a 14,000 euro budget. So far, it has been nominated for the Golden St. George Award at the 36th Moscow International Film Festival and has been featured in the Official Selection of film festivals around the world."
] |
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[
"Merata Mita"
] |
Which film has the director born first, From Language To Language or Recep İvedik 5?
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Recep İvedik 6 Recep İvedik 6 is a 2019 Turkish comedy film directed by Togan Gökbakar and written by Şahan Gökbakar, starring Şahan Gökbakar and Nurullah Çelebi. It is the sixth film in the "Recep İvedik" film series. Recep Ivedik travels back in time and travels to Kenya with his friends country of origin. Recep Ivedik is mistakenly sent to Kenya instead of Konya, the blundering Recep wreaks havoc in the savannah as he tries to get home. Principal photography for the movie began on 3 September 2018. It was announced that part of the shootings would take place in the longoz forest in Karacabey district of Bursa. Şahan Gökbakar has said in an interview that the production of this movie would've been impossible without the help of his best friend Deniz Ünal. He has been essential in the creation of the plot.
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[
"To language To is an unclassified Mbum language of northern Cameroon and the Central African Republic. It is only used as a second language, as the secret male initiation language of the Gbaya.",
"Tosinê Reşîd Tosinê Reşîd (also Tosinê Reşît), (born 1941), is a contemporary Kurdish Yazidi writer, poet and playwright. He was born in the village of Koorakand (Kûrekend) in Armenia. He studied physics and chemistry at the Pedagogical Institute and graduated in 1964. After a few years of working as a teacher, he continued his studies in 1970 and received his PhD in chemistry in 1975. In the same year, he published his first book entitled \"Kilamê Rê\" (Word of the Way). During the 1970s, around 200 of his articles were used under the name of \"Kurdish Encyclopaedia\" in cultural programs of Radio Yerevan. He published his first play based on the well known Kurdish folkloric epic \"Siyabend û Xecê\" in 1984. In 1993, he left Armenia and settled in Melbourne, Australia.",
"Tofig Ismayilov (film director) Tofiq Ismayilov (6 April 1939 – 25 March 2016) was an Azerbaijani film director, screenwriter and film scholar. Ismayilov directed over 30 films, including documentaries and starred in several films. From 2007, he lectured in the Azerbaijani State University of Culture and Art. As a scholar, Ismayilov authored the encyclopedia \"The Cinema History of Turkic People\". His articles were published in over fifty Turkish newspapers and journals.",
"On the Way to School On the Way to School () is a 2008 Turkish documentary film directed by Orhan Eskiköy and Özgür Doğan. It has attracted 78,000 people in eight weeks, an impressive showing for a documentary. The film is an openhearted account of a young Turkish teacher during a school year in a Kurdish village in southeastern Turkey. Film production began in September 2007 and was completed in June 2008. The film opened in 22 screens across Turkey on at number five in the Turkish box office chart with an opening weekend gross of $60,387. The film debuted number five in the Turkish box office chart and has made a total gross of $399,581. The film was photographed mostly in Demirci village which is in Şanlıurfa, Turkey.",
"From One Friday to the Next From One Friday to the Next (\"Od petka do petka\") is a 1985 Croatian film directed by Antun Vrdoljak, starring Boris Dvornik and Zdravka Krstulović.",
"From the Village to the City From the Village to the City () is a 1974 Turkish comedy film directed by Ertem Eğilmez.",
"As Far as I Can Walk As Far as I Can Walk (also known as Strahinja Banović or Strahinja) is a 2021 internationally co-produced drama film directed by Stefan Arsenijević and written by Arsenijević, Bojan Vuletić, and Nicolas Ducray. It is a modern reimagining of Strahinja Banović, a hero of medieval Serbian epic poetry, that follows a young Ghanaian couple living as refugees in Belgrade. It premiered at the 55th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, where it won five awards. The film was produced by Miroslav Mogorovich of Serbia's Art & Popcorn, Alice Ormieres of France's Surprise Valley, Gilles Chanial of Luxembourg's Les Films Fauves, Borislav Chouchkov of Bulgaria's Chouchkov Brothers, and Kestutis Drazdauskas of Lithuania's Artbox. The project received support from Eurimages, Film Center Serbia, the Serbian Film Incentive, Film Fund Luxembourg, the Bulgarian National Film Center, the Lithuanian Film Centre, the CNC's Aide aux cinémas du monde, and the European Union's Creative Europe MEDIA. Principal photography took place on location in Belgrade in 2020.",
"With Mum With Mum () is a 2013 Bosnian drama film directed by Faruk Lončarevič. It was selected as the Bosnian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards, but was not nominated.",
"Another Language Another Language is a 1933 American Pre-Code romantic drama film directed by Edward H. Griffith and starring Robert Montgomery and Helen Hayes. A newlywed discovers that she and her husband's snobby family speak different languages: Stella and Victor meet in Europe, fall deeply in love, and marry soon thereafter. They sail back to the States to meet Victor's family, and the honeymoon is over: Stella is free spirited and Victor, although traditional in nature, does not interfere in his wife's pursuits outside the home. Victor's family, dominated by his manipulative mother, and they find Stella, pretentious and aloof. Their marriage starts to fall apart when Victor begins siding with his family instead of his wife. A frustrated Stella finds a sympathetic ear in Victor's nephew, Jerry.",
"Ante Peterlić Ante Peterlić (18 May 1936 – 12 July 2007) was a Croatian screenwriter and film director. He is best known for his film \"Accidental Life\", his debut feature film. Peterlić was a prominent young film critic, and a professor of film theory at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Zagreb. In the 1960s, he directed his first short TV drama, and was active as an assistant director in several feature films and documentaries, working also as a script doctor."
] |
[] |
[
"From Language To Language"
] |
What is the place of birth of the director of film Cherry Ripe (Film)?
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Ripe Cherries Ripe Cherries () is a 1973 East German drama film directed by Horst Seemann. It was entered into the 8th Moscow International Film Festival.
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[
"Ace Norton Ace Norton (born May 24, 1982, in Venice, Los Angeles, California) is a Japanese American filmmaker and artist born and raised in Venice, California. Norton creates visuals on a variety of media platforms including music videos, commercials, fashion films, and movies. Norton also is known for his drawings, sculptures, and frequently commissioned installation work. Norton grew up in Venice, and is the son of writer/director Bill Norton Junior and grandson of motion picture screenwriter William Norton Senior. Norton spent most of high school shooting short films. One of which, \"Cherry Coke Rage\", won the highest award at the Los Angeles Film Festival. By the end of his high school career Norton had produced over 200 short films. Following graduation Norton attended the University of Southern California (USC) School of Cinema. At USC Norton began to direct music videos for local Los Angeles bands. While in college Norton and friends (Toben Seymour, Hiro Murai, Charles Spano, Asiel Norton) created Commondeer Films. Using Norton's bedroom as office space, they would spend weekends emailing bands and animating low budget music videos. Commondeer produced over 40 music videos. After building his name in the Los Angeles art & music scenes, Norton's work caught the attention of Partizan founder Georges Bermann. In 2007, Norton signed to Partizan, then shortly thereafter to Prettybird (London) & Solab (France), & REPRESENT (Germany)… Since then, Ace has directed over eighty music videos, television commercials, fashion shorts, and short films. His prolific body of work includes music videos for groups such as Foster The People, The Fray, Jennifer Lopez, Scissor Sisters, Aesop Rock, The Virgins, Sebastien Tellier, Death Cab for Cutie, Norah Jones, Steve Aoki, Regina Spektor, Bloc Party and Simian Mobile Disco, And campaigns for Lexus, Gucci, Honda, Coca-Cola, La Mer, Old Spice, Adidas, Samsung, Smirnoff, Nissan, Gap, Mercedes, Dolby, Happy Socks, Paco Rabanne, T-Mobile, House of Fraser, and many many more. Ace’s work has been featured in the L.A. Times, The Huffington Post, Nowness, Nylon, Interview, Anthem, Boards, Promo magazine and numerous others. Highsnobiety regarded him as one of the \"Best 10 Directors Working Today\".",
"Cherry (2021 film) Cherry is a 2021 American crime drama film directed by Anthony and Joe Russo, from a screenplay by Angela Russo-Otstot and Jessica Goldberg, based on the autofictional novel of the same title by Nico Walker, and stars Tom Holland as the titular character, alongside Ciara Bravo, Jack Reynor, Michael Rispoli, Mark Francis, and Jeff Wahlberg. The film follows the life of a man, from a college student to a PTSD-inflicted veteran who robs banks to pay for his and his wife's drug addiction. \"Cherry\" was released in theaters on February 26, 2021, and was released digitally on Apple TV+ on March 12, 2021. The film received mixed reviews from critics, who praised Holland's performance but criticized the story & direction. College student Cherry falls in love at first sight with his classmate Emily. Their relationship blossoms but Emily decides to leave him and study in Montreal. Cherry is devastated and enlists in the Army as a medic to escape his heartbreak. Just before he is about to leave for basic training, Emily realizes her mistake and confesses she is in love with Cherry too and that they are meant for one another. Cherry and Emily marry before his deployment. During his two year service in the Army, Cherry suffers from PTSD after having several horrific experiences, including seeing his friend, Jimenez, burnt and killed from an IED. To cope with his panic attacks and severe anxiety when he comes home, he abuses OxyContin, prescribed from a doctor helping to decrease his PTSD symptoms. His growing addiction begins to frustrate Emily and as a result, she begins taking Cherry's medication to deal with her own frustration of not knowing how to support him without drugs and the two soon become addicted to OxyContin, and eventually heroin. After they break into a safe that he was looking after for his drug dealer, Pills and Coke, he and Emily use most of the drugs secured inside for themselves. Some time later, Pills and Coke visits and sees the empty safe. Cherry learns that his drug dealer's boss, Black, is the owner of the safe and will kill all three of them for this. To get the money for the drugs they used, Cherry robs a bank and pays back the money. As a result of their daily heroin use, Cherry continues to rob banks frequently after he and Emily go through severe withdrawals. Emily overdoses and almost dies in a hospital.",
"Fruit Chan Fruit Chan Gor (; born 15 April 1959) is a Hong Kong Second Wave filmmaker who is best known for his style of film reflecting the everyday life of Hong Kong people. He is well known for using amateur actors (such as Sam Lee in \"Made in Hong Kong\", Wong Yau-Nam in \"Hollywood Hong Kong\") in his films. He became a household name after the success of the 1997 film \"Made in Hong Kong\", which earned many local and international awards. Chan was born on Hainan Island, China. Growing up, he watched a lot of films from Communist countries. He and his family moved to Hong Kong in July 1971. His family was poor and Chan worked in an electronics factory while finishing Forms 1 to 3 at night school. He later got a job as a projectionist in Jordan, Hong Kong, where he developed an interest in international cinema. He later enrolled in a one-year film studies course at the Film Culture Society, garnering admission by lying about his secondary education experience and working odd jobs to pay for tuition. He continued his interest in film later on at the Hong Kong Film Culture Centre, a small film club, where he studied script writing and directing. In 1982, after only one year of working at the Hong Kong Film Culture Centre he started his career in the film industry. He began his career as an assistant director to David Lai Dai-Wai in the film \"Mid-Night Girls\". He later worked as an assistant director to mainstream directors Jackie Chan, Kirk Wong, Ronny Yu, and Shu Kei. His break came in 1991 when a film he was working with stopped its production. Chan took this as an opportunity; he used the same studio to direct \"Finale in Blood\" starring Hong Kong film star Andy Lau. However, the outcome of the first of his own films was highly praised by the critics rather than the public. In 1994 he collected a total of 500,000 HKD and film-materials left over by other productions to begin directing his award winning \"Made in Hong Kong\". After \"Made in Hong Kong\" came out he was thought of as the hope for Hong Kong cinema by fellow Hong Kong filmmakers for challenging the stable model of Hong Kong filmmaking. He had become the first filmmaker to, independently of the big studios, challenge the genre of Hong Kong films and make realistic films about the political and social situations going on in Hong Kong at the time.",
"Jennifer Lyon Bell Jennifer Lyon Bell (born August 6, 1969 in Concord, Massachusetts) is an erotic film director/producer, curator, teacher, and writer. She is one of the early members of the feminist pornography movement and ethical porn movement, alongside Erika Lust, Shine Louise Houston, Tristan Taormino, and Maria Beatty. She is the founder and creative director of the independent production company Blue Artichoke Films in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. She has honors degrees from Harvard University in Psychology, (B.A.) and from the University of Amsterdam in Film + Television Studies (M.A.). Bell’s films have been cited for their sense of intimacy, realism, and authenticity. Bell says she aims to create positive social change with her erotic films by purposely eroticizing sexual communication between partners, by diversifying portrayals of gender, and by showing diversity in both casting (diverse race, body type, \"etc.\") and in showing the flexible, diverse, creative nature of sex. Her films have been covered in \"Vice\", \"BuzzFeed\", \"Playboy\", \"Filmmaker\", \"Dazed\", \"Cosmopolitan\", and \"Huffington Post\", among others.",
"Joe Pennella Joseph Pennella is an American cinematographer and television director. Pennella's career began as a documentary filmmaker in Denver, Colorado. He is a graduate of the University of Denver and received a bachelor's degree in mass communications. Beginning in the 1980s, Pennella worked on as a second unit director of photography on the films \"Bad Boys\" (1983) and \"Blueberry Hill\" (1988). From 1985, he focused primarily on cinematography, working on the films \"Happy Together\" (1989) and \"Wife, Mother, Murderer\" (1991), both directed by Mel Damski. Moving to television, he worked on shows including \"Life Goes On\", \"The Drew Carey Show\", \"The Wayans Bros.\", \"Jack & Jill\", \"Ed\", \"Kitchen Condential\", \"Pepper Dennis\", and \"What About Brian\". In 1997, he made his directorial debut with an episode of \"Clueless\". His other directing credits include \"Jake in Progress\", \"Everwood\" and \"Monk\", also working as a cinematographer on the latter.",
"Jaie Laplante Jaie Laplante (born January 8, 1970) is a Canadian-American screenwriter, actor and curator. Born in Alberta, Canada, Laplante's notable credits include co-screenwriter of \"Sugar\", for which he received a nomination in the Best Adapted Screenplay category of the 2005 Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television's 25th Genie Awards, along with co-writers John Palmer and Todd Klinck. As an actor, he appeared in \"Frisk\", directed by Todd Verow. Laplante is currently executive director and chief curator of Miami International Film Festival, which he has programmed since 2010.",
"Helen Cherry Helen Mary Cherry (24 November 1915 – 27 September 2001) was an English stage, film and television actress. She was born in Worsley, Lancashire, and brought up in Harrogate, West Riding of Yorkshire. Whilst working at the Arts Theatre, Cherry met fellow actor Trevor Howard, whom she married on 8 September 1944; they remained married until his death in 1988. They had no children.",
"Ripe (Slug album) Ripe is the debut album by SLUG, a Field Music production led by former Field Music touring bassist Ian Black. The tracks \"Cockeyed Rabbit Wrapped in Plastic\", \"Running to Get Past Your Heart\" and \"Greasy Mind\" were selected for radio promotion, with a video being produced for the latter. Ian Black describes the writing process for the album as a series of 'what-if' scenarios- \"What if we take a stoner metal riff and use it like a dub bass part...that was the idea. Let's add some 4 part harmonies some squelch bass, some hisses and triangle and you've got a peculiar, sinister song.\" He has cited horror movie soundtracks by Fabio Frizzi, Goblin, Lalo Schifrin, Andrzej Korzyński and John Carpenter as a major influence on his songwriting. Creation and touring of the album was supported by Peter and David Brewis, the core members of Field Music itself.",
"Joe Lynch (director) Joe Lynch (born March 23, 1976) is an American film and music video director, film producer, cinematographer, and actor. Lynch was born in Long Island, New York. Though he began his career as a child actor, he soon became obsessed with filmmaking itself. His first two student shorts, \"mAHARBA\" and \"hiBeams\", were selected to screen at many film festivals. He was named \"Filmmaker of the Year\" in 1999 by the Long Island Voice. Lynch has directed music videos for such groups as DVDA, Pete Yorn, Strapping Young Lad, Faith No More, 311, and Godhead. He was also one of the creators of the television show \"Uranium\" for Fuse TV. His director debut in feature film was 2007's \"\", which starred Henry Rollins, Erica Leerhsen, and Texas Battle. Lynch is a lifelong genre film fan (especially horror) and has appeared as a featured guest at several Weekend of Horrors conventions. He has also appeared in several short films, including director Adam Green's 2007 Halloween short \"The Tiffany Problem\" alongside Joel Moore and Corri English. Lynch worked at G4 as creative director of the website, and appears as a special guest on its popular series \"Attack of the Show!\" in a horror-themed segment called \"Body Count\". Lynch was one of the four directors who collaborated on the comedy horror anthology \"Chillerama\", which was released by Image Entertainment on November 29, 2011 after a successful festival and \"roadshow\" theatrical run. Lynch directed the wraparound portions set in a drive-in playing four obscure genre films. He also appeared as \"Fernando Phagabeefy\", director of the fourth film, \"Deathication\". His next feature-length film was released in 2012. \"Knights of Badassdom\", a \"horror/adventure/comedy\" film, stars Ryan Kwanten, Steve Zahn, Summer Glau, Danny Pudi, Jimmi Simpson and Peter Dinklage. Lynch disowned the movie after significant interference from the studio. Lynch also executive produced and was the creative showrunner for G4tv.com's \"Epictober Film Festival\", producing three horror/video game-themed short films by directors Drew Daywalt, Gregg Bishop and Sam Balcomb, which premiered in October 2011.",
"Sébastien Rose Sébastien Rose (born June 30, 1969, in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian film director and screenwriter. His debut film, \"How My Mother Gave Birth to Me During Menopause (Comment ma mère accoucha de moi durant sa ménopause)\", won the Claude Jutra Award for the best Canadian film by a first-time director in 2003."
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[
"Croydon"
] |
What nationality is the director of film Queensland (Film)?
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Queensland (film) Queensland is a 1976 film directed by John Ruane and starring John Flaus and Robert Karl. Doug is a factory worker living in Melbourne who dreams of moving from Melbourne to Queensland. He attempts to reconnect with an old flame, Marge, and move to Queensland together. John Ruane says he was inspired by a newspaper article about a slaughterman who killed his de facto wife and then got drunk for two days. He decided to remove the killing aspect, concentrate on the relationship. Ruane: What we were trying to do then, strangely enough, was trying to imitate "Summer of the Seventeenth Doll" in reverse and to imitate "Midnight Cowboy", a sort of Northcote version of "Midnight Cowboy" - not the story, but the fact that they were headed for a dream. Their dream was Miami. Our film was obviously about heading to Queensland... It's about a vanishing breed of Australians. The film was made with money from the Experimental Film and Television Fund while John Ruane was a film student at the Swinburne College of Technology in Melbourne. The movie was released through the co-operative movement.
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"Cecil Holmes (director) Cecil William Holmes (23 June 1921 – 24 August 1994) was a New Zealand-born film director and writer. He was born in Waipukurau, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand. He served in the Royal New Zealand Air Force and British Royal Navy during World War II before turning to filmmaking. He made a number of documentaries for the New Zealand National Film Unit then moved to Australia, where he directed several feature films and a number of documentaries for the Commonwealth Film Unit. The Cecil Holmes Award given by the Australian Directors Guild is named after him. The Award was instigated in 1995, and is presented by the ADG board from time to time to honour recipients who have advocated for the role of the director. His second wife was author and Indigenous advocate Sandra Le Brun Holmes.",
"Justin Kurzel Justin Dallas Kurzel (; born 1974) is an Australian film director and screenwriter. Kurzel was born 1974 in Gawler, South Australia to a family of immigrant roots, his father hailing from Poland and his mother from Malta. His younger brother, Jed Kurzel, is a blues rock musician who has scored most of Justin's films. In 1999 he was awarded a Mike Walsh Fellowship. His film debut was the Australian short film \"Blue Tongue\" (2004). His feature film debut was \"Snowtown\" (2011), for which he won the AACTA Award for Best Direction. Though controversial for its violence, the film was generally praised and holds an 84% on Rotten Tomatoes with the critic consensus: \"It's a bleak and brutal endurance test, but for viewers with the strength and patience to make it to the end, Snowtown will prove an uncommonly powerful viewing experience.\" His 2015 film adaptation of William Shakespeare's \"Macbeth\" was selected to compete for the Palme d'Or at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival. In 2016, Kurzel directed \"Assassin's Creed\" (2016), based on the video game franchise of the same name. Kurzel directed \"True History of the Kelly Gang\" in 2018, adapted from Peter Carey's 2001 Man Booker Prize-winning novel of the same name, written from the viewpoint of legendary Australian bushranger and outlaw Ned Kelly. The film premiered at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival and was released in Australian cinemas in 2020. Kurzel will direct multiple episodes of Apple TV's television adaptation of the 2003 novel \"Shantaram\". Kurzel is married to actress Essie Davis. They have twin daughters.",
"David Caesar David Caesar (born 1963) is an Australian television and film director and writer. He grew up in Turlinjah on the south coast of NSW and attended school in nearby Moruya where he was school captain in his senior year. Caesar graduated from the Australian Film Television and Radio School in 1987. He won an AWGIE and best director at Shanghai Film Festival for his film MULLET. He won a Queensland Premiers Literary award for the screenplay for PRIME MOVER in 2008.",
"Glenn Fraser Glenn Fraser is an Australian filmmaker with a reputation for making gritty films in a variety of arenas and forms. Most of his work focuses on the 'hidden' to some degree, either subcultures or activities which exist just beneath the surface of an ordinary life, or hidden in plain sight. Subject matter has included the highly regarded human trafficking in \"The Veiled\", male sexual control in \"Boy\", female sexual empowerment in \"Slipper\" and the rise of new terrorism in the Middle East for \"Beautiful Voice\". His filmmaking has seen him work extensively through the United Kingdom, Asia, Canada and the Middle East. He attended Woollahra Public School and then Sydney Boys High School, in Moore Park from 1980 to 1985. His films have received awards and his work has been exhibited in major international film festivals including Tropfest, the Sydney Film Festival, Edinburgh International Film Festival and Sundance Film Festival. In 2017, Fraser and the team at Transmedia Entertainment developed the world's first fully dramatised virtual reality comic book in \"Moriarty: Endgame VR\". The work was debuted at Wondercon 2017. In 2018, Fraser and fellow filmmaker Karl Jenner developed the Face Off Screen Actors' Showcase. Noticing a lack of opportunities for less experienced actors to see their work on the big screen, Fraser invited actors to submit their work to go under the eye of a panel of industry experts including casting director Greg Apps, actors Kate Fitzpatrick, Tony Bonner AM, Susan Prior and producers Enzo Tedeschi and Sally Browning.",
"David Charles (Australian politician) David Ernest Charles (born 2 March 1948) is a former Australian politician. Born in Melbourne, he was a film and television director before entering politics. In 1980, he was elected to the Australian House of Representatives as the Labor member for Isaacs. He held the seat until his retirement in 1990. On leaving the parliament, Charles served a term as Consul-General in San Francisco (1990–1993).",
"Robert Sarkies Robert Sarkies (born 6 March 1967) is a New Zealand film director and screenwriter. Sarkies grew up in the South Island city of Dunedin. He attended Kaikorai Valley College. His three feature films to date have been set in Dunedin, or in the lower South Island. After his debut feature \"Scarfies\", Sarkies followed it in 2006 with \"Out of the Blue\", based on the 1990 Aramoana Massacre, then black comedy \"Two Little Boys\", starring Bret McKenzie and Australia's Hamish Blake. Sarkies began making short films as a teenager with fellow filmmaker and Lindsay Chalmers. After winning an international award for his short \"Dream-makers\", Sarkies began work on his most ambitious short to date: adventure comedy \"Signing Off\" (1996), which won four international awards and helped attract funding for \"Scarfies\" (1999), his feature debut. \"Signing Off\" was produced by film and television producer Lisa Chatfield. Sarkies co-wrote the \"Scarfies\" script with his younger brother, playwright and performer Duncan and award winning producer Lisa Chatfield. Winner of seven awards including Best Picture and Best Director at the NZ Film Awards, and a local hit, the film is part comedy, part thriller, and partly a celebration of being a university student in Dunedin. \"Scarfies\" was later released on video in the United States under the title \"Crime 101\". Sarkies' second feature was drama \"Out of the Blue\" based on the 1990 Aramoana Massacre, in which a gunman killed thirteen people in a seaside town close to Dunedin. The film emphasizes realism over melodrama, partly through handheld camerawork and a naturalistic acting style. Some of those living in Aramoana expressed opposition to the film being made; others who lost people in the tragedy agreed to do interviews with scriptwriters Sarkies and Graeme Tetley. In New Zealand, \"Out of the Blue\" became the tenth most successful local film yet released theatrically (not accounting for inflation). It also won six Qantas Film and Television Awards in September 2008, including \"Best Picture - budget over $1 million\". As of October 2008, Out of the Blue's rating on critics' website Rotten Tomatoes was 91 per cent.",
"Queensland Queensland (, ) is a state situated in northeastern Australia, and is the second-largest and third-most populous Australian state. It is bordered by the Northern Territory, South Australia, and New South Wales to the west, south-west and south respectively. To the east, Queensland is bordered by the Coral Sea and the Pacific Ocean. To its north is the Torres Strait, separating the Australian mainland from Papua New Guinea. With an area of , Queensland is the world's sixth-largest sub-national entity, and is larger than all but 15 countries. Due to its size, Queensland's geographical features and climates are diverse, including tropical rainforests, rivers, coral reefs, mountain ranges and sandy beaches in its tropical and sub-tropical coastal regions, as well as deserts and savanna in the semi-arid and desert climatic regions of its interior. Queensland has a population of over 5.2 million, concentrated along the coast and particularly in South East Queensland. The capital and largest city in the state is Brisbane, Australia's third-largest city. Ten of Australia's thirty largest cities are located in Queensland, with the largest outside Brisbane being the Gold Coast, the Sunshine Coast, Townsville, Cairns, Ipswich, and Toowoomba. The state's population is multicultural, with 28.9% of inhabitants being immigrants. Queensland was first inhabited by Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders. Dutch navigator Willem Janszoon, the first European to land in Australia, explored the west coast of the Cape York Peninsula in 1606. In 1770, James Cook claimed the east coast of Australia for the Kingdom of Great Britain. In 1788, Arthur Phillip founded the colony of New South Wales, which included all of what is now Queensland. Queensland was explored in subsequent decades, and the Moreton Bay Penal Settlement was established at Brisbane in 1824 by John Oxley. Queensland was separated from New South Wales on 6 June 1859 (now commemorated as Queensland Day), thereby establishing Queensland as a self-governing Crown colony with responsible government, named in honour of Queen Victoria. Queensland was among the six colonies which became the founding states of Australia with Federation on 1 January 1901. Since the Bjelke-Petersen era of the late 20th century, Queensland has received a high level of internal migration from the other states and territories of Australia and remains a popular destination for interstate migration.",
"Howard Rubie Howard William Rubie (27 August 1938 – July 2011) was an Australian director. Born in Sydney, he worked extensively in film and television, and was awarded for his services an Emmy and was nominated for an AFI Award (now known as the AACTA Award). and started his career in cinematography and was inducted in 2010 to the Australian Cinematographers Society Hall of Fame.",
"Australia (2008 film) Australia is a 2008 epic adventure drama film directed by Baz Luhrmann and starring Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman. The screenplay was written by Luhrmann and screenwriter Stuart Beattie, with Ronald Harwood and Richard Flanagan. The film is a character story, set between 1939 and 1942 against a dramatised backdrop of events across northern Australia at the time, such as the bombing of Darwin during World War II. Production took place in Sydney, Darwin, Kununurra and Bowen. The film was released to cinemas on 26 November 2008 in the United States and in Australia on 26 December 2008, with subsequent worldwide release dates throughout late December 2008 and January and February 2009. \"Australia\" received mixed reviews from critics and grossed $211 million worldwide. In 1939, weeks before the start of World War II, Lady Sarah Ashley of England travels to Australia to force her philandering husband to sell his faltering cattle station, Faraway Downs. The huge station straddles Western Australia and the Northern Territory, reaching north to the Timor Sea. Her husband sends an independent cattle drover, called \"The Drover,\" to transport her to Faraway Downs. Lady Sarah's husband is murdered before she arrives; the authorities tell her the killer is an Aboriginal elder nicknamed \"King George.\" The station's manager, Neil Fletcher, secretly tries to gain control of Faraway Downs in order to sell it to meat tycoon Lesley 'King' Carney, thereby creating a complete cattle monopoly. Meanwhile, at Darwin, Australian Army logistics officer Captain Dutton negotiates beef prices with Carney on behalf of the Allies. The childless Lady Sarah is captivated by the boy Nullah, who has an Aboriginal mother and a white father. Nullah, who has been spying on Fletcher, reveals his plan to Lady Sarah, who fires Fletcher and runs the cattle station aided by her remaining staff. The next day, policemen arrive to take Nullah away to Mission Island as they have with other half-Aboriginal children. While evading them, Nullah's mother Daisy drowns when she hides with him in a water tower. Lady Sarah comforts Nullah by singing the song \"Over the Rainbow.\" Nullah tells her that \"King George\" is his grandfather, and that like the Wizard of Oz, he too is a \"magic man\".",
"James Bogle James Bogle (b 1959) is an Australian director and writer of films and TV."
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[
"Australian"
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What is the place of birth of the director of film Walkover (Film)?
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Walkover (film) Walkover () is a 1965 Polish drama film directed by Jerzy Skolimowski. It is the second feature film directed by Skolimowski, and again features his alter ego, Andrzej Leszczyc, whose story is continued from the film "Rysopis".
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"Mikheil Kobakhidze Mikheil Kobakhidze (; 5 April 1939 – 13 October 2019) was a Georgian screenwriter, film director, actor and composer. He was born in Tbilisi. A Retrospective of his work was held at the 1996 Venice Film Festival.",
"Orlow Seunke Orlow Seunke (born 22 September 1952) is a Dutch director, screenwriter and producer. Born in Amsterdam, Seunke studied at the Dutch Film Academy, graduating in 1975. After directing several shorts and TV works, he made his feature film debut in 1982 with the critical acclaimed \"The Hes Case\", which premiered at the 39th edition of the Venice Film Festival in which it won the Silver Lion for Best First Work, and which later was the recipient several other accolades including the Critics' Award at the Toronto Film Festival and the Bronze Hugo Award at the Chicago International Film Festival. His second work \"Pervola\" was entered into the main competition at the 42nd Venice International Film Festival and won the Golden Calf Special Jury Prize at the Netherlands Film Festival. In 2002 Seunke left the Netherlands and moved to Indonesia. Between 2003 and 2006 he was the artistic director of the Jakarta International Film Festival.",
"René Bail René Bail (July 13, 1931 – October 9, 2007) was a Canadian director, cinematographer and actor. Bail was born on July 13, 1931, in Montreal, Quebec. He died in 2007.",
"William Tummel William Tummel (March 5, 1892 – November 16, 1977) was an American assistant director. He worked on 59 films between 1925 and 1947. He won an Academy Award in 1933 for Best Assistant Director. He was born in Kansas City, Missouri and died in Los Angeles, California.",
"Hideo Jojo Hideo Jōjō (城定秀夫) (born September 2, 1975) is a Japanese film director and scriptwriter.",
"Bhushan Patel Bhushan Patel (born in Mumbai, India) is a Bollywood film director, actor and cinematographer, best known for directing the horror movies \",\" \"Ragini MMS 2\" and \"Alone.\" Bhushan Patel is a Gujarati. His father was a cameraman. Patel studied at Jamnabai Narsee School and lived at Vile Parle next to Vikram Bhatt, another director he became friends with.",
"Ross McLaren (filmmaker) Ross McLaren is a Canadian artist and filmmaker based in New York City. McLaren was born in 1953 in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada and graduated with honors from Ontario College of Art, where he also did post-graduate work. He is faculty at Cooper Union, Fordham University and Pratt Institute, and also taught at Millennium Film Workshop in New York City. Since 1976, McLaren has worked as a filmmaker, scholar, teacher, curator, critic, and community organizer. He founded and was first director of the Funnel Film Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, an institution devoted to the production, exhibition, and distribution of film. As founder/director, McLaren encouraged continued recognition of film—particularly Super 8—in his native country. His films include: \"Crash 'n' Burn\": the \"self-destructive document of Toronto’s eponymous punk club,\" \"Wave\", \"Weather Building\", \"Dance of the Sacred Foundation Application (feat. Jack Smith)\", \"Sex Without Glasses\", and the Ann Arbor Film Festival award-winning sensation \"Summer Camp\". A recipient of such prestigious grants as Ontario and Canada Council awards, McLaren has shown his works worldwide. His films screened at MoMA, Anthology Film Archives, the Menil Collection, the National Film Theatre in London, the Centre Georges Pompidou, the Biennale du Paris, Documenta VI, Jyväskylä University in Finland, and ARKEN Museum of Modern Art in Denmark. His work, which was presented in such esteemed venues as the Edinburgh, Toronto, and Oberhausen Film Festivals, is found in several permanent collections, including that of the American Federation of Arts, New York, the Arts Council of Great Britain, the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Ottawa’s National Film Archives and the National Gallery of Canada.",
"James Basevi James Basevi (born 21 September 1890, Plymouth, Devon, England – d. 27 March 1962, Bellflower, California) was a British-born art director and special effects expert. After his military service during World War I Basevi emigrated to Canada and later on to the United States. He began his career in 1924 with MGM, designing sets for silent films. After the advent of talkies, Basevi became the head of MGM's special effects department, helping to create the earthquake scene in \"San Francisco\" (1936). He also worked on the storm sequence in John Ford's \"The Hurricane\" for 20th Century Fox. In 1943, he shared an Oscar for art direction with William S. Darling for \"The Song of Bernadette\". He was nominated for Oscars for \"Wuthering Heights\" (1939), \"The Westerner\" (1940), \"The Gang's All Here\" (1943) and \"The Keys of the Kingdom\" (1944).",
"Jim Threapleton James Edward Threapleton (born 1973, Wharfedale, West Riding of Yorkshire, England) is an English film director. Threapleton has worked as an assistant director on many films, including \"Hideous Kinky\". His first work as a director (and writer) was the film \"Extraordinary Rendition\", starring Omar Berdouni and Andy Serkis, which premiered at the 2007 Locarno Film Festival. The elder of two boys, he has a younger brother Robin. He and Kate Winslet, who he met on the set of \"Hideous Kinky\", married on 22 November 1998 in Reading, Berkshire, Winslet's hometown. They have a daughter, Mia Honey Threapleton (born 12 October 2000 in London). The couple separated in September 2001 and divorced on 13 December 2001. In 2008 Threapleton married his second wife, Julie Vuorinen, a school administrator and teacher to special needs students. They have two daughters, Olivia, born in 2009, and Georgia, born in 2013.",
"Tim McCann (director) Tim McCann (born June 21, 1965) is an American film director and a professor of film at his alma mater, the State University of New York at Purchase. McCann was born in Spring Valley, New York, and grew up in Nyack, New York. His parents divorced when he was 3. At 15, McCann wanted to make films, and in 1987 graduated from the film school at the State University of New York at Purchase. He then spent four years in Brooklyn, New York City, working odd jobs and directing low-budget commercials. By early 1996, he was an audio-visual specialist at the Chappaqua Library, in Chappaqua, New York. He directed his first feature, \"Desolation Angels\", in 1995, made on a budget of $42,000. The film, which starred Michael Rodrick, premiered at the 1995 Telluride Film Festival. It then won the International Critics Prize (FIPRESCI Prize) at the Toronto International Film Festival, and was accepted to the Rotterdam Film Festival."
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"Łódź"
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When is the director of film The Gold Suit 's birthday?
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The Gold Suit The Gold Suit (Spanish: El traje de oro) is a 1960 Spanish film directed by Julio Coll.
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"Sam Mendes Sir Samuel Alexander Mendes (born 1 August 1965) is a British film and stage director, producer, and screenwriter. In theatre, he is known for his dark re-inventions of the stage musicals \"Cabaret\" (1993), \"Oliver!\" (1994), \"Company\" (1995), and \"Gypsy\" (2003). He directed an original West End stage musical for the first time with \"Charlie and the Chocolate Factory\" (2013). For directing the play \"The Ferryman\", Mendes was awarded the Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play in 2019. In film, he made his directorial debut with the drama \"American Beauty\" (1999), which earned him the Academy Award and Golden Globe Award for Best Director. He has since directed the crime film \"Road to Perdition\" (2002), \"Jarhead\" (2005), the drama \"Revolutionary Road\" (2008), and the James Bond films \"Skyfall\" (2012) and \"Spectre\" (2015). For the war film \"1917\" (2019), he received the BAFTA Award for Best Direction and a second Golden Globe Award for Best Director, as well as his second Academy Award nomination for Best Director; additionally, he was nominated for Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay. In 2000, Mendes was appointed a CBE for his services to drama, and he was knighted in the 2020 New Years Honours List. That same year, he was awarded the Shakespeare Prize by the Alfred Toepfer Foundation in Hamburg, Germany. In 2005, he received a lifetime achievement award from the Directors Guild of Great Britain. In 2008, \"The Daily Telegraph\" ranked him number 15 in their list of the \"100 most powerful people in British culture\". Mendes was born on 1 August 1965 in Reading, Berkshire. He is the son of Valerie Mendes (born Barnett), a publisher and author, and Jameson Peter Mendes, a university professor. His father, who is from Trinidad and Tobago, is a Roman Catholic of Portuguese descent, and his mother is an English Jew. His grandfather was the Trinidadian writer Alfred Hubert Mendes. Mendes's parents divorced when he was three years old, after which Mendes and his mother settled in Primrose Hill in North London.",
"The White Suit The White Suit () is a 1999 Serbian language film directed by Lazar Ristovski. It was a co-production between the United Kingdom and Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. It was Yugoslavia's official Best Foreign Language Film submission at the 72nd Academy Awards, but did not manage to receive a nomination.",
"Max Landis Max Landis (born August 3, 1985) is an American writer and filmmaker, and the son of director John Landis. He wrote scripts for the films \"Chronicle\" (2012), \"American Ultra\" (2015), \"Victor Frankenstein\" (2015), and \"Bright\" (2017). He wrote and directed the film \"Me Him Her\" (2015), produced the first two years of the Syfy series \"Channel Zero\" (2016), and created the series \"Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency\" (2016) based on the novel, for BBC America. He has also written limited series published by DC and Image Comics. In both 2011 and 2012, he was listed among \"Forbes\" magazine's \"30 Under 30\" young people to watch in the entertainment industry. His career stalled in 2017, following accusations from several women of emotional and sexual abuse. Landis was born in Beverly Hills, California, the son of director John Landis and costume designer and historian Deborah Nadoolman Landis. His family is Jewish. He left Beverly Hills High School for a therapeutic boarding school in Connecticut, but still graduated with a Beverly Hills High School diploma. Landis has stated that he has cyclothymia and dysgraphia. Max Landis appeared briefly in some of his father's films, including \"The Stupids\", \"Blues Brothers 2000\", and \"Burke and Hare\". He started writing at 16, and sold his first script at the age of 18, a collaboration with his father on the \"Masters of Horror\" episode \"Deer Woman\". In 2008 he independently wrote an unaired episode for the series's second incarnation as \"Fear Itself\". The same year, he wrote \"Back to Mysterious Island\" (based on the Jules Verne novel) for Bluewater Comics. While attending the University of Miami, Landis wrote shorts which were produced by students in the school's film program. Upon leaving the university, he went on what one contemporary reporter called a \"spec-selling streak\", having three of his pitches optioned within six months. One of these was \"Good Time Gang,\" described as \"a cross between \"The Bourne Identity\" and \"Jackass\"\", which was not produced. He was hired in 2011 as screenwriter for \"Mr. Right\", a violent romantic comedy released to mixed reviews in 2015.",
"Jack Gold Jack Gold (28 June 1930 – 9 August 2015) was a British film and television director. He was part of the British realist tradition which followed the Free Cinema movement. Gold was born in London, the son of Charles and Minnie (née Elbery) Gold. He attended University College London. After leaving UCL, he began his career as a film editor on the BBC's \"Tonight\" programme. Gold became a freelance documentary filmmaker, making dramas as a platform for his social and political observations. For television, his best known work is \"The Naked Civil Servant\" (1975), based on Quentin Crisp's 1968 book of the same name and starring John Hurt. He had previously directed the 1964 crime series \"Call the Gun Expert\" for the BBC. Other television credits include \"The Visit\" (1959), the BBC Television Shakespeare productions of \"The Merchant of Venice\" (1980) and \"Macbeth\" (1983) - the latter starring Nicol Williamson - as well as the made-for-TV adaptation of Graham Greene's \"The Tenth Man\" (1988), starring Anthony Hopkins and \"Charlie Muffin\" (1979, USA: \"A Deadly Game\"). In 1998, he directed an award-winning-adaption of the 1981 children's book \"Goodnight Mister Tom\" by Michelle Magorian, featuring John Thaw in the lead. He also directed films such as \"The National Health\" (1973), \"Man Friday\" (1975), \"Aces High\" (1976), \"The Medusa Touch\" (1978), \"The Chain\" (1985) and \"Escape from Sobibor\" (1987). Gold directed the final episode of ITV's television detective drama \"Inspector Morse\". Other work includes the television drama series \"Kavanagh QC\" and \"The Brief\". Gold was an Honorary Associate of London Film School. Gold married actress Denyse Alexander (née Macpherson) in 1957, with whom he shared a birthday - she was born in 1932. The couple had three children: Jamie, Nicholas and Kathryn.",
"The Man in the Brown Suit (1989 film) The Man in the Brown Suit is a television movie adaptation of an Agatha Christie mystery novel of the same name about an American woman getting involved in a diamond theft in South Africa. A tourist visiting Cairo witnesses a murder and after that sees a man in a brown suit fleeing the scene. She boards a ship and assumes that one of her fellow passengers is the criminal and that they also plan to steal a cache of diamonds. However, all of her traveling companies appear to be potential suspects.",
"The Man in the White Suit (play) The Man in the White Suit is a play by Sean Foley, based on the 1951 Ealing film by Alexander Mackendrick, John Dighton and Roger MacDougall. The play will made its world premiere at the Theatre Royal, Bath from 6 to 21 September 2019 before transferring to the Wyndham's Theatre in London's West End beginning previews from 25 September, official opening night on 8 October 2019. It was be directed by Foley, designed by Michael Taylor with music by Noah and the Whale's Charlie Fink and starred Stephen Mangan as Sidney Stratton, Kara Tointon as Daphne Birnley and Sue Johnston as Mrs Watson. The production was due to run until 11 January 2020, however due to poor ticket sales it closed early on 7 December 2019.",
"Stephen Frears Stephen Arthur Frears (born 20 June 1941) is an English director and producer of film and television often depicting real life stories as well as projects that explore social class through sharply drawn characters. Born in Leicester and educated at Gresham's School and Trinity College, Cambridge, Frears started his career working as an assistant director in theatre and film while directing numerous television plays. In 1971, he directed his first feature film, \"Gumshoe\". After more television work, he won acclaim for the gay romance film, \"My Beautiful Laundrette\" (1985), featuring a breakout performance from a young Daniel Day-Lewis. He continued to garner praise with \"Prick Up Your Ears\" (1987), a biographical movie about British playwright Joe Orton. He followed with the American films \"Dangerous Liaisons\" (1988) and \"The Grifters\" (1990), the latter receiving a nomination for Best Director. In 2000, Frears adaptated Nick Hornby's novel, \"High Fidelity,\" into a feature film with John Cusack, whom he had previously directed in \"The Grifters\". In 2002, he directed the drama \"Dirty Pretty Things\" with Audrey Tautou and Chiwetel Ejiofor, which addressed the exploitation of illegal immigrant workers in London. In 2006, Frears directed \"The Queen\", that focused on the reaction to the tragic death of Princess Diana in 1997. The film received its debut at the Venice International Film Festival to critical acclaim, with Helen Mirren eventually winning many awards for playing the title role, and Frears himself received his second Academy Award nomination for Best Director. Frears continued to work with exceptional talents such as Judi Dench in the drama \"Philomena\" (2013), based on the true story of a woman searching for a child she gave up for adoption in her youth; and Meryl Streep in \"Florence Foster Jenkins\" (2016), as a delusional socialite who embarks upon a career as opera singer despite a manifest lack of vocal talent. He also reunited with Dench in \"Victoria and Abdul\" (2017), a film about the unlikely friendship between the aging Queen Victoria and her young Indian servant, Abdul Karim.",
"The Last Suit The Last Suit (; ) is a 2017 Argentine-Spanish-Polish dramatic film written and directed by Pablo Solarz, starring Miguel Ángel Solá, Ángela Molina and Martín Piroyansky. The film tells a story that explores old age, generational differences, judaism and the wounds that remain open from World War II. Abraham Bursztein, an 88-year-old Jewish tailor, who even has great-grandchildren, found out his daughters' intention to sell his apartment and send him to a nursing home. Later he decides to travel from Buenos Aires to Łódź in Poland, where he sets out to find his old friend Piotrek, who saved him from certain death at the end of World War II, and then helped him escape to Argentina. Abraham intends to keep his promise of returning one day and to also give him the last suit he ever made, to which the film title alludes. What follows is a series of entanglements with road-movie elements that in its heart hides important themes. Despite his constant grumpiness and mistreatments, Abraham will always find someone willing to help him. In Spain, Maria (Angela Molina) will assist him after losing his money in a robbery, and to reconnect with his estranged daughter. In Germany, Ingrid (Julia Beerhold) will support him in making peace with the country and its people. The magic of the story will even make a Polish nurse named Gosia (Olga Bołądź) who he barely knows; accompany him on the last leg of his journey to Łódz.",
"Roland Emmerich Roland Emmerich (; born 10 November 1955) is a German film director, screenwriter, and producer. He is widely known for his science fiction and disaster films and has been called a \"master of disaster\" within the industry. His films, most of which are English-language Hollywood productions, have made more than $3 billion worldwide, including just over $1 billion in the United States, making him the country's 15th-highest-grossing director of all time. He began his work in the film industry by directing the film \"The Noah's Ark Principle\" (1984) as part of his university thesis and also co-founded Centropolis Entertainment in 1985 with his sister. He is also known for directing films such as \"Universal Soldier\" (1992), \"Stargate\" (1994), \"Independence Day\" (1996), \"Godzilla\" (1998), \"The Patriot\" (2000), \"The Day After Tomorrow\" (2004), \"2012\" (2009), \"White House Down\" (2013), \"\" (2016), \"Midway\" (2019), and \"Moonfall\" (2022). He is a collector of art and an LGBT activist, and is openly gay. Emmerich was born in Stuttgart, West Germany, and grew up in the nearby town of Sindelfingen. As a youth, he traveled extensively throughout Europe and North America on vacations financed by his father, Hans, the wealthy founder of a garden machinery production company. In 1977, he began attending University of Television and Film Munich with the intention of studying to become a production designer. After watching \"Star Wars\", he instead decided to enroll in the school's film director program. Required to create a short film as his final thesis in 1981, he wrote and directed the full-length feature \"The Noah's Ark Principle\", which was screened as the opening film of the 34th Berlin International Film Festival in 1984. In 1985, he founded Centropolis Film Productions (now Centropolis Entertainment) in partnership with his sister, producer Ute Emmerich, and directed his major film debut, a fantasy feature named \"Joey\". He subsequently directed the 1987 comedy \"Hollywood-Monster\" and the 1990 science-fiction film \"Moon 44\".",
"Akiva Goldsman Akiva J. Goldsman (born July 7, 1962) is an American screenwriter, director, and producer of motion pictures and adaptations of popular novels. Goldsman's filmography as a screenwriter includes \"The Client\"; \"Batman Forever\" and its sequel \"Batman & Robin\"; \"I, Robot\"; \"I Am Legend\"; \"Cinderella Man,\" and numerous rewrites that are both credited and uncredited. He also wrote more than a dozen episodes for the science fiction television series \"Fringe\". In 2002, Goldsman received the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay and the Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay for the 2001 film \"A Beautiful Mind\", which also won the Academy Award for Best Picture. In 2006, Goldsman re-teamed with \"A Beautiful Mind\" director Ron Howard to adapt Dan Brown's novel \"The Da Vinci Code\" for Howard's film. He also wrote the screenplay for its 2009 sequel \"Angels & Demons\". In 2018, Goldsman helped develop the DC Comics TV series \"Titans\", alongside Greg Berlanti and Geoff Johns. In 2020, he also helped develop the series \"\" with Alex Kurtzman, Michael Chabon, and Kirsten Beyer, as a sequel to \"\" and \"\". He is also the co-creator of the upcoming series \"\", a prequel to \"\". Goldsman was born in New York to Jewish parents and raised in Brooklyn Heights. His parents, Tev Goldsman and Mira Rothenberg, were both clinical child psychologists who ran a group home for emotionally disturbed children. He graduated from Saint Ann's School, also in Brooklyn Heights, where he says he made many friends with whom he later worked in the entertainment industry. He received his bachelor's degree from Wesleyan University and attended the graduate fiction-writing program at New York University. Goldsman has a production company at Warner Bros. named Weed Road Pictures. He produced the Universal Pictures feature \"Lone Survivor\", from writer/director Peter Berg, based on the book \"\" by Marcus Luttrell. It tells the story of Luttrell's Navy SEAL team in 2005 Afghanistan, on a mission to kill a terrorist leader. It starred Mark Wahlberg, Emile Hirsch, Ben Foster and Taylor Kitsch, and was released in 2013."
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[
"7 April 1919"
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Are both movies, July 7 (Film) and Trois Milliards Sans Ascenseur, from the same country?
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Trois milliards sans ascenseur Trois milliards sans ascenseur (Translation: "Three Billions Without an Elevator") (/ "Seven Brains for a Perfect Shot") is a 1972 French-Italian film, directed by Roger Pigaut. It stars actor Gabriele Ferzetti. The script was co-written by Lucio Fulci. A group of likeable slackers with little talent attempts to steal a prestigious jewellery collection exhibited at the highest floor of a tower. What they lack in experience, they make up for with street smarts. They think the stakes are too high for them, so they subcontract the heist, but swindle the subcontractor. They try to blackmail the exhibition's insurance agency, but end up tricked.
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[
"The Common Man (film) The Common Man () is a 1975 French drama film directed by Yves Boisset and produced by Sofracima. It was entered into the 25th Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Silver Bear - Special Jury Prize.",
"Solemn Communion Solemn Communion () is a 1977 French comedy-drama film directed by René Féret. It was entered into the 1977 Cannes Film Festival.",
"A Hell of a Day A Hell of a Day (original title: Reines d'un jour) is a 2001 French comedy film directed by Marion Vernoux.",
"Bastille Day (1933 film) Bastille Day or July 14 (French: Quatorze Juillet) is a 1933 French romantic comedy film directed by René Clair and starring Annabella, George Rigaud and Raymond Cordy. It was made at the Epinay Studios by the French subsidiary of the German company Tobis. The film's art direction was by Lazare Meerson. Anna, a flower-girl, is in love with Jean - a young taxi driver. Jean doesn't have the same feelings for Anna as he still thinks about Pola, who dumped him. Eventully, Jean asks Anna for a dance at to the ball, but all hell breaks loose when Pola shows up with two men who will stop at nothing to disturb this newly arising love.",
"Alias Betty Alias Betty () is a 2001 French drama film directed by Claude Miller. The film won several international film festival awards. On Rotten Tomatoes it has an approval rating of 92% based on 51 reviews.",
"Millionnaires d'un jour Millionnaires d'un jour ()is a French comedy film from 1949, directed by André Hunebelle, written by Alex Joffé, and starring by Gaby Morlay. The film features Louis de Funès as solicitor.",
"Day Off (film) Day Off (Title in ) is a 2001 French drama film directed by Pascal Thomas.",
"Lovers Like Us Lovers Like Us (French: Le Sauvage; \"The Savage\"; also known in English as Call Me Savage) is a 1975 French film starring Yves Montand and Catherine Deneuve. The film was a commercial success with a total of 2,373,738 admissions in France and was the 12th highest-grossing film of the year. It was released in the U.S. by 20th Century Fox in April 1977. Scant days before her wedding to Vittorio, Nelly (Deneuve) has a change of heart and runs away. As Vittorio pursues her through Caracas, she turns for help first to Alex (Roberts), a previous employer, and then to Martin (Montand), a middle-aged French man she meets by chance. Martin drives her to the airport, where she gets a plane ticket to Paris. Returning by boat to his peaceful lonely life on an island off the coast, Martin is surprised and dismayed to find that Nelly has made her way there ahead of him. When he tries to return her to the mainland she sabotages the boat, causing it to sink. Marooned upon the island, Martin is forced to adapt to his new neighbor, who is determined to stay. The film recorded admissions of 2,373,738 in France.",
"Das Milliardensouper Das Milliardensouper is a 1923 German silent comedy film directed by Victor Janson and starring Ossi Oswalda, Georg Alexander and Paul Biensfeldt. The film's sets were designed by the art director Jacek Rotmil.",
"Les Ambassadeurs (film) Les Ambassadeurs (, ) is a Tunisian film produced in 1975 by Naceur Ktari. It won the \"Tanit d'or\" for best film Carthage Film Festival in 1976 and the special jury prize at Locarno International Film Festival the same year. It was selected for the 1978 Cannes Film Festival in the category \"\"Un Certain Regard\"\". In the Goutte d'Or neighborhood of Paris, North African immigrants share a tiny apartment amongst their French neighbors. The two communities get along uneasily, their relationship rife with misunderstandings and mutual offense. Salah (Sidi Ali Kouiret), from the southern Maghreb, is a witness to this immigrant life in Paris and to the day to day incidents which make up the life of his compatriots. They, excepting those willing to pursue a life of petty crime, live a life of tedium and depression. French racists in the area escalate tensions with a series of attacks that end in a double murder. Salah, with the help of his friends, decides to organise protests against the injustice they face."
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[
"no"
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Which one was established first, Deutsche Reichsbahn (East Germany) or J. & L. Lobmeyr?
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J. & L. Lobmeyr J. & L. Lobmeyr is a glassware company from Vienna, Austria. It was founded in 1823 and is still family owned. The company was founded in 1823 by Josef Lobmeyr (17 March 1792 - 8 May 1855). When his children acquired the company they renamed it J. & L. Lobmeyr, named after his son Joseph and brother Louis. Joseph became the marketing director and Louis managed the art department. Ludwig Lobmeyr (2 August 1829 - 25 March 1917) developed further professional relationships with Bohemian glassworks and glass making companies. They had an office at Kamenický Šenov and partners included Wilhelm Kralik of Meyrswalden. J. & L. Lobmeyr provided a crystal chandelier for Schönbrunn Palace and other clients. They also had a partnership with Thomas Edison. They co-developed the first electric chandeliers in the world, in 1880, with Edison. They provided services for the King of Belgium, the Duke of Brabant, and the Court of Flanders. In 1906 they opened an office in Karlovy Vary. Around this time, clients included Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria. In recognition of their services, they were titled purveyor to the Imperial Court. In 1917, Louis died. The company was left to Stefan Rath (1876-1960), Louis' nephew. Additional clients included the Vienna State Opera, the Metropolitan Opera, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and the Kremlin. As of 1962, Rath had written a history of the family and company. Today, the company is still owned by Rath's grand children Andreas, Leonid and Johannes.
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[
"Deutsche Werft Deutsche Werft (English: German Shipyard) was a shipbuilding company in Finkenwerder Rüschpark, Hamburg, Germany. It was founded in 1918 by Albert Ballin and with Gutehoffnungshütte (GHH), \"Allgemeine Elektricitäts-Gesellschaft\" (AEG) and \"Hamburg Amerikanische Packetfahrt Actien Gesellschaft\" (HAPAG) as investors. In peacetime, Deutsche Werft built merchant ships, such as the HAPAG turbo-electric cargo ships and . In World War II Deutsche Werft built 113 Type IX and XXIII U-boats for the \"Kriegsmarine\". In 1968 Deutsche Werft was merged and became part of Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft.",
"Bank of German Labor, Inc. Bank of German Labor, Inc. () was a financial institution of the German Labor Front (DAF). Founded in 1924 as the Bank of Workers, Employees, and Civil Servants (\"Bank der Arbeiter, Angestellten und Beamten AG\") by organizations representing these groups, the Berlin-based bank was taken over by the DAF and renamed after the Nazi government banned all independent trade unions on May 2, 1933.",
"German State Railway Wagon Association The German State Railway Wagon Association () or DWV was an association of the German state railways \"Länderbahnen\" founded in 1909. The purpose of the association was to guarantee the unrestricted exchange of goods wagons between the member railway administrations. The German State Railway Wagon Association could, unlike the \"Prussian State Railway Wagon Association\", stipulate standard wagon designs for the whole of Germany. It developed a total of eleven different wagon types, the \"Verbandsbauart\" (literally: association type) or \"DWV\" wagons. In addition to entire goods wagons, types of bogie were also specified. With the founding of the Deutsche Reichsbahn on 1 April 1920 the DWV closed its operations.",
"Deutsche Werke Deutsche Werke was a German shipbuilding company founded in 1925 when Kaiserliche Werft Kiel and other shipyards were merged. It came as a result of the Treaty of Versailles after World War I that forced the German defense industry to shrink. The company was owned by the government of the Weimar Republic and its headquarters was in Berlin while the manufacturing location was in Kiel. Deutsche Werke started building merchant ships but when the Nazi Party gained power in 1933 the production was changed to naval ships. Besides shipbuilding Deutsche Werke also produced firearms. Especially known are the so-called Ortgies pistols which were particularly popular in the United States. The pistols were developed by Heinrich Ortgies. During World War II the company expanded to Gdynia, establishing \"Deutsche Werke Gotenhafen\". Deutsche Werke facilities and infrastructure were destroyed during World War II by bombing raids. Parts of the works were reorganised as Maschinenbau Kiel. In 1955 the shipyard areas were bought by Howaldtswerke.",
"Herbert Loebl Dr Herbert Loebl, (18 April 192328 January 2013) was a British businessman, philanthropist and leading proponent of exporting, notable as a co-founder of Joyce, Loebl & Company, a manufacturer of scientific instruments. Herbert Loebl was born in Bamberg in Germany, into a prominent local Jewish family. With the rise of the Nazi party in Germany, the Loebl family fled persecution to the United Kingdom in late 1938 where he attended Dover Grammar School for Boys in Kent. He studied electrical engineering at King’s College, Newcastle where he graduated in 1949. During his time at King's College, Loebl met Captain Robert Joyce. In 1951, the two went into business producing scientific equipment with only £200 of capital. Joyce, Loebl & Co. exported over 70 percent of its products and at the time of its sale to Technical Operations Inc. (Tech/Ops), an American company, it was one of the major employers in north-eastern England with some 500 workers. It is estimated that the company also spawned 45 other businesses in the region. Some of the most significant products developed by Joyce, Loebl & Co were the optical microdensitometer used to visualise the properties of DNA and other organic compounds, and the MecoLab, a system of routine blood-panel analysis for hospitals. There are currently four companies which have grown out of the original Joyce, Loebl & Company Ltd: Loebl Ltd, Sevcon Ltd, Applied Imaging Ltd, and Phasor Ltd. A donation made by Hebert Loebl was used to set up a section of the business school of Newcastle University, focussed on the promotion of exports, which is named the \"Herbert Loebl Export Academy\" in his honour. Loebl was awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1973 for services to exports. He was also awarded the Citizen's Medal of the city of Bamberg in 1996, the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (1997) and the Bavarian Order of Merit in 2001. In 2003, he was awarded an honorary doctorate of science by the University of Newcastle. In 2010, he was given a lifetime achievement award by the North East Business Executive.",
"Loeb (surname) Loeb or Löb is a surname of German and Yiddish origin. It is derived from the word \"lion\" in German and Yiddish in different historic and dialectal forms (\"Löwe\", \"Lewe\", \"Löb\", \"Leb\", \"Leib\"). In Yiddish it is mostly written לייב (\"Leib\"). People with the surname include:",
"Reichskommissariat Reichskommissariat () is a German word for a type of administrative entity headed by a government official known as a \"Reichskommissar\" (). Although many offices existed, primarily throughout the Imperial German and Nazi periods, in a number of fields (ranging from public infrastructure and spatial planning to ethnic cleansing) it is most commonly used to refer to the quasi-colonial administrative territorial entity established by Nazi Germany in several occupied countries during World War II. While officially located outside the German Reich in a legal sense, these entities were directly controlled by their supreme civil authorities (the \"Reichskommissars\"), who ruled their territories as German governors on behalf of and as representatives of Adolf Hitler. The introduction of these territorial administrations served a number of purposes. Those established or planned to be established in Western and Northern Europe were in general envisioned as the transitional phases for the incorporation of Germanic countries outside pre-war Germany into an expanded Nazi state. Their eastern counterparts served primarily colonialist and imperialist purposes, as sources of \"Lebensraum\" for German settlement and the exploitation of natural resources. Another contrast was the level of administrative overhaul implemented in these two types. As in most other territories conquered by the Germans, local administrators and bureaucrats were pressured to continue their regular day-to-day operations (especially at the middle and lower levels) albeit under German oversight. Throughout the war the \"Reichskommissariate\" in Western and Northern Europe simply retained the existing administrative structure, while in the eastern ones new structures were introduced. All of these entities were intended for eventual integration into a Greater Germanic Reich () encompassing the general area of Europe stretching from the North Sea to the Ural Mountains, for which Germany was to form the basis. In summer 1941, German Nazi-ideologist Alfred Rosenberg suggested that to facilitate the break-up of the Soviet Union and Russia as a geographical entity, conquered Soviet territory should be administered in the following five Reichskommissariaten: At Hitler's request the Turkestan project was shelved by Rosenberg for the immediate future, who was instead ordered to focus on Europe for the time-being. Central Asia was determined to be a future target for German expansion, as soon as its armies would be ready to move further east after the consolidation of present victories in Soviet Russia.",
"Lorbeer Lorbeer is the German word for laurel. It may refer to:",
"Jungfernbach Jungfernbach may refer to:",
"Georg Leber Georg Leber (7 October 1920 – 21 August 2012) was a German Trades Union leader and a politician in the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). Leber was born in Obertiefenbach (Beselich). After serving in the Luftwaffe (the German air force) in World War II, he joined the SPD in 1947. In 1957, he was elected to the Bundestag, which he was a member of until 1983, representing Frankfurt am Main I. In 1966, Leber was appointed minister for transportation for the grand coalition. He kept this position and became minister for postal service and long-distance communication under the joint SPD-FDP administration. In 1972, he gave up both positions and became minister of defence. Under his ministership the Bundeswehr was expanded and the Universities of the Bundeswehr were founded in Munich and Hamburg. In 1978, he left his position after a controversy in the defense ministry involving eavesdropping. From 1979 until 1983 he was the Deputy Speaker of the Bundestag. Leber quit politics in 1986, and with his wife retired to the Bavarian countryside. From 1990 to 1993, he was a member of the Advisory Board of the Bertelsmann Stiftung. Leber died in his hometown of Schönau on 21 August 2012."
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[
"J. & L. Lobmeyr"
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What is the date of death of the director of film Proč Nevěřit Na Zázraky?
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Proč nevěřit na zázraky Pro nevěřit na zázraky (English: Why Not Believe in Miracles?) is a 1977 Czechoslovak film. It was directed by Antonín Máša. The film starred Josef Kemr and Jiřina Třebická
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[
"Jindřich Polák Jindřich Polák (5 May 1925 – 22 August 2003) was a Czech film and television director. He is known for his science fiction productions, but worked in many different genres.",
"Jaroslav Balík Jaroslav Balík (23 June 1924 – 17 October 1996) was a Czechoslovak film director and screenwriter. He directed 26 films between 1952 and 1987.",
"Alexander Stefanovich Alexander Borisovich Stefanovich (; 13 December 1944 – 13 July 2021) was a Russian film director, producer, and screenwriter. Cavalier of Order of Friendship. Was born in Leningrad on December 13, 1944. He graduated from the directing department of VGIK (workshop of Lev Kuleshov) in 1969. He died from COVID-19 complications on 13 July 2021, at the age of 76.",
"Vojtěch Jasný Vojtěch Jasný (30 November 1925 – 15 November 2019) was a Czech director, screenwriter and professor who has written and directed over 50 films. Jasný made feature and documentary films in Czechoslovakia, Germany, Austria, USA & Canada, and was a notable figure in the Czechoslovak New Wave movement of the 1960s. He is best remembered for his movies \"The Cassandra Cat\" and \"All My Compatriots\", both of which won prizes at Cannes Film Festival. In addition to his film career he taught directing at film schools in Salzburg, Vienna, Münich and New York. Jasný was born in Kelč, Czechoslovakia on 30 November 1925. His father was a teacher. In 1929 his father bought a movie projector for a local Sokol club, which provided Jasný's first introduction to cinema. After watching Renoir's The Little Match Girl he decided to become a filmmaker. During his teens he made amateur movies on a 9mm camera. During the WWII his father was arrested and sent to Auschwitz where he died in 1942. After the war Jasný went to study philosophy and Russian language but he switched to study filmmaking at newly founded FAMU in 1946. His professors were Karel Plicka, Vsevolod Pudovkin and hosting professors Cesare Zavattini and Giuseppe De Santis. Since 1950 he co-directed many documentaries with Karel Kachyňa. His movies \"Desire\" and \"The Cassandra Cat\" were nominated for Palme d'Or. In 1968 he directed \"All My Compatriots\" which won the award for Best Director at 1969 Cannes Film Festival. After the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia following the Prague Spring of 1968 he decided to leave the country. Jasný made movies and taught at film schools in Austria, West Germany and Yugoslavia until relocating to Brooklyn, New York in the early 1980s. In the USA Jasný taught film directing classes at Columbia University, School of Visual Arts and New York Film Academy and made several documentaries about Czechoslovakia. His last feature film \"Return to Paradise Lost\" was made in 1999.",
"Zhanna Prokhorenko Zhanneta \"Zhanna\" Trofimovna Prokhorenko (, ; 11 May 1940 – 1 August 2011) was a Soviet and Russian actress, best known for her role in Grigory Chukhray's film \"Ballad of a Soldier\". She was born in Poltava, Ukraine, and grew up in central Ukraine inside the Prokofiev house, before she and her family moved to Leningrad. She graduated from the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography in 1964. She was awarded People's Artist of the RSFSR in 1988. She was also a recipient of the Order of the Badge of Honour and of the Medal \"For Labour Valour\". Her granddaughter is actress Maryana Spivak. Prokhorenko married twice. Her first husband was film director Yevgeny Vasilyev, and they had one daughter. Her second husband, writer Artur Makarov, was murdered in her apartment in 1995. The killer never was found. She died in Moscow on 1 August 2011, aged 71, from undisclosed causes.",
"Krzysztof Zaleski Krzysztof Zaleski (September 3, 1948 – October 20, 2008) was a Polish theater director and cinema actor. Zaleski was born in Świętochłowice, Poland, on September 3, 1948. He graduated from Warsaw University's Department of Polish Studies in 1971. He further completed his studies at the State Higher Theatre School in Warsaw in 1986. He received numerous awards throughout his career for his work within the Warsaw theater community. In 2007, Zaleski was awarded the Feliks’ Award for his adaptation of series of short stories originally written by Marek Nowakowski. Zaleski worked as the Director of Polish Radio Drama. Additionally, he served as the director of Director of Polish Radio 2 for the last 18 months of his life. Krzysztof Zaleski died on October 20, 2008, in Warsaw at the age of 59 after a long illness. He was survived by his wife, Polish actress Maria Pakulnis, and their son.",
"Leonid Osyka Leonid Mikhailovich Osyka () (March 8, 1940 in Kyiv – September 16, 2001 in Kyiv) was a Ukrainian movie director, producer, and screen writer.",
"Tomasz Zygadło Tomasz Zygadło (23 December 1947 – 17 September 2011) was a Polish film director. He directed 26 films between 1967 and 1997. His 1980 film \"The Moth\" was entered into the 12th Moscow International Film Festival.",
"Čeněk Zahradníček Čeněk Zahradníček (11 April 1900 – 12 November 1989) was a Czech experimental film director, cinematographer and editor. He was one of the founders of the Prague Pathé Club. He started as an amateur filmmaker shooting on 9.5mm film camera. In the 1920s and 1930s he made his short independent movies influenced by avantgarde filmmakers. His film \"A Soldier's Story\" (1934) won the UNICA main prize for the best amateur film. His film \"May\" was intended as a backdrop for an E. F. Burian's theatre performance based on poem of the same name by Karel Hynek Mácha. In 1937 he became a professional cinematographer shooting newsreels. In 1942 while working under German occupation he had to shoot a newsreel about the Lidice massacre. In 1944 he was a cinematographer for a German propaganda film \"Theresienstadt\". Because of this he had to leave his cinematographer job in 1948 and worked in an archive until his retirement.",
"Jan Svěrák Jan Svěrák () (born 6 February 1965 in Žatec) is a Czech film director. He is the son of screenwriter and actor Zdeněk Svěrák. He studied documentary filmmaking at the FAMU. He and his films have received awards including the Academy Award, Crystal Globe, Golden Globe Award, and Tokyo Grand Prix. He lives in Prague."
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[
"4 October 2001"
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Where was the director of film Avalanche (1928 Film) born?
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Avalanche (1928 film) Avalanche is a lost 1928 American silent Western film, directed by Otto Brower. It stars Jack Holt, Doris Hill, and Olga Baclanova. It was produced and distributed through the Paramount Pictures company.
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"The Crimson Canyon The Crimson Canyon is a 1928 American Western film directed by Ray Taylor and written by Hugh Nagrom and Carl Krusada. The film stars Ted Wells, Lotus Thompson, Wilbur Mack, Buck Connors and George Atkinson. The film was released on October 14, 1928, by Universal Pictures.",
"Otto Brower Otto Brower (December 2, 1890 – January 25, 1946) was an American film director. He directed more than 40 films between 1928 and 1946. He was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and died in Hollywood, California, from a heart attack.",
"Emmett J. Flynn Emmett J. Flynn (November 9, 1892 in Denver, Colorado – June 4, 1937 in Hollywood, California) was an American director, screenwriter, actor, and producer.",
"All Faces West All Faces West is a 1929 American western film directed by Raymond K. Johnson and starring Ben Lyon, Marie Prevost and Anders Randolf. It was shot in late 1928 on location in Utah. It premiered in Salt Lake City as a silent film, but was re-edited with added music and sound effects and released under the alternative title Call of the Rockies in 1931. The film focuses on the settling of Utah by Mormon pioneers in the mid-nineteenth century.",
"Jerome Storm Jerome Storm (November 11, 1890 – July 10, 1958) was an American film director, actor, and writer. He acted in 48 films between 1914 and 1941 and directed 47 films between 1918 and 1932. He was born in Denver, Colorado, and died in Desert Hot Springs, California.",
"Beau Sabreur Beau Sabreur is a 1928 American silent romantic adventure film directed by John Waters and starring Gary Cooper and Evelyn Brent. Based on the 1926 novel \"Beau Sabreur\" by P. C. Wren, who also wrote the 1924 novel \"Beau Geste\". Produced by Paramount Famous Lasky Corporation and distributed by Paramount Pictures, only a trailer exists of this film today. The released feature version is a lost film. In the original novel the lead character Major Henri de Beaujolais is an officer of spahis (Algerian colonial cavalry of the French Army) and has no connection with the better known Foreign Legion. In all surviving stills of \"Beau Sabreur\" Gary Cooper is shown wearing the distinctive spahi uniform and it is not clear whether the lost film was intended to be a Foreign Legion epic. A desert-bound member of the French Foreign Legion exposes a betrayer to the Legion. He is then sent on a mission among the Arabs to conclude the signing of a crucial peace treaty. \"Beau Sabreur\" was filmed on location in Guadalupe, California, in Red Rock Canyon State Park in Cantil, California, and in Yuma, Arizona.",
"Avalanche (1999 film) Avalanche (also known as \"Escape from Alaska\") is a 1999 Canadian-American disaster film directed by Steve Kroschel and starring C. Thomas Howell and Thomas Ian Griffith.",
"The Bride of the Colorado The Bride of the Colorado is a 1928 film starring John Boles.",
"Kolbjörn Knudsen Kolbjörn Knudsen (13 October 1897 – 8 January 1967) was a Swedish actor. He appeared in more than 30 films between 1928 and 1967.",
"Pehr Qværnstrøm Pehr Adolf Qværnstrøm (February 8, 1878 – December 12, 1949) was a Norwegian actor, film director, and scriptwriter."
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[
"Grand Rapids, Michigan"
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Where was the director of film The Tiger Of Jalisco born?
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The Tiger of Jalisco The Tiger of Jalisco (Spanish:El tigre de Jalisco) is a 1947 Mexican western film directed by René Cardona and starring Armando Soto La Marina, Delia Magana and Manolo Fábregas.
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[
"The Masked Tiger The Masked Tiger (Spanish:El tigre enmascarado) is a 1951 Mexican western film directed by Zacarías Gómez Urquiza and starring Luis Aguilar, Flor Silvestre and Aurora Segura. The film's art direction was by Jorge Fernández.",
"Antonio González Caballero Antonio González Caballero () (1927–2003) was a Mexican painter, pedagogue and screenwriter. His most famous work is the play \"Nilo, mi hijo\". Famous film \"La Casa del Pelícano\" is based on it. He was born in San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí to \"Don\" González and \"Doña\" Caballero. He died in Historic center of Mexico City. \"Nilo, mi hijo\" is the most famous work by Caballero. It was filmed under the title \"La casa del pelícano\" (\"The House of the Pelican\"). The main character Nilo was played by well known and beloved Enrique Álvarez Félix. Nilo's raped mother Margarita was Jacqueline Andere, and young Daniela Romo also appeared. The film was shocking for some commentators who noticed a connection between castration of Nilo and Enrique's difficult relationship with his mother. On the poster for the film an egg is depicted. It is pierced by scissors. This is a symbolic representation of emasculation.",
"Rolando Aguilar Rolando Aguilar (1903–1984) was a Mexican film director and screenwriter.",
"Fernando Wagner Fernando Wagner (November 7, 1905 in Göttingen, Germany – October 20, 1973 in Cuernavaca, Mexico) was a German-born Mexican actor and film director. He had prominent roles in \"La Perla\" and \"The Wild Bunch\". His interment was in Mexico City's Panteón Jardín.",
"José Luis García Agraz José Luis García Agraz (born 16 November 1952) is a Mexican film director. He was born in Mexico City in 1952. He studied at the Centro de Estudios Cinematográficos (or CUEC) at UNAM. His script \"Los supersabios\" was turned into an animated feature in 1975. He was assistant director to José Estrada in \"Maten al león\" (1975) and \"Los indolentes\"; to Julián Pastor in \"El esperado amor desesperado\" (1975) and \"La casta divina\" (1976); to Gonzalo Martínez in \"Del otro lado del puente\" (1977), and to Arturo Ripstein in \"La viuda negra\" (1977) and \"Cadena perpetua\" (1978). His first short film \"Háblame de Rita\" (1979), which he also wrote, was shown at the International Documentary and Short Film Festival in Bilbao. His second short \"Patricio\" (1982) received an Ariel award. It was also selected for the Festival Internacional de Nuevo Cine in Havana and once again the Bilbao short film festival. His other shorts include \"Saxofón\" (1987), \"Solamente una vez\" (1988), \"Ladrón de sábado\" (1990) and \"El último tren\" (1996). Along with Fernando Cámara, Toño Betancourt, Nerio Barbieris and Marcelo Llacarino, Agraz founded the film cooperative Kinam to realize his debut feature \"Nocaut\", which he also wrote. \"Nocaut\" won the Ariel for best debut film. It also won the Heraldo and the Diosa de Plata awards. The film was shown at film festivals in Amiens, Madrid and New York City among others. Agraz followed up with a number of features, notable among which are \"Sueños de oro\" / \"Dreams of gold\" (a co-production between México and the USA, 1984); \"La paloma azul\" (a Japanese-Mexican co-production, 1989); and \"Desiertos mares\" (1993), which won him the best director prize at the Ariel awards in 1994. He repeated the feat in 2004 with \"El Misterio del Trinidad\". He has also made a number of documentaries and educational programs for television.",
"Juan Ibáñez Juan Ibáñez (April 20, 1938 – September 12, 2000) was a Mexican actor, film director, producer and writer. He was born in Guanajuato, Guanajuato and died in Mexico City.",
"Raúl Ruiz (director) Raúl Ernesto Ruiz Pino (; 25 July 1941 – 19 August 2011) was an experimental Chilean filmmaker, writer and teacher whose work is best known in France. He directed more than 100 films. The son of a ship's captain and a schoolteacher in southern Chile, Raúl Ruiz abandoned his university studies in theology and law to write 100 plays with the support of a Rockefeller Foundation grant. He went on to learn his craft working in Chilean and Mexican television and studying at film school in Argentina (1964). Back in Chile, he made his feature debut \"Three Sad Tigers\" (1968), sharing the Golden Leopard at the 1969 Locarno Film Festival. According to Ruiz in a 1991 interview, \"Three Sad Tigers\" \"is a film without a story, it is the reverse of a story. Somebody kills somebody. All the elements of a story are there but they are used like a landscape, and the landscape is used like story.\" He was something of an outsider among the politically oriented Chilean filmmakers of his generation such as Miguel Littín and Patricio Guzmán, his work being far more ironic, surrealistic and experimental. In 1973, shortly after the military coup d'état led by Augusto Pinochet, Ruiz and his wife (fellow director Valeria Sarmiento) fled Chile and settled in Paris, France. Ruiz soon developed a reputation among European critics and cinephiles as an avant-garde film magician, writing and directing a remarkable number of amusing, eccentric, complex, and highly literary low-to-no-budget films in the 1970s and 1980s (often for France's Institut national de l'audiovisuel and then for Portuguese producer Paulo Branco). The best known of these often oneiric, fabulist films are: \"Colloque de chiens\" (1977), a short which marked the start of Ruiz's long-term working relationship with Chilean composer Jorge Arriagada; \"The Suspended Vocation\" (1978); \"The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting\" (1978); \"On Top of the Whale\" (1982); \"Three Crowns of the Sailor\" (1983); \"City of Pirates\" (1983); \"Manoel's Destinies\" (1985); \"Treasure Island\" (1985) and \"Life is a Dream\" (1986).",
"Carlos Gallardo (actor) Carlos Gallardo (born June 22, 1966) is a Mexican actor, producer, occasional screenwriter and director. Gallardo frequently collaborates with his friend, director Robert Rodriguez. Gallardo was born in Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila, Mexico, to a Mexican father and an Irish mother. Gallardo's first taste of fame came with the feature film \"El Mariachi\", a critically acclaimed film renowned for costing US$7,000 to make. The film won the 1993 Sundance Film Festival, and won Gallardo an Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature, an accolade he shared with Rodriguez. He also was credited as unit production manager and for special effects in \"El Mariachi\". Following \"El Mariachi\", Gallardo went on to be co-producer of the Robert Rodriguez-directed \"Mexico Trilogy\" sequels, \"Desperado\" and \"Once Upon a Time in Mexico\". Both films featured Antonio Banderas in the role of El Mariachi, in place of Gallardo, though Gallardo had a minor role in \"Desperado\", playing El Mariachi's friend, Campa. Gallardo co-wrote, produced and starred in the title role of 2004 independent action thriller, \"Bandido\". He was also producer for 2004 Colombian TV series \"Me amaras bajo la lluvia\". Carlos also participated in the Robert Rodriguez production titled \"Curandero\" where he plays the lead. \"Curandero\" was directed by Eduardo Rodriguez. In 2007 he played Deputy Carlos in \"Planet Terror\", Robert Rodriguez's portion of \"Grindhouse\", appearing opposite Michael Biehn and Tom Savini. It was his first appearance in a Rodriguez film since \"Desperado\".",
"Raúl Ramírez (actor) Raúl Ramírez (28 January 1927, in Guadalajara – 22 June 2014, in Mexico City) was a veteran Mexican actor.",
"Víctor Manuel Castro Víctor Manuel Castro (1924–2011) was a Mexican actor, screenwriter and film director."
] |
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[
"Havana"
] |
What nationality is the director of film Summer School Teachers?
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Summer School Teachers Summer School Teachers is a 1974 feature film directed and written by Barbara Peeters and starring Candice Rialson. It is about three female friends who all teach at a school over the summer. It was an unofficial follow up to "The Student Teachers" (1973). Three friends from Iowa go to California for the summer, rent an apartment together and teach at the same high school. PE teacher Conklin (Candice Rialson) coaches an all-girl football team despite the opposition of the resident coach (Dick Miller), and romances one of the male teachers. Sally (Pat Anderson) teaches photography and despite being engaged to a man back home, has affairs with an eccentric rock star with a food fetish, and with a male chauvinist teacher who talks her into posing nude for some photos. Chemistry teacher Denise (Rhonda Leigh Hopkins) becomes involved with one of her students, a juvenile delinquent, who is falsely accused of participating in car stealing. Conklin uncovers that funds for sport are being misspent by the coach. Both she and Sally are suspended but all ends happily with the girl football team triumphant. Peeters enjoyed working for Roger Corman: He is always available and he doesn't hire you unless he trusts you. As long as you open big and close big and try to resolve three stories in the end, Roger lets you do what you want. Just be sure you put in either a sex scene or an action sequence every 15 minutes. The film was very popular. Roger Corman attributed this to its strong female liberation statement, which he thought was the strongest of any film made by New World Pictures. The "Los Angeles Times" called it "an entertaining and breezy exploitation film... even though she operates on a very superficial level, screenwriter Peeters deals with real issues like the danger of labelling people or the trauma of teacher-student romance. As a director, Peeters excels in zany slapstick". "Diabolique" magazine said the film was "feels like a screwball comedy rather than something sleazy. There is nudity... but the women are confident and in control: they do most of the seducing, they stick up for each other and the sisterhood, and the messages are mostly positive – girls should be able to do whatever boys can do, physical fitness is good, corruption is bad. This is the best character Rialson ever played."
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[
"End of Summer (2017 film) End of Summer () is a 2017 Chinese film by first-time director Zhou Quan. It tells the intertwining, coming-of-age stories of a fifth-grade boy, a middle-aged Chinese teacher and an old man in the Chinese city of Shaoxing against the backdrop of the 1998 World Cup. It made its world premiere in the New Currents section of the 22nd Busan International Film Festival, winning the KNN Award. Fifth-grader Gu Xiaoyang (Rong Zishan) loves soccer and wants to get onto the school's team but his teacher father Jianhua (Zhang Songwen) forbids him from playing believing study is more important. Xiaoyang finds an ally in his neighbor Grandpa Cheng (Ku Pao-ming), a soccer fanatic who not only encourages him but agrees to coach him so that he can qualify for the school team.",
"The Dance Teacher The Dance Teacher () is a 1995 Czech drama film directed by Jaromil Jireš.",
"The Village Teacher The Village Teacher () is a 1947 Soviet drama film directed by Mark Donskoy. The film tells the story of a teacher young Varya, who is going to teach peasant children in one village, which treats her coolly upon her arrival. Suddenly an acquaintance and former lover of Varya, a bolshevik Martynov, arrives in town marries and Varys. The revolution begins.",
"Tim Loane Tim Loane is a writer, director, lecturer and actor. Loane created the TV series \"Teachers\" for Channel 4 and was the lead writer for the first season. He was nominated at the 70th Academy Awards for Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film for the film \"Dance Lexie Dance\". Loane was educated at Methodist College Belfast and Queen's University Belfast.",
"Auguri professore Auguri professore (\"Good Luck Professor\") is a 1997 Italian comedy drama film directed by Riccardo Milani. The film is set in a school near Rome, and in a small mountain village of Abruzzo. The boys of the grammar school where teaches Professor Vincenzo Lipari, Italian teacher, are in serious crisis. The crisis, however, is not only that of a typical young adolescent: it is a real collective crisis that pushes young students to not studying, and caring of life, to believe in false ideals, and to get lost in the vortex of ignorance, that will not get them in any future. Vincenzo Lipari tries to help the guys, but also he is a frustrated like them, because they can not even organize a program of Italian lessons of the year. And so the man, trying to understand the new requirements youth, recalls his early school years: past, when teachers did not have to ask pupils to behave well in school, because it was all the opposite.",
"Los Angeles Film School The Los Angeles Film School (informally LA Film School) is a for-profit college in Los Angeles, California offering associate and bachelor's degrees in majors relating to the entertainment industry. The school encompasses the Los Angeles Recording School and is accredited by the Accrediting Commission of Career Schools and Colleges and the California Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education. The Los Angeles Film School was founded in 1999. The school was conceived and founded by married investors Paul Kessler, a financier, and Diana Derycz-Kessler, a Harvard-trained lawyer and entrepreneur, together with Thom Mount, and venture capitalist Bud MaLette. In 1998, the founders developed the idea for the school and made an initial investment of $2 million. The first classes began in September 1999, and the school's first students graduated in July 2000. The founding faculty included Tom Schatz, professor of film, William A. Fraker and Janusz Kamiński teaching cinematography, Jon Amiel and Donald Petrie teaching directing, Dede Allen teaching editing, Ron Judkins teaching sound production, and Joe Byron, Director of Technology. The school was originally funded by Kessler and Derycz-Kessler through their company Bristol Investments. After 18 months, the couple bought out their partners in the school and Dercyz-Kessler became the CEO, seeking to address overspending in a more active role. The total investment in the school had grown to $15 million by 2001, including the installation of the professional equipment required for film production. , students at the school had created 700 short films. The total number of students was 150 full-time and approximately 30 part-time. In 2003, the school formed a partnership with several private equity investors. In April 2011, a decision was made by ACCET to withdraw its accreditation of The Los Angeles Recording School. The decision was stayed on appeal, and the school was permitted to resign its accreditation amicably, following the transfer of remaining students to The Los Angeles Film School, which is accredited by the ACCSC. In February 2010, employees of The Los Angeles Film School submitted authorization cards to the National Labor Relations Board in an effort to become unionized as part of the California Federation of Teachers. Following the controversial firing of a Los Angeles Film School employee and union organizer, and the litigation which led to her reinstatement, the group withdrew its petition for unionization.",
"Budapest school The Budapest school, or documentarism, was a Hungarian film movement that flourished from roughly 1972 to 1984. The movement originated from Béla Balázs Studios, a small-budget filmmaking community that aimed to unite the young avant-garde and underground filmmakers of Hungary and give them an opportunity to make experimental works without state censorship. The Balázs studio gave birth to two main movements in the early 1970s: an experimental, avant-garde group (led by individuals like Gábor Bódy), and the documentarist group, whose main goal was the portrayal of absolute social-reality on screen. This movement was called \"Budapest school\" by an Italian film critic on a European film festival. Soon they adopted this name. The main founders and leaders of the group were István Dárday, Györgyi Szalai, Judit Ember and Pál Schiffer. Many young and sometimes amateur artists were invited to the group by fellow filmmakers, especially Béla Tarr, who made his debut film at the age of 22 with financing from the Béla Balázs Studios. Films of the movement were generally (but not always) shot with amateur equipment, mostly hand-held cameras, and usually by two or more cameras at the same time. Non-professional actors, who most of the time socially resembled their characters, were cast. These films also avoided pre-written scripts, with only a basic scenario and certain plot elements pre-written, and the cast members' reactions improvised on the set. Most films were shot in a very short period of time with a very limited budget or no budget at all. Their central themes were mostly the lives of working class and poor people in urban Hungary and their struggle to have a decent existence. The main goal of the movement was to show absolute reality on screen instead of the false escapism shown by commercial and mainstream films. The Budapest school movement closely resembled cinema verité. The first full-length film made in this manner was \"Jutalomutazás\" (\"\"The Prize Trip\"\") (1975) by István Dárday and Györgyi Szalai. The best-known example of the movement is \"\"Családi tűzfészek\"\" (\"\"Family Nest\"\") (1979) by Béla Tarr.",
"Douglas McKeown Douglas McKeown (born January 14, 1947) is an American filmmaker, actor, and writer, best known as the screenwriter and director of the sci-fi horror film, \"The Deadly Spawn\" (1983). McKeown was born in New York City and raised in Metuchen, New Jersey. As a child he taught himself the art of horror makeup, gaining notoriety by terrorizing local neighborhoods. He graduated from Emerson College in 1968 with high honors, having studied cinematography and theater in addition to English literature. After a brief stint as an Editorial Coordinator at ABC-TV in New York City, he spent six years as a high school teacher, numbering among his students the future writer and movie director Richard Wenk, stage director Lonnie Price, magician-illusionist David Copperfield, and animation producer Tom Ruegger. During this period he directed a series of musicals and straight plays for school, community theatre, and summer stock. In 1976, McKeown left teaching to join the Jean Cocteau Repertory in New York as an actor. He quickly moved on to other challenges, creating designs for many plays there, including sets and costumes for the Cocteau’s world premiere of Tennessee Williams’ \"Something Cloudy, Something Clear,\" and staging a number of productions, notably poet Robert Lowell’s adaptation of \"The Oresteia of Aeschylus.\" Following the release of “The Deadly Spawn” in 1983, McKeown shot a number of short video documentaries in Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and New York. One of these, a promotional video for New York’s LGBT Center, ultimately led him to his ongoing role as facilitator of the storytelling workshop, \"Queer Stories.\" He compiled and edited \"Queer Stories for Boys\" (Thunder's Mouth Press, 2004), an anthology of writings by members of the workshop. Beginning in 2004, he returned to the stage as an actor after a hiatus of twenty-four years, joining the Phoenix Theatre Ensemble for their productions of Kafka’s \"The Trial\" and Anouilh’s \"Antigone.\"",
"Jeff Daniel Silva Jeff (Daniel) Silva is a Boston filmmaker and film programmer. \"Ivan & Ivana\" (2011) and \"\" (2008), have been exhibited at film festivals and museums internationally, including MoMA's Documentary Fortnight, The Viennale, Visions du Reel, Valdivia, Flahertiana, and DocAviv.. In 2017, he worked on \"Linefork\", a feature about Lee Sexton. Silva programmed cinema for 15 years at the Balagan film series, which he co-founded in 2000. He was a teaching fellow at Harvard University. Silva taught at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts (SMFA) in Boston.",
"TheFilmSchool TheFilmSchool is a non-profit film program located in Seattle, Washington, that focuses on intensive training in screenwriting and directing. TheFilmSchool's mission statement 'to elevate the art of cinematic storytelling' guides the curriculum to heavily emphasize character, structure, and understanding the principles of storytelling. The program was founded in 2003 by Stewart Stern, John Jacobsen, Rick Stevenson, Warren Etheredge, and Tom Skerritt. TheFilmSchool launched the Great American Short Screenplay Contest in 2008, in partnership with the Seattle International Film Festival. Christopher McQuarrie, Academy Award-winning screenwriter of \"The Usual Suspects\", called TheFilmSchool \"probably the best place in the world to study story.\" Actor Robert Redford joined TheFilmSchool Advisory Board in 2008. All the founders still teach in the 3 Week Intensive. Various other producers, writers, and directors teach at the establishment. These include: John Jacobsen, Rick Stevenson, Warren Etheredge, Brian McDonald, Stacy Adams, and Stewart Stern, screenwriter of \"Rebel Without A Cause\". Bert and Bertie, the writing and directing duo, are BAFTA Award winners. Kristi L. Simkins won Best Narrative Short at the Rainier Independent Film Festival and a special Jury Selection award at the Lady Filmmakers Film Festival. LaDora Mishan Sella and L. Gabriel Gonda won awards at HollyShorts and the Tacoma Film Festival, among others, for their film \"Brightwood\". Winda Benedetti won Washington State Screenwriting competition in 2006 and was a finalist in 2007. Andrea Seybold and Kate Wharton's \"Drill Queen\" was selected as a semifinalist in Script Pipeline's 2008 TV Writing Competition. Jessika Satori won multiple awards at the Action On Film International Film Festival for her film \"So You Shall Reap\" in 2012. Andres Iseminger's \"Little Pricks\" was accepted as a finalist at the Beverly Hills Film Festival. Steven Schardt produced two films that were shown at the Sundance Film Festival, \"Humpday\" in 2009, and \"Your Sister's Sister\" in 2012, which starred Golden Globe winner Emily Blunt. His own film, \"Treatment,\" which he wrote and directed was selected to play at the Tribeca Film Festival and the Seattle International Film Festival. Kristi L."
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[
"American"
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Who is the spouse of the performer of song When The Stars Go Blue?
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When the Stars Go Blue "When the Stars Go Blue" is a popular alternative country song composed and originally performed by solo artist and former Whiskeytown band member Ryan Adams. It was first released on his album "Gold" on September 25, 2001, and has been described as the "most gorgeous ballad" on that album. "When the Stars Go Blue" has been covered by many artists, including Irish band the Corrs (featuring Bono of U2), country music singer Tim McGraw, and Norwegian artists Venke Knutson and Kurt Nilsen as a duo. Irish band the Corrs recorded the song on their album "", featuring U2's Bono. The cover was released on April 15, 2002, in the United States, reaching number 11 on the "Billboard" Adult Alternative Airplay chart and number 18 on the Adult Top 40. The song was remixed for their album "" in 2006. In 2006, the song was released by Tim McGraw as the first single from his compilation album "". Heribert Severing, creator and writer of severing.nu, included McGraw's version of "When the Stars Go Blue" on his list of the top Country singles of 2006. "When the Stars Go Blue" debuted at number 35 on the U.S. "Billboard" Hot Country Songs for the week of March 18, 2006. Norwegian singers Venke Knutson and "World Idol" Kurt Nilsen recorded a duet that appears in Venke Knutson's album 2005 "Places I Have Been". The song was released as a single in Norway in February 2006, reaching number 14 on the Norwegian Singles Chart. Irish/British girlband Wonderland performed the track for their debut performance on television in Ireland. The recorded studio version was included the band's debut album "Wonderland". It was also featured in "One Tree Hill" as a hit song by fictional characters Haley James Scott and Chris Keller (real life singers Bethany Joy Lenz and Tyler Hilton) and features on the "One Tree Hill" Soundtrack. The song was performed by Blake Lewis on American Idol Season 6, originally airing on April 17, 2007. His cover of the song made it to #92 of the pop charts in 2007.
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[
"Gary Fjellgaard Gary Lynn Fjellgaard (born August 14, 1937) is a Canadian country music singer-songwriter. He has released fifteen albums and charted thirty-five songs on the \"RPM\" Country Tracks chart between 1977 and 1996, including the Top 10 singles \"Walk in the Rain Tonight\" (#10, 1987), \"The Moon Is Out to Get Me\" (with Linda Kidder, No. 10, 1989), \"Cowboy in Your Heart\" (#7, 1989), \"Somewhere on the Island\" (#7, 1990), \"In My Heart\" (with Kidder, No. 10, 1990) and \"Train of Dreams\" (#10, 1994). He launched his own record label, Silver Creek Music, in 2001. Fjellgaard's song \"Riding on the Wind\" was named Single of the Year in 1985 by the Canadian Country Music Association. He also won the 1987 Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada Song of the Year award for writing the Mercey Brothers' hit \"Heroes\". Fjellgaard won the 1989 Canadian Country Music Association Award for Male Artist of the Year. He also won three awards for his collaborations with Linda Kidder in 1989, 1990 and 1992. After several years of nominations, Fjellgaard won the 1993 Juno Award for Best Country Male Vocalist. He was inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame in 2005.",
"Lori McKenna Lorraine McKenna ( Giroux; born December 22, 1968) is an American folk, Americana, and country music singer-songwriter. In 2016, she was nominated for the Grammy Award for Song of the Year and won Best Country Song for co-writing the hit single \"Girl Crush\" performed by Little Big Town. In 2017, she again won Best Country Song at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards for writing \"Humble and Kind\" performed by Tim McGraw. McKenna along with Lady Gaga, Natalie Hemby and Hillary Lindsey wrote the second single off the soundtrack to the 2018 film \"A Star Is Born\" called \"Always Remember Us This Way.” McKenna performed backing vocals along with Lindsey and Hemby, and the song received a nomination for Song of the Year at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards. McKenna was born and raised in Stoughton, Massachusetts, where she still lives today. Her mother died when she was seven years old, a theme often touched on in her music. She met her husband, Gene McKenna, in third grade and married him at age 19. She has five children and has been married for more than 30 years. McKenna first started writing lullabies to her children. Her brother, who first introduced her to the guitar, encouraged her to attend an open-mic night at the Old Vienna Kaffeehause in Westborough, Massachusetts in 1996. The organizer heard her play and encouraged her to come back, becoming her informal manager and booking shows for her around Boston. McKenna was managed by Gabriel Unger from 2000 to 2004. During this time, she released her first four albums under Signature Sounds and developed a folk music fan base in the Northeast. She won awards at the Boston Music Awards, and performed at the Sundance Film Festival. In 2004, singer-songwriter Mary Gauthier introduced McKenna's album \"Bittertown\" to her Nashville friends. Upon hearing it, Faith Hill stalled her completed 2005 record \"Fireflies\" to replace tracks with covers of McKenna's songs. Hill and husband Tim McGraw became McKenna's champions and asked her to tour with them in 2006. Hill took McKenna to perform with her on the \"Oprah Winfrey Show\". McGraw helped bring McKenna to Warner Bros.",
"Linda Gail Lewis Linda Gail Lewis (born July 18, 1947, in Ferriday, Louisiana, United States) is an American singer, songwriter and pianist. She has recorded with Stephen Ackles, Van Morrison, and with her brother, Jerry Lee Lewis. She also has recorded with her two daughters, MaryJean Ferguson and Annie Marie Dolan, in a group called the Lewis 3. She is married to Eddie Braddock, former Stax promotions director.",
"Lita Gaithers Lita Gaithers (born July 30) is an American singer-songwriter, actress, director, and Tony Award-nominated co-author and vocal director of the Broadway musical \"It Ain't Nothin' But the Blues\", which was nominated for 4 Tony Awards including Best Musical in 1999. Lita, who received a nomination for the \"Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical\", is the third of only four African American women who have ever been nominated in that category. As a veteran performer of legitimate stages that include: the Mark Taper Forum, Pasadena Playhouse, and Arena Stage, her lead and featured stage performances consist of: \"The Tin Pan Alley Rag\", \"Ain't Misbehavin'\", \"Nunsense\", \"The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas\", \"A... My Name Is Alice\", \"Purlie\", \"For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow Is Enuf\", and being an original cast member of \"Blues\", which was developed at the Denver Center Theatre Company. Lita is married to the Reverend Dr. Oscar Otis Owens, Jr., and resides in View Park-Windsor Hills, California.",
"Red Hurley Brian \"Red\" Hurley (born 11 November 1947) is an Irish popular singer whose career has spanned several decades beginning in the 1970s. He is principally known as a solo artist, but he has also performed with various bands and pop groups, most notably The Nevada Showband, with whom he enjoyed his first series of number one records in the 1970s. He represented Ireland at the Eurovision Song Contest in 1976 with the song \"When\". Hurley tours regularly, performing at some of Ireland's principal concert venues. In August 2014, he was one of the musical soloists chosen to perform at the State Funeral of former Irish Prime Minister, Albert Reynolds. Hurley was born in 1947 and grew up in Milltown, Dublin, with four brothers and two sisters. He has been married twice. His first marriage to top Dublin model Patricia Ward ended in the mid-1980s; they had one daughter together, Kimberley. He met his second wife, Norma, in 1990 when she was a dancer in one of his shows. They were together for 18 years before marrying in Dublin in 2008. The couple have two daughters, Kristina and Stephanie. Hurley started his career in 1969 as lead vocalist with \"The Colours\". In 1970, he went on to form his first band, \"The Wheels\", Hurley released several successful singles during this period with \"The Wheels\" including Isadora, Take Me Tonight and Poor Man's Roses, all of which made it into the Irish charts with Isadora being the best known of his hits from this period. In early 1971, Hurley joined The Nevada, one of Ireland's top pop acts of that era, quickly becoming their most popular ever lead singer with a string of number 1 hits many penned by British songwriters Les Reed and Barry Mason specifically for Red. These include 'Sometimes. Kiss Me Goodbye and I never said Goodbye'. He enjoyed success with The Nevada until he left in 1974 to form his own \"Red Hurley Band\". The hits continued during the subsequent decade with 'Love Is All' (his biggest Reed/Mason hit and one of the biggest selling singles of the 1970s in Ireland), 'Broken Promises', 'Tennessee Special', 'You're my Day You're my Night' and many others, all huge chart hits in Ireland.",
"Tamara Champlin Tamara Champlin (née Matoesian) is an American singer-songwriter who started her career as a session singer in Houston, Texas, later moving to Los Angeles. She has performed with and written for singers such as Elton John, Leon Russell, Nicky Hopkins, Steve Lukather, Andreas Carlsson, husband Bill Champlin, and son Will Champlin. Tour dates from 2010 to 2016 with Bill Champlin included California, Europe, Hawaii, Japan, South America, Kuwait and Iraq. She is a full member of the Sons of Champlin, a founding member of Bill Champlin & Wunderground, is active in the Rhythmic Arts Project to benefit children with intellectual disabilities, and in the Saving K-9 Lives charity, which encourages the adoption of shelter pets. Tamara Champlin's career began as a Gilley's Club dancer and singer with Becky Bauch Williams (then Conway) in the movie \"Urban Cowboy\", followed by singing credits on Elton John's album \"The Fox\" in 1981, and future husband Bill Champlin's album \"Runaway\". She went on her first road trip to South Africa also in 1981, as part of Rita Coolidge's band. In films, she was the vocalist for \"Heart of Glass\" (composed with Bill Champlin and Bruce Gaitsch) in the \"Caddyshack II\", and sang three songs in the Rob Lowe Movie \"Illegally Yours\" in which she shared songwriting credits with Bruce Gaitsch on \"Who Wins\". With husband Bill Champlin and Rita Coolidge, she performed two songs on screen in the Jim Carrey Movie \"\"Copper Mountain\"\". In 1983–84, she was a regular background vocalist on Alan Thicke's Show the \"Thicke of the Night\" and in 1988, was part of the Atlantic Records 40th Anniversary Celebration. Writing collaborations followed, including \"Price of Love\" (with Jack Ponti and Vic Pepe) on the Baton Rouge album \"Lights Out on the Playground\", \"If You're Not The One For Me\" (with Bruce Gaitsch), sung by Bill Champlin and Brenda Russell, on Tom Scott's album \"Keep This Love Alive\", and \"Stone Cold\", released by Paul Rodgers (Queen/Bad Company) with his band The Law on their album \"Laying Down The Law\" (1991).",
"Sunny Ozell Sunny Ozell, Lady Stewart (born December 23, 1978) is an American singer and songwriter who resides in England. She is married to the British actor Sir Patrick Stewart. Ozell grew up in Reno, Nevada, in a musical household and began her classical training at an early age. Her parents did not play or perform themselves, but they had a passion for music and took music education seriously, getting Ozell to play the violin from the age of just four years old. She also started vocal training at the age of 11 years and soon after realised that music was the career path she wanted to pursue. From 13, she started working with an opera coach. At university in Boulder, Colorado, she majored in English Literature and sang in blues bands and soul-funk bands in her spare time throughout college. After graduating, she started performing in clubs around New York and became a part of the city's musical community with her blend of jazz, blues and American roots music, performing both original material and interpretations of works by other renowned blues, soul and country songwriters. She considers \"Take It with Me\" (which mainly consists of covers of works from artists such as Howard Jones, Hank Williams, Randy Newman, T Bone Burnett and Tom Waits) to be her debut album. Both on \"Take It with Me\" and live, Sunny Ozell works with renowned musicians, including guitarist Aaron Lee Tasjan (Semi Precious Weapons, Drivin N Cryin), bassist Andy Hess (The Black Crowes, Gov't Mule, Uberjam), keyboard player Andrew Sherman (George Duke, Mariah Carey), pedal steel player Jon Graboff (Ryan Adams & The Cardinals), backing singer Nicki Richards (Madonna) and drummer Ethan Eubanks (Teddy Thompson, Crash Test Dummies, Joseph Arthur). Ozell performs frequently at Rockwood Music Hall and The Living Room in New York and has collaborated with musicians such as Jim Campilongo and Adam Levy of Norah Jones’ backing band, and Krystle Warren. Ozell has begun preliminary recording sessions on the followup album to \"Take It with Me\". The focus will be on original material. Ozell cites Gillian Welch and David Rawlings as influences, for their \"simplicity and their total lack of pretention\", but also American jazz singer Cassandra Wilson, in particular her 1993 album \"Blue Light ‘til Dawn\".",
" She has also performed in operas at the Caramoor International Music Festival, the Festival dei Due Mondi, and the Spoleto Festival USA. She has appeared on \"The Merv Griffin Show\", \"The Mike Douglas Show\", \"The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson\" and \"Late Night with David Letterman\". She was married to comedian/actor Robert Klein from 1973 to 1989; they had one son, Alexander Klein. She is currently married to pianist Dr. Ford Lallerstedt and lives in Boone, North Carolina, in the Blue Ridge Mountains. She practices Transcendental Meditation.",
"Star Anna Star Anna Constantia Krogstie Bamford is an American singer and guitarist from Ellensburg, Washington who plays Americana and alt-country. Her band Star Anna and the Laughing Dogs includes Justin Davis (guitar), Keith Ash (bass), and Travis Yost (drums). Since summer 2010, the band has also included Ty Bailie on keyboards. Davis replaced original guitarist Corey Dosch, who left the band to pursue his Ph.D.; Ash replaced earlier bassist Frank Johnson. Star Anna was born in 1985. She began playing drums at the age of 11. During high school, she played in a punk rock band named No Continuous Standing as a drummer. When she reached the age of 16, she became a guitarist and started writing songs. Her early songs were specifically Christian but later expanded to include personal material in her songs. Star Anna and the Laughing Dogs appeared with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra on October 26, 2012. The orchestra performed two of Star Anna' songs, arranged by Scott Teske, and a piece composed by Teske with lyrics by Star Anna. In his weekly column for Seattle alternative press weekly The Stranger, Duff McKagan wrote positively regarding her singing voice.",
"The Stars We Are The Stars We Are is the fourth studio album by British singer/songwriter Marc Almond. It was released in September 1988, reaching number 41 on the UK Albums Chart, and 144 on the US \"Billboard\" 200 album chart. It is Almond's highest selling solo album in both countries and was certified silver by the BPI. \"The Stars We Are\" includes the singles \"Tears Run Rings\", \"Bitter Sweet\", \"Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart\" and \"Only the Moment\". With his assembled band La Magia (made up of former Willing Sinners members Annie Hogan, Billy McGee and Steve Humphreys) and accompanied by various studio musicians, Almond recorded the album at Matrix Studios in London. The artwork was designed by Huw Feather with a cover photograph by Andy Catlin. The album includes a duet with the German singer Nico, titled \"Your Kisses Burn\", which was recorded shortly before her death. Almond also duets with Agnes Bernelle on the track \"Kept Boy\" (a bonus track on the CD and cassette versions of the album) and also with US singer Gene Pitney as they perform Pitney's 1967 hit \"Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart\". This version became a UK number one hit in early 1989 and was the UK's sixth best-selling single of that year, being certified Gold by the BPI. Original editions of the album did not feature Almond's duet with Pitney on \"Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart\", and simply contained Almond's original solo version of the track instead. The duet version was recorded after the album was released and, after the success of the single in 1989, the duet was appended to CD and cassette versions and appeared in-place of the original solo version on some LP versions. \"Tears Run Rings\" was Almond's only solo single to peak inside the US \"Billboard\" Hot 100."
] |
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[
"Mandy Moore"
] |
Who was born earlier, Eric Gründemann or Gerard Lee Bevan?
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David Bevan David Bevan may refer to:
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[
"Eric Lambert Eric Lambert may refer to:",
"Jason Bevan Jason Scott Bevan (18 April 1978 – 7 October 2017) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Collingwood in the Australian Football League (AFL). Bevan was a midfielder, who Collingwood secured in the 1995 AFL Draft. His two appearances in the 1996 AFL season where in Collingwood's round 15 win over eventual premiers North Melbourne and their win against Fitzroy the following round.",
"Eric Magnusson Eric Magnusson may refer to:",
"Cecil Bevan Cecil Stuart Reginald Bevan (May 1, 1875 January 22, 1953) was a British stage and film actor.",
"Maurice Bevan Maurice Bevan (10 March 1921 – 20 June 2006) was a British bass-baritone and composer, who sang with The Deller Consort (founded by Alfred Deller in 1948), St Paul's Cathedral in London, and the BBC.",
"Eric Virgin Eric Virgin may refer to:",
"Rick Bevan Rick Bevan (born in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia) was a professional rugby league footballer in the New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership. He played for the Eastern Suburbs in the 1927 season and was the father of legendary all-time-great and Hall of Famer Brian Bevan. Rick Bevan was the Eastern Suburbs club's 171st player.",
"Roland Bevan Roland Bevan (October 12, 1888 – August 16, 1957) was an American football and college basketball coach. He served as the head football coach at St. Mary's College—now known as the University of Dayton— from 1911 to 1912 and Muskingum University in Concord, Ohio from 1913 to 1914, compiling a career college football coaching record of 12–12–2. After serving as a high school football coach at several stops in Ohio, he made his way to Dartmouth College, where he was a trainer. At the time of his death in 1957, he was working as a trainer for the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York.",
"Gerard Vaughan Gerard Vaughan may refer to:",
"Edward Bevan Edward Bevan may refer to:"
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[
"Gerard Lee Bevan"
] |
Which film came out earlier, What A Woman! or Alaiyadikkuthu?
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Alaipayuthey Alaipayuthey ( ) is a 2000 Indian Tamil-language romantic drama film written, co-produced and directed by Mani Ratnam, starring Madhavan and Shalini. The film explores the tensions of married life between two young people who elope and the maturing of love among urban Indians who are conflicted between tradition and modernity. The score and soundtrack were composed by A. R. Rahman. The film's story is mostly recollected in flashbacks by Karthik (Madhavan), on how he and Shakthi (Shalini) fall in love against the backdrop of Chennai and its suburban trains, against the wishes of their parents. The film had a mostly positive reception by critics. The film made its European premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2001. It was shown at various film festivals nationally and internationally. "Alaipayuthey" was later remade and released in Hindi in 2002, as "Saathiya", directed by Ratnam's former assistant Shaad Ali. Karthik Varadarajan is an independent and free-spirited software engineering graduate from a wealthy family who owns a startup along with his friends. At a friend's wedding, he meets Shakthi Selvaraj, a medical student from a middle-class family. The duo constantly bumps into each other on the local commuter trains they both use and eventually fall in love. Karthik pursues Shakthi aggressively and proposes marriage. Shakthi, however, is reluctant. Karthik manages to convince Shakthi and request his parents to formally ask Shakthi's parents for her hand in marriage. However, when the parents meet, they do not get along, and Shakthi calls off the relationship altogether and leaves for an extended medical camp in Kerala. While apart, both Karthik and Shakthi realise that they are desperately in love and decide to get married without the knowledge or consent of their parents. They continue living separate lives after marriage, meeting outside of their homes and hoping that their parents will see eye to eye at some point in the future, and can be informed of the marriage.
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[
"Ladies and Gentlewomen Ladies and Gentlewomen is a Tamil language, Indian documentary by Malini Jeevarathnam and produced by Pa. Ranjith. It is about love, life, and suicide among lesbians. The documentary also features a \"Lesbian Anthem\" for which the music was composed by Justin Prabhakaran and lyrics were penned by Kutti Revati and Damayanthi. Ladies and GentleWomen is an attempt to break the silence in the area of comprehending the dynamics of lesbianism .Probably the first move in Tamil scenario , this Documentary aims to dialogue about the conspicuous silence around the body politics and Relationship which is misspelt as social Stigma. challenging the silence emerged from constant fight against Socially accepted identities. With absolutely no response to the suicidal cases, the Social Rejection of lesbianism leads to the documentary sternly projecting the question to the society . \" Why the hell , do you care about Someone's love When you dont care a speck about someone's suicide?\" The documentary narrates the tale of Tija and Bija, a lesbian couple believed to be from Rajasthan, and is also about a Tamil folktale that features the lovers Pappathi and Karupaayi. It also features different perspectives on lesbian women from LGBTQ activists, journalists, lawyers and common people. She says her main aim is to increase the visibility of queer women and to save lesbian women from committing suicide or them being a subject of honor killings. Director claimed the research for the film took her one-and-a-half years, and the movie took three years to complete altogether. Her main intention, she claims, is to bring focus to the deaths of LGBT persons and their sufferings. As a part of the research, Malini met around 85 women from the Queer community. Many were not ready to talk about their sexuality in front of the camera. The film premiered at the Chennai Rainbow Film Festival in Chennai on 8 January 2017. This documentary has received Best Documentary awards at the Norway Tamil Film Festival, nominated for an award at the Pune International Queer Film Festival Out & Loud, and received many other accolades around the world. It has been screening at 11 different international film festivals and has won the Best Documentary award at three of them. In India, the movie has been screen at Chennai International Queer Film Festival, Bangalore Queer Film Festival, Hyderabad chapter of Queer Campus Bangalore and received rave reviews in many other cities.",
"Cochin Shadhi at Chennai 03 Cochin Shadhi at Chennai 03 is a 2020 Indian Malayalam-language film directed by Manjith Divakar. The film stars R. K. Suresh, Akshatha Sreedhar Shastry, Neha Saxena, and Vinoth Kishan as leading cast members. The film follows main character Shadika on her journey to Chennai where she encounters trouble along the way. The film was simultaneously shot in Tamil as Vanmurai (Violence). The film is based on a real-life incident that happened in Coimbatore: a teenage girl boards the wrong bus, initiating a series of interesting events. Filming was originally planned to be only shot in Malayalam, but was also shot in Tamil. Regarding the Malayalam version, \"The Times of India\" gave the film a rating of one-and-a-half out of five stars and stated that \"Cochin Shadhi At Chennai 03 is a cringe-fest you can avoid without a second thought. It has nothing new to offer, making it stale wine in an old bottle\". Regarding the Tamil version, \"Maalaimalar\" praised the story, music, and cinematography while criticizing the screenplay.",
"Kalabhavan Shajohn Shaji John, professionally credited by his stage name Kalabhavan Shajohn is an Indian actor, director and comedian who works primarily in Malayalam cinema. He started his career as a mimicry artist in Kalabhavan, Kochi. Making his debut in 1999 with My Dear Karadi and having made more than 90 appearances, he received a major breakthrough in his career with \"Drishyam\" (2013), in which he played a negative role. He made his directorial debut with \"Brother's Day\" starring Prithviraj. As of June 2021, he has starred in more than 130 Malayalam films. He was born as Shaji John to E. J. John, a retired ASI and Rejina, a retired nurse, in Varissery, Kottayam, Kerala in India. He studied at St. Mary's College, Manarcaud He has a brother Shibu John who is also a mimicry artist and radio RJ in Voice Of Kerala. He married Dini on 28 October 2004. The couple has a daughter, Hannaa and a son, Yohan.",
"Kerala State Film Award for Best Character Actress The Kerala State Film Award for Best Character Actress is an award, begun in 2015, presented annually at the Kerala State Film Awards of India to an actress for her performance in a Malayalam film. It replaced the Kerala State Film Award for Second Best Actress, which was discontinued in 2014. The winner receives a certificate, statuette and a cash prize of ₹50,000.",
"Alai Osai Alai Osai () is a 1985 Indian Tamil language film directed by Sirumugai Ravi. The film stars Vijayakanth and Nalini . It was given an \"A\" (restricted to adults) certificate by the censor board. Soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja. The lyrics for the songs were written by Ilayabharathi, Gangai Amaren, Muthulingam, Kamakodian and Vairamuthu. The song \"Poradada\" was used in the 2018 Tamil movie, \"Pariyerum Perumal\".",
"Theerthayathra Theerthayaathra is a 1972 Indian Malayalam film, directed by A. Vincent and produced by R. S. Prabhu. The film stars Madhu, Sharada, Sukumari and Kaviyoor Ponnamma in the lead roles. The film had musical score by A. T. Ummer. The movie was also the debut film for Telugu actress Supriya (Jayalakshmi Reddy) as Parvathikkutty. The music was composed by A. T. Ummer and the lyrics were written by P. Bhaskaran.",
"Lalithasree Lalithasree (born 30 October 1957) is an Indian actress best known for her work in Malayalam cinema. She has acted in more than 450 films. She acts mainly in supporting roles. She is known for her comedy roles with Jagathy Sreekumar. Lalithasree was born as Subhadra to Chandrasekharan Nair and Lakshmikuttiamma at Kottayam, Kerala. She has an elder sister, Mallika and a younger brother, Vidyasagar. Her father was from Kottayam and her mother was from Palakkad. Her father, who was a doctor, shifted to Vijayawada and the family settled there. She was studying at the seventh grade when her father died. They migrated to Madras after her father's death. She made her debut at the age of 15 in the Tamil movie \"Unarchigal\". She discontinued her studies and since became busy with movies",
"Gayathiri Iyer Gayathri Iyer (also known as Urmila Gayathri) is an Indian actress and model from Kerala, who has acted predominantly in Hindi, Kannada, Telugu and Bengali films. Her first notable film in Kannada was \"Namo Bhootatma\", a remake of the Tamil film \"Yaamirukka Bayamey\", produced by Eldred Kumar of RS Infotainment and starred Komal and Harish Raj as the male leads. \"Namo Bhootatma\" ran for 100 days in Karnataka and was well received by the audience. Iyer's next release was \"Ouija\" in Kannada by Vega Entertainment which was filmed in Malaysia and parts of Bangalore and Hyderabad. It starred Shraddha Das, Madhuri Itagi, Sayaji Shinde and Bharath. She made her television debut in Ekta Kapoor's serial \"\" and was praised for portraying her natural evil look on camera.",
"Nee! Nee! () is a 1965 Indian Tamil-language film, directed by Kanagashanmugam (with T. R. Ramanna receiving \"supervising director\" credit) and produced by T. K. Ramaraj. The film stars Jaishankar and Jayalalithaa. The film had musical score by M. S. Viswanathan. It was released on 21 August 1965 and became a commercial success. Sundaram, a rich man, falls in love with an orphaned girl, and marries her over the objections of his elder brother. He sets up a home of his own with his wife, but when his family members persuade him to rejoin the household, he brings his wife to his brother's house. There is once again cheer and sunshine in his life. Trouble arises when he is away from the house to accept a new job offered to him. The son-in-law of the house, a magistrate, leaks out the news that the orphan girl has earlier been convicted by him for immoral traffic. At once, insults are heaped on her. Unable to bear the taunting remarks, the girl leaves the house and attempts. The real drama then begins and all ends well. \"Nee!\" was directed by Kanagashanmugam, while T. R. Ramanna received \"supervising director\" credit. The film was produced by T. K. Ramaraj under Sri Vinayaga Pictures, and was the company's first production. Sakthi T. K. Krishnasamy was the writer, Selvaraj was art director, M. A. Rahiman was cinematographer, and M. S. Money was editor. The film was completed in two months, and its final cut measured . The music was composed by M. S. Viswanathan, while the lyrics were written by Vaali. \"Nee!\" was released on 21 August 1965. Writing for \"Sport and Pastime\", T. M. Ramachandran positively reviewed the film, saying the male and female leads showed \"promising talent\". The film became a commercial success.",
"Aladinge Waldin Aladinge Waldin () is a 2003 Sri Lankan Sinhala comedy film directed by Upali Piyaratne and produced by Anura de Silva & Thilak Mapatuna for Indu Films. It stars Tennyson Cooray and Sasanthi Jayasekara in lead roles along with Cletus Mendis and Sunil Hettiarachchi. Music composed by Sarath de Alwis. It is the 1004th Sri Lankan film in the Sinhala cinema."
] |
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[
"What A Woman!"
] |
Which film has the director died earlier, Always Further On or One Foot In Hell (Film)?
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Always Further On Always Further On () is a 1965 Mexican drama film directed by Luis Alcoriza. It won the FIPRESCI Prize at the 1965 Cannes Film Festival. The film was also selected as the Mexican entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 38th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.
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[
"Until Forever (film) Until Forever is a 2016 American independent biographical romantic drama film written and directed by Michael Linn and starring Stephen Anthony Bailey and Madison Lawlor. It is based on the life of Michael Boyum (1976-1999), a 22-year-old man from Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota who married his high school sweetheart, Michelle Larson, six weeks before he died of leukemia. Filming took place in Hot Springs, South Dakota. The film was also shot in the Twin Cities. A scene was also filmed at the Meridian Highway Bridge. Edwin L. Carpenter of The Dove Foundation gave the film a positive review and wrote that it \"features strong acting — especially that of Stephen Anthony Bailey as Michael and Madison Lawlor as Michelle — a tightly written script, and wonderful music.\"",
"Dead Along the Way Dead Along The Way is a 2016 Irish crime comedy film, directed by Maurice O'Carroll, and produced by Sinead O' Riordan. The film tells the story of two wedding videographers who find themselves unexpectedly dealing with a dead body, overly-enthusiastic Gardaí, fertility treatment,a vengeful gangster and an imminent wedding. The film was shot in Laois and Dublin. The film is a co-production between ORion Productions and Burnt Ice Pictures. Wacker and Tony – a pair of down-on-their-luck videographers – are about to video a wedding, and they think their lives can’t get any worse. Wacker’s wife has chucked him out, he has been beaten up over money she borrowed for fertility treatment, and a drink-fueled incident the night before has put his friendship with Tony under huge strain. But their problems are only beginning: Big Jim – a notorious loan shark who is also having a pretty bad time of it after learning about his 16-year-old daughter’s pregnancy – visits the church and dies after a scuffle with Tony. The videographers decide to try and conceal their crime before any wedding guests arrive. What happens next is ungodly. \"Dead Along The Way\" premiered at the Galway Film Fleadh on 6 July 2016, and was one of the first independent Irish films that sold out within hours. It then went on to open the Indie Cork Film Festival in October 2016. Following fast in the footsteps of the Galway Film Fleadh, the screening instantly sold out and was moved to a larger screen to accommodate the demand for tickets. The film won best independent feature at the Underground Cinema Film Festival in Dún Laoghaire and then announced a limited theatrical release where it had its theatrical premiere in the Gate Cinema in Cork City. \"Donald Clarke\" of \"The Irish Times\" commented saying the film was \"A dead ringer for tarantino, in a good way.\" In March 2017, \"Dead Along The Way\" will have its United States Premiere at the Chicago International Film Festival.",
"Notes to Eternity Notes to Eternity is a 2016 documentary feature film by New Zealand director Sarah Cordery, released theatrically in 2016. It is a meditation on the Israel-Palestine conflict centring on the lives and ideas of Noam Chomsky, Robert Fisk, Norman Finkelstein and Sara Roy. It was selected for the Documentary Panorama programme of the Belfast Film Festival in 2017. and the Screening Rights Film Festival 2017.] It screened as part of the Directed By Women 2017 season at the Genesis Cinema in London and had its Scottish premiere at the Glasgow Film Theatre. A preliminary cut premiered at the New Zealand International Film Festival in 2014.",
"One Foot in the Grave One Foot in the Grave is a British television sitcom written by David Renwick. There were six series (each consisting of six half-hour shows) and seven Christmas specials over a period of ten years from early 1990 to late 2000. The first five series were broadcast between January 1990 and January 1995. For the next five years, the show appeared only as Christmas specials, followed by one final series in 2000. The series features the exploits of Victor Meldrew, played by Richard Wilson, and his long-suffering wife, Margaret, played by Annette Crosbie. Wilson initially turned down the part of Meldrew and David Renwick considered Les Dawson for the role, until Wilson changed his mind. The programmes invariably deal with Meldrew's battle against a long series of problems, some of which he creates for himself. Set in an unnamed town in southern England, Victor takes involuntary early retirement. His various efforts to keep himself busy while encountering various misfortunes and misunderstandings are the themes of the sitcom. Indoor scenes were filmed at BBC Television Centre with most exterior scenes filmed on Tresillian Way in Walkford in Christchurch, Dorset. Despite its traditional production, the series subverts its domestic sitcom setting with elements of black humour and surrealism. The series was occasionally the subject of controversy for some of its darker story elements, but nevertheless received a number of awards, including the 1992 BAFTA for Best Comedy. The programme came 80th in the British Film Institute's 100 Greatest British Television Programmes. Four episodes were remade for BBC Radio 2. The series inspired a novel, published in 1992, featuring the most memorable moments from the first two series and the first Christmas special. The series features the exploits, mishaps and misadventures of irascible early retiree Victor Meldrew, who, after being made redundant from his job as a security guard at the age of 60, finds himself at war with the world and everything in it. Meldrew, cursed with misfortune and always complaining, is married to long-suffering wife Margaret, who is often left exasperated by his many misfortunes. Amongst other witnesses to Victor's wrath are tactless family friend Jean Warboys and next-door neighbours Patrick (Victor's nemesis) and Pippa Trench. Patrick often discovers Victor in inexplicably bizarre or compromising situations, leading him to believe he is insane.",
"Not Only But Always Not Only But Always is a British TV movie, originally screened on the Channel 4 network in the UK on 30 December 2004. Written and directed by playwright Terry Johnson, the film tells the story of the working and personal relationship between the comedians Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, a hugely popular duo in the UK during the 1960s and 1970s. Focusing primarily on Cook, the film traces the pair from their first meeting through their career as part of the \"Beyond the Fringe\" review, their television series \"Not Only... But Also\" (from which the film takes its title) and various other projects before their later estrangement as Moore became a successful Hollywood film star and Cook remained in the UK. Although some events are fictionalised and condensed, and the film was criticised in some quarters for an unsympathetic portrayal of many of Cook's faults, it was generally well-received critically.",
"The More It Goes, the Less It Goes The More It Goes, the Less It Goes is a 1977 French film. It was also known as \"Plus ca va moins ca va\". Two police inspectors are investigating a homicide.",
"As Far as My Feet Will Carry Me As Far as My Feet Will Carry Me () is a 2001 film about German World War II prisoner of war Clemens Forell's escape from a Siberian Gulag in the Soviet Union back to Germany. It is based on the book of the same name written by Bavarian novelist . The book is in turn based on the story of Cornelius Rost who used the alias \"Clemens Forell\" to avoid retribution from the KGB. A previous television adaptation was produced in 1959. However, since the book's publication doubts have been raised about the authenticity of Rost's story. Clemens Forell is a German Wehrmacht soldier who was captured by the Soviets in 1945. Forell is sentenced to 25 years hard labour for \"crimes against the partisans\" and sent as part of a large group of prisoners to a Gulag labour camp in the Siberian region of the Soviet Union. After a huge cross-continent railway journey on starvation rations, and a long-cross-country trek by foot into the bleak wilderness, they arrive at the gulag. This is run by a cruel commander, Lieutenant Kamenev. After one unsuccessful attempt, Forell ultimately does escape with the aid of the camp doctor, Dr. Stauffer. Stauffer had planned to escape himself, but is terminally ill with cancer, so he gives Forell warm clothes and a loaded pistol, and explains where he has hidden supplies for a long journey. Forell promises to visit the doctor's wife in Magdeburg and tell her that he is already dead. Forell heads north to avoid the guards, who would expect him to go west. When the supplies given to him by Dr. Stauffer run out, he kills a seal for food. Over the winter, he wanders across northern Siberia, until he meets Anastas and Semyon, two gold prospectors. Although initially suspicious of them, Forell eventually joins them. After Semyon falls in a river and Forell rescues him, Semyon kills Anastas when he suspects him of stealing his gold. Semyon and Forell then continue their journey. When Semyon can no longer continue, Forell offers to carry his pack for him, but a suspicious Semyon throws him down a slope, thinking he too will try to steal his gold.",
"The Beyond (1981 film) The Beyond (, lit. \"...And you will live in terror! The afterlife\") is a 1981 Italian Southern Gothic supernatural horror film directed by Lucio Fulci, from an original story created by Dardano Sacchetti, and starring Catriona MacColl and David Warbeck. Its plot follows a woman who inherits a hotel in rural Louisiana that was once the site of a horrific murder, and which may be a gateway to hell. It is the second film in Fulci's \"Gates of Hell\" trilogy after \"City of the Living Dead\" (1980), and was followed by \"The House by the Cemetery\" (1981). Filmed on location in and around New Orleans in late 1980 with assistance from the Louisiana Film Commission, additional photography took place at De Paolis Studios in Rome. Released theatrically in Italy in the spring of 1981, \"The Beyond\" did not see a North American release until late 1983 through Aquarius Releasing, who released an alternate version of the film titled 7 Doors of Death; this version featured an entirely different musical score and ran several minutes shorter than Fulci's original cut, which was branded a \"video nasty\" upon its release in the United Kingdom. The original version of the film saw its first United States release in September 1998 through a distribution partnership between Rolling Thunder Pictures, Grindhouse Releasing and Cowboy Booking International. Following its release, reception of \"The Beyond\" was polarized. Contemporary and retrospective critics have praised the film for its surrealistic qualities, special effects, musical score and cinematography, but note its narrative inconsistencies; horror filmmakers and surrealists have interpreted these inconsistencies as intentionally disorienting, supplementing the atmospheric tone and direction. \"The Beyond\" is ranked among Fulci's most celebrated films, and has gained an international cult following over the ensuing decades. In 1927, an artist and warlock named Schweick works on a hellish painting in Room 36 of the Seven Doors Hotel, in New Orleans, Louisiana. He protects one of the seven gates of hell, which if opened, will bring about the end of the world and the death of mankind. He is dragged from his room by a Lynch mob to the hotel basement and killed for practicising black magic. As this happens, a white-eyed woman reads from the ancient tome \"Eibon\", prophesizing the opening of one of the seven gates of hell.",
"Further Films Further Films is an American independent film and television production company. It was founded by actor Michael Douglas on November 19, 1997. The company is based in New York City but has offices located in Universal City, California. In May 1999, Further Films executive Allen Burry announced that the company was interested in acquiring Tom Wolfe's novel \"A Man in Full\" for development as a television series.",
"Hell for Certain Hell for Certain may refer to:"
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[
"Always Further On"
] |
What nationality is Leo Diogenes's father?
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Diogenes Diogenes ( ; ), also known as Diogenes the Cynic (, ), was a Greek philosopher and one of the founders of Cynic philosophy. He was born in Sinope, an Ionian colony on the Black Sea coast of Anatolia (Asia Minor) in 412 or 404 BC and died at Corinth in 323 BC. Diogenes was a controversial figure. He was the son of a mintmaster and was banished from Sinope for debasement of currency. After being exiled, he moved to Athens and criticized many cultural conventions of the city. He modeled himself on the example of Heracles, and believed that virtue was better revealed in action than in theory. He used his simple lifestyle and behavior to criticize the social values and institutions of what he saw as a corrupt, confused society. He had a reputation for sleeping and eating wherever he chose in a highly non-traditional fashion, and took to toughening himself against nature. He declared himself a cosmopolitan and a citizen of the world rather than claiming allegiance to just one place. There are many tales about his dogging Antisthenes' footsteps and becoming his "faithful hound". Diogenes made a virtue of poverty. He begged for a living and often slept in a large ceramic jar, or pithos, in the marketplace. He became notorious for his philosophical stunts, such as carrying a lamp during the day, claiming to be looking for a man (often rendered in English as "looking for an honest man"). He criticized Plato, disputed his interpretation of Socrates, and sabotaged his lectures, sometimes distracting listeners by bringing food and eating during the discussions. Diogenes was also noted for having mocked Alexander the Great, both in public and to his face when he visited Corinth in 336 BC. Diogenes was captured by pirates and sold into slavery, eventually settling in Corinth. There he passed his philosophy of Cynicism to Crates, who taught it to Zeno of Citium, who fashioned it into the school of Stoicism, one of the most enduring schools of Greek philosophy. No writings of Diogenes survive but there are some details of his life from anecdotes ("chreia"), especially from Diogenes Laërtius' book "Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers" and some other sources. Nothing is known about Diogenes's early life except that his father, Hicesias, was a banker.
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"Diogenes Laertius Diogenes Laërtius ( ; , ; ) was a biographer of the Greek philosophers. Nothing is definitively known about his life, but his surviving \"Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers\" is a principal source for the history of ancient Greek philosophy. His reputation is controversial among scholars because he often repeats information from his sources without critically evaluating it. He also frequently focuses on trivial or insignificant details of his subjects' lives while ignoring important details of their philosophical teachings and he sometimes fails to distinguish between earlier and later teachings of specific philosophical schools. However, unlike many other ancient secondary sources, Diogenes Laërtius generally reports philosophical teachings without attempting to reinterpret or expand on them, which means his accounts are often closer to the primary sources. Due to the loss of so many of the primary sources on which Diogenes relied, his work has become the foremost surviving source on the history of Greek philosophy. Laërtius must have lived after Sextus Empiricus (c. 200), whom he mentions, and before Stephanus of Byzantium and Sopater of Apamea (c. 500), who quote him. His work makes no mention of Neoplatonism, even though it is addressed to a woman who was \"an enthusiastic Platonist\". Hence he is assumed to have flourished in the first half of the 3rd century, during the reign of Alexander Severus (222–235) and his successors. The precise form of his name is uncertain. The ancient manuscripts invariably refer to a \"Laertius Diogenes\", and this form of the name is repeated by Sopater and the Suda. The modern form \"Diogenes Laertius\" is much rarer, used by Stephanus of Byzantium, and in a lemma to the Greek Anthology. He is also referred to as \"Laertes\" or simply \"Diogenes\". The origin of the name \"Laertius\" is also uncertain. Stephanus of Byzantium refers to him as \"Διογένης ὁ Λαερτιεύς\" (\"Diogenes ho Laertieus\"), implying that he was the native of some town, perhaps the Laerte in Caria (or another Laerte in Cilicia). Another suggestion is that one of his ancestors had for a patron a member of the Roman family of the Laërtii.",
"Constantine Diogenes (pretender) Pseudo-Constantine Diogenes or Pseudo-Leo Diogenes (died after 1095) was an unsuccessful pretender to the Byzantine throne against Emperor Alexios I Komnenos. Of lowly origin, he pretended to be a son of Emperor Romanos IV Diogenes. Exiled to Cherson, he escaped and took refuge among the Cumans. In 1095, he invaded the Byzantine Empire at the head of a Cuman host and advanced as far as Adrianople before being captured by a ruse and blinded by loyalist forces. According to Anna Komnene's \"Alexiad\", he was a man of obscure origin who pretended to be Leo Diogenes, son of emperor Romanos IV Diogenes (), and who had died near Antioch in 1073. Since the son of Romanos IV who died at Antioch was not Leo but rather Constantine Diogenes, the emperor's eldest son, scholars have traditionally emended Anna's reference accordingly. On the other hand, given the support provided by the Cumans to this pretender, the French scholar Jean-Claude Cheynet suggests that he did indeed claim to be Leo, who unlike his brother had been active on the Empire's Danube frontier and was known to the Cumans, dying in battle against them in 1087. According to Anna's account, Pseudo-Diogenes came to Constantinople from the East, \"poor and wearing a goat's skin\". Nevertheless, he soon gathered a group of supporters among the populace, and openly claimed his intention to claim the throne from Alexios I Komnenos (). Alexios at first disregarded the pretender's agitations, but then his sister Theodora, the widow of the real Constantine Diogenes, who had retired to a monastery, protested the abuse of her husband's name, and the emperor had the pretender arrested and exiled to Cherson. There, the pretender made contact with the Cumans who frequented the town. One night, he climbed over the walls and, escorted by Cumans, escaped his imprisonment. Seeking refuge among the Cumans, he soon gained their recognition as emperor and their support in his attempt to claim the throne, although, as Anna Komnene reports, this was more a pretext for raiding and plundering the Byzantine provinces.",
" Diogenes was also noted for having mocked Alexander the Great, both in public and to his face when he visited Corinth in 336 BC. Diogenes was captured by pirates and sold into slavery, eventually settling in Corinth. There he passed his philosophy of Cynicism to Crates, who taught it to Zeno of Citium, who fashioned it into the school of Stoicism, one of the most enduring schools of Greek philosophy. No writings of Diogenes survive but there are some details of his life from anecdotes (\"chreia\"), especially from Diogenes Laërtius' book \"Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers\" and some other sources. Nothing is known about Diogenes's early life except that his father, Hicesias, was a banker. It seems likely that Diogenes was also enrolled into the banking business aiding his father. At some point (the exact date is unknown), Hicesias and Diogenes became involved in a scandal involving the adulteration or debasement of the currency, and Diogenes was exiled from the city and lost his citizenship and all his material possessions. This aspect of the story seems to be corroborated by archaeology: large numbers of defaced coins (smashed with a large chisel stamp) have been discovered at Sinope dating from the middle of the 4th century BC, and other coins of the time bear the name of Hicesias as the official who minted them. During this time there was much counterfeit money circulating in Sinope. The coins were deliberately defaced in order to render them worthless as legal tender. Sinope was being disputed between pro-Persian and pro-Greek factions in the 4th century, and there may have been political rather than financial motives behind the act. According to one story, Diogenes went to the Oracle at Delphi to ask for her advice and was told that he should \"deface the currency\". Following the debacle in Sinope, Diogenes decided that the oracle meant that he should deface the political currency rather than actual coins. He traveled to Athens and made it his life's goal to challenge established customs and values. He argued that instead of being troubled about the true nature of evil, people merely rely on customary interpretations.",
"Leophanes Leophanes or Leo'phanes or Leophanēs () was an Ancient Greek scientist and naturalist who lived approximately between 470-430 BC and the 4th century BC. He is known from mentions in Aristotle and Pseudo-Plutarch, both of whom discuss his theory that male and female animals are generated from different testicles.",
"Diogenes of Athens (tragedian) Diogenes of Athens () was a writer of Greek tragedy in the late 5th or early 4th century BC. His works are listed by the Suda as \"Semele\", \"Achilles, Helen, Herakles, Thyestes, Medea, Oedipus,\" and \"Chrysippus\". He was either born or flourished at the time of the Thirty Tyrants and the suppression of Athenian democracy, around 404–403 BC. This Diogenes is sometimes confused with Diogenes of Sinope, to whom a similar list of tragedies is attributed by Diogenes Laërtius. Athenaeus preserves a geographically confused fragment from Diogenes, having to do with a laurel grove along the Halys river where Lydian and Bactrian girls perform sacred music for Artemis as the goddess of Mount Tmolus.",
"Statue of Diogenes The Statue of Diogenes () is a monument to the Ancient Greek philosopher Diogenes of Sinope, who was born in Sinop , ancient Asia Minor, Turkey in about 412 BC. Sinop (then known as Sinope) is the birthplace of Diogenes in the 5th century BC. Sinop municipality decided to erect a statue of Diogenes. Its creator was Turan Baş of the Ondokuz Mayıs University in Samsun. The statue was erected in 2006. It is situated at the center of the narrowest point of Sinop Peninsula isthmus. Other historically notable places of the city (like Sinop Fortress Prison) are close to the monument. The tall statue depicts Diogenes the Cynic standing with his dog on his dwelling barrel and searching for an honest man in the far with his lamp in the hand. According to the Turkish daily newspaper \"Milliyet\", some politicians criticized the decision of the municipality on the ground that Diogenes searched for an honest man and thus insulted the honest people of Sinop. However, that legend had been originated in Athens and not in Sinop.",
"Diogenes of Babylon Diogenes of Babylon (also known as Diogenes of Seleucia; ; ; c. 230 – c. 150/140 BC) was a Stoic philosopher. He was the head of the Stoic school in Athens, and he was one of three philosophers sent to Rome in 155 BC. He wrote many works, but none of his writings survived, except as quotations by later writers. Born in Seleucia on the Tigris in Babylonia, Diogenes was educated at Athens under the auspices of Chrysippus and succeeded Zeno of Tarsus as head (\"scholarch\") of the Stoic school there in the 2nd century BC. Among his pupils were Panaetius and Antipater of Tarsus who succeeded him as scholarch. He seems to have closely followed the views of Chrysippus, especially on dialectic, in which he is said to have instructed Carneades. Together with Carneades and Critolaus, he was sent to Rome to appeal a fine of five hundred talents imposed on Athens in 155 BC for the sack of Oropus. They delivered their epideictic speeches first in numerous private assemblies, then in the Senate. Diogenes pleased his audience chiefly by his sober and temperate mode of speaking. Cicero speaks of him as deceased by 150 BC, and since Lucian claims that he died at the age of 80, he must have been born around 230 BC. There is some evidence, however, that he may have lived to around 140 BC. Cicero calls Diogenes \"a great and important Stoic\". In the works of the Epicurean philosopher Philodemus found in carbonized papyrus rolls recovered from the ruins of the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum, Diogenes is discussed more frequently than any philosopher besides Epicurus himself. He was the author of several works, of which, however, little more than the titles is known: In addition, it appears from Philodemus that he wrote extensive works \"On Music\" and \"On Rhetoric\". Some aspects of his views on these two subjects are recoverable from the critical remarks to be found in Philodemus' works on these two subjects. There are several passages in Cicero from which we may infer that Diogenes wrote on other subjects also, such as duty, the highest good, and the like.",
"Diogenes of Apollonia Diogenes of Apollonia ( ; ; 5th century BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher, and was a native of the Milesian colony Apollonia in Thrace. He lived for some time in Athens. His doctrines are known chiefly from Diogenes Laërtius and Simplicius. He believed air to be the one source of all being, and, as a primal force, to be intelligent. All other substances are derived from it by condensation and rarefaction. Aristotle has preserved a long passage by Diogenes concerning the organization of the blood vessels. Diogenes was a native of the Milesian colony Apollonia Pontica in Thrace, present-day Sozopol on the Black Sea. His father's name was Apollothemis. Nothing is known of the events in his life, except that he lived some time in Athens. Diogenes Laërtius states that \"great jealousy nearly put his life in danger in Athens,\" but there may be confusion with Anaxagoras who is mentioned in the same passage. Like all the \"physiologoi\" (natural philosophers), he wrote in the Ionic dialect. In \"The Clouds\" of Aristophanes, it is thought that some views of Diogenes are transferred to Socrates. His most famous work was \"On Nature\" (Περὶ Φύσεως, \"Peri Physeos\"), some fragments of which are preserved, chiefly by Simplicius. Diogenes, like Anaximenes, believed air to be the one source of all being, and all other substances to be derived from it by condensation and rarefaction. This he modified by the theories of his contemporary Anaxagoras, and asserted that air, the primal force, was intelligent: And it seems to me that that which possessed thought is what people call air, and that by this everyone both is governed and has power over everything. For it is this which seems to me to be god and to have reached everything and to arrange everything and to be in everything. And there is not a single thing which does not share in it. The nature of the universe is air, limitless and eternal, from which, as it condenses and rarefies and changes its properties, the other forms come into being.",
"Ptolemy of Thebes In Greek mythology, Ptolemy or Ptolomeus (;Ancient Greek: Πτολεμαῖος) was an ancestral ruler of Thebes, in ancient Greece living in the 12th century BCE. His father was Damasichthon; his son, Xanthus. Since the Homeric root to Ptolemy includes no \"T\", the name is reconstructed as Polemy.",
" According to Diogenes Laërtius, he was named after his grandfather, as was common in Athenian society. But there is only one inscription of an Aristocles, an early archon of Athens in 605/4 BC. There is no record of a line from Aristocles to Plato's father, Ariston. Recently a scholar has argued that even the name Aristocles for Plato was a much later invention. However, another scholar claims that \"there is good reason for not dismissing [the idea that Aristocles was Plato's given name] as a mere invention of his biographers\", noting how prevalent that account is in our sources. Ancient sources describe him as a bright though modest boy who excelled in his studies. Apuleius informs us that Speusippus praised Plato's quickness of mind and modesty as a boy, and the \"first fruits of his youth infused with hard work and love of study\". His father contributed all which was necessary to give to his son a good education, and, therefore, Plato must have been instructed in grammar, music, and gymnastics by the most distinguished teachers of his time. Plato invokes Damon many times in the \"Republic\". Plato was a wrestler, and Dicaearchus went so far as to say that Plato wrestled at the Isthmian games. Plato had also attended courses of philosophy; before meeting Socrates, he first became acquainted with Cratylus and the Heraclitean doctrines. Ambrose believed that Plato met Jeremiah in Egypt and was influenced by his ideas. Augustine initially accepted this claim, but later rejected it, arguing in \"The City of God\" that \"Plato was born a hundred years after Jeremiah prophesied.\" Plato may have travelled in Italy, Sicily, Egypt, and Cyrene. Plato's own statement was that he visited Italy and Sicily at the age of forty and was disgusted by the sensuality of life there. Said to have returned to Athens at the age of forty, Plato founded one of the earliest known organized schools in Western Civilization on a plot of land in the Grove of Hecademus or Academus. This land was named after Academus, an Attic hero in Greek mythology. In historic Greek times it was adorned with oriental plane and olive plantations The Academy was a large enclosure of ground about six stadia (a total of between a kilometer and a half mile) outside of Athens proper."
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"Byzantine"
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What is the date of birth of the director of film Hans Trutz In The Land Of Plenty?
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Hans Trutz in the Land of Plenty Hans Trutz in the Land of Plenty (German: Hans Trutz im Schlaraffenland) is a 1917 German silent fantasy film directed by and starring Paul Wegener and also featuring Lyda Salmonova and Ernst Lubitsch. It was one of a trilogy of fairytale-inspired films made by Wegener, along with "Rübezahl's Wedding" and "The Pied Piper of Hamelin". It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin and on location at Bautzen in Saxony. The film's sets were designed by the art director Rochus Gliese.
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"World of Plenty World of Plenty is a 1943 British documentary film directed by Paul Rotha for the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries. It discusses problems with, and possible improvements to, global food distribution. An opening narration explaining that the film's purpose is to examine the \"world strategy of food\", in terms of its production, distribution and consumption. The film is then divided into three parts: \"Food - As It Was\", \"Food - As It Is\" and \"Food - As It Might Be\".",
"Hans-Jürgen Syberberg Hans-Jürgen Syberberg (born 8 December 1935) is a German film director, whose best known film is his lengthy feature \"\". Born in Nossendorf, Pomerania, the son of an estate owner, Syberberg lived until 1945 in Rostock and Berlin. In 1952 and 1953 he created his first 8 mm takes of rehearsals by the Berliner Ensemble. In 1953 he moved to West Germany, where he in 1956 began studies in literature and art history, completing them the following year. He earned his doctorate in Munich with his thesis on \"The Absurd in Dürrenmatt.\" In 1963 Syberberg began producing documentary films about Fritz Kortner and Romy Schneider for Bavarian Radio and others. For Syberberg, cinema is a form of \"Gesamtkunstwerk\". Many commentators, including Syberberg himself, have characterized his work as a cinematic combination of Bertolt Brecht's doctrine of epic theatre and Richard Wagner's operatic aesthetics. Well known philosophers and intellectuals have written about his work, including Susan Sontag, Gilles Deleuze and Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe. In 1975 Syberberg released \"Winifried Wagner und die Geschichte des Hauses Wahnfried von 1914–1975\" (English title: \"The Confessions of Winifred Wagner\"), a documentary about Winifred Wagner, an Englishwoman who had married Richard Wagner's son Siegfried. The documentary attracted attention because it exposed Mrs Wagner's unrepentant admiration for Adolf Hitler. The film thus proved an embarrassment to the Wagner family and the Bayreuth Festival (which she had run from 1930 until the end of the Second World War). Winifred Wagner objected to the inclusion in the film of conversations she did not know were being recorded. Syberberg is also noted for an acclaimed visual interpretation of the Wagner opera \"Parsifal\" in 1982. Syberberg's work has attracted criticism at least since the publication of the film script of \"Hitler: A Film from Germany\", particularly from the Left, who were amongst many targets of his criticism in that book. In later essays, although he never presented himself as a conservative or sympathizer with German nationalism, his comments began to scandalize a broad spectrum of writers and critics in Germany and elsewhere.",
"Helmut Käutner Helmut Käutner (25 March 1908 – 20 April 1980) was a German film director active mainly in the 1940s and 1950s. He began his career at the end of the Weimar Republic and released his first major films in Nazi Germany. Käutner is relatively unknown outside of Germany, although he is considered one of the best filmmakers in German film history. He was one of the most influential film directors of German post-war cinema and became known for his sophisticated literary adaptations. He was born in Düsseldorf, Germany. His 1956 film \"Der Hauptmann von Köpenick\" was nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 29th Academy Awards. Three years later, his film \"The Rest Is Silence\" was entered into the 9th Berlin International Film Festival. He died in Castellina in Chianti, Italy. Feature Films Television",
"Ralph Baum Ralph Baum (4 October 1908 – 1987) was a French film producer and production manager particularly associated with Max Ophüls whose career spanned from 1930 to 1985 across more than 50 films. He also directed four films.",
"Land of Plenty Land of Plenty is a 2004 drama film directed by Wim Wenders starring Michelle Williams and John Diehl. The title of the film comes from the song \"The Land of Plenty\" from the album \"Ten New Songs\", written by Leonard Cohen and Sharon Robinson, which was used in the movie. The film was Gloria Stuart's last screen appearance before her death in 2010. The movie presents a view of post-9/11 United States as seen through the eyes of Lana (Williams), an American girl who has lived in Africa and the Middle East for years with her missionary parents. She is returning from a long trip to the West Bank. In Los Angeles, she works at a homeless mission and looks up her only living relative in the US, her late mother's brother, Paul (Diehl). He is a paranoid Vietnam veteran who drives around filming and spying on Arabs and people with Arab features. Lana, in contrast, leans toward anti-war convictions and has been changed by her experiences abroad, so feels outside American culture. Having first-hand knowledge of the Middle East and Africa, she sees similarities between the slums of Los Angeles and those of the Third World. After she and Paul see the murder of a young Pakistani outside the mission, they take his body to his family. Their road trip offers Paul a different view of Muslim home life. Over the course of the film, Paul and Lana learn more about each other. The film was shot using the digital and hand-held Panasonic AG-DVX100 camera, so the production time was cut to a minimum. In the United States, the film was distributed by IFC Films. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 62% based on 26 reviews, with an average rating of 6.1/10. Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 62 out of 100, based on 10 critics, indicating \"generally favorable reviews\". Kevin Thomas of \"Los Angeles Times\" said, \"Hampered by an ending that overreaches needlessly, the film is nevertheless worthy and unmistakably the effort of an enduringly distinctive and important filmmaker.\" Leslie Felperin of \"Variety\" praised Michelle Williams' performance, saying, \"Engaging perfs keep its motor running, with Williams in particular charming and convincing as a politically engaged humanist.\"",
"Volker von Collande Volker von Collande (21 November 1913 – 29 October 1990) was a German actor and film director. He appeared in more than 40 films between 1934 and 1987. He also directed more than 20 films between 1942 and 1967. Collande was a member of the Nazi Party.",
"Hermann Warm Hermann Warm was a German art director for films. Born in 1889 (died 1976) in Berlin, Germany, Warm was an important figure in the expressionist movement of the 1920s. Warm entered the German film industry in 1912 after working on-stage for a while. As well as doing set work on films such as \"The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari\" and Fritz Lang's \"Destiny\", Warm also worked with Danish film director Carl Theodor Dreyer on films including \"The Passion of Joan of Arc\" and \"Vampyr\". During World War II, Warm lived in Switzerland and returned to Germany in 1947.",
"Hans Hermann Schaufuß Hans Hermann Schaufuß (13 July 1893 – 30 January 1982) was a German actor. He appeared in more than one hundred films from 1922 to 1969. His sons were actors Hans Joachim Schaufuß and Peter-Timm Schaufuß.",
"Hans Much Hans Much (1880–1932) was a German author, writer, and physician.",
"Eduard Linkers Eduard Linkers (11 October 1912 – 3 April 2004) was an Austrian actor. He appeared in 75 films between 1936 and 1988. He was born as Eduard Linker to a family of Jewish descent in Czernowitz, Austria-Hungary. He studied acting in Vienna, where he also started his acting career. After Anschluss he escaped to Czechoslovakia. He made his living by teaching English. That's how he met a Czech director František Čáp, who cast him in his movie \"Men Without Wings\" (1946). In 1952 he moved to Germany, where he acted in American productions. He spoke Romanian, German, English, Czech, French and Italian."
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"11 December 1874"
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Which film has the director died first, Dream Girl (1948 Film) or Pink Tights?
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Pink Tights Pink Tights is a surviving 1920 American silent romantic comedy film directed by B. Reeves Eason and starring Gladys Walton. It was produced and released by Universal Film Manufacturing Company. A print is held by the Danish Film Institute.
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"Dream Girl (play) Dream Girl is a play by Elmer Rice. At its core is Georgina Allerton, a young woman whose efforts to run a bookstore are undermined severely by her tendency to drift off into Walter Mitty-like flights of fancy on a regular basis. The play's time span covers a single day of her life, during which several successive extravagant and often comic daydreams are portrayed. The Broadway production, directed by the playwright, opened on December 14, 1945 at the Coronet Theatre, where it closed exactly one year later following a run of 348 performances. The cast included Betty Field and Wendell Corey. Lucille Ball headlined a national touring production in 1947. A 1948 screen version, directed by Mitchell Leisen, starred Betty Hutton, Macdonald Carey, Peggy Wood, and Walter Abel. In 1965, it was adapted for the Broadway musical stage under the title \"Skyscraper\". In 1955 a televised version adapted by S. Mark Smith was presented in the \"Hallmark Hall of Fame\" series. It starred Vivian Blaine.",
"Pipe Dreams (1976 film) Pipe Dreams is a 1976 romantic drama film starring soul singer Gladys Knight in her acting debut as a woman who attempts to regain the love of her husband, played by real-life spouse Barry Hankerson. His boss is played by Wayne Tippit; Bruce French, Sally Kirkland and Altovise Davis (wife of Sammy Davis Jr.) round out the cast. Maria Wilson follows her husband to Alaska, where he is working on the Alaska pipeline, to try to win him back. The local boss disapproves. The film was written and directed by Steve Verona and produced by Verona Enterprises and California Cinema Pruductions LGN, with financing from Buddah Records and minority organizations. Filming took place on location in Valdez in January 1976. The soundtrack album for the movie was produced by Knight's brother Merald \"Bubba\" Knight. Box office results were poor. Gladys Knight received a Golden Globe nomination for New Star Of The Year (Actress). \"So Sad the Song\" from \"Pipe Dreams, The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack\" earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Song (Motion Picture).",
"Dream Girl (2019 film) Dream Girl is an Indian Hindi-language comedy film backed by Balaji Motion Pictures in collaboration with ALT Entertainment. The film was directed by Raaj Shaandilyaa and distributed by Pen India Limited. Ayushmann Khurrana plays a cross-gender actor whose female voice impersonation begets attention from others. The film talks about depression and loneliness. It also features Nushrat Bharucha, Annu Kapoor, Manjot Singh, Vijay Raaz, Abhishek Banerjee, Raj Bhansali and Nidhi Bisht in supporting roles. Incidentally, the film was originally titled as \"Googly\". Filming started in December 2018. It was theatrically released on 13 September 2019 and turned out to be a blockbuster success. The film was one of the highest grossing Hindi film of 2019. The film earned 200 crores worldwide on a budget of 28 crores. Karamveer \"Karam\" Singh (Ayushmann Khurrana) is good at impersonating the female voice from a very young age and hence keeps getting female lead roles in plays (Sita in Ramayan and Radha in Krishnaleela) since his childhood. Although he protests every time that would settle for a much smaller but male character. He is currently unemployed and gets to perform these roles because it fetches him good money. His friend Smiley (Manjot Singh) runs a liquor shop and supports him in every one of his endeavors. His father, Jagjeet Singh(Annu Kapoor) runs a shop dealing in funeral items and is sunk deep into loans he owes to various banks. Due to low turnover, he is unable to pay back the EMI's. While returning from an unsuccessful interview for a job, Karam sees an ad that promises Rs. 70,000/month salary. He reaches the given address, but the employer Mauji 'W Ji' (Rajesh Sharma) rejects him outright without inquiring about his qualifications. Karamveer pleads, and finally, Mauji relents and shows him his call center where only ladies work. The call center is entertaining fantasies of people who call them, mostly men who don't have a partner in life. Karamveer is shocked but quickly regains his composure, and answers a call in a female voice for Ms. Pooja (who works at the call center), but is frequently on leave.",
"Dreamgirls Dreamgirls is a Broadway musical, with music by Henry Krieger and lyrics and book by Tom Eyen. Based on the show business aspirations and successes of R&B acts such as The Supremes, The Shirelles, James Brown, Jackie Wilson, and others, the musical follows the story of a young female singing trio from Chicago, Illinois called \"The Dreams\", who become music superstars. Staged with a mostly African-American cast and originally starring Jennifer Holliday, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Loretta Devine, Ben Harney, Cleavant Derricks, Vondie Curtis-Hall, and Obba Babatundé, the musical opened on December 20, 1981, at the Imperial Theatre on Broadway. The musical was then nominated for 13 Tony Awards, including the Tony Award for Best Musical, and won six. It was later adapted into a motion picture from DreamWorks and Paramount Pictures in 2006. The film starred Jamie Foxx, Beyoncé, Eddie Murphy, Jennifer Hudson, Danny Glover, Anika Noni Rose, and Keith Robinson. Act I: 1960s In 1962, The Dreamettes, a hopeful black girl group from Chicago, enter the famous Amateur Night talent competition at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York (\"I'm Lookin' for Something\", \"Goin' Downtown\", \"Takin' the Long Way Home\"). The group is composed of full-figured lead singer Effie White and best friends, Deena Jones and Lorrell Robinson. For the contest, the Dreamettes sing \"Move (You're Steppin' on My Heart)\", a song written by Effie's brother, C.C., who accompanies them to the talent show. Unfortunately, they lose the talent show, but backstage, the girls and C.C. meet Curtis Taylor Jr., a car salesman who becomes the Dreamettes' manager. Curtis convinces James \"Thunder\" Early, a popular R&B star, and his manager, Marty, to hire The Dreamettes as backup singers. Though Jimmy Early and the Dreamettes' first performance together is successful (\"Fake Your Way to the Top\"), Jimmy is desperate for new material. Curtis convinces Jimmy and Marty that they should venture beyond traditional rhythm and blues and soul audiences and aim for the pop market. C.C.",
"Dream Doll Dream Doll () is a 1979 British-Yugoslavian animated short film by Bob Godfrey and Zlatko Grgić as a co-production between Zagreb Film and Bob Godfrey Films. The authors shared similar art styles and animation philosophies such as using absurdist gags and disheveled drawings. It is a film with erotic overtones in which a gentleman falls in love with an sex doll. The short ends with the man \"born aloft by the flocks of dolls\" as a deliberate parody of Disney's \"Peter Pan\", \"Dream Doll\" is cited as one of Godfrey's most prominent works. although it also could be an homage to Albert Lamorisse's \"The Red Balloon\". The short was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 1980.",
"Dream Life (film) Dream Life () is a Canadian drama film, directed by Mireille Dansereau and released in 1972. The first narrative fiction feature film from Quebec to be directed by a woman, the film stars Liliane Lemaître-Auger and Véronique Le Flaguais as Isabelle and Virginie, colleagues at a film production company in Montreal, who dream of finding the perfect man but come to realize that reality doesn't live up to their fantasies. The film won two Canadian Film Awards at the 24th Canadian Film Awards in 1972, for Best Editing (Danielle Gagné) and the Wendy Michener Award.",
"Dream Girl (2009 film) Dream Girl is a 2009 Indian Oriya film under Prasad Productions (P) Ltd., directed by Ashok Pati. This film is a remake of a super hit Telugu film \"Bommarillu\" which was also made in Bengali as \"Bhalobasa Bhalobasa\". The story is about a boy and his family. The story is about all the fathers, all the relations, the so-called generation gap, and especially about a dream girl, who has changed the boy’s life. The story can be treated as a moral for each and every family in an entertaining way. When a baby is born and learns to walk, his father holds his hand and teaches him to walk. But what will be the situation if the father will not leave the hand even after 24 years? This is the situation of the boy in this story. He wants freedom in his life and wants to live by his own choice, but he always has to accept his father’s decision as his one and only choice. He is bent on marrying a girl of his own choice, and how successful he became, perfectly depicted in this movie. The music of the film composed by Prashant Padhi. The tracks from the film include:",
"The Dream Girl (operetta) The Dream Girl is an operetta in three acts with music by Victor Herbert and book by Rida Johnson Young (who also wrote the lyrics) and Harold R. Atteridge. Based on the 1906 play \"The Road to Yesterday\", by Beulah Marie Dix and Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland, its satiric story concerns reincarnation. Additional music was written by Sigmund Romberg. The piece was Victor Herbert's last musical composition, and the work was produced posthumously on Broadway in 1924. \"The Dream Girl\" opened at the Ambassador Theatre on Broadway on August 20, 1924 and ran for 117 performances. It starred Fay Bainter, George LeMaire and Walter Woolf and was staged by J. C. Huffman.",
"The Tights The Tights are an English punk rock band from Worcester. The band's only two singles were released by the Cherry Red Records label: \"Bad Hearts\" / \"It\" / \"Cracked\" (1978) and \"Howard Hughes\" / \"China's Eternal\" (1978). After John Peel played \"Bad Hearts\" on BBC Radio 1, this single made it to number six in the UK punk chart. Follow-up \"Howard Hughes\" reached number four in the same chart. After playing their farewell gig at the Marquee Club, London, The Tights split in 1979. In 2004 the band reformed. Bass player Barry Island (aka Gary Marsden) has gone on to record an album called \"Killing Without Touching\" with his band Threshing Ground, who have gained popularity in Australia with singles: \"I'm in Love With a Girl Called Vinyl\" and \"last Beer in Bondi\". Rick Mayhew was later replaced by Mark Simon",
"The Street Has Many Dreams The Street Has Many Dreams (Italian: Molti sogni per le strade) is a 1948 Italian comedy film directed by Mario Camerini and starring Anna Magnani, Massimo Girotti and Checco Rissone. The film's sets were designed by the art director Alberto Boccianti."
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"Pink Tights"
] |
Which film has the director who is older than the other, The Zero Theorem or Les Paumées Du Petit Matin?
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The Zero Theorem The Zero Theorem is a 2013 science fiction film directed by Terry Gilliam and starring Christoph Waltz, David Thewlis, Mélanie Thierry, and Lucas Hedges. Written by Pat Rushin, the story centres on Qohen Leth (Waltz), a reclusive computer genius tasked with solving a formula that will determine whether life holds any meaning. The film began production in October 2012. Gilliam has given conflicting statements about whether "The Zero Theorem" is meant as the third part of a satirical dystopian trilogy ("Orwellian triptych") that began with 1985's "Brazil" and continued with 1995's "12 Monkeys". At some point in the future, Qohen Leth, an eccentric and reclusive programmer who refers to himself in the plural, works crunching "entities" for the ontological research division of a large company called Mancom. He does not like having to leave the quiet, fire-damaged church in which he lives to travel the bright, crowded streets and work in a noisy office and fears missing a mysterious phone call he has been expecting for years, so he requests disability leave or permission to work from home. Though he points to the fact that all of his hair has fallen out as evidence he is dying, three company doctors determine he is physically healthy, but they do require he start sessions with Dr. Shrink-Rom, an AI therapist. Qohen attends a party thrown by his supervisor, Joby, so he can talk to Management, their boss. He requests permission to work from home, saying he would be more productive and mentioning his call, which he says he hopes will provide his life with a purpose. Management at first calls Qohen "insane", but later says he has a special project for Qohen that he thinks might prove mutually beneficial. The project is the "Zero Theorem", an extremely complex mathematical formula with a reputation for quickly exhausting anyone who tries to solve it. Qohen spends months locked in his home working on it and becomes increasingly deranged, as the "entities refuse to remain crunched" and Mancom's demands for processed data are relentless. In frustration, he smashes his work station with a hammer. Joby comes by to check on Qohen and says he knows someone he thinks can help.
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[
"Les Paumées du Petit Matin Les paumées du petit matin (English: \"The Escapees\", \"The Dawns of the Early Morning\", also known as \"The Runaways\") is a 1981 drama film directed by Jean Rollin. A drama, it maintained the fairytale and romantic qualities of Rollin's earlier films \"Requiem pour un Vampire\", \"Fascination\" and \"La Nuit des Traquées\", but departed from his usual horror themes. The story begins in a mental asylum run by nuns. Michelle, a troubled teenager, has been returned to the asylum after escaping and is put in a straitjacket and then locked in a room. She manages to get the attention of a new patient, Marie, a quiet girl who just seems to sit in the garden in a rocking chair. Marie helps Michelle by removing her straitjacket, and the pair run off together. At first, Michelle wants to leave on her own, but Marie wants to go with her and the two form a tenuous friendship. They follow a group of burlesque dancers who they encounter in an old scrapyard as they roam the countryside. They befriend a thief named Sophie, who helps them escape when the burlesque show is busted. Ending up in a shipyard, they connect with bar owner Madame Louise, who takes in runaways. Sophie convinces her sailor boyfriend to not only stow her away for the next voyage, but the other two as well. Marie and Michelle later meet two men and two women at Louise's, who take them away to a mansion and try to rape Marie, so they kill the people. When the police arrive, a gun battle ensues, and with their last two bullets, Michelle and Marie share a kiss before fulfilling their suicide pact. Marie, however, can't bring herself to pull the trigger, so Michelle walks out holding her body. Michelle walks down to the water with Marie's body. Sophie couldn't leave her friends behind, and had already left the ship. She's placed in handcuffs for an earlier pickpocketing episode, but runs and jumps off the dock to her death onto some pontoons floating below. VHS releases of \"Les Paumées du Petit Matin\" were only available in some countries, such as France, Canada and Turkey. A DVD edition was released 26 January 2009 by Redemption Films in the UK, and 31 March 2009 by Salvation Films in the US.",
"The Petit Paumé The Petit Paumé is a student association of EMLYON Business School created in 1968, which name comes from Jacques Brel's popular song \"Les Paumés du petit matin\" (1962). The Petit Paumé's aim is to design and to distribute a critical and free guide of the city of Lyon. Thus, the association tests all the city restaurants, bars and shops that it wishes to mention in its annual guide. Each of its members (about 30) is both a tester and a writer. They print about 300,000 copies of the guidebook per year. The Petit Paumé publishes a paper version of the guide, a weekly newsletter sent by e-mail, an app for Android and iOS. Some examples of chapters in the guide are: Events organised by the Petit Paumé include:",
"Zero (2018 film) Zero is a 2018 Indian romantic comedy-drama film written by Himanshu Sharma, directed by Aanand L. Rai and produced by Colour Yellow Productions in collaboration with Red Chillies Entertainment. Starring Shah Rukh Khan, Anushka Sharma and Katrina Kaif in lead roles. \"Zero\" revolves around Bauua Singh, a short man from Meerut who after having difficulty finding a marriage partner, finds a companion in Aafia Bhinder, a NSAR (a fictional space research facility) scientist with cerebral palsy. However, film superstar Babita also gets close with him, testing his first relationship, before this love triangle takes them to far-off cities, thrusting Bauua into an adventure to discover both his true love and completeness in a life lived to the fullest. Made on a budget of , \"Zero\" is Khan's most expensive film and was conceived by Rai in 2012, before pre-production began in 2016. Initially having a working title \"Katrina Meri Jaan\", it went through numerous name changes before arriving at the final title in early 2018. Principal photography began in Mumbai during May 2017 and concluded in 2018 at Orlando. The soundtrack is composed by Ajay-Atul with lyrics written by Irshad Kamil, under the label T-Series. \"Zero\" was theatrically released worldwide on 21 December 2018, to mixed reviews from critics. Critics particularly praised the film's visual effects and the performances of Khan and Kaif, but was criticised for inconsistent screenplay. Though it didn't recoup its investment and bombed at the box office, it earned seven nominations at the 64th Filmfare Awards including Best Actor for Khan and Best Supporting Actress for Kaif. Red Chillies VFX won the award for Best Special Effects. Bauua Singh is a dwarf from Meerut who has trouble finding a marriage partner. After using matrimonial agencies with little luck, he eventually finds his companion in Aafia Yusufzai Bhinder, a NSAR scientist (a fictionalized depiction of NASA) with cerebral palsy. In the events that followed, both fall in love with each other, but Bauua dumps her after five months. However, Aafia comes looking for him, and Bauua's parents fix their marriage.",
"The Little Thing (1938 film) The Little Thing (French: Le petit chose) is a 1938 French drama film directed by Maurice Cloche and starring Robert Lynen, Arletty and Marcelle Barry. It is based on Alphonse Daudet's 1868 novel \"Le Petit Chose\".",
"Kilometer Zero Kilometer Zero is a collective of international artists and writers that produces magazines, theatre, and artistic performances. It was founded in Paris, France, at the Shakespeare and Company bookstore in 2000. The group operates as an association under the French laws of 1901. The name derives from 'Kilometre Zero', the point in front of Notre Dame cathedral. The \"Kilometer Zero\" magazine was created as an advertising free creative and political platform. Contributors have included Noam Chomsky, Ralph Nader, Dennis Cooper, Tom Tomorrow, Daniel Stedman, CD Wright, and Sparkle Hayter. Kilometer Zero has produced performances in Paris, London, Brooklyn, Amsterdam, Marseille, and Beijing. The founding of \"Kilometer Zero\" is documented in Jeremy Mercer's novel \"Time Was Soft There\", published in 2005 by St. Martin's Press.",
"Le Tiroir secret Le Tiroir secret is a 1986 French family drama TV mini-series (6 episodes) directed by Michel Boisrond, Edouard Molinaro, Nadine Trintignant and Roger Gillioz. The screenplay was written by Danièle Thompson, Jean-Patrick Manchette, Patrick Besson and Roger Grenier. The music score is by Vladimir Cosma. It was released on DVD in France on 18 October 2006. It tells the story of a woman who suspects that her husband (presumed dead) had in fact led a double life.",
"Bye Bye Morons Bye Bye Morons () is a 2020 French comedy drama film written and directed by Albert Dupontel. The film stars Virginie Efira, Albert Dupontel and Nicolas Marié. The film received twelve nominations at the 46th César Awards, winning in six categories, including Best Film, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay for Dupontel, and Best Supporting Actor for Marié. Once salon owner Suze Trappet is diagnosed with a terminal illness, she decides to find the child she was forced to abandon when she was 15 years old. Her journey will lead her to cross paths with JB, a fifty-something in full burn-out, and Mr. Blin, a blind archivist of impressive enthusiasm. The film was released on October 21, 2020 in France.",
"Les Compagnes de la nuit Les Compagnes de la nuit , is a French drama film from 1953, directed by Ralph Habib, written by Paul Andréota, starring Françoise Arnoul and Louis de Funès.",
"Laurent Petitgand Laurent Petitgand (born 28 September 1959 in Laxou, France) is a French composer, songwriter, singer and actor. He is best known for \"The Salt of the Earth\", \"The Inner Life of Martin Frost\" (2007), \"A Trick of Light\" (1996), \"Beyond the Clouds\", \"Faraway, So Close!\" (1992), \"Notebook on Cities and Clothes\" (1989), \"Wings of Desire\" Zirkus Music (1987), \"Tokyo-Ga\" (1985).",
"The Elective Affinities The Elective Affinities (, ) is a 1996 Italian-French comedy film directed by Paolo and Vittorio Taviani. It was screened out of competition at the 1996 Cannes Film Festival."
] |
[] |
[
"Les Paumées Du Petit Matin"
] |
Are director of film Sahara (2005 film) and director of film Not So Dumb both from the same country?
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Sahara (2005 film) Sahara is a 2005 action-adventure film directed by Breck Eisner based on the best-selling 1992 novel of the same name by Clive Cussler. It stars Matthew McConaughey, Steve Zahn and Penélope Cruz, and follows a treasure hunter who partners with a WHO doctor to find a lost American Civil War Ironclad warship in the Sahara Desert. The film was shot in 2003 on-location in Morocco as well as in the United Kingdom. It became notable for its many production issues, including doubling its production budget from $80 million to $160 million, lawsuits among the crew, and being accused of several violations of international law. "Sahara" grossed $119 million worldwide at the box-office, ultimately failing to recoup all of its costs and is often listed among the biggest box-office failures of all-time. In 1865, at the conclusion of the American Civil War, Richmond, Virginia is in ruins. The CSS "Texas", captained by Mason Tombs, is loaded with the last of the Confederacy's gold to keep it from Union forces. It then disappears into the Atlantic. In present day Mali, there is a civil war between dictator General Kazim and the Tuareg people. In Nigeria, WHO doctors Eva Rojas and Frank Hopper investigate a disease affecting people who have been in Mali. Zakara, a corrupt Tuareg, tries to murder Eva, but she is rescued by Dirk Pitt, from the National Underwater and Marine Agency, who was diving nearby. Dirk gets a gold Confederate coin found in the Niger. A clue to the long-lost "Texas", Dirk borrows his boss Sandecker's yacht to search for it. His partner Al Giordino and Rudi Gunn from NUMA accompany him. They first transport Eva and Hopper to Mali so they can continue investigating the disease, then continue up the Niger. Businessman Yves Massarde and dictator General Kazim try to stop the doctors from discovering the source of the disease. Kazim sends men to attack the yacht. Dirk, Al, and Rudi survive, but the yacht is destroyed. Rudi leaves to get help while Dirk and Al go to rescue the doctors. Kazim's men track down the doctors and kill Hopper. Dirk and Al rescue Eva. As they are leaving Mali, they are captured by the Tuareg insurgents.
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[
"Kiss Me Not on the Eyes Dunia (English title: Kiss Me Not on the Eyes) is a 2005 Egyptian film directed by Jocelyne Saab and starring Hanan Tork and Mohamed Mounir. It was premiered in the 2005 Cairo International Film Festival. Student of Sufi poetry and belly dance in Cairo, Dunia is looking for herself and wishes to become a professional dancer. During casting for a dance contest, she meets the illustrious and charming Dr Bechir, a Sufi thinker and writer. With him, Dunia will discover not only the pleasure of words through Sufi poetry, but also the pleasure of the senses. However, she will have to confront tradition, which destroyed her capacity to feel pleasure, in order to free her body and dance with her soul.",
"Not So Stupid (1946 film) Not So Stupid (French: Pas si bête) is a 1946 French comedy film directed by André Berthomieu and starring Bourvil, Suzy Carrier and Bernard Lancret. In 1928 Berthomieu had made a silent film of the same name. This was Bourvil's first film; originally a musician and singer, he went on to become one of the great comic actors of French cinema. The film's art direction was by Raymond Nègre. It was shot at the Cité Elgé studios in Paris. \"Pas si bête\" is a comedy about social differences and appearances. Léon Ménard (Bourvil), a farmer and an apparently simple man of the country, is invited to visit his uncle Henri Ménard (Albert Duvaleix), a prosperous industrialist. He encounters a number of people scheming to marry into the Ménard family for the sake of money. Ménard discovers and thwart the plots and manages to unite a young couple who truly are in love. The romantic comedy ends happily with a double marriage. Henri's daughter Nicole (Suzy Carrier) marries Didier (Bernard Lancret), and Ménard marries his new-found love Rosine (Jacqueline Beyrot). It turns out that Léon is \"not so stupid\" after all.",
"Jewel of the Sahara Jewel of the Sahara is a 2001 film starring Gerard Butler, Clifford David as the old Francois Renard and Peter Franzén as the young Francois Renard. \"Jewel of the Sahara\" is comedy, fantasy short film directed by Ariel Vromen, who also wrote the screenplay, was the executive producer and edited the film. The film was made by Keyser Productions. Set in a French Foreign Legion Camp circa 1954, the film follows the fantasies of a British captain, desperately missing his home and wife. The captain is caught in an embarrassing situation caused by a combination of the monotonous, hot dreary surroundings, not grasping the workings of the Foreign Legion, and his smoldering desire created by his wife's lustful love letters, all of which is befuddled by his use of drugs.",
"Running the Sahara Running the Sahara is a 2007 documentary feature film that chronicles Ray Zahab, Charlie Engle, and Kevin Lin's attempt to run across the entire Sahara Desert. They traveled a total of 6920 kilometers, reaching the Red Sea on February 20, 2007. Producers Marc Joubert, Keith Quinn, Larry Tanz and director James Moll filmed on location in Africa across six countries: Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Libya, Egypt. Prepare2go.com supported the film crew with the logistics throughout.",
"Shahriar Bahrani Shahriar Bahrani () is an Iranian director.",
"Ash Baron-Cohen Ashley Louis Baron-Cohen, also known mononymously as Ash, is an English filmmaker. He has a bachelor's degree in experimental psychology from University of Sussex, and trained as a filmmaker at the Pasadena Art Center. He currently resides in Los Angeles. Baron-Cohen is known for such films as \"Bang\" and \"This Girl's Life\". While in film school, he persuaded Richard Harris to leave the set of Clint Eastwood's \"Unforgiven\" to star in his student film for free. His siblings include the academic Simon Baron-Cohen and the playwright Dan Baron Cohen. He is the cousin of actor and comedian Sacha Baron Cohen. Ash is legally blind without his contact lenses.",
"Ahmed Boulane Ahmed Boulane (born 1 January 1956 in Salé, Morocco) is a Moroccan film director, producer and screenplay writer. Known as \"l'enfant terrible du cinéma marocain\" for his antics with journalists and his fellow filmmakers, he is considered to be one of the most talented directors in Morocco. After a stint working in theater and radio as an actor in Morocco and then living in Italy, he returned to Morocco where he worked for 25 years in various positions in the film industry: actor, location manager, production manager, casting director and first assistant director. He was first assistant director in more than fifty international feature films for renowned directors, such as Giuliano Montaldo, Carlo Di Palma, Alan J. Pakula, Philippe de Broca, Jean Delannoy and John Landis, among others. His first short film, \"Voyage dans le passé\" received the prestigious Vatican award at the 7th Milan African Film Festival and launched his dream of a becoming a feature film director. His first feature film, \"Ali, Rabiaa and the Others\" was removed from movie theaters a few days after its release, considered too controversial for Morocco, but he won several international awards for this project. Despite a chaotic production where permits were refused at the last minute by certain Moroccan administrations, his second feature film, \"The Satanic Angels\", was first at the box office in Morocco in 2008, ahead of films like \"Harry Potter\" and \"300\". His most recent films are \"The Return of the Son\" in 2011, and \"La Isla\", a co-production with Spain released in 2016. In 2019 Ahmed Boulane published his first book \"Ma vie est belle\", translated into English by Dana Schondelmeyer (\"What a Beautiful Life\"), a memoir of his childhood, adolescence and early twenties. In 2019 he was nominated as the head of the grand jury for the Golden Movie Awards Africa. Voyage dans le passé Ali, Rabiaa and the Others The Satanic Angels The Return of the Son La Isla",
"Touriya Jabrane Touriya Jabrane ( – born Saadia Kraytif ; 16 October 1952 – 24 August 2020) was a Moroccan theatre director, actress, and politician. She was born in Casablanca. Between 2007 and 2009, she held the position of Minister of Culture in the cabinet of Abbas El Fassi.",
"Noam Murro Noam Murro (; born ) is an Israeli film director and film producer. He is best known for directing the films \"Smart People\", \"\", and the BBC miniseries \"Watership Down\". Murro was born and raised in Jerusalem, Israel, to a family of Jewish background. In the early 1990s, after completing his studies in design and architecture at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem, Murro left Israel for New York. Although he never received a formal education in film, Murro decided his dream was to become a filmmaker. \"As a boy I worked for Lia van Leer at the Jerusalem Cinematheque. I got my film education there, watching films. I worked as an usher, I replaced reels, I cleaned the theater, whatever needed doing, and I got to see two movies a day. I did this for two years, without pay, just so I could see movies.\" He resides in Los Angeles with his wife and children. After studying architecture and establishing himself over the years as an advertising director, he was nominated six times for the DGA Awards, winning the award in 2005. Along with Shawn Lacy Tessaro, he founded the production company Biscuit Films, which has produced many successful advertising campaigns. In 2004, he was originally set to direct \"The Ring Two\" but left the film due to \"creative differences\". In 2012, he directed advertising campaigns for well-known brands such as Adidas, Nike, eBay, Volkswagen, Land Rover, Toshiba, Stella Artois and many others. In 2008, Murro made his directorial debut with \"Smart People\", a comedy presented at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. In 2011, he was chosen to direct \"A Good Day to Die Hard\" but left production in August 2011, to direct the \"300\" sequel, \"\". John Moore was subsequently drafted in to replace him.",
"Maryam Touzani Maryam Touzani (born 18 July 1980), is an Moroccan filmmaker and actress. She is best known as the director of critically acclaimed film \"Adam\". Touzani was born in 1980 in Tangier. In 2003, she obtained Master's degree in Media Communication and Journalism in London. Then she began her career as a journalist with a focus on cinema. She is married to a fellow Franco-Moroccan filmmaker Nabil Ayouch. At first, she worked as a screenwriter and meanwhile direct some short and documentary films. In 2011, she made the short \"Quand ils dorment\". It won 17 prizes, including that of the Special Jury at the Huesca International Film Festival, festival qualifying for the Oscars. Then in 2014, she made her maiden documentary \"Sous Ma Peau Vieille\". The film became very popular in Morocco, which discussed about prostitution in Morocco. With the success of this documentary, she turned it into the feature film with the title \"Much Loved\" which was released in 2015. The film was directed by her husband Nabil Ayouch whereas she made the script. In late 2015, she made her second short \"Aya va à la plage\". The film revolves around another social aspect, this time about the exploitation of small children as domestic workers. In 2017, she wrote the film \"Razzia\" with her husband, director Nabil Ayouch. She also played the lead role 'Salima' in the film. Then, in 2019, Touzani directed her maiden feature film, \"Adam\". The film was selected for the Cannes Film Festival in the section 'Un Certain Regard'. Then later at the 12th Festival International du Film Francophone de Namur of Angoulême. It was selected as the Moroccan entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 92nd Academy Awards, but it was not nominated. In the same year, she became a member of the Academy of Oscars."
] |
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[
"yes"
] |
Are Nachar-e Pain and Hindaza both located in the same country?
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Hindaza Hindaza () is a Palestinian village located six kilometers south-east of Bethlehem. The village is in the Bethlehem Governorate Southern West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the village had a population of 4,779 in 2007. The primary healthcare is obtained in Za'atara where the Ministry of Heath have classified the care facilities as level 3.
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[
"Hinda-Qasbah Shahi Mosque Hinda-Qasbah Shahi Mosque () is a mosque located in the village of Hinda in Borail Union, Khetlal Upazila, Joypurhat District, Bangladesh. In 1958, Abdul Khaliq Chishti established this mosque under the command of Abdul Ghafur Chishti.",
"Hoseynabad-e Pain Hoseynabad-e Pain () may refer to:",
"Painsra Painsra (, ) is a town of Faisalabad District located on Jhang road from Faisalabad. It is about 30 km from Bhawana City, 49 km from Jhang and 25 km from Faisalabad.",
"Shakheh-ye Pain Shakheh-ye Pain () may refer to:",
"Nowbandian-e Pain Nowbandian-e Pain (, also Romanized as Nowbandīān-e Pā’īn; also known as Nowbandīān-e Kāfeh) is a village in Negur Rural District, Dashtiari District, Chabahar County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,044, in 204 families.",
"Shahr Deraz Shahr Deraz or Shahrdaraz or Shahr-e Deraz () may refer to:",
"Estakhr-e Deraz Estakhr-e Deraz () may refer to:",
"Sirdar-e Pain Sirdar-e Pain (, also Romanized as Sīrdar-e Pā’īn; also known as Sīrdar) is a village in Kuhdasht-e Shomali Rural District, in the Central District of Kuhdasht County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 64, in 10 families.",
"Hindki, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Hindki, is a village in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan. It is located at 32°59'26N 70°34'23E with an altitude of 362 metres (1190 feet).",
"Jaghdar-e Pain Jaghdar-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jaghdar-e Pā’īn) is a village in Siyahu Rural District, Fin District, Bandar Abbas County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 19 families."
] |
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[
"no"
] |
Where does Joan Paton's father work at?
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John Paton (British politician) John Paton (8 August 1886 – 14 December 1976) was a Labour Party politician in the United Kingdom, and a Member of Parliament (MP) from 1945 to 1964. He was born in Aberdeen; his father James Paton was a master baker and his mother Isabella Bruce was a seamstress. After leaving school at 13 he became a printer's devil in what is now the "Aberdeen Press and Journal". He then became a barber, running his own establishment until the war years. His socialist views repelled his wealthy customers and the shop failed soon after the war. Moving to Glasgow, he worked as a journeyman barber before becoming a full-time political organiser for the Independent Labour Party. he married Jessie Thomson of Springburn, Glasgow and they had a son, John. He moved to London to become the editor of the "New Leader". He was General Secretary of the Independent Labour Party from 1927 to 1933. He was elected at the 1945 general election as MP for the two-seat Norwich constituency. When that constituency was divided at the 1950 general election, he was returned to the House of Commons for the new Norwich North seat, which he held until he retired at the 1964 general election. His second wife Florence Paton was MP for Rushcliffe from 1945 to 1950.
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[
"Al Paton Al Paton is a musician from South Africa and Namibia. In the 1990s, Paton supported Springbok Nude Girls and Johnny Clegg. He co-formed the band Desert Velvet which won the NBC Music Makers Award and the Stage Magazine Recording Sponsorship. The band also appeared on the South African television show Going Nowhere Slowly. Paton joined interactive drumming company Drum Cafe teaching African drumming and djembe, performing for President Thabo Mbeki and Archbishop Desmond Tutu. 'Matchstick Man', co-written with Desert Velvet and produced by Chris Acker, reached the top 40 pop-rock charts on Garageband.com and Top 15 Lyrics of all-time in pop-rock. Top 10 of the Vivacious Voice National Songwriting Contest - 'Peachy' at number 6 and 'Always' at number 19. He co-wrote lyrics for the Western Cape's National cricket team song (the Cape Cobras), with his mother, Lesley Paton. The song was produced by Gabi Le Roux (Mandoza, Jack Hammer) with executive producer Clive Ridgeway (Judith Sepuma). Paton performed in 17 countries with Drum Cafe.",
"Alex Paton (physician) Alexander Paton (2 March 1924 – 12 September 2015) was a British gastroenterologist, writer and postgraduate dean for North-West London hospitals, who was a specialist in alcohol misuse. In 1945, while studying medicine at St Thomas's Hospital Medical School, he was one of the London medical students who were sent to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp shortly after its liberation by British troops, to assist in administering the \"starvation diet\" to the severely malnourished and dying inmates. Paton was one of the first intake of doctors into the British National Health Service and later became a registrar to Sheila Sherlock, a recognised authority on liver disease. In 1959, he was appointed consultant physician to Dudley Road Hospital, Birmingham, where he taught medical students for the MRCP, established an endoscopy service and began a 20-year study of the effects of alcoholic liver cirrhosis. He later held consultant positions at the St Ann's Hospital and the Prince of Wales Hospital in North London, and became the first chairman of the medical committee of Alcohol Concern. His book, \"ABC of Alcohol\", went through four editions. Alexander Paton was born on 2 March 1924 in Allahabad, India. His father, also called Alex, was an army colonel who had been awarded the Military Cross. His mother, Isabel Sybil Emma Grimwood Mears was the daughter of Sir Edward Grimwood Mears, chief justice of the High Court of Allahabad. After completing his early education at Alleyn Court Prep School, Essex, he gained a scholarship to Canford School in Dorset and subsequently gained admission to study medicine at St Thomas's Hospital Medical School, London during The Blitz. He was one of the London medical students who were sent to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1945, shortly after its liberation by the British troops, to assist Arnold Peter Meiklejohn in administering what was known as the \"starvation diet\" to the severely malnourished and dying inmates. Many of these inmates had such advanced malnutrition that they were intolerant of large, highly nutritious meals and the diet comprised small, frequent, bland meals which were much better tolerated. In his memoirs, published in the \"British Medical Journal\" in 1981, he described how on 4 April 1945 there was a proposed trip to Holland for 12 St Thomas's students.",
"Ian Paton Ian Paton may refer to:",
"John Paton John Paton is the name of:",
" They had two sons and two daughters. In addition to his busy work schedule Paton served his profession on numerous councils and committees. The first of these was as chairman of the Association of Consulting Engineers between 1949 and 1950, an association of which he was made an honorary member in 1984. Paton served on the council of the Institution of Civil Engineers from 1954 to 1959 and again from 1961 to 1966. He was elected vice president of that institution, a position he filled from 1966 to 1970 when he was elected president. Whilst serving as president he started \"New Civil Engineer\" magazine to keep members up to date with civil engineering news. From 1960 to 1965 Paton was a board member of the Hydraulics Research Station of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research and from 1964 to 1975 he served on the council of the Construction Industry Research and Information Association. Paton was also the British representative on the committee of the International Commission on Large Dams between 1966 and 1973. From 1968 to 1970 he was chairman of the National Economic Development Council's working party on large industrial construction sites and from 1969 to 1974 was a member of the Natural Environment Research Council. Paton was vice-chairman of the Council of Engineering Institutions from 1971 to 1972 and chairman for 1972 to 1973. From 1974 to 1979 he was chairman of the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food flood protection research committee. Paton was also a member emeritus of the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers and served as their president in 1980. Paton was awarded many honours for his contributions to civil engineering. In 1952 he was made an honorary fellow of University College London and he was also a fellow of the Institution of Structural Engineers and the American Society of Civil Engineers. Paton was made a fellow of the Royal Society in 1969 and served as one of its vice-presidents for the 1977–78 session. Paton became one of the few practising engineers to have held that post. He was created a knight bachelor in the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1973 in recognition of his services to the construction industry.",
"Paton (motorcycles) Paton is an Italian motorcycle manufacturer. In 1957 after FB Mondial pulled out of Grand Prix racing, Paton was set up by Giuseppe Pattoni (chief mechanic of the FB Mondial GP team) and designer Lino Tonti.",
"William Paton William Paton may refer to:",
"Angus Paton Sir Thomas Angus Lyall Paton (10 May 1905 – 7 April 1999) was a British civil engineer from Jersey. Paton was born into a family that had founded the civil engineering firms of Easton, Gibb & Son and Sir Alexander Gibb & Partners and he would spend his entire professional career working for the latter. Following his graduation from University College London one of his first jobs was the construction of a dam in Maentwrog in Wales. Paton later became an expert on dams and much of his career was devoted to their construction. In 1931 he undertook an economic survey of Canada which recommended a programme of works for its port system. This report was still being used into the 1970s. During the Second World War Paton was involved with the construction of gun emplacements in the Dardanelles, Turkey and of caissons for the Mulberry Harbours used after the Invasion of Normandy. After the Second World War, Paton undertook an economic survey of Syria, which made recommendations for port, water infrastructure, irrigation and hydroelectric improvements. This was followed by a similar report on Lebanon and one on the possibility of extending railways from Northern Rhodesia to neighbouring countries. From 1946, Paton worked almost exclusively on hydroelectric projects, beginning with the Owen Falls Hydroelectric Scheme in Uganda. He also worked on the Kariba Dam in Zambia and Zimbabwe, which was the largest dam in the world when built and for which he was made a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George. He was also involved with the Indus Basin Project, the Aswan High Dam, the Hendrik Verwoerd Dam, the P.K. Le Roux Dam, the Spioenkop Dam and the Tarbela Dam. Paton was knighted in 1973 and retired in 1977, remaining a senior consultant to Gibb and Partners. He spent his retirement in Jersey, where he died at St Helier on 7 April 1999. Paton was dedicated to his professional career and served as President of both the Institution of Civil Engineers (November 1970 – November 1971) and the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers. Angus, the name he preferred, was born on the island of Jersey in the Channel Islands on 10 May 1905. His father, Thomas Lyall Paton, was a journalist and author.",
"Robert T. Paton Robert Thomson Paton (16 March 1856 – 17 February 1929) was a medical doctor who served as Director-General of Public Health for New South Wales from 1913 to 1921. Paton was born at historic Portobello Castle, Edinburgh, a son of John Govan Stewart Paton, carver and gilder, and his wife Catherine Paton, née Thomson. The family claimed descent from Captain John Paton, a martyr to the Covenanter cause, and closely related to the Paton family of Alloa, cotton spinners, later Paton & Baldwins Ltd. He completed one year of a medical course at the Edinburgh University before in 1876 leaving for Australia, where he worked as a doctor's assistant in Bathurst and Wallsend and sailed extensively through the South Sea Islands in a yacht which he part-owned. In 1884 he returned to Edinburgh and completed the course, becoming an FRCS and LRCS. He returned to Australia and entered into general practice, then joined the public service as a medical officer at Trial Bay prison. Subsequent appointments include: Paton and Dr J. B. Nash MLC were sent to Wollongong hospital by special train immediately after the Mount Kembla coalmine disaster of July 1902 to help treat miners suffering from \"afterdamp\" (a carbon monoxide mixture) inhalation, the cause of most of the 93 deaths. He was awarded the CMG in 1922. His remains were ashed at Rookwood Crematorium and presumably disposed of \"in the most economic manner possible\" as directed in his will. Paton married Janet Tritschler (born 1857) in Leytonstone, Essex, on 1 July 1886. Their children included: They had a home on O'Sullivan Road, Rose Bay, in 1928; Wentworth Street, Point Piper in 1929.",
"Hugh Paton Hugh Paton (October 5, 1852 – January 28, 1941) was a Scottish business owner in Montreal. The son of William Paton and Mary Shedden, he was born in Johnstone, Renfrewshire, was educated in Paisley and came to Canada in 1871. He was first employed as private secretary for his uncle John Shedden, a railway contractor based in Toronto. His uncle was killed in a railway accident in 1873 and Paton became secretary-treasurer for The Shedden Forwarding Company, which handled storage, collection and cartage services for the Grand Trunk Railway; also at this time, he moved to Montreal. After the death of the company's manager in 1879, Paton became manager and later company president. He was also a director for the Bell Telephone Company of Canada, the Royal Bank of Canada, The Canadian Transfer Company, the Montreal Trust Company, the Canadian Express Company, the London & Lancashire Assurance Company, The Northern Electric Manufacturing Company, the Wire & Cable Company and the Sincennes-McNaughton Company. Paton was honorary secretary-treasurer of the Montreal Tandem Club, the Montreal Hunt Club and the Province of Quebec Turf Club. He was vice-president and then president for the St. Andrew's Society of Montreal. He also served on the board of governors for the Montreal General Hospital and the Notre Dame Hospital. In 1884, he married Isabella, the daughter of Andrew Robertson. From 1880 to 1942, he was owner of in the Rivière des Prairies, where he built his home, greenhouses and a golf course. He died at his home in Montreal on January 28, 1941, at the age of 88."
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[
"University of Adelaide"
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Which film has the director who was born earlier, The World Was His Jury or Mort, où est ta victoire??
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Mort, où est ta victoire? Mort, où est ta victoire? is a 1964 French film, directed by Hervé Bromberger. It stars Pascale Audret and Gabriele Ferzetti.
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[
"Jean-Xavier de Lestrade Jean-Xavier de Lestrade (born 1 July 1963) is a French writer, director and producer of films and television series. Lestrade was born in Mirande, Gers, in southwestern France. He studied law and journalism in Paris, and turned to making documentaries which scrutinize the mechanisms of society. Lestrade won an Oscar for Best Documentary for his ninth feature, \"Murder on a Sunday Morning\", in 2001. He is also known for his film \"The Staircase\", about the murder trial against author Michael Peterson, who was accused of killing his wife. He is an executive producer for the TV series \"Sin City Law\" (2007), which has been shown on the Sundance Channel in the US. His miniseries \"Laetitia\", based on the tragic case of Laetitia Perrais, aired on HBO and HBO Max in late August 2021.",
"René Jeanne René Jeanne was a French actor, writer, and cinema historian. He was born in 1887 and died in 1969. Jeanne was married to actress Suzanne Bianchetti. Jeanne was also notable for serving on the jury of the Mostra de Venise in 1937 and 1938. Jeanne and fellow film artist Émile Vuillermoz had the idea of an international film festival in France. Its goal would be to compete with the Venice Film Festival, which had become politicised and was controlled at that time by Benito Mussolini. He passed the idea to Jean Zay, the French Minister of Public Instruction at the time. Zay appreciated the idea, and therefore undertook the founding of the famous Festival de Cannes.",
"Max Jury Max Jury (born May 12, 1992) is an American singer-songwriter from Des Moines, Iowa, now living in London, United Kingdom. He has released two studio albums, \"Max Jury\" (2016) and \"Modern World\" (2019). On June 3, 2016, Max Jury released his eponymous debut studio album which includes his breakthrough single \"Numb\". He has toured with Lana Del Rey and Rufus Wainwright. His second studio album, \"Modern World\", was released on May 31, 2019, by Marathon Artists. It was produced by Robin Hannibal, a four-time Grammy-nominated producer and songwriter, best known for his co-writing credit on Kendrick Lamar's \"Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe\".",
"Roland Mortier Roland Mortier (21 December 1920 – 31 March 2015) was a Belgian scientist at the Université Libre de Bruxelles. He was a member of the Académie royale de langue et de littérature françaises de Belgique and the Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques. In 1965, he was awarded the Francqui Prize on Human Sciences. He was born in Ghent.",
"Mortcerf Mortcerf () is a commune in the Seine-et-Marne department in the Île-de-France region in north-central France. Inhabitants are called \"Moressartois\".",
"Victor (1993 film) Victor is a French short film released in 1993, written by Nicolas Mercier and François Ozon, directed by Ozon, and starring François Genty. Victor is a young man of good breeding, who keeps his dead parents in the bedroom of their sumptuous family cottage. The new status quo opens the door for new discoveries.",
"To the Ends of the World To the Ends of the World () is a 2018 French film directed by Guillaume Nicloux. It was selected to screen in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival.",
"Mortimore Mortimore may refer to:",
"The Verdict (2013 film) The Verdict () is a 2013 Belgian crime film directed by Jan Verheyen that premiered at the Montreal International Film Festival.",
"France Roche France Roche (2 April 1921 – 14 December 2013) was a French film actress and screenwriter. She appeared in 17 films between 1951 and 1979. She was a member of the jury at the 11th Berlin International Film Festival."
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[
"The World Was His Jury"
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Are the directors of both films Shutter (2014 film) and Like Dandelion Dust from the same country?
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Like Dandelion Dust Like Dandelion Dust is a 2009 drama film directed by Jon Gunn and based on the novel by the same name by Karen Kingsbury. The film won 26 awards at 23 film festivals. Two police officers knock on the door of a home and a drunk man answers. Rip Porter lives at the house with his wife Wendy. The police say they are checking on an emergency call and find Rip drunk and Wendy injured. They arrest Rip, and he is sent to prison. Seven years later, Rip is released from prison. Rip has changed; he is now sober and has taken anger management courses. When Rip suggests starting a family, Wendy feels forced to reveal that she gave birth to their son while he was in prison but gave the baby up for adoption to the Campbells who live in Florida. Rip immediately wants custody of his son, and has a right to do so because Wendy forged his signature on the adoption papers. Jack and Molly Campbell have enjoyed an idyllic life with Joey, Wendy and Rip's son. When a judge upholds Rip and Wendy's claim, Molly and Jack are distraught. Joey's first visit with Wendy and Rip goes exceptionally well. As a last resort, Jack travels to Ohio and offers Rip money in exchange for Joey. Rip refuses, and gets in a physical altercation with Jack. Since this confrontation, Rip starts drinking again due to stress. On the next visit when Joey refuses to take a shower, Rip is at first patient but eventually loses his temper. He roughly puts Joey in the shower, and unintentionally leaves a bruise on Joey's arm. Before Joey leaves, Wendy tells him about making a wish by blowing on a dandelion. Once he is gone, Wendy tells Rip that she arranged for Joey to spend an extra week with Jack and Molly. This upsets Rip and he seriously assaults Wendy. When Joey returns home, he shows his bruise to Jack and Molly and tells them what happened. Molly convinces Jack they should flee the country with Joey. They join a church mission trip to Haiti, with Molly's sister and her husband. Jack has arranged for the three of them to fly out to another country. However, Molly's sister is suspicious and calls Allyson Bower, the child services agent in charge of Joey's case. The Campbells are returned to the US where they meet with Allyson Bower and Wendy.
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[
"Like Cotton Twines Like Cotton Twines is a film directed by Ghanaian-American filmmaker Leila Djansi. The movie gives insight of an American teacher who comes to Ghana to teach and later finds out that one of his female student who is 14 years is to engage in a trokosi system of practice. The reason is for her to marry a fetish priest for the atonement of the sins of her father.",
"Dissolve (2019 film) Dissolve (, Russian: Растворяться) is a 2019 feature-length drama film by the South Korean art-house director Kim Ki-Duk. It was shot in Kazakhstan with local actors and premiered at the Cannes Film Market under the temporary title \"3000\". It was screened at the Almaty Film Festival in Kazakhstan on 19 September 2019, where it was compared to Kim's earlier film \"Samaritan Girl\". This was Kim's final film before his death the following year. In Almaty, a sheltered and chaste woman named Din sees her life intertwined with the experiences of a prostitute who looks like her.",
"Daniel Ruczko Daniel Ruczko (born 3 July 1982 in Bremen, Germany) is a director, composer, writer and music producer. He started producing music at the age of 12 on his Amiga 500 computer using the software ProTracker, a couple of years later that lead to a career as an internationally known DJ and producer. After spending most of his twenties releasing records on numerous labels and touring the globe as a DJ, in 2010 Ruczko went to a music school in Hamburg, Germany to become a Film Music composer. In the same year he won an award for the concept of his short film \"Bipolar - A Narration of Manic Depression\" which was chosen by the German actor \"Matthias Schweighöfer\". \"Bipolar\" got Daniel a lot of attention and also his first awards.. Throughout his creative career, Daniel has received over 60 awards for his films, three of which have been screened at the Short Film Corner of the Cannes Film Festival. Ruczko works on commercials and music videos under his company name Misfit Media, as well as film projects under his company name Mind Pollution Pictures. In 2018 Daniel moved to Los Angeles to work as a film director and producer.",
"Dust (1985 film) Dust is a 1985 film directed by Marion Hänsel based on the 1977 J. M. Coetzee novel \"In the Heart of the Country\". The film was shot in Spain and is a French-Belgian production. The film was selected as the Belgian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 58th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. It won the Silver Lion prize, awarded to the best first or second major work by a director, at the 1985 Venice Film Festival. The jury recognised Jane Birkin's performance as amongst the best of the year, but decided not to award a best actress prize because all of the actresses they judged to have made the best performances were in films that won major awards.",
"Daniel Dencik Daniel Dencik (born 1972) is a Danish writer and film director. He has published nine books in Danish, ranging from poetry to short stories and essays as well as three novels. He has studied Philosophy at Stockholm University, where he wrote his thesis about the existentialism of Kierkegaard. He has studied film editing at the National Film School of Denmark. In 1998 he had his first book of poetry published by Gyldendal. His work has been divided between film and literature ever since. He is the editor of the cult movie \"Nói albinói\" (2003) by Dagur Kari. He is writing essays on subjects ranging from the sport of professional cycling to the philosophical meaning of solitude and religion. He has covered Tour de France for the Danish daily paper Politiken 2016 and 2017, and for the magazine Euroman 2018. As of 2012, he has also been directing films, most notably the documentary \"Expedition To The End of The World\". In 2012 he received The Reel Talent Award at CPH:DOX. His portrait of the painter Tal R entitled \"Tal R: The Virgin\" won a Danish Academy Award 2014 for best short documentary. 2015 marked his debut in narrative films with the historical drama, \"Gold Coast\". The film revolves around the Europe's colonial past in West Africa. It was shot on locations in Ghana and Burkina Faso and stars Jakob Oftebro and Danica Curcic. The soundtrack is composed by Angelo Badalamenti. It was a Danish-Ghanaian co-production with a budget of €2 million. \"Gold Coast\" had its international premiere at the 2015 Karlovy Vary Film Festival. He has received the biggest talent award in Danish film, the prestigious Nordisk Film Award, in 2014. His controversial novel \"Anden person ental\" (2014) was praised by the critics and the focus of a lot of attention in the Danish press. In 2016 he published a collection af short stories titled \"Grand Danois\" (2016). This work was nominated for Book of the Year in Denmark. A story from the book was published in the American journal World Literature Today. His later books have been translated into German, Dutch, and Swedish.",
"Dandelion (2014 film) Dandelion () is a 2014 Vietnamese romantic comedy film directed by Nguyễn Quang Huy, starring Sơn Tùng M-TP, Hari Won, Phạm Quỳnh Anh, Ngô Kiến Huy, Hứa Vĩ Văn. The film's screenplay is based on the book \"Bắt đầu từ một kết thúc\", an autobiography about the life of the ill-fated singer Wanbi Tuấn Anh. The movie is about Dinh Phong (Son Tung M-TP) and his group of friend: Ngo Kien Ha (Ngo Kien Huy), Pham Quynh Bang (Pham Quynh Anh) whose motto is \"Cha so gi, chi so gia\" (Afraid nothing, only afraid of getting older), a Korean girl Sky (Hari Won) and Manager Lam (Hua Vi Van) who worships money. Dinh Phong's father passes away after being hospitalized for a while. One of his wishes are to keep smiling and to eat dog meat before dying. Dinh Phong keeps pursuing music career after the death of his father, even dreams of having a concert on his own, however Manager Lam stops it and forces him to become an actor. At the audition, one of his eyes is sore so he visits the hospital to be diagnosed with a tumor and have to be hospitalized for a short time. His mom forbids him from singing but he sneaks out of the hospital to perform at liveshows. After leaving the hospital, Manager Lam receive a notice from the doctor informing that Dinh Phong has a cancer and only able to live for 5 years. Discovering his medical situation, although feeling desperate he still keeps trying to live positively. In the last liveshow, he reveals that Lam is the one who takes all of his money and hides his medical situation so he could keep performing, following his own will. Kien Ha punches Lam and they cry together. Previously, Phong met Lam at a bridge where Phong said: \"I don't care about how long I'm able to live, but as long as I still live, please let me live the happiest life ever, let me sing as much as possible\". Phong refuses treatments since he can't stand seeing his family worry about him. After battling with cancer, Dinh Phong passes away in the mourning of his family and fans. After his death, his friends visit him at the pagoda.",
"Dan Villegas Dan Villegas is a Filipino cinematographer and director. He won the 2014 Metro Manila Film Festival Best Director award for his film \"English Only, Please\". He graduated from Ateneo de Manila University. He also took up film courses at the Marilou Diaz Abaya Film Institute and Berlinale Talents in Europe.",
"Crumbs (film) Crumbs is a 2015 Ethiopian post-apocalyptic science fiction romance film. It is the first feature film from Spanish-born director Miguel Llansó. Filmed around Dallol, Ethiopia on a budget of $225,000, \"Crumbs\" \"takes an exotic and sometimes surreal approach to what's essentially a simple, touching love story\". Premiered at the Rotterdam International Film Festival, \"Crumbs\" won a Nightfall Jury Mention at the 2015 Los Angeles Film Festival and the Award for Best First Feature Film at the 2015 Fantasia International Film Festival. In a dazzlingly imaginative vision of a postapocalyptic Ethiopia, a hapless scavenger finds himself launched on a surreal adventure involving a mysterious UFO, witches, Santa Claus, Nazi knights, and more. Conjuring a loop-the-loop universe from the detritus of late-twentieth-century pop culture (from Michael Jordan to Ninja Turtles), this psychedelic fantasia surprises and charms as it spins off its own giddy axis.",
"Denis Langlois (director) Denis Langlois (born in Longueuil, Quebec) is a Canadian director, screenwriter, producer, actor and editor from Quebec. He is most noted for his feature films \"Danny in the Sky\", \" (Amnésie, l'énigme James Brighton)\" and \"A Paradise Too Far (Y’est où le paradis?)\". Denis Langlois received a diploma from the Concordia University film program. In 1994, with Bertrand Lachance, he founded a company called \"Castor & Pollux Productions\". \"Amnesia: The James Brighton Enigma\" was co-winner, with Tori Foster's documentary film \"533 Statements\", of the best Canadian feature film prize at the Inside Out Film and Video Festival in Toronto in 2006. It also got the best feature film public's prize in the Cine Llamale H of Montevideo in Uruguay in 2008. \"A Paradise Too Far\" wins best feature film at Picture This... Film Festival in Calgary 2018. It is also a semi-finalist for the Inclusivity Prize at Wayward Festival in Los Angeles 2018.",
"Dust (2001 film) Dust is a 2001 Western film in which centuries and continents intertwine in an intricate tapestry. The UK-Italian-German-Spanish-Macedonian co-production, written and directed by Milcho Manchevski, stars Joseph Fiennes, David Wenham, Adrian Lester, Rosemary Murphy, Nikolna Kujaca, Anne Brochet, and Vera Farmiga. It was the opening-night film of the 2001 Venice Film Festival and was later released in a number of countries, including the United States. \"Where Does Your Voice Go When You’re No More?\" A New York thief (Edge), a tough-as-nails hundred-year-old woman (Angela), two brothers from the Wild West (Luke and Elijah), a revolutionary hell-bent on liberating Macedonia from the Ottoman Empire (The Teacher), and a beautiful pregnant woman (Neda), all cross paths in a tale that spans two continents and three centuries. Its fractured narrative resembles a Cubist painting. The film was written and directed by Milcho Manchevski. The music for the film was composed by Kiril Džajkovski. Principal photography took place in a number of countries and locations, including Cologne, New York City, Mariovo and Bitola. The initial idea of film originated in August 1995, when Milcho Manchevski announced that Dust will be released in 2000 by United Artists. The development was started in Spring 1996, they worked hard on creating concept art and paintings for the film. When Pre-production lasted from Summer 1996 to November 1999, the film was delayed to a May 2002 release in the UK as Lionsgate owns US rights and Pathé owns international rights of this film and later released on August 22, 2003. Filming lasted around December 16, 1999 – February 8, 2000. Moving Picture Company provided visual effects and animation. \"Dust\" opened at the Venice Film Festival on 29 August 2001 and was later released in Italy on 5 April 2002. Pathé distributed the film in the United Kingdom on 3 May 2002. In Spain, the film was released on 12 July 2002 by Alta Classics. It was given a limited release in the United States on 22 August 2003, where it was distributed by Lionsgate."
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[
"no"
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Which country the director of film Charlotte For Ever (Film) is from?
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Charlotte for Ever (film) Charlotte for Ever is a 1986 feature film directed by Serge Gainsbourg, starring himself, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Roland Bertin and Roland Dubillard. Once a successful Hollywood screenwriter, Stan is now a depressive alcoholic who spends most of his time mooching about his house whilst pouring out his troubles to his drinking partner. The only thing that keeps him going is his love for his teenage daughter, Charlotte, but she despises him, believing him to be responsible for the accident in which her mother died. Stan's one hope is to patch things up with Charlotte. Charlotte Gainsbourg garde pas qu'un bon souvenir du tournage de ce film. Très impliqué, son père lui avait fait repousser ses limites malgré son jeune âge. "Il me faisait aller trop loin, faire des choses qui me gênaient. C'était difficile. Je faisais la tête sur les couvertures de journaux, je ne voulais faire aucun effort, c'était ma manière de me préserver" se souvient-elle. In 1984, two years before "Charlotte for Ever" was released Gainsbourg had written and performed the song "Lemon Incest" with his daughter, Charlotte Gainsbourg. The song was hugely controversial as it contained references to incest and pedophilia which audiences suspected were partially autobiographical. The movie "Charlotte for Ever" explored similar themes. Due to Charlotte Gainsbourg's age and the fact that she was playing a character with the same name as her own while her real life father was playing her father in the movie, the movie was reviled and questions about whether Gainsbourg was abusing his daughter were once again raised. As an adult Charlotte Gainsbourg repeatedly defended her relationship with her father, admitting that he had meant to provoke audiences but denying any impropriety or abuse towards herself.
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"Mambéty for Ever Mambéty For Ever is a 2008 documentary film. A film made in Cameroon and France about the life and work of filmmaker Djibril Diop Mambéty, with testimonials from filmmakers Abderrahmane Sissako, Newton Aduaka and Mahamat-Saleh Haroun, Cheick Fantamady Camara, Mahama Johnson Traoré; critics Catherine Ruelle, Thierno I. Dia and Brice Ahounou; Cameroonian actor Gérard Essomba; Mambéty's brother, Wasis Diop; and his son, Teemour Diop.",
"Jamil Dehlavi Jamil Dehlavi () (born 1944) is a London-based independent film director and producer of Pakistani-French origin. Since he became a filmmaker in the 1970s, his work has been widely screened internationally, notable films including \"Jinnah\" (1998), about the partition of India and the birth of Pakistan, which won the Grand Prize at the Festival of the Dhow Countries, Best International Film at the World Film Awards in Indonesia, the Gold Award at Worldfest Flagstaff, Best Foreign Film at Worldfest Houston, and was nominated for a Golden Pyramid at the Cairo International Film Festival. Born in Kolkata, West Bengal, to a French mother and an Pathan-Indian father who was a diplomat and subsequently travelled extensively between Asia and Europe, Dehlavi is fluent in five languages (English, French, Italian, Spanish and Urdu). He studied at Karachi Grammar School, then at international schools in Paris and Rome before going to Rugby School and Oxford University. He graduated with a BA degree in Politics and French Literature and an MA (Hons) in Jurisprudence. He was subsequently called to the Bar at Lincoln's Inn but never practised, preferring instead to go into the world of cinema. Dehlavi studied film directing at Columbia University in New York, where he was awarded an MFA degree. While studying in New York, Dehlavi trained as an actor with Stella Adler and made his first feature film \"Towers of Silence\", which he wrote, produced and directed. It won the Grand Prize at the Festival of the Americas. His next film, \"The Blood of Hussain\" (1980), was selected by the Director's Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival and won the Grand Prize at the Taormina Film Festival. All of his subsequent films have also won major awards at film festivals all over the world. Dehlavi has worked on various projects for the BBC, Channel Four, and French television, including \"Qâf – The Sacred Mountain\", which won awards at five environmental film festivals. He worked on \"Passover\", a passion play shot in Córdoba and made in collaboration with the celebrated flamenco guitarist Paco Peña. Dehlavi has also worked in the Radio & Visual Services Division at the United Nations and as an Associate Professor in the School of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences at Habib University in Karachi.",
"Susan Charlotte Susan Charlotte (born July 21, 1954) is an American playwright, screenwriter and author. Best known as a playwright, Charlotte was the inaugural recipient of the Joseph Kesselring Prize. She is the author of such plays as \"The Shoemaker\", \"Love Divided By/Times Three\" and \"Did You Know My Husband?\" She is also a screenwriter whose films include: \"A Broken Sole\" and \"Come On\". Charlotte has written for CBS, PBS and Lifetime TV. She is the author of two critically acclaimed books. She is the founding artistic director of the award-winning theatre company Food For Thought Productions and the non-profit theatre company Cause Celebre Productions. She has also been a Film and Theatre professor at Columbia University, CUNY, and NYU. She has written fifteen full-length plays and fifty one-acts. Her plays, which have been produced for over thirty years, include: the 2011 Off-Broadway premiere of \"The Shoemaker\" starring Danny Aiello and directed by Antony Marsellis, who also directed the film version entitled \"Something Like That\" with Danny Aiello. Her play \"The Hairdresser\", which has enjoyed multiple productions, starred Kathleen Chalfant, Maria Tucci, Louise Lasser and Steven Schetzner. She also founded a school for writers, Prism Playhouse Inc. and two theatre companies—Food For Thought Productions (winner of the National Arts Club Gold Medal in drama) where she premiered plays by Tennessee Williams, Tony Kushner and Lynn Redgrave and the not-for-profit theatre, Cause Celebre Productions. Her film credits include: \"A Broken Sole\", which was theatrically released in 2007 and directed by Antony Marsellis, starred Danny Aiello, Margaret Colin, Bob Dishy, Judith Light, Laila Robins, and John Shea. \"Come On\", premiered at the Hamptons International Film Festival in 2000. \"Love Divided By\" (based on her play) with original music by Philip Glass, was chosen to open MoMA's Titus II theatre. Her TV credits include: CBS' \"Comedy Zone\" (1984), which starred Patty Duke and Paul Reiser, the daytime series \"Loving\" (1983), \"Guiding Light\", and PBS' \"Did You Know My Husband?\" (2018) with Carole Shelley and Louise Lasser. In addition, She has written for Lifetime TV.",
"Ana Rocha Fernandes Ana Rocha Fernandes is a Cape-Verdian film director, screenwriter and editor. Fernandes was born in Santiago, Cape Verde. She was a teacher in Cape Verde, and then moved to Germany to study architecture at the University of Siegen, before studying film at the Film Academy Baden-Württemberg in Ludwigsburg. She now lives in Stuttgart.",
"May el-Toukhy May el-Thouky (born 17 August 1977 in Charlottenlund, Denmark) is a Danish-Egyptian film director. She graduated from the Danish National School of Performing Arts in 2002, and later as a film director from the National Film School of Denmark in 2009. She is known for directing the 2019 film \"Queen of Hearts\". She also directed the 2015 film \"Long Story Short\".",
"Alice Rohrwacher Alice Rohrwacher (, ; born 29 December 1980) is an Italian film director, editor and screenwriter. Rohrwacher was born in Fiesole, in Tuscany, to an Italian mother and German father. She spent her youth in the village of Castel Giorgio, where her mother was born and her father Reinhard worked as a beekeeper. She is the sister of the Italian actress Alba Rohrwacher. She studied literature and philosophy at the University of Turin and then specialized in screenwriting at the Holden School in Turin. Her first experience in filmmaking was in 2006, when directing a part of the Italian documentary \"Checosamanca\". In 2011, she directed her first feature film, \"Heavenly Body\", which premiered at the Directors' Fortnight during the 2011 Cannes Film Festival to critical acclaim. Her second feature film, \"The Wonders\", won the Grand Prix at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival. Also in 2014, Rohrwacher was appointed the President of the International Jury for the “Luigi De Laurentiis” Venice Award for a Debut Film at the 71st Venice International Film Festival. She announced filming of her third film \"Lazzaro Felice\" in 2017 with the film starring Sergi López and Rohrwacher's sister Alba Rohrwacher. The film premiered at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival where it won the award for Best Screenplay. It was released by Netflix in December of that year. Rohrwacher was invited to serve on the jury for the 2019 Cannes Film Festival. Bong Joon-ho described her work as \"a mix of magic realism and neorealism, innocent characters butting up against corrupt behemoths\".",
"Eleni Cubitt Eleni Cubitt was a film maker born in Greece. Her most recent film was \"The War That Never Ends\" in 1991 for which she was the executive producer. Under the name of Eleni Collard, she was executive producer for the 1968 Jean-Luc Godard film \"Sympathy for the Devil\". She now lives in London and is the secretary of the British Committee for the Reunification of the Parthenon Marbles, an organisation initially set up by her late husband James Cubitt, to campaign for the return of the Parthenon Marbles to Athens.",
"Hubert Taczanowski Hubert Taczanowski (born 1 October 1960, Poland) is a US and UK-based motion picture cinematographer. He is the son of Stanisław and Mirosława (née Sadżak) Taczanowski and a member of the former magnate family Taczanowski from Poznań A graduate of Cinematography at the famed Lodz Film School in Poland, Taczanowski has been the director of photography on nineteen feature films and two television series. His films have been screened at the Sundance, Venice, Toronto, Edinburgh and Berlin Film Festivals. Additionally, he has shot over twenty music videos for Sony Music, Atlantic Records, EMI and Chrysalis. In January 2007 he married British costume designer Stephanie Collie. He resides in New York and London.",
"Forever (2003 film) Forever () is a 2003 Italian romantic drama film written and directed by Alessandro Di Robilant.",
"Charlotte Gray (film) Charlotte Gray is a 2001 drama film directed by Gillian Armstrong. The screenplay was adapted from Sebastian Faulks' 1999 novel \"Charlotte Gray\". It is set in Vichy France during World War II. The film stars Cate Blanchett, James Fleet, Abigail Cruttenden, Rupert Penry-Jones, Michael Gambon and Billy Crudup. The story is based on the exploits of women in Britain's Special Operations Executive (SOE) who worked with the French resistance in Nazi-occupied France. The fictional character Charlotte Gray is a composite based on such SOE agents as Pearl Cornioley, Nancy Wake, Odette Sansom and Violette Szabo. In 1942, a young Scot, Charlotte Gray, travels by train to London to take a job in a surgery. Richard Cannerley enters her compartment, asking questions about her life and expressing interest that she is fluent in French. He gives Charlotte his business card with the details of a book launch party. There, he introduces Charlotte to some of his acquaintances and asks her to contact him later. Charlotte enjoys a quick wartime romance with Royal Air Force Flight Lieutenant Peter Gregory, whom she met at the party. Cannerley has recruited Charlotte for the SOE. She is seconded to First Aid Nursing Yeomanry with the rank of Driver. She completes rigorous SOE training. Charlotte learns that Gregory's plane has gone down over occupied France and that he is missing in action. Charlotte signs up for SOE operations in France, partly motivated by her wish to find him. Charlotte's first mission to France is to deliver radio vacuum tubes. She drops by parachute. She meets her contact in a café, but the contact is arrested by the police in front of her. Julien, Charlotte's main contact in the French Resistance, reassigns her to act as housekeeper to his father, Levade. Levade is hiding two French Jewish boys, André and Jacob, after their parents were deported to a German concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Poland. Charlotte participates in a Resistance mission: helping to blow up a train carrying Nazi armaments and soldiers. The Nazis bring their own forces and armoured vehicles to the village to crush the Resistance in the area. Charlotte's SOE contact tells her that Gregory died after his aeroplane was shot down. A French official arrives to work with the Germans to ensure that their quota for deporting Jews is met."
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[
"French"
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When did the director of film The Hayseeds' Back-Blocks Show die?
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The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show is a 1917 Australian rural comedy from director Beaumont Smith. It was the third in his series about the rural family, the Hayseeds. It is considered a lost film. Dad Hayseed and his friends from Stoney Creek, including Dad Duggan, Cousin Harold, Sam, Tom, Poppy, Molly, Peter, Hopkins and M'Arthur, decide to hold an agricultural show. They go to Brisbane to ask the Governor of Queensland to open it and he agrees. They form a brass band to play, and the show is a great success. Like the first two Hayseed movies, Beaumont Smith used local appeal to make them attractive to audiences. This one was shot around Brisbane. It was followed by "The Hayseeds' Melbourne Cup".
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[
"Peter Carter (director) Peter Carter (December 8, 1933 - June 3, 1982) was a British-Canadian film and television director. Best known as the director of \"The Rowdyman\" and \"Klondike Fever\", he garnered a Genie Award nomination for Best Director at the 1st Genie Awards in 1980 for \"Klondike Fever\". Carter began as an apprentice with J. Arthur Rank in England and moved to Canada in 1955, where he joined Crawley Films as an editor and assistant director. He returned to England, worked in Africa, and came back to Canada in 1963. His films included \"Rituals\", \"High-Ballin'\" and \"Highpoint\" and on television, his credits included episodes of \"R.C.M.P.\", \"Seaway\", \"Wojeck\", \"McQueen\", \"For the Record\", \"Police Surgeon\", \"The Forest Rangers\" and \"Swiss Family Robinson\", and the telefilms \"The Courage of Kavik the Wolf Dog\" and \"A Man Called Intrepid\". He died of a heart attack on June 3, 1982. He was married to actress Linda Goranson.",
"Al Schwartz (writer) Albert Schwartz (29 November 1910 – 25 March 1988) was an American screenwriter, television producer, and director. He was a writer for \"The Red Skelton Show\", where he and other writers won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series in 1961 and were nominated for the same award in 1962. He also wrote scripts for \"The Jackie Gleason Show\", \"The Milton Berle Show\", \"The Brady Bunch\", \"Gilligan's Island\", \"Petticoat Junction\", and other television shows and made-for-TV movies throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. Earlier in his career, Schwartz wrote for Bob Hope's radio program, \"The Pepsodent Show Starring Bob Hope\". He was the brother of Sherwood Schwartz, the creator and producer of \"Gilligan's Island\" and \"The Brady Bunch\", and Elroy Schwartz, a comedy and television writer.",
"R. G. Springsteen Robert G. Springsteen (September 8, 1904 – December 9, 1989) was an American director of Hollywood B movies and television shows. He was most often credited on screen as R. G. Springsteen. Born in Tacoma, Washington in 1904, Springsteen started working in Hollywood during the 1920s. He was hired by Fox Studios as a wardrobe assistant. In 1936 he moved to directing and worked as a Second unit, or assistant, director on numerous low budget B movies. During this time film credits often listed him by the nickname of Bud Springsteen. By 1945 Springsteen became a lead director and established himself as a filmmaker with his first B Western, \"Marshal of Laredo\". From 1945 through 1968, Springsteen was a prolific director of Hollywood B Westerns and television episodes initially with Republic Pictures and later with A.C. Lyles's series of Westerns for Paramount Pictures. His last directing job came in 1968 with an episode of the television series \"Gentle Ben\". R. G. Springsteen died on December 9, 1989 in Los Angeles, California.",
"Robert Stevens (director) Robert Stevens (December 2, 1920 – August 7, 1989) was an American director and producer. He led on a career of producing and directing many television shows and movies for nearly 4 decades. He was most active throughout the 1950s and 1960s. His most famous and notable works include his works as the producer/director of \"Suspense\", as a frequent director of \"Alfred Hitchcock Presents\" and as a director of \"The Alfred Hitchcock Hour\" and as the director of the movie \"Change of Mind\". He also directed the pilot of \"The Twilight Zone\". Work became slow for Stevens after the 1970s. His last work was as the director of an episode of \"Amazing Stories\" in 1987. In 1989, shortly before his death, Stevens was robbed and beaten in his rented Westport, Connecticut home where he had retired to in 1987. He died shortly thereafter of cardiac arrest on August 7, 1989, in Westport. He was 68 years old.",
"Diarmuid Lawrence Diarmuid Seton Lawrence (15 October 1947 – 20 September 2019) was an English television director. Born in Westcliff-on-Sea in Essex, Lawrence began his career in 1978 as a production assistant on the BBC television drama \"Pennies from Heaven\". Two years later he made his directorial debut with \"Play for Today\". Lawrence's credits include \"The Witches and the Grinnygog\", \"Mapp and Lucia\", \"Quirke\", \"Grange Hill\", \"Anglo Saxon Attitudes\", \"Minder\", \"The Hanging Gale\", \"Casualty\", \"Silent Witness\", \"Little Dorrit\", \"Messiah\", and \"Desperate Romantics\". In 1990, his direction of \"Beyond the Pale\" won him the Golden Gate Award for Best Television Feature at the San Francisco International Film Festival. He was the recipient in 1993 of the British Academy Television Award (BAFTA) for Best Drama Serial for \"Anglo Saxon Attitudes\". In 2017 he received an International Emmy Kids Award for the best Kids TV Movie/Mini-Series for \"Peter and Wendy\". He died in 2019.",
"Our Friends, the Hayseeds Our Friends, the Hayseeds is a 1917 Australian rural comedy from director Beaumont Smith. It centers on the rural family, the \"Hayseeds\", and their rivalry with a neighbouring family, the \"Duggans\". It was Smith's first movie as a director and was a popular success at the box office, leading to a number of sequels. However no known copy of it exists today and it is considered a lost film. The Hayseeds and Duggaans live on selections next to each other. Joe Hayseed and Pansy Duggan want to get married but their families quarrel when the Hayseeds' cow gets into the Duggan's corn and they are forbidden to see each other. The two families have a brawl on the bush fence, a fight that only ends in exhaustion. However, a bush fire unites them and Jim and Pansy marry. Pansy falls pregnant and Dad Hayseed and Dad Duggan both hope for a boy which will be named after them. She ends up giving birth to twin girls. The film was divided into four sections: the first two dealing with a day in the life of the Hayseeds; the last two under the title \"Pansy's Wooing\" with Joe and Pansy's courtship. A contemporary reviewer said that of the film's 5,000 foot length, 1,000 feet was dedicated to humorous titles. The movie was inspired by the success of Bert Bailey's stage adaptation of Steele Rudd's \"Dad and Dave\" stories, \"On Our Selection\" and Philip Lytton's play \"The Waybacks\". Smith had worked with Bailey and Edmund Duggan on the initial production of \"Selection\". Shooting took place on location in South Australia in Campbelltown and Norwood. Many of the cast had appeared in Beaumont Smith's theatrical productions of \"While the Billy Boils\" (which he filmed in 1921) and \"Seven Little Australians\". While shooting the bushfire scene off the side of a hill at Campbelltown, the fire got out of control and momentarily trapped the actors. According to contemporary press reports, \"they came out of that fire black as coal heavers, almost blind with smoke, and singed badly. Their faces were a study of horror and fear, and that heartless photographer turned the handle all the time. But he got a most realistic picture.",
"Peter Harris (director) Peter Harris (1933 – 23 February 2021) was an English television director, best known for his work on \"The Muppet Show\", \"Spitting Image\" and \"Bullseye\". Harris was one of just two directors on the original \"The Muppet Show\", working on the first 73 episodes. In 1984, Harris became the director of the British satirical television puppet show \"Spitting Image\". He was chosen for the role due to his previous work on \"The Muppet Show\". During the 1980s, Harris also directed the British game show \"Bullseye\", and coined several of the catchphrases of presenter Jim Bowen, including \"Stay out of the black and in the red, there's nothing in this game for two in a bed\". Behind the scenes, Harris was also tasked with finding the prizes for the show, which included a range of speedboats. He died from COVID-19 in a nursing home in Ferndown, Dorset, on 23 February 2021, at the age of 88.",
"Charles S. Thompson (set decorator) Charles S. Thompson (August 28, 1908 – July 9, 1994) was a Canadian-born Hollywood set decorator, with nearly 200 films to his credit in a career that lasted 30 years. He cut his teeth on a string of B movies in the early 1940s, before breaking into John Ford's inner circle of regulars. Amongst his credits for the director were \"Rio Grande\" (1950) and \"The Quiet Man\" (1952), for which he received an Academy Award nomination. Thompson fared better with higher profile projects throughout the 1950s and 1960s, particularly in television, working on such series as \"Perry Mason\", \"The Fugitive\" and \"The Man from U.N.C.L.E.\", whilst on the feature film front, his work can be viewed in Samuel Fuller's \"Shock Corridor\" (1963) and the Clint Eastwood vehicle, \"Joe Kidd\" (1972). Thompson scored a second Oscar nomination in 1965 for his work on \"A Patch of Blue\". He died on July 9, 1994, at the age of 85.",
"Hal Cooper (director) Harold \"Hal\" Cooper (February 23, 1923 – April 11, 2014) was an American television director and executive producer who worked primarily on sitcoms. After establishing himself as a pioneer of the Golden Age of Television, Cooper became a regular director on many of the popular and enduring shows of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Cooper directed 54 episodes of \"I Dream of Jeannie\" between 1966 and 1969 and 126 of the 141 episodes of \"Maude\", where he also served as executive producer from 1975 through 1978. His work on the latter series earned him two Emmy Award nominations as well as three nominations from the Directors Guild of America Awards. Born in The Bronx, New York, on February 23, 1923, Cooper began his entertainment career at the age of 9, becoming part of the acting troupe on the children's radio show \"Rainbow House\". When he wasn't on microphone, Cooper spent his time in the control room, learning about directing from the show's producer and director, Bob Emery. One day in 1936, Emery fell ill two hours before the show was to go live and he chose Cooper to fill in for him, resulting in Cooper directing his first live broadcast at the age of 13. In 1940, Cooper began attending the University of Michigan, where he met his first wife, Pat Meikle, whom he married in 1944. His education was interrupted by World War II in 1943, when he was commissioned as a lieutenant (junior grade) into the U.S. Naval Reserve and served in the Pacific Theater of Operations. He returned to the university in 1946 and graduated with a B.A. that same year, after which he set out on a career in live television. Cooper wrote, produced and acted in the pioneering live daytime children's series \"Your Television Babysitter\" for the DuMont Network. This show, which was co-written and hosted by Cooper's wife, Pat Meikle, aired on DuMont's first full day television broadcasting and led to a spin-off, \"The Magic Cottage\", which Cooper also produced. From 1950 to 1957, Cooper directed and produced a number of daytime soap operas, including \"Search for Tomorrow\".",
"Allan Albert Allan Praigrod Albert (June 29, 1945, New York City - June 10, 1994, New York City) was a director, producer, and playwright. He attended Amherst College and the Yale School of Drama. He has served as artistic director at the Charles Playhouse in Boston and the Berkshire Theatre Festival in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. In 1972 he started Allan Albert Productions. He also created the National Educational Television series \"How Can I Tell You?\". Albert died from lymphoma on June 10, 1994, in New York City."
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[
"2 January 1950"
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Who was born first out of Claude Ake and David Coon?
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David Coote David Coote may refer to:
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"David Coons David B. Coons is a computer graphics professional and longtime CGI expert. David B. Coons was born in 1960, and grew up in Santa Monica, California. He attended Santa Monica High School while living in a highly unconventional family arrangement: he alternated between his uncle's apartment (where he actually had a bedroom) and his father's apartment (which was his sister's official residence), several blocks away. During his high school years he was a member of the \"Olive Starlight Orchestra\" (not an orchestra at all, but rather a social circle akin to Virginia Woolf's \"Bloomsbury Group\"), that included film editor Kate Sanford, doctor David Eadington, graphics developers Eric Enderton and Greg Turk, writer Sandra Tsing Loh, lawyer Susan P. Crawford, and entrepreneur Christophe Pettus (founder of the company Blowfish). His did some work on films including a vampire movie entitled \"Murder in Vein\" and a short called \"The Juggler\", which starred Keith Goldfarb. At the main SIGGRAPH Convention every year, Coons can be identified by the job description on his badge, which invariably reads \"Mad Scientist\". Active in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Coons works behind the scenes in the film and computer graphics industries. He is also the president and owner of ArtScans Studio in Culver City, California, where he uses a scanner of his own invention to serve a clientele of celebrity artists and fine artists. The ArtScans page describes the scanner this way: \"ArtScans has been doing accurate color capture for reproduction since 1992. We own and operate a large (44\" x 50\") flatbed scanner that is the only one of its kind in the world. Both the scanner and its software were designed by us.\" Keith Goldfarb, co-founder of Rhythm and Hues Studios, a computer-graphics studio that works on major motion pictures—\"Night at the Museum 2: Battle of the Smithsonian\" and \"The Chronicles of Riddick\" (2004),—as well as high-end commercials, has called him \"the most knowledgeable person about scanning on this planet.\" David Coons was also a pioneer in the art of digital printing reproduction of scanned and computer generated artwork, specifically adapting the large format IRIS printer, a machine designed to work solely with proprietary prepress computer systems, to this task.",
"David Acheson David Acheson may refer to:",
"David Tyler David Tyler may refer to:",
"Ty Coon Edward Howard \"Ty\" Coon, Jr. (July 26, 1915 – January 9, 1992) was a professional American football player who played as an offensive lineman for two seasons in the National Football League (NFL) with the Brooklyn Dodgers.",
"John Coon (sailor) John Malcolm Coon (31 October 1929 - 27 June 2010) was an Australian sailor who competed in the 1960 Summer Olympics and in the 1964 Summer Olympics.",
"David Dennison David Dennison may refer to:",
"David Paton David Paton (born 29 October 1949) is a Scottish bassist, guitarist and singer. He first achieved success in the mid-1970s as lead vocalist and bassist of Pilot, who scored hits with \"Magic\", \"January\", \"Just a Smile\" and \"Call Me Round\" before splitting in 1977. Paton is also known for his work in the original lineup of The Alan Parsons Project (1975-1985), and for working with acts such as Kate Bush, Camel and Elton John. Born Edinburgh, Scotland, Paton grew up in the south-eastern suburb of Gilmerton, Edinburgh, where he attended Liberton High School. His first band was called 'The Beachcombers' and they signed a recording contract in 1968 with CBS Records. They changed their name to The Boots and published their first single, \"The Animal In Me\". This was soon followed by \"Keep Your Lovelight Burning\", but after about two years, the band split because of financial problems in 1970. He then replaced a guitarist in the Bay City Rollers for a short period of time but never recorded with them. After leaving them in October 1970, he became a member of another Band called 'Fresh', which changed their name to Christyan and published a single, \"Nursery Lane\", in 1971. While still playing with the band, he took a job as a musician in a nightclub called Tiffanys where he met Ian Bairnson. In 1973, Paton was a co-founder of Pilot. With Ian Bairnson, Billy Lyall and Stuart Tosh, they recorded several demos with EMI Records and recorded their first album \"From the Album of the Same Name\" which was published in 1974. On it was included their first major hit, \"Magic\" and Bairnson, who was still not an official member of the band, joined them after the recording of the first album. They released their second album \"Second Flight\" in 1975, and its single \"January\" topped the UK Singles Chart for three weeks, ironically beginning week ending 1 February. and it was followed in 1976 by their third, \"Morin Heights\" which was recorded at Le Studio in Morin Heights in Quebec, Canada, and produced by Roy Thomas Baker.",
"David English David English may refer to:",
"L. H. Coon Lewis H. Coon (October 6, 1842 – June 4, 1903) was an American politician in the state of Washington. He served in the Washington House of Representatives from 1895 to 1897.",
"David Stewart David Stewart may refer to:"
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[
"Claude Ake"
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Who is the spouse of the director of film The Perfect Gentleman (Film)?
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Perfect Gentlemen (film) Perfect Gentlemen is a 1978 American made-for-television comedy crime film starring Lauren Bacall (in her television film debut), Ruth Gordon, Sandy Dennis and Lisa Pelikan. The film, produced and directed by Jackie Cooper from a screenplay written by Nora Ephron, was filmed on location in Claremont, California and Hollywood, California from October 27, 1977 to November 1977. It originally premiered on March 14, 1978 on CBS. Three women with totally different backgrounds who share a common bond: each needs a large sum of money and each has a husband serving time at a maximum security prison. Lizzie Martin (Lauren Bacall) has been instructed by her husband Ed (Robert Alda) to deliver a $1 million bribe in order to get him an instant parole; however, when she learns he has been having an affair with his secretary, Lizzie wants to disappear but fears for her life if she doesn't carry out his instructions. Sophie Rosenman (Sandy Dennis) needs money to save the family's bankrupt delicatessen; Annie Cavagnaro (Lisa Pelikan) needs money because she's pregnant, and Lizzie could use the funds to escape from Ed, so the three women devise an elaborate scheme to deliver the bribe money and then steal it back. Mrs. Cavagnaro (Ruth Gordon), Annie's mother-in-law, joins the trio when they discover they need her because of her safe-cracking expertise.
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"An Ideal Husband (1980 film) An Ideal Husband () is a 1980 Soviet comedy film directed by . The film tells about Sir Robert Chiltern, who was a promising politician, an ideal husband and man, but got involved in a dirty business. Will he be able to save his marriage? Screenwriter and director — Viktor Georgiyev Operator — Fyodor Dobronravov Artist — Konstantin Forostenko Costume artist — Ganna Ganevskaya",
"An Ideal Husband (1947 film) An Ideal Husband, also known as Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband, is a 1947 British comedy film adaptation of the 1895 play by Oscar Wilde. It was made by London Film Productions and distributed by British Lion Films (UK) and Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation (USA). It was produced and directed by Alexander Korda from a screenplay by Lajos Bíró from Wilde's play. The music score was by Arthur Benjamin, the cinematography by Georges Périnal, the editing by Oswald Hafenrichter and the costume design by Cecil Beaton. This was Korda's last completed film as a director, although he continued producing films into the next decade. The film stars Paulette Goddard, Michael Wilding, Diana Wynyard, Hugh Williams, C. Aubrey Smith, Glynis Johns and Constance Collier. A voice-over narrator announces the opening setting as \"Hyde Park Corner, 1895 . . . the centre of the universe,\" when \"Parliament's in session . . . [and] Victoria reigns, but fashion is supreme.\" Members of the British upper class are seen riding on horseback or in carriages, and most of the main characters are introduced. These include Mrs. Laura Cheveley (Paulette Goddard), who has recently returned to Britain after living in Vienna; Sir Roger Chiltern (Hugh Williams), a government minister with a reputation for honesty; his wife Lady Gertrude (Diana Wynyard), who disapproves strongly of immorality and dishonesty; Mabel Chiltern (Glynis Johns), Sir Robert's younger sister; Lord Arthur Goring (Michael Wilding), an unmarried and unconventional young man; and his father, the Earl of Caversham (C. Aubrey Smith), who is eager to have his son marry and settle down. Later at a lavish party hosted by the Chilterns, Mrs. Cheveley attempts to extort Sir Roger into supporting a bill to provide government financing for a proposed canal in Argentina, which Sir Roger considers to be a fraudulent scheme. Mrs. Cheveley has incriminating letters that Sir Roger wrote many years earlier that allowed him to use advance knowledge of the financing of the Suez Canal to establish his fortune and career. Sir Roger initially refuses but gives in rather than ruin his reputation. Before leaving the party, Mrs.",
"The Perfect Lady The Perfect Lady is a 1931 British comedy film directed by Frederick J. Jackson and Milton Rosmer and starring Moira Lynd, Henry Wilcoxon and Reginald Gardiner. It was made at Elstree Studios by British International Pictures.",
"The Perfect Wife?! The Perfect Wife?! is a 1983 Hong Kong romantic comedy film directed Dean Shek and starring Shek, Eric Tsang and Linda Lau. Dean Shek is flirty lawyer and expert at dealing with divorce cases who also likes to fool around with married women. One day, he attends the wedding of his friend Bluffer Wong and suddenly thinks about starting a family. Because of his lack of confidence in Hong Kong women, he asks someone to find a woman for him in mainland China and then transform her into his ideal wife. One day, Shek's cousin James Dean comes crying to him saying his fiancé left him for another man. Under Dean's encouragement, James seeks a new lover but finds interest in Dean's wife Chu. Chu is moved by James' gentleness and leaves Dean. The film grossed HK$12,946,443 at the Hong Kong box office during its theatrical run from 5 to 23 August 1983 in Hong Kong.",
"A Perfect Man (2013 film) A Perfect Man is a 2013 film directed by Kees Van Oostrum. A wandering man (Schreiber) has an affair with the wrong woman, leading to a separation. \"The Hollywood Reporter\" John DeFore describes the script as deficient. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 20% based on 5 reviews, with an average rating of 4.77/10.",
"An Ideal Husband (2000 film) An Ideal Husband is a 2000 film based on the 1895 play \"An Ideal Husband\" by Oscar Wilde. While the film retains the premise of Wilde's play and much of the original dialogue, it updates the action to the present day. The external scenes of the film were shot at various locations in the English 'home counties', principally in Buckinghamshire Sir Robert Chiltern, a rich landowner, belongs to the English 'county set' and is a member of an (unnamed) local government authority somewhere north of London. Well-off and with a loving and trusting wife, his honour and very existence are threatened when Mrs. Laura Cheveley appears with evidence of a past misdeed of Sir Robert's. It transpires that Robert's wealth stems from insider trading concerning a proposed canal project at an unspecified location. She attempts to blackmail Sir Robert into supporting the project - in which she has invested heavily - and in desperation, Sir Robert turns for help to his friend Lord Goring, an apparently idle philanderer. Goring knows the lady from years before. After several varieties of machination, the story ends happily. Lord Goring marries Robert's sister Mabel, Mrs. Chevely is outsmarted, and Lady Chiltern retains her faith in her husband's honour and 'idealism'.",
"The Perfect Guy (2015 film) The Perfect Guy is a 2015 American romantic thriller film directed by David M. Rosenthal, produced by Tommy Oliver and written by Alan B. McElroy and Tyger Williams and stars Sanaa Lathan, Morris Chestnut and Michael Ealy. Ealy and Lathan also served as executive producers on the film. The film centers on a single woman who falls in love with a man who harbors an obsession after she breaks up with him. \"The Perfect Guy\" was released in North America on September 11, 2015 and garnered negative reviews from critics, praising the filmmaking and performances but criticized the script for being underwritten and lacking in thriller moments. The film was a box-office success, grossing $60.3 million against its $12 million budget. Successful lobbyist Leah Vaughn breaks up with her boyfriend, Dave King, because he refuses to commit to her wishes of starting a family. Two months later, she meets Carter Duncan, a charming man who works in IT for another company. They quickly grow close and he works his way into the hearts of her friends and family. On their way home from a trip to San Francisco to meet her parents, a stranger at a gas station asks Leah about Carter's Dodge Charger. Carter viciously attacks the man, and Carter and Leah drive off when the station's owner orders them to leave. Distraught over his actions, Leah decides to break up with him that night. Over the next several weeks, Carter stalks Leah at her job, and makes numerous phone calls, even after she changes her phone number. Unbeknownst to Leah, Carter also gets into her house with her spare key. He goes through her belongings, hacks into her computer, and abducts her cat. She finally decides to go to the police, meeting with Detective Hansen, who advises her to keep records of any further attempts Carter makes to contact her. Leah later finds a threatening note and a single red rose attached to her car and files a restraining order against Carter, causing him to lose his job. Later, Dave contacts Leah about rekindling their relationship and Leah eagerly agrees. One night, Leah and Dave find Carter watching them at a restaurant, and Dave grimly warns him to stay away. They notify the police and, after Hansen interrogates Carter over the violation, Carter feigns innocence, stating he had no idea she was there and that Dave was aggressive towards him. Hansen lets him go.",
"The Perfect Human The Perfect Human () is a cult short film in black and white by Jørgen Leth lasting 13 minutes about a middle class Danish couple performing everyday rituals. The film examines human behavior in a suave, pseudo-scientific way. It depicts well-dressed actors, a man and a woman, both labelled 'the perfect human' in a detached manner, 'functioning' in a blank boundless room, as though they were subjects in a zoo. The tone of world-weary detachment is created through a voice-over providing comments on their mundane actions. The film was later seen in five different versions when Leth was challenged by filmmaker Lars von Trier, which were compiled in \"The Five Obstructions\".",
"Mr. Perfect (film) Mr. Perfect is a 2011 Indian Telugu-language romantic comedy film directed by Dasaradh, and produced bt Dil Raju. The film stars Prabhas, Kajal Agarwal and Taapsee Pannu while Murali Mohan, Prakash Raj, Sayaji Shinde, Nassar, and K. Vishwanath play supporting roles. The film released on 22 April 2011 to positive reviews. The film won the newly incorporated Nagi Reddy Memorial Award for \"Best Telugu Family\" entertainer for the year 2011. Vicky (Prabhas), an expert in gaming software, lives in Australia and never compromises in his life, a principle that he adheres to since his childhood. He believes that one should be oneself in a relationship and one should not change one's characteristics or personality to get along with his/her partner. He also encourages his friends to follow his principle of life, but his principles and attitude lead to a clash of interests with his father (Nassar), who constantly advises him to adjust for his and others' happiness. Unfortunately, Vicky pays no heed. Meanwhile, in India, Vicky's parents arrange a wedding alliance between him and Priya (Kajal Aggarwal). Priya is Vicky's childhood friend and a doctor by profession. She and Vicky are poles apart; while Vicky is modern in his thinking and is not ready to compromise with his life, Priya is traditional and conservative and is ready to compromise for the happiness of others. Initially, Vicky and Priya do not get along - they both play practical jokes on one another, but later, on her father's (Murali Mohan) advice, Priya attempts to change her attitude towards Vicky and be more positive about him. Soon enough, Priya falls in love with Vicky and changes many of her interests to adjust with him, such as giving up her love of classical dance as Vicky does not like it, eating non-vegetarian food, and wearing modern dresses. Vicky too begins to fall in love with her and is ready to accept the wedding proposal. He receives the news of his friend Shiva's (Sagar) divorce where the relationship soured due to too many compromises. Vicky is very disturbed when he begins to find out that Priya has compromised for his sake. He rejects the proposal and returns to Australia.",
"A Perfect Gentleman (1928 film) A Perfect Gentleman is a 1928 silent American comedy film, directed by Clyde Bruckman, which stars Monty Banks, Ernest Wood, Henry Barrows, and Ruth Dwyer."
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[
"Miriam Seegar"
] |
Where was the director of film Four Minutes born?
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4 Minute Mile 4 Minute Mile is a 2014 drama film directed by Charles-Olivier Michaud, written by Jeff Van Wie and Josh Campbell, and starring Kelly Blatz, Richard Jenkins, Cam Gigandet, Analeigh Tipton, Rhys Coiro, and Kim Basinger. It is distributed by Gravitas Ventures, and the international sales rights are held by Double Dutch International. The film premiered at the Seattle International Film Festival (SIFF) on June 5, 2014. Gravitas planned for a theatrical release on August 1, 2014. Drew Jacobs, a teenage track runner who lives with his mother Claire and older brother Wes, is overwhelmed and struggling with life. He is manipulated by a local drug dealer, Eli, into running drug payments, and fears that he is heading down the same fruitless life path his brother once took as Drew finds the fate of his primary outlet, track practice, up in the air. Drew, however, is soon noticed by his reclusive neighbor and ex-track coach, Jame Coleman, who offers to train him. As Drew trains, the two form a bond, until Coleman is killed in an altercation with his brother's old gang, forcing Drew to conquer his fears and push through himself.
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[
"3 Minute Wonder 3 Minute Wonder is a short Channel 4 television slot that broadcasts first time directors' three-minute TV programmes in the middle of the channel's weekday primetime schedule. It offers first-time directors and assistant producers the opportunity to air their work to a large audience, and in doing so, to take a first step into the competitive UK film industry. The \"3 Minute Wonder\" strand is part of the Channel 4's \"4Talent\" initiative to help new talent break into the very competitive UK television industry. Other projects in the scheme include FourDocs and the Channel 4 Sheffield Pitch documentary competition. Channel 4 offers new directors £4000 and their assistance in making their shorts which are then broadcast at 7:55pm every weekday. The films shown on the series are primarily documentaries that generally highlight a current issue that is not in the public eye, for instance synesthesia or domestic abuse. It has previously featured Karl Pilkington in a series of 4 and was mentioned on \"The Ricky Gervais Show\".",
"Florian von Bornstädt Florian von Bornstädt (; born 26 August 1991 in Itzehoe) is a German writer and screenwriter, known for the Netflix original film \"The Four of Us\". Florian von Bornstädt grew up in Kellinghusen and completed with the Mittlere Reife at the local secondary school. After school he started a vocational training as a media designer at h1 - Fernsehen aus Hannover, a regional German TV channel. In the meantime he wrote the script for his first short film Little Red Riding Hood: A Tale of Blood and Death. He shared the directing position with Martin Czaja. This was followed by two more short films in sole direction, which were shown at international film festivals. In his second short film, He was there again, he worked i.a. with the actor and voice actor Charles Rettinghaus. In 2015 he wrote the script for the horror film #funnyFACE, directed by Marcel Walz and filmed in Spain in 2015. After the premiere in 2015 at the Weekend of Horrors in Germany, the film was finally released for home theater in December 2019. From 2016 to 2017 von Bornstädt worked as a storyliner for various German daily series. In May 2018 he published his first novel, Am Ende noch Meer, based on an unfilmed screenplay, via Kindle Direct Publishing. Von Bornstädt wrote the screenplay for the film The Four of Us, which was released on Netflix on October 15, 2021. Jonas Nay, Paula Kalenberg, Nilam Farooq and Louis Nitsche can be seen in the leading roles. He also joined the team of authors for the second season of the ZDF series Doktor Ballouz in 2021. Von Bornstädt lives in Berlin since July 2017.",
"John Huckert John Huckert (born June 26, 1954) is an American filmmaker.",
"Jamie Maclachlan Jamie Maclachlan (born 1981) is a British actor who has worked extensively in the business but is best known for playing the lead role of Roger Bannister in the Emmy Award nominated film 'Four Minutes', alongside Christopher Plummer. For his portrayal Jamie was on the Emmy Award watch list of 2006 in the category of Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie, making it to a short list of just 13 pre nominated actors in this category. Jamie is also a part owner of production company MaclachlanWood. Jamie has had a varied career in Theatre, Television and Film. His full Filmography is listed below.",
"Director (Avant album) Director is the fourth studio album by American R&B singer Avant. It was released by Geffen Records on April 25, 2006 in the United States. The album reached number one on the US \"Billboard\" Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums, while peaking at number four on the US \"Billboard\" 200. As of 2008, \"Director\" sold 600,456 copies in the US. Three singles were released: \"You Know What\" (number 58 Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs), \"4 Minutes\" (number 9 Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and number 52 Hot 100) and \"Lie About Us\". \"4 Minutes\" describes a man's desperate attempt to mend a broken relationship.",
"Richard Martini (director) Richard Martini (born 12 March 1955) is an American film director, producer, screenwriter and freelance journalist. Martini was born in 1955 and grew up in Northbrook, Illinois. He attended local public schools. He graduated magna cum laude from Boston University with a degree in Humanities, attended University of Southern California Film School and is a 2008 graduate of the Master of Professional Writing Program at USC. His student short film, \"Lost Angels,\" was the film debut of fellow Chicago native, actress Daryl Hannah. He took improv classes at Second City in Chicago under Jo Forsberg, and with the Harvey Lembeck Workshop in Los Angeles. His first documentary film, \"Special Olympians,\" won the top prize at the 1980 Mexico City International Film Festival. He made his feature film directorial debut with \"You Can't Hurry Love,\" which featured the debut of Bridget Fonda. TNT described it as the \"quintessential 80's comedy.\" Martini left USC to work for writer/director Robert Towne (\"Chinatown,\" \"Mission: Impossible\"); he served as an acting coach for Robert Evans on the original \"The Two Jakes.\" After that Martini wrote his first feature \"My Champion,\" which starred Christopher (son of Robert) Mitchum and Yoko Shimada (Shogun). He wrote the comedy \"Three For the Road\" for Vista Films, which starred Charlie Sheen. Martini directed a comedy short, \"Video Valentino,\" shot by fellow USC alum John Schwartzman (DP of \"The Amazing Spider-Man\") and produced by Jonathan D. Krane. The short led to a deal with Vestron Pictures, where he made \"You Can't Hurry Love\" starring Bridget Fonda, Charles Grodin and Kristy McNichol based on the short. Martini co-wrote and directed two films for producer Jonathan D. Krane: the Faustian comedy \"Limit Up\", set in Chicago, starring Nancy Allen and blues icon Ray Charles, and Point of Betrayal (1996) starring Dina Merrill, Rod Taylor and Rebecca Broussard, which won the Palm Beach International Film Festival as Best Film. Martini then co-wrote and directed \"Cannes Man\" (released on iTunes in 2010) starring Francesco Quinn and Seymour Cassel, with appearances by Johnny Depp and the \"cast of characters who inhabit the film festival each year.",
"80 Minutes 80 Minutes is a 2008 German direct-to-video English-language action thriller film written and directed by Thomas Jahn and starring Gabriel Mann, Natalia Avelon, Joshua Dallas, Oliver Kieran-Jones and Francis Fulton-Smith. The film was released direct-to-video on September 2, 2008 in the United States. Alex North has been injected with a poison inside his body and has only 80 minutes to find $15,000 for his boss Lloyd if he wants to live. Now he must go through the whole night, searching for ways to make up that amount. Christopher Armstead called the film \"trite\".",
"Past Minutes Past Minutes (Portuguese: Minutos Atrás) is a 2013 Brazilian comedy-fantasy film directed and written by Caio Sóh. Nildo (Otávio Muller) and Alonso (Vladimir Brichta) are two waste pickers, whose lonely souls wander through life behind remains of dreams and fears played out in search of a reason for their lives. Along with the Ruminant horse (Paulo Moska), their companion, the two share fantastic and surreal stories that sometimes borders on insanity. They walk towards the construction of a new destination to its existence, distressed by the passage of time.",
"Jim Enright Jim Enright (born 2 November 1954) is a pornographic film director.",
"Four (2012 film) Four is a 2012 American independent feature film written and directed by Joshua Sanchez. It is based on the 1998 play of the same name by Christopher Shinn. The film stars Wendell Pierce, Emory Cohen, Aja Naomi King and E.J. Bonilla. The film premiered at the 2012 Los Angeles Film Festival where its ensemble cast won the top acting award. E.J. Bonilla received an Imagen Award nomination for his performance and Wendell Pierce received an Independent Spirit Award nomination for his performance. \"Four\" took over five years to make and the film started several times before it was actually made. Sanchez met Christopher Shinn in 2003 while he was working for an online magazine and was assigned to interview Shinn. Sanchez had read all of Shinn's plays as research for the interview, which is how he first came to read Shinn's play, \"Four\". Sanchez wanted to option \"Four\" right away, but another filmmaker had already optioned it. A year later, the other filmmaker did not renew the option on the play, so Sanchez stepped in. To raise money for the film, Sanchez and his producer, Christine Giorgio, were among some of the first artists to use the crowdfunding website, Kickstarter in December 2009. They successfully raised nearly $20,000 for their initial campaign. Film director, and playwright, Neil LaBute, executive produced the film along with renowned photographer, Allen Frame. The film is a requiem for loneliness, conformity and desire quietly hidden in the everyday norms of suburban American life and touches on several cultural boundaries, including sexuality, class and race. Three of the film's four main characters are people of color. About \"Four\" Sanchez said: The film was released on September 13, 2013."
] |
[] |
[
"Göttingen"
] |
Are Chau Tsai Kok and Navarino Island located in the same country?
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Chau Tsai Kok Chau Tsai Kok (Chinese: 洲仔角) is a small uninhabited island off the island of Tap Mun in the northeastern New Territories of Hong Kong, opposite to the village of Tap Mun. It is under the administration of Tai Po District.
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[
"Wang Chau (Sai Kung) Wang Chau () is an island of Hong Kong. Administratively, it is part of Sai Kung District. Together with Basalt Island and Bluff Island, it forms the Ung Kong Group () and is part of Hong Kong Global Geopark.",
"Pak Sha Chau (North District) Round Island or Pak Sha Chau () is an uninhabited island of Hong Kong. Administratively, it is part of the North District.",
"Chek Nai Ping Chek Nai Ping () is a village in Sha Tin District, Hong Kong.",
"La Ka Chau La Ka Chau or 勒加洲 is an old island in Hong Kong. It is located in the northeastern part of Sai Kung. The island was reclaimed when the Land reclamation in Hong Kong at Sai Kung was carried out in the late 1970s and early 1980s to make the Sai Kung Waterfront. It is now part of a public car park in Sai Kung.",
"Tau Lo Chau Tau Lo Chau () is an uninhabited island of Hong Kong, part of the Soko Islands group, located south of Lantau Island.",
"Ma Chau Ma Chau island (, not to be confused with Ma Shi Chau island), is an uninhabited outlying island of Hong Kong located in the Soko Islands group about 4km south to Lantau Island.",
"Cham Tau Chau Cham Tau Chau () is a small uninhabited island in Hong Kong. Administratively, it belongs to the Sai Kung District. It lies within the Inner Port Shelter, south of Sai Kung Peninsula, north of Sharp Island and Tai Tsan Chau (). Cham Tau Chau has a coastline of 0.8 kilometres.",
"Navarino Island Navarino Island () is a Chilean island located between Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, to the north, and Cape Horn, to the south. The island forms part of the Commune of Cabo de Hornos, the southernmost commune in Chile and in the world, belonging to Antártica Chilena Province in the XII Region of Magallanes and Chilean Antarctica. Its population is concentrated primarily in the communal capital, Puerto Williams, and in small settlements like Puerto Navarino, Río Guanaco and Puerto Toro. The highest point of the island is Pico Navarino at . The island is a popular destination for fly-fishers. History and archaeology may be the most valuable resource of Navarino Island and its adjacent sectors. It is considered to have one of the most dense concentrations of archeological sites in the world. The Yahgan were nomadic people, and moved their settlements on a seasonal basis. Their middens show their dependence of fish and shellfish for food, as well as some vegetables that they gathered. There is a Megalithic Yaghan archaeological site dating to about 10,000 years ago near Wulaia Bay. Numerous remains of huts surrounded by ring middens have been found on the lowland terraces. Interest in the Yahgan culture attracts tourists. At the regional museum, the Martin Gusinde Anthropological Museum, exhibits of the Yaghan culture: their dwellings, fish traps, and crafts; and the remains of the 19th-century English missions can be seen. Aquatic birds, and the geology and botany of the island, also attract tourists. The waters around Navarino Island were the location of the Snipe incident a military incident that took place between Chile and Argentina in 1958 as a result of a disputed border line in the Beagle Channel. The Snipe Incident was part of the wider Beagle Conflict between Chile and Argentina which brought both countries to the brink of war in 1978. Both countries disagreed about the sovereign rights over the zone and Snipe, an uninhabitable islet between Picton Island and Navarino Island, claimed by both. Chileans call the waterway around the islet \"Beagle Channel\", but in Argentina they called it \"Moat channel\" on the grounds that the Beagle Channel, allegedly, went south around Navarino Island.",
"Naru Island (Solomon Islands) Naru Island is a small island in the New Georgia Islands of the Western Province of the Solomon Islands. The island is primarily notable for its role in the events after the sinking of \"PT-109\" involving future American president John F. Kennedy.",
"Shek Ngau Chau Shek Ngau Chau () is an uninhabited island of Hong Kong, under the administration of Tai Po District. It is located in Mirs Bay, in the North-east of the New Territories."
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[
"no"
] |
What is the place of birth of the director of film The Other (1913 Film)?
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The Other (1913 film) The Other (German: Der Andere) is a 1913 German silent thriller film directed by Max Mack and starring Albert Bassermann, Emmerich Hanus and Nelly Ridon. When talking with friends, Dr. Hallers, a well-known lawyer in Berlin, said he was skeptical about fantasies on the split personality: he could never believe something like that. During a ride, however, he has an accident, after which he often falls into a deep sleep from which he awakens with the feeling of having a dual personality. Later, his double starts to rob his apartment with a thief. During the robbery, the police arrives and arrests the thief. Hallers, having fallen asleep, wakes up without remembering anything of what happened. Eventually, the lawyer recovers and marries his fiancée.
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[
"The Man Outside (1913 film) The Man Outside is a 1913 Comedy film.",
"The Other Woman (1921 film) The Other Woman is a 1921 American silent drama film directed by Edward Sloman and starring Jerome Patrick, Jane Novak and Helen Jerome Eddy.",
"Allen Curtis Allen Curtis (1877 – November 24, 1961), was an American film director of the silent era. He directed 278 films between 1913 and 1922. He was born in New York, New York and died in Hollywood, California.",
"The Crook and the Girl The Crook and the Girl is a 1913 American drama film featuring Harry Carey.",
"Who Was the Other Man? Who Was the Other Man? is a 1917 American silent war drama film directed by Francis Ford and starring Ford, Duke Worne and William T. Horne.",
"The Other Man (1916 film) The Other Man is a 1916 short comedy film starring Fatty Arbuckle. The film was shot in Fort Lee, New Jersey.",
"The Wrong Bottle The Wrong Bottle is a 1913 American drama film featuring Harry Carey.",
"Another Man's Shoes (film) Another Man's Shoes is a 1922 American comedy film directed by Jack Conway and written by Victor Bridges, Raymond L. Schrock, and Arthur F. Statter. It is based on the 1913 novel \"Another Man's Shoes\" by Victor Bridges. The film stars Herbert Rawlinson, Barbara Bedford, Una Trevelyn, Nick De Ruiz, Josef Swickard, and Jean De Briac. The film was released on November 6, 1922, by Universal Film Manufacturing Company.",
"Konec milování Konec milování is a 1913 Austro-Hungarian drama film directed by Otakar Stáfl and Max Urban.",
"She Was the Other She Was the Other is a 1914 American silent comedy film featuring Mabel Paige and Oliver Hardy."
] |
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[
"Halberstadt"
] |
Where did the director of film Wood Pigeon (1970 Film) die?
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Wood Pigeon (film) Wood Pigeon "(Persian title: Toghi - )" is a 1970 Iranian drama film directed by Ali Hatami and starring Behrouz Vossoughi, Afarin Obeysi, Naser Malek Motiee, Zhaleh Olov, Hamideh Kheirabadi and Bahman Mofid.
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[
"Nicolas Roeg Nicolas Jack Roeg (; 15 August 1928 – 23 November 2018) was an English film director and cinematographer, best known for directing \"Performance\" (1970), \"Walkabout\" (1971), \"Don't Look Now\" (1973), \"The Man Who Fell to Earth\" (1976), \"Bad Timing\" (1980), and \"The Witches\" (1990). Making his directorial debut 23 years after his entry into the film business, Roeg quickly became known for an idiosyncratic visual and narrative style, characterized by the use of disjointed and disorienting editing. For this reason, he is considered a highly influential filmmaker, cited as an inspiration by such directors as Steven Soderbergh, Christopher Nolan, and Danny Boyle. In 1999, the British Film Institute acknowledged Roeg's importance in the British film industry by respectively naming \"Don't Look Now\" and \"Performance\" the 8th and 48th greatest British films of all time in its Top 100 British films poll. Roeg was born in St John's Wood in North London on 15 August 1928 to Jack Nicolas Roeg and Mabel Gertrude (née Silk). He had an older sister, Nicolette (1925-1987), who was an actress. His father was of Dutch ancestry and worked in the diamond trade, but lost a lot of money when his investments failed in South Africa. Roeg had said that he entered the film industry only because there was a studio across the road from his home in Marylebone. Roeg was educated at the Mercers' School in London. In 1947, after completing National Service, Roeg entered the film business as a tea boy moving up to clapper-loader, the bottom rung of the camera department, at Marylebone Studios in London. For a time, he worked as a camera operator on a number of film productions, including \"The Sundowners\" and \"The Trials of Oscar Wilde\".",
"Robin Wood (critic) Robert Paul Wood (23 February 1931 – 18 December 2009) – known as Robin Wood – was an English film critic and educator who lived in Canada for much of his life. He wrote books on the works of Alfred Hitchcock, Howard Hawks, Satyajit Ray, Ingmar Bergman, Michelangelo Antonioni, and Arthur Penn. Wood was a longtime member - and co-founder, along with other colleagues at Toronto's York University - of the editorial collective which publishes \"CineACTION!\", a film theory magazine. Wood was also York professor emeritus of film. Wood was born in Richmond, Surrey, England. According to \"Contemporary Authors\" he attended Jesus College, Cambridge, where he was influenced by F. R. Leavis and A. P. Rossiter, and graduated in 1953 with a diploma in education. From 1954 to 1958, Wood taught in schools in both England and Sweden. After a year in Lille, France, teaching English, Wood returned to schools in England, and again in Sweden, where he met Aline Macdonald whom he married on 17 May 1960. (They had three children: Carin, Fiona, and Simon). Wood began to contribute to the film journal \"Movie\" in 1962, primarily on the strength of an essay he wrote for \"Cahiers du cinéma\" on Hitchcock's \"Psycho\". In 1965, he published his first book, \"Hitchcock's Films\" (New York: A. S. Barnes, 1965). From 1969 to 1972, under the aegis of Peter Harcourt, Wood was a lecturer in film at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. In September 1974, Wood and his wife divorced. Around this time, he also had a relationship with John Anderson, the dedicatee in at least one of Wood's books. Later he was to meet Richard Lippe, with whom he lived from 1977 until his death in 2009. From 1973 to 1977, Wood was a lecturer on film studies at the University of Warwick, Coventry, one of the first three such courses in Britain, which he founded with financial support from the British Film Institute. Here he met the future film scholar Andrew Britton, whose influence on Wood, by Wood's own account, was as great as Wood's on his student.",
"The Dove (1974 film) The Dove is a 1974 American biographical film directed by Charles Jarrott. The picture was produced by Gregory Peck, the third and last feature film he would produce. The drama is based on the real life experiences of Robin Lee Graham, a young man who spent five years sailing around the world as a single-handed sailor, starting when he was 16 years old. The story is adapted from \"Dove\" (1972), the book Graham co-wrote with Derek L.T. Gill about his seafaring experiences. The film tells of real-life Robin Lee Graham (Joseph Bottoms), a 16-year-old boy who sets sail in a 23-foot sloop in attempt to be the youngest person to circumnavigate the globe solo. He had planned the trip with his sailor father Lyle Graham (John McLiam) for years. On one of his stops after setting sail, he meets and falls in love with the gregarious and attractive Patti Ratteree (Deborah Raffin). After much banter, Patti decides to follow Graham throughout his long journey. She meets him in Fiji, Australia, South Africa, Panama, and the Galápagos Islands. As he travels around the globe, Graham experiences many adventures on the sea and land as he matures from a teenager to a young adult. Graham finds the trip a lonely experience, especially when the wind dies on him on the high seas. At one point he badly wants to quit the voyage but Patti (now his new wife) and his father encourage him to continue. At the end of the film, Graham sails into Los Angeles with crowds welcoming him home. Robin Lee Graham (born 1949) set out to sail around the world alone as a teenager in the summer of 1965. \"National Geographic Magazine\" carried the story in three issues from 1966 to 1970, and he co-wrote a book detailing his journey called \"Dove.\" Graham was just 16 when he set out from Southern California and headed west in his 24-foot Lapworth sailboat. He became married along the way, and after almost five years, sailed back into his home port. After he and his wife Patti - who he had met in Fiji – attended Stanford University, they moved to Montana and settled down. He collaborated with a writer on a book of the journey which became a best seller.",
"Jack Kerness Jack Kerness (January 30, 1911 – January 9, 2010) was an art director for five Hollywood studios over his 70-year career working with such directors as Alfred Hitchcock and others. He spent 37 years at Columbia Pictures and is noted for creating what is considered one of the best movie posters of all time. The poster is of Rita Hayworth starring in the title role of \"Gilda.\" Noted photographer Robert Coburn took the full-length color Kodachrome while Jack Kerness acted as the art director, creating a sultry image of Hayworth in a Jean Louis gown. Kerness died on January 9, 2010, in Canoga Park, California three weeks before his 99th birthday after a short stay at the Motion Picture Hospital. The cause of death was listed as natural causes.",
" He also directed a BBC series about Japan, \"In the Shadow of Fujisan\" (BBC One 1987 and BBC Four 2009). Other projects included \"One Pair of Eyes\" (1970) about the sculptor John Skeaping, \"Survival in Limbo\" (1976) starring Duncan Carse, and he was also the director/producer for BP's film of Donald Campbell's Land Speed Record attempt at Utah in 1960. Cobham's first book, \"A Sparrowhawk's Lament: How British Breeding Birds of Prey Are Faring\", was published in 2014; his next book, \"Bowland Beth: The Life of an English Hen Harrier\", a study of the persecution of the hen harrier on the grouse moors of the Forest of Bowland, was published in 2017. Cobham died of a stroke on 25 March 2018 at the age of 87. He is survived by his wife Liza Goddard, ex-president of the Hawk and Owl Trust, of which he was vice-president.",
"Robert Sparr Robert Sparr (September 10, 1915 – August 28, 1969) was an American screenwriter, television director, and film director. He died as a result of a plane crash in Colorado while scouting filming locations for the 1970 film \"Barquero\" with fellow \"Star Trek\" crew member, cameraman Gerald Finnerman. The pilot was also killed but Finnerman survived. The plane crash prompted a drawn-out legal battle involving Sparr's son for a wrongful death suit, which went to the United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.",
"Alain Corneau Alain Corneau (7 August 1943 – 30 August 2010) was a French film director and writer. Corneau was born in Meung-sur-Loire, Loiret. Originally a musician, he worked with Costa-Gavras as an assistant, which was also his first opportunity to work with the actor Yves Montand, with whom he would collaborate three times later in his career, including \"Police Python 357\" (1976) and \"La Menace\" (1977). He directed Gérard Depardieu in the screen adaptation of \"Tous les matins du monde\" in 1991. Corneau died in Paris on 30 August 2010 from cancer, aged 67 and was interred at Père Lachaise Cemetery.",
"Oliver Wood (cinematographer) Oliver Wood (born 2 April 1950) is an English cinematographer, known for his work on blockbuster action and comedy films such as \"Die Hard 2, Face/Off\", \"Freaky Friday, \", and the \"Bourne\" franchise. He has collaborated with directors like Paul Greengrass, John Woo, Renny Harlin, Ron Underwood, and Adam McKay, and was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Cinematography for \"The Bourne Ultimatum.\" Wood was born in London, England on 2 April 1950. At the age of 19, he moved to New York City. His first break came for director Leonard Kastle on cult crime film \"The Honeymoon Killers\" (1969) where he used available light to give the dark comedy a newsreel look. He shot numerous B-movies and independent films throughout the late 1970s and 1980s, frequently collaborating with cinematographers Joseph Mangine and Fred Murphy. He also worked as a camera operator on higher-profile projects including \"Body Rock\" (1984) and \"To Live and Die in L.A.\" (1985), both of which were shot by Robby Müller. He also became a prolific music video and commercial cinematographer, working for directors like Bob Giraldi and Rupert Wainwright. His big break came when he was director of photography for 53 episodes of stylish crime drama \"Miami Vice,\" serving as the series primary DP between 1987 and 1989. His work on the series caught the attention of producers, enabling him to work on big-budget Hollywood films including \"Die Hard 2\" (1990), \"Face/Off\" (1997), \"U-571\" (2000) \"Fantastic Four\" (2005), and \"\" (2013). He was the original director of photography on the swashbuckling action film \"Cutthroat Island\", but suffered an on-set injury and was replaced by Peter Levy. He also shot the Bourne Trilogy, where he worked with director Paul Greengrass to produce a spontaneous, naturalistic effect, often using multiple cameras, frequently handheld, citing films such as \"The Battle of Algiers\" as an influence. He was nominated for a BAFTA for \"The Bourne Ultimatum\" (2007).",
"Boris Sagal Boris Sagal (October 18, 1923 – May 22, 1981) was an American television and film director. Born in Yekaterinoslav, Ukrainian SSR (now known as Dnipro, Ukraine) to a Ukrainian-Jewish family, Sagal immigrated to the United States. Sagal's TV credits include directing episodes of \"The Twilight Zone\", \"T.H.E. Cat\", \"Alfred Hitchcock Presents\", \"Night Gallery\", \"Columbo: Candidate for Crime\", \"Peter Gunn\", and \"The Man from U.N.C.L.E.\". He also directed the 1972 television adaptation of Percy MacKaye's play \"The Scarecrow\", for PBS. He was nominated for four Primetime Emmy Awards for his direction of the miniseries \"Rich Man, Poor Man\" and, posthumously, \"Masada\". Sagal directed the 1971 science fiction film \"The Omega Man\", starring Charlton Heston in the lead role, and \"The Dream Makers\". There is a directing fellowship in his name at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in Massachusetts. Shortly before his death, Sagal's miniseries \"Masada\" aired on ABC. Sagal was Ukrainian-Jewish. He was the father of Katey, Joey, David, Jean and Liz with his first wife, Sara Zwilling, who died in 1975. Norman Lear, who was a friend of Boris and was also made godfather to Katey, introduced Boris and Sara when Sara was his script supervisor while he wrote for \"The Martin and Lewis Show\", as both Katey and Norman acknowledged in 2016. His second wife was Marge Champion, to whom he was married from January 1, 1977, until his death. Sagal was killed in an accident during production of the miniseries \"World War III\", when he was partially decapitated by walking into the tail rotor blades of a helicopter in the parking lot of the Timberline Lodge in Oregon. An investigation revealed that he turned the wrong way after exiting the helicopter. He died five hours later in a Portland hospital. He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park.",
"Ray Selfe Ray Selfe was an English film director, producer, screenwriter, editor, actor and movie theatre owner. Selfe was born into a working-class family in Croydon, Surrey and the age of ten found a passion for film. Selfe was later expelled from Pitman's College at the age of fourteen and became a projectionist at a local movie theatre and ran a mobile cinema, taking film shows to youth clubs. In 1950, he had a brief national service in the RAF and was later discharged on medical grounds. As a filmmaker, Selfe later went on to work on such films as \"Four Dimensions of Greta\" (1972), \"White Cargo\" (1973), \"Emmanuelle in Soho\" (1981) and \"Don't Open till Christmas\" (1984). During Selfe's later years, he gained respect within the industry as a private film archive curator. Selfe died of a heart attack at age 69."
] |
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[
"Tehran"
] |
When did the director of film The Rainmaker (1926 Film) die?
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The Rainmaker (1926 film) The Rainmaker is a lost 1926 American drama silent film directed by Clarence G. Badger and written by Gerald Beaumont, Louis D. Lighton and Hope Loring. The film stars William Collier, Jr., Georgia Hale, Ernest Torrence, Brandon Hurst, Joseph J. Dowling and Tom Wilson. The film was released on May 10, 1926, by Paramount Pictures.
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[
"Earle Rodney Earle Rodney (4 June 1888 – 16 December 1932) was a Canadian screenwriter, actor, and film director. He wrote for more than 100 films between 1926 and 1947 (posthumous credit). He also acted in 69 films between 1915 and 1929, often paired with Dorothy Devore. He was born in Toronto, and died in Los Angeles, California from pneumonia.",
"Henry, the Rainmaker Henry, the Rainmaker is a 1949 American comedy film directed by Jean Yarbrough and written by Lane Beauchamp. The film stars Raymond Walburn, Walter Catlett, William Tracy, Mary Stuart, Barbara Brown and Gary Gray. The film was released on February 13, 1949, by Monogram Pictures.",
"Millionaires (film) Millionaires is a lost 1926 American comedy film directed by Herman C. Raymaker and written by Edward Clark, C. Graham Baker and Raymond L. Schrock. It is based on the 1923 novel \"The Inevitable Millionaires\" by E. Phillips Oppenheim. The film stars George Sidney, Louise Fazenda, Vera Gordon, Nat Carr, Helene Costello and Arthur Lubin. The film was released by Warner Bros. on October 1, 1926. The film version switched the novel's setting from London to New York's East Side where a struggling Jewish tailor suddenly makes a fortune in oil stock and attempts to move up in the world socially with his newfound wealth.",
"The Fighting Peacemaker The Fighting Peacemaker is a 1926 American silent Western film directed by Clifford Smith and starring Jack Hoxie, Lola Todd and Ted Oliver.",
"Desert Dust Desert Dust is a 1927 American silent Western film directed by William Wyler and starring Ted Wells, Lotus Thompson and Bruce Gordon. The film's sets were designed by the art director David S. Garber.",
"Butterflies in the Rain Butterflies in the Rain is a 1926 American silent romantic comedy film directed by Edward Sloman and starring Laura La Plante, James Kirkwood and Dorothy Cumming. The film is set in England and is based on a novel by the British writer Andrew Soutar. Tina Carteret, the daughter of wealthy old English family, is attracted to feminist ideas about the freedom of the modern woman and mixed with a bohemian set of friends. When she encounters the stuffy owner of the neighbouring estate John Humphries she at first ridicules him, but later finds herself falling in love. They marry but she continues to associate with her old bohemian set, leading to her being blackmailed while on holiday in Spain.",
"Lazy Lightning Lazy Lightning is a 1926 American silent Western film directed by William Wyler and starring Art Acord, Fay Wray and Robert Gordon.",
"The Rainmaker (play) The Rainmaker is a play written by N. Richard Nash in the early 1950s. The play opened on October 28, 1954, at the Cort Theatre in New York City, and ran for 125 performances. It was directed by Joseph Anthony and produced by \"Ethel Linder Reiner\". The play was translated into more than 40 languages and made into the 1956 film \"The Rainmaker\", starring Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn. The story was also made into a Broadway musical, \"110 in the Shade\". The play was revived on Broadway in 1999–2000 starring Woody Harrelson and Jayne Atkinson, who was nominated for the 2000 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play. Set in a drought-ridden rural town in the West in Depression-era America, the play tells the story of a pivotal hot summer day in the life of spinsterish Lizzie Curry. Lizzie keeps house for her father and two brothers on the family cattle ranch. She has just returned from a trip to visit pseudo-cousins (all male), which was undertaken with the failed expectation that she would find a husband. As their farm languishes under the devastating drought, Lizzie's family worries about her marriage prospects more than about their dying cattle. A charming confidence trickster named Starbuck arrives and promises to bring rain in exchange for $100. His arrival sets off a series of events that enable Lizzie to see herself in a new light. The reviews called the play \"Stirring\" (\"Newsday\"), \"captivating\" (\"The New York Times\"), \"wonderfully funny\" (\"New York Daily News\"), and a \"classic\" (\"Chicago Sun-Times\") The play was also the inspiration for an indian movie, from 1990s, directed by Amol Palekar named Thodasa Roomani Ho Jaayen, which also got wide positive reviews by critics and was incorporated into management studies courses on behavioural sciences in India, due to its grasp on human emotions.",
"A Hero of the Big Snows A Hero of the Big Snows is a 1926 American silent adventure film directed by Herman C. Raymaker and written by Ewart Adamson. The film stars Rin Tin Tin, Alice Calhoun, Don Alvarado, Leo Willis and Mary Jane Milliken. The film was released by Warner Bros. on July 24, 1926. As July 2016, according to the Library of Congress, the film survives at Archives Françaises du film du CNC.",
"The Earth Woman The Earth Woman is a 1926 American silent drama film directed by Walter Lang. The film is considered to be lost."
] |
[] |
[
"June 17, 1964"
] |
Who was born later, Leoul Neeraio or Ingrid Meldahl?
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Leoul Neeraio Leoul Neeraio (born 24 November 1959) is an Ethiopian boxer. He competed in the men's featherweight event at the 1980 Summer Olympics.
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[
"Ingrid Neel Ingrid Neel (born June 16, 1998) is an American tennis player. She has won one doubles title on the WTA Tour with two singles and ten doubles titles on the ITF Circuit. On 8 June 2015, she achieved a career-high singles ranking of world No. 501. On 17 May 2021, she peaked at No. 105 in the WTA doubles rankings. Neel was awarded a wildcard into the women's doubles tournament of the 2015 US Open alongside Tornado Alicia Black. In April 2021, she won her first WTA title in her career at the 2021 Copa Colsanitas in Bogota, partnering with French player Elixane Lechemia defeating the third seeded pair of Buzarnescu/Friedsam.",
"Susanne Theel Susanne Theel (born 11 June 1963) is a German sailor. She competed in the women's 470 event at the 1988 Summer Olympics.",
"Erika von Heiland Erika von Heiland (born December 24, 1965) is an American badminton player, born in the Philippines. She competed in women's singles at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, and in singles and doubles at the 1996 Summer Olympics.",
"Ingrid of Denmark Ingrid of Denmark may refer to:",
"Paul H. Raihle Paul H. Raihle (May 13, 1892 in Melrose, Minnesota – June 6, 1963) was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly. He served in the military during World War I and attended the University of Paris. His wife, Sylvia Havre Raihle, would also be a member of the Assembly. They had five children. Raihle was elected to the Assembly in 1924. He was a Republican.",
"Raija Sollamo Raija Tellervo Sollamo (\"née\" Pursula; born December 9, 1942 in Padasjoki) is a Finnish theologian and professor emerita of Biblical Languages in the Faculty of Theology, University of Helsinki. She was the first female professor in the field of theology in Finland. Between 1998 and 2003, Sollamo was vice-rector of the University of Helsinki, thereby becoming the first female vice-rector in Finland. From 2007 to 2010, she was president of The International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament (IOSOT). Sollamo has received numerous awards and accolades: the Academy of Finland Doctoral Thesis Award (1980), the University of Helsinki Eino Kaila Award (1992), elected Woman of the Year (social influence) by the Finnish business and Professional Women Association (1993), the Maikki Friberg Equality Prize (1996), and the Alfred Kordelin Foundation Award (2014). Since 2002, she is an honorary member of the Finnish Exegetical Society and since 2006 a member of the Finnish Academy of Sciences.",
"Leigh-Ann Naidoo Leigh-Ann Naidoo (born 12 July 1976 in Durban) is a South African beach volleyball player. Naidoo began her career at the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour in 1999 attending only the Acapulco Open alongside Alena Schurkova. Already with partner Julia Willand she attended more stages in the 2004 season culminating with the participation in the 2004 Summer Olympics, in Athens. They lost all three matches in the group stage and did not advance to the medal round. Naidoo currently resides in Cape Town and has been with her partner, Kelly Gillespie, since 2003. She is openly gay and in 2006 became an ambassador and keynote speaker of the Gay Games, in Chicago. Naidoo was is a Palestinian solidarity activist and in 2016 participated in the Women's Boat to Gaza, an attempt to break the Israel maritime blockade of Hamas controlled Gaza. She was detained by Israeli authorities, processed and returned to South Africa within a day.",
"Ingrid Bjørnov Ingrid Bjørnov (born 5 December 1963) is a Norwegian singer, songwriter, keyboard player, composer and text writer. Her debut album \"Første Akt\" from 1980 with the duo Dollie (together with Benedicte Adrian) was awarded Spellemannprisen, and the duo represented Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 1984. She spent seven years with the musical \"Which Witch\", which premiered in 1987. Among her later musicals is \"Markus og Julie\" from 2007, with text by Klaus Hagerup, staged at Trøndelag Teater. Among her books are \"Ingrid Bjørnovs pianobok\" from 2005 and \"Lakse-enka – nødskrik fra en tørrflue\" from 2007. She was awarded the Leonard Statuette in 2013.",
"Marita Ruoho Marita Ruoho (born 13 August 1949) is a Finnish orienteering competitor and World champion. She won a gold medal at the 1978 World Orienteering Championships in Kongsberg with the Finnish relay team. She received a silver medal in 1981 (Thun).",
"Buttedahl Buttedahl is a Norwegian surname. Notable people with this surname include:"
] |
[] |
[
"Leoul Neeraio"
] |
Are director of film The Glass Cell (Film) and director of film Hunger (1966 Film) from the same country?
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Hunger (1966 film) Hunger (, ) is a 1966 black-and-white drama film directed by Denmark's Henning Carlsen, starring Swedish actor Per Oscarsson, and based upon the novel "Hunger" by Norwegian Nobel Prize-winning author Knut Hamsun. Filmed on location in Oslo, it was the first film produced as a cooperative effort among the three Scandinavian countries. With its stark focus on a life of poverty and desperation, the film is considered a masterpiece of social realism. Film historians suggest it was the first Danish film to gain serious international attention since the work of Carl Theodor Dreyer. It is one of the ten films listed in Denmark's cultural canon by the Danish Ministry of Culture. In 1890 Kristiania (Oslo), an impoverished and lonely writer named Pontus (Per Oscarsson) comes to the city from the country. He stands on a bridge, overlooking running water, writing but clearly starving. He visits a pawnbroker several times. He sells his waistcoat for a few cents, then gives the money to a beggar. Other money that falls into his hands he also gives away. He has written an article that a newspaper editor (Henki Kolstad) agrees to publish if he makes some corrections, but Pontus is too proud to accept an advance when offered, so he leaves elated but still hungry. He begs a bone for his fictitious dog, which he gnaws on secretly in an alley. He often has the chance to make things better for himself, but his pride gets in the way, such as when he declines the much-needed help of a worried friend. When he is unable to pay his rent, the landlady (Else Heiberg) evicts him. Another landlady shortly does the same. Hunger is constantly overwhelming Pontus and he drifts between hallucination and reality while struggling to survive. He suffers humiliations which lead him to the edge of insanity. He applies for an accounting job but is rejected, and fails a physical exam to be a fireman because he wears glasses. One hallucination revolves around Ylajali (Gunnel Lindblom), an apparently refined woman he has met on the street. Despite their mutual flirtations, nothing ever evolves between them. On a sudden impulse, Pontus takes a job as a crew member on an outbound freighter. His destination is unknown.
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[
"Thirst (1961 film) Thirst () is a 1961 Romanian drama film directed by Mircea Drăgan and Mihai Iacob. It was entered into the 2nd Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Silver Prize.",
"The Cell (play) The Cell is an Australian play by Robert Wales. The setting is in a school for delinquent girls. The play debuted in 1966. The play was published in 1971. It was adapted for television by the ABC in 1968, directed by John Croyston, and broadcast as part of the Seek and Destroy series. That was a short lived anthology series which consisted of four BBC plays and one Australian play - \"The Cell\" was the Australian play. Australian TV drama was relatively rare at the time. \"The Cell\" was made when Australian TV stations were investing less in TV plays and more in serials. Sister Catherine is in charge of a school for delinquent girls. She resents being passed over as Mother Superior of the Convent. When the new Mother Superior, Mother Denis, arrives, there is a clash of personalities between the two. This is heightened when Sister Catherine sides with a young nun, Sister Lenora, who has broken the discipline of the convent. When the Mother Superior dies, Sister Catherine, who was in charge of the convent infirmary and drugs, comes under suspicion. Croyston decided to film the action all in one take \"to enable the cast to hold the edge of emotional distraction\". The \"Sydney Morning Herald\" called the production \"a victory for the local industry\". The same reviewer later called it one of the best TV plays of the year saying \"for writing and execution this play had class, high class.\" It was also adapted for television by the BBC in England as \"A Swallow's Nest\" in 1968.",
"Maria Giese Maria Giese is an American feature film director and screenwriter. A member of the Directors Guild of America, and an activist for parity for women directors in Hollywood, she writes and lectures about the under-representation of women filmmakers in the United States. She has an associate degree from Bard College at Simon's Rock, a bachelor's degree from Wellesley College and a Masters of Fine Arts in film directing from the University of California, Los Angeles's Graduate School of Film and Technology. While at UCLA, she wrote, directed, and produced the student film A Dry Heat, for which she won a CINE Golden Eagle Award. Giese wrote and directed the 1996 British film \"When Saturday Comes\", produced by Capitol Films, UK, starring Sean Bean, Pete Postlethwaite, and Emily Lloyd. She also wrote, directed, and co-produced \"Hunger\", based on Knut Hamsun's 1890 existentialist novel of the same title. \"Hunger\" was the first digital film made based on a classic work of literature. It starred Joseph Culp and Robert Culp and received two Best Film Awards and a Best Underground Film award. Giese's other directing work includes the short doc \"A Lotta Lambada\" and the short film \"A Dry Heat\", which won a UCLA Spotlight award, a Cine Golden Eagle, and was a finalist for the 1991 Student Academy Awards. She also directed the short film \"Take Your Seat\" (aka \"Jewish Water\") which also won a Cine Golden Eagle, and an episode of the TV sitcom \"Solo En America\" for Columbia TriStar. She did uncredited rewrites on the 1996 film \"North Star\". She has taught film & TV production at UCLA Extension, lectures regularly, and writes extensively. Giese is an active member of the Directors Guild of America since 1999 and currently serves as the Women's DGA Director Category Rep. Giese and her successful activism for women directors in US entertainment media are the subject of two feature documentary films. \"This Changes Everything\" (2019) , directed by Tom Donahue, starring Geena Davis and Maria Giese, and featuring Meryl Streep, Shonda Rhimes, Natalie Portman, and Reese Witherspoon was released worldwide in 2019 after premiering at Toronto International Film Festival in 2018 .",
"Hunger (1973 film) Hunger/La Faim is a 1973 animated short film produced by the National Film Board of Canada. It was directed by Peter Foldes and is one of the first computer animation films. The story, told without words, is a morality tale about greed and gluttony in contemporary society. Peter Foldes worked in collaboration with the National Research Council's Division of Radio and Electrical Engineering's Data Systems Group, who decided to develop a computer animation application in 1969. NRC scientist Nestor Burtnyk had heard an animator from Disney explain the traditional animation process, where a head animator draws the key cels and assistants draw the fill in pictures. The work of the artist's assistant seemed to Burtnyk to be the ideal demonstration vehicle for computer animation and within a year he programmed a \"key frame animation\" package to create animated sequences from key frames. The NFB in Montreal was contacted so that artists could experiment with computer animation. Foldes made a 1971 experimental film involving freehand drawings called \"Metadata\". This was followed by \"Hunger\", which took him and his NRC partners a year and a half to make. Awards for \"Hunger\" included a Special Jury Prize at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival, a BAFTA Award for Best Animation Film, a Golden Sheaf Award for Best Animation at the Yorkton Film Festival, and a Silver Hugo at the Chicago International Film Festival. The film was also nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film at the 47th Academy Awards.",
"István Szabó István Szabó (; born 18 February 1938) is a Hungarian film director, screenwriter, and opera director. Szabó is one of the most notable Hungarian filmmakers and one who has been best known outside the Hungarian-speaking world since the late 1960s. István Szabó's films are based on the tradition of the European auteurism that represent many aspects of the political and psychological conflicts of Central Europe's recent history often inspired by his own personal biography. He made his debut as a student in 1959, creating a short film at the Academy of Drama and Film in Budapest, and his first feature film was released in 1964. He achieved his greatest international success with \"Mephisto\" (1981) for which he was awarded an Oscar prize in the best foreign language film category. Since then, most of Szabó's films have been international co-productions made in a variety of languages. His films are shot in European locations. However, he continues to make films in Hungarian, and even in his international co-productions he prefers to choose Hungary for filming locations, relying on Hungarian talents in the making. In 2006, Szabó stirred controversy when a weekly Hungarian magazine called Élet és Irodalom (Life and Literature in English) published an article about that he had been an informant to the communist regime's secret service. Born to Mária Szabó (née Vita) and István Szabó who was a doctor, in Budapest. The father's side of his family had a long tradition of choosing a career in medicine. His family is of Jewish origin that converted to catholicism. Even so, the Arrow Cross Party still considered them Jews before the end of WW II. Regent Miklós Horthy declared that Hungary had quit the war, seeking an armistice with belligerent countries. As a result, the Arrow Cross Party rose to power with the support of the Nazi Germany, and his family had to split up and take refuge to escape from persecution. Szabó made it through the war, hiding in an orphanage, but his father died of diphtheria shortly after the German defeat. Later on, his films draw heavily on these memories of his childhood.",
"Anja Breien Anja Breien (born 12 July 1940) is a Norwegian film director and screenwriter. One of the leading figures of the Norwegian film industry, and one of the first women to rise to prominence as a writer-director in Norway, Breien's body of work in fiction and documentary explores social and political issues, notably women's rights within the context of Norwegian society. After completing her studies in French at the University of Oslo, Breien went on to graduate from the French film school L'Institut des hautes études cinématographiques (IDHEC) in 1964. She began working in film as a script supervisor on the Nils R. Müller film \"Det Store Varpet\" in 1961. She also worked as an assistant director on \"Hunger\" (\"Sult\") (1966), directed by Henning Carlsen and based on the novel by Knut Hamsun. Breien's first film as a director and screenwriter was a short in 1967 titled \"Growing Up\", followed by her short documentary \"17. May – A Film about Rituals\" (\"17. Mai – En film om ritualer)\" (1969), a satirical look at the celebration of the Norwegian National Day. Her first feature-length film was \"Rape\" (\"Voldtekt\"), released in 1971. \"Rape\" was praised by critics, but also sparked debate due to its criticism of the Norwegian criminal justice system. Breien subsequently wrote and directed \"Wives\" (\"Hustruer\") (1975), which became a box-office success and received critical acclaim throughout Scandinavia. \"Wives\" was inspired as a feminist response to John Cassavetes' \"Husbands\" (1972), and follows three women in their thirties who temporarily abandon their domestic responsibilities for a day of freedom. Breien went on to write and direct two sequels, \"Wives - Ten Years After\" (\"Hustruer 10 År Etter\") (1985) and \"Wives III\" (\"Hustruer 20 År Etter\") (1996), featuring the same characters ten and twenty years later. In 1981's \"Witch Hunt\" (\"Forfølgelsen\"), Breien again critiqued her home country's patriarchal society through the story of a woman accused of witchcraft in 1630s western Norway.",
"Philippe Arthuys Philippe Arthuys (22 November 1928 – 6 January 2010) was a French composer and film director. He worked on over 20 films between 1959 and 1997. His 1965 film \"The Glass Cage\" was entered into the 4th Moscow International Film Festival.",
"Luke Seomore Luke Seomore is an English film director, and musician, part of a critically acclaimed filmmaking duo working alongside English director Joseph Bull. He often performs and writes under the moniker ‘Blessed are the Hearts that Bend'. Seomore's work includes music videos, Feature films, television and art installations. They write and direct their films together, while Seomore composes original soundtracks. Their debut feature \"Blood Cells\" premiered at 71st Venice International Film Festival in 2014. Their feature documentary \"Isolation\" premiered at Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2009. The film received numerous positive reviews, \"The Guardian\" wrote that Isolation was 'a beautifully attuned piece of work' while \"Sight and Sound\" wrote 'The film replicates this chaos by introducing a potent clash of poetry and magic realism in between the naturalistic interviews.' and Little White Lies proclaimed it was one of the three best British films at EIFF, describing the documentary had a 'visually stunning aesthetic that is absolutely riveting, a vital and important documentary that stays with you long after it has finished'. The film also caught the attention of English film director Ken Loach, who described the film as 'important document of the experiences of ex-soldiers through the eyes of someone who knows.’ \"Dazed & Confused\" magazine commissioned a discussion between Seomore and Loach, to celebrate the release of Route Irish. Seomore composed the film's entire score and a live soundtrack version of the film premiered at Branchange Film festival in Jersey. After Jersey the film backed by live score (additional musicians Michael Garrad and David Stephens) sold out two dates at The Roundhouse and one date at the Barbican. In July 2010 Picturehouse Cinemas released Isolation nationwide. The film toured throughout the UK, a live score was performed at each screening by Seomore alongside musicians Michael Garrad and David Stephens. The duo have produced numerous music videos and documentaries for such acts as, Four Tet, Steve Reid, Tricky (who described them as 'genius'), Liquid Liquid, Wild Beasts (shot in a blizzard, where Seomore contracted frostbite), Duffy, British Sea Power and The Last Shadow Puppets whom Alex Turner and Miles Kane hired to document the making of their album 'Age of the understatement'",
"Louis van Gasteren Louis Alphonse van Gasteren (20 November 1922 – 10 May 2016) was a Dutch film director, film producer, and artist. He was born in Amsterdam. He is the son of actor Louis van Gasteren Sr. and singer Elise Menagé Challa, and the brother of actress Josephine van Gasteren. Van Gasteren trained as an electrician. He worked for the Dutch Polygoon newsreel company in Haarlem, Netherlands in 1949. In 1951 he started his own film production company \"Spectrum Film\". He made his debut with \"Brown Gold\", a film about cocoa and chocolate, in 1952. In 1983 Van Gasteren won the Dutch Film Critics Award for best documentary as well as the Golden Calf for best picture for \"\" (\"Hans, Life Before Death\"). He received the Golden Calf a second time in 2003 for his documentary \"The Price of Survival\". Van Gasteren was a visiting professor in the United States at UCLA and Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University. Van Gasteren lived in Amsterdam and was married to Joke Meerman. At the end of his life he was the oldest active filmmaker in the Netherlands. During the Second World War Van Gasteren was convicted to four years for killing Walter Oettinger, a German Jew in hiding. After the war Van Gasteren was pardoned, but when he claimed a special pension for resistance fighters, this was denied on the grounds that the killing of Oettinger had not been an act of resistance. A partial list:",
"Hunger (1986 film) Hunger is a 1986 Australian TV film about a Romanian refugee who settles in Australia. Nowra wrote the film for Jan Chapman following their successful collaboration on \"Displaced Persons\". He says the subject matter was close to Chapman's heart, and the producer thought it would be a romantic story. However the more research Nowra did, the less romantic he felt the story was and he had a deal of trouble writing it as a love story. He felt swamped with the research and did not like the real life men on whom the story was based. Nowra was not satisfied with the final script, although he said the director did the best he could. Nowra also plays a support role."
] |
[] |
[
"no"
] |
Are Lapar Ali Baba Mohammadi and Vazireh located in the same country?
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Vaziri, Iran Vaziri () may refer to:
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[
"Maaf Vaziri Maaf Vaziri (, also Romanized as Ma‘āf Vazīrī; also known as Armanī Maḩalleh and Ma‘āf) is a village in Ziabar Rural District, in the Central District of Sowme'eh Sara County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 137, in 37 families.",
"Vazir, Iran Vazir (, also Romanized as Vazīr) is a village in Qaratureh Rural District, in the Central District of Divandarreh County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 454, in 94 families. The village is populated by Kurds.",
"Vazirabad, Markazi Vazirabad (, also Romanized as Vazīrābād and Wazīrābād) is a village in Mashhad-e Miqan Rural District, in the Central District of Arak County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 254, in 67 families.",
"Vazeyak Vazeyak (, also Romanized as Vāzeyak) is a village in Harazpey-ye Shomali Rural District, Sorkhrud District, Mahmudabad County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 504, in 131 families.",
"Vazirabad, Fars Vazirabad (, also Romanized as Vazīrābād; also known as Khosrowābād) is a village in Qarah Bagh Rural District, in the Central District of Shiraz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,977, in 653 families.",
"Vazirabad, West Azerbaijan Vazirabad (, also Romanized as Vazīrābād) is a village in Bakeshluchay Rural District, in the Central District of Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 91, in 28 families.",
"Vazirabad Vazirabad or Wazirabad () may refer to:",
"Deh Vazir Deh Vazir (, also Romanized as Deh Vazīr; also known as Deh-e Zīr) is a village in Qatruyeh Rural District, Qatruyeh District, Neyriz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 12, in 5 families.",
"Vazirabad, Ilam Vazirabad (, also Romanized as Vazīrābād) is a village in Zarrin Dasht Rural District, in the Central District of Darreh Shahr County, Ilam Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 603, in 117 families. The village is populated by Kurds.",
"Vazi Vazi (, also Romanized as Vāzī) is a village in Mazu Rural District, Alvar-e Garmsiri District, Andimeshk County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 25, in 4 families."
] |
[] |
[
"yes"
] |
Do both The Crimson Key and Hands Up (1921 Film) films have the directors from the same country?
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Hands Up (1921 film) Hands Up (German:Hände hoch) is a 1921 German silent film directed by Wolfgang Neff.
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[
"The Crimson Circle (1922 film) The Crimson Circle is a 1922 British silent crime film directed by George Ridgwell and starring Clifton Boyne, Fred Groves and Robert English. The film was an adaptation of the 1922 novel \"The Crimson Circle\" by Edgar Wallace. A German-British version of novel, \"The Crimson Circle\" (1929), was filmed in both a silent and Phonofilm sound-on-film version. Police battle against a gang of blackmailers known as The Crimson Circle.",
"Anthony Nelson Keys Anthony Nelson Keys (13 November 1911 – 19 March 1985) was a British film producer, best known of his work with Hammer Film Productions. His father was Nelson Keys and his brother John Paddy Carstairs.",
"The Crimson City The Crimson City (1928) is an American silent drama film produced by Warner Bros. written by Anthony Coldeway and directed by Archie Mayo. Actors include Myrna Loy, Anna May Wong, Sōjin Kamiyama, John Miljan, Leila Hyams and Richard Tucker. The film was released with a Vitaphone soundtrack with a music score and sound effects. The film was released by Warner Brothers Pictures on April 7, 1928. The story centers on an Asian woman named Onoto (Loy), who is rescued from slavery by a fugitive of European ancestry named Gregory Kent (Miljan). They fall in love, but prevailing mores about race doom the romance. Onoto leaves Kent so that he may marry another (Hyams). The only known surviving copy is kept at the Museo del Cine Pablo Ducros Hicken in Buenos Aires, Argentina. A trailer for this film survives among the holdings of the Library of Congress.",
"Hands Up! (2003 film) Hands Up! is a 2003 Chinese historical comedy film directed and written by Feng Xiaoning, and produced by Han Sanping. The film stars Pan Changjiang, Guo Da, and Liu Wei. It based on the Second Sino-Japanese War. The film took place in Panyan Park of Xinxiang city, Henan province.",
"The Key of the World The Key of the World is a 1918 British silent romance film direcred by J.L.V. Leigh and starring Eileen Molyneux, Heather Thatcher and Eric Harrison. It was made by British Gaumont at Lime Grove Studios in Shepherd's Bush. It was based on a novel by Dorin Craig.",
"The Crimson Runner The Crimson Runner is a 1925 American silent drama film directed by Tom Forman and starring Priscilla Dean, Bernard Siegel, and Alan Hale. As described in a film magazine review, Bianca Schreber is a poor girl whose father was wounded while in the Austrian Army during World War I. She is obliged to steal to keep from starving. With many poor people in want in her town, she is brought to the decision to become an outlaw for the purpose of feeding the hungry. Police pursue her until she takes refuge in the home of a noble with whom she is in love. Gregory, who has faked a title and grafted to obtain his government position, discovers Bianca in his home but she escapes. When Gregory holds a masquerade ball, she hides behind a mask and wins his ardor. Infatuated with her, he takes her to his chamber and attacks her. The guests break down the door to find them struggling. Gregory leaps to his death from a window. The noble replaces Gregory in his position and obtains a pardon for the young woman, whom he marries. A complete copy of \"The Crimson Runner\" is located in the collection of Lobster Films in Paris.",
"The Hands of Nara The Hands of Nara is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by Harry Garson and starring Clara Kimball Young, Elliott Dexter and Vernon Steele. It is based on the novel of the same title by Richard Washburn Child.",
"Hands Up (serial) Hands Up is a lost 1918 American adventure film serial directed by Louis J. Gasnier and James W. Horne. The serial was Ruth Roland's breakthrough role. A newspaperwoman finds trouble aplenty when an Inca tribe believes her to be the reincarnation of their long-lost princess. The serial consisted of fifteen episodes, released from August 18 to November 24, 1918: Like many American films of the time, the film serial \"Hands Up\" was subject to restrictions and cuts by city and state film censorship boards. The Chicago Board of Censors required a cut in Chapter 1, Reel 3, of the slugging of a man; in Chapter 2, Reel 4, slugging man; in Chapter 3, Reel 1, Indian slugging man, masked man shooting Indian at barred window, Reel 2, shooting scene in which man falls, taking belt from ground, near view of man aiming gun at horseman and his falling off horse; Chapter 5, Reel 1, the two intertitles \"I won her fair. She belongs to me now\" and \"She's mine again\", the stabbing of the man, two scenes of Indian bending young woman back on table, Reel 2, slugging the engineer; Chapter 6, Reel 1, binding an Indian woman to telegraph pole and the young woman sitting on a bar; Chapter 8, Reel 1, slugging the man in the cabin, Reel 2, stabbing the man, binding the young woman, two scenes of tying the woman to the horse, and two scenes of dragging the woman; Chapter 9, Reel 1, first hula dance scene, young woman sitting at bar, young woman at table with arm around Mexican man's neck, four saloon fight scenes, Reel 2, first and third scene of man choking woman in bedroom; Chapter 11, Reel 1, the shooting of the old man and, Reel 2, binding of the young woman and old man; Chapter 12, Reel 2, two scenes of shooting and men falling; Chapter 13, Reel 1, the slugging of the guard at the door, and, Reel 2, the slugging of the man on the coach; and, Chapter 14, Reel 2, the shooting by Killman, the shooting of Killman, and the closeup of a choking scene.",
"Hearts Up Hearts Up is a 1921 American Silent Western film directed by Val Paul and starring Harry Carey. As summarized in a film publication, Jim Drew (Millett), who is a squaw man (a disparaging term for a white man with an Indian wife), receives word that his wife whom he had long deserted had died and that his daughter was coming by train to live with him. Jim is injured when his cabin catches fire, and dies just as David Brent (Carey) arrives to repay a debt of gratitude. Reading the girl's letter stating that she will meet her father in San Francisco, David decides to meet the girl and tell her of her father's death. But when Lorelei (Golden) arrives, she mistakes David for her father and is so happy with her beautiful home that David cannot bring himself to tell her the truth. She met Gordon Swayne (Braidwood), a surveyor, on the train and retains his friendship, which makes David unhappy. When Gordon discovers that David is not Lorelei's father, he threatens him. When Lorelei learns the truth, David decides to go away and leave the girl as mistress of the cabin. Lorelei stops him and tells him she loves him only. While a review found the film pleasing, it noted the age difference between the older Carey and his love interest Golden, who was 16 years old during filming.",
"The Key (1934 film) The Key is a 1934 American Pre-Code film directed by Michael Curtiz. It was re-issued as \"High Peril\" (pre-release title \"Sue of Fury\") in 1960. The story, concerning a love triangle, is set during the Irish War of Independence. Captain Bill Tennant (William Powell) is a British officer stationed in Dublin in 1920. Tennant had a month long tryst with Norah, the wife of his friend, British intelligence officer Captain Andrew Kerr, three years ago before Norah and Andy met. Tennant's first assignment is to capture a notorious Sinn Féin member, Peadar Conlan. His first attempt is a failure, and Kerr is ordered to relieve Tennant overnight. Norah is frightened by his assignment and begs her husband not to go. After Kerr leaves, we see a flashback to when Tennant and Norah were involved, several years before. Kerr leads the search for Conlan. He finds and captures him. When he arrives home, very late, Norah is still up and still dressed. Tennant is also there and insists “We've got to tell him.” Norah says that is for her to do, sends Tennant away. and tells her husband “Yes.” She reminds her husband that he has always known that there had been someone else. That someone was Tennant, and the passion she thought long past has flared up at this meeting. Kerr rushes out, despite her pleadings that he'll be killed; he says that might solve both their problems. Tennant sees him leave and intercepts a distraught Norah to ask where Kerr is headed; Bill promises to find him. Conlan is sentenced to hang by the British military. Shortly after, Kerr is spotted and followed to a pub where he is ambushed and abducted by men and women waiting in the alley. When Tennant arrives at the military post the next morning, he finds Norah waiting there for news of her husband. She tells him that a part of her went out the door with Kerr. Her love for Tennant was a romantic dream: He's \"just three years too late.” A messenger arrives from Sinn Féin. He claims to be a peacemaker, and tells the general that Kerr will be released if Conlan is. But the general tells him Conlan will be hanged at 6:00 a.m. the next morning."
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[
"no"
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Are Takht-e Chenar and Uchpili both located in the same country?
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Uchpili Uchpili () is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Uchpilinsky Selsoviet, Dyurtyulinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 457 as of 2010. There are 8 streets. Uchpili is located 14 km southeast of Dyurtyuli (the district's administrative centre) by road. Ayukashevo is the nearest rural locality.
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[
"Uchhri railway station Uchhri railway station () is located in Pakistan.",
"Chenar, Angut-e Gharbi Chenar (, also Romanized as Chenār) is a village in Angut-e Gharbi Rural District, Anguti District, Germi County, Ardabil Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 74, in 16 families.",
"Owch Gol Owch Gol (, also Romanized as Ūchgol) is a village in Siyah Mansur Rural District, in the Central District of Bijar County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 122, in 22 families. The village is populated by Azerbaijanis.",
"Takht, Golestan Takht () is a village in Chehel Chay Rural District, in the Central District of Minudasht County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 748, in 209 families.",
"Chenar (39°07′ N 47°52′ E), Angut-e Sharqi Chenar (, also Romanized as Chenār) is a village in Angut-e Sharqi Rural District, Anguti District, Germi County, Ardabil Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 186, in 39 families.",
"Bagh-e Chenar Bagh-e Chenar or Bagh Chenar or Baghchenar () may refer to:",
"Uchquloch Uchquloch (, ) is an urban-type settlement in Jizzakh Region, Uzbekistan. It is part of Forish District. The town population in 1989 was 3767 people.",
"Uchkoʻprik Uchkoʻprik (also spelled Uchkuprik, , ) is an urban-type settlement in Fergana Region, Uzbekistan. It is the administrative center of Uchkoʻprik District. Its population was 4,277 people in 1989, and 4,300 in 2016.",
"Uch Tappeh, Malayer Uch Tappeh (, also Romanized as Ūch Tappeh) is a village in Tork-e Sharqi Rural District, Jowkar District, Malayer County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,380, in 281 families.",
"UCH UCH may refer to:"
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[
"no"
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When is the performer of song Fun (Xu Weizhou Song) 's birthday?
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Fun (Xu Weizhou song) Fun (Chinese: 放, Pinyin: "Fàng") aka "Release" is a song recorded by Chinese singer-songwriter Xu Weizhou. The single was released on 8 December 2016 which was composed by Xu Weizhou himself while the lyrics were written by Zhao Dengkai. "Fun", a pop rock song with a length of three minutes and thirty-nine seconds was officially released on 8 December 2016. This single was composed by Xu Weizhou himself and was arranged and produced by Shi Xiaopeng, lead guitarist of the band "Cold Air". The music video was officially released on 15 December which has 2 versions, first was the "Laneige" version including a short interview of Xu Weizhou to promote the product whereas he was the endorser at that time and the second one, which was the official version was released at "Yinyuetai", Sina Weibo and YouTube. Xu flew to South Korea to shoot the music video together with a South Korean team. On 23 December 2016, Xu was invited to Shanghai Disneyland Christmas Party and performed the song live for the first time. Later on, he performed the verses of "Fun" and his other song "Light" during the 24th Oriental Billboard Award Ceremony and 2017 Sakura Muse Music Festival. On 1 April 2017, he performed "Fun" during his appearance as a guest to a television music show "Global Chinese Music Chart" currently airing on CCTV15, 2017 Music Radio China Top Ranking Awards on 21 June, 2017 Asian Music Gala Awards on 19 July 2017 MTV Global Chinese Music Awards on 20 July and 2017 iQiyi Screaming Night Concert on 19 August.
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"Xu Jiaqi Xu Jiaqi (; ; born August 27, 1995) is a Chinese singer, rapper, dancer, songwriter, and actress. She was a member of Team SII of the female idol group SNH48 as well as its sub-units Style-7 and 7Senses, and she was also a member of the temporary girl group, THE9. In 2020, she participated in \"Youth with You 2\" and got 3rd place, securing her place in THE9. She is also known for her role in the television series \"Legend of Yunxi\" (2018) as well as her leading role in \"The Blooms at Ruyi Pavilion\" (2020) as Fu Xuan. Xu was born on August 27, 1995 in Linhai, Taizhou, Zhejiang, China. She graduated from Shanghai Film Art Academy and Shanghai Normal University. On 14 October 2012, during an SNH48 press conference, Xu was announced as one of the first-generation members of SNH48. On 25 May 2013, Xu performed at the \"Blooming For You\" Concert. On 11 November, she was promoted to SNH48 Team SII, and on 12 December, she starred in SNH48's first documentary, \"MengXiang YuBei Sheng\". On 16 December, she performed at the SNH48 Guangzhou Concert. On 18 January 2014, Xu participated in the Red and White Concert, of which Team SII emerged as the winner. On 26 July, during SNH48's first General Election, Xu came in eighth with 7256 votes, subsequently becoming part of the Senbatsu for their fifth single. On 31 January 2015, Xu performed at SNH48 Request Hour Setlist Best 30 2015. On 25 July, during SNH48's second General Election, she came in 20th with 14351.7 votes and was placed among the Under Girls. On 31 October, Xu came in first during SNH48's first Fashion Awards and became part of SNH48's sub-unit Style-7. In 2016, it was announced that Xu would star in the film \"Catman\" together with bandmate Ju Jingyi, due to be released in 2017. Xu made her acting debut with a cameo on the drama \"Stairway to Stardom\".",
"Victoria Song Song Qian (; born February 2, 1987), known professionally as Victoria or Victoria Song, is a Chinese singer, dancer, actress, model, host and author known for her work as a member of South Korean girl group f(x). In 2010, Song gained fame as part of \"We Got Married Season 2,\" as well as being a cast member of KBS's \"Invincible Youth\". She is also known for her roles in television series \"When Love Walked In\" (2012), \"Beautiful Secret\" (2015), \"Ice Fantasy\" (2016), \"A Life Time Love\" (2017), \"Moonshine and Valentine\" (2018), Find Yourself (2020); and the films \"My New Sassy Girl\" (2016) , \"My Best Friend's Wedding\" (2016), and \"Wished\" (2017). Song ranked 74th on \"Forbes\" China Celebrity 100 list in 2017, 41st in 2019 and 14th in 2020. Song Qian was born in Qingdao, Shandong. She left her hometown at a young age to study Chinese traditional dance at the Beijing Dance Academy. After her high school graduation, she was accepted to the Beijing Dance Academy and majored in Chinese ethnic dance. In September 2007, Song was first scouted by an SM Entertainment casting agent while in Beijing dance competition and eventually cast into SM Entertainment after passing the audition under SM Casting System. She was originally trained to prepare for her acting and modeling career in South Korea. Prior to debuting, Song was introduced to the public through various appearances in music videos and commercials; her first appearance is in \"Spris\" commercial with Lee Joon-gi in early 2008. She made her official debut as a member of f(x) in September 2009. In June 2010, Song became a cast member for the first season of the variety show \"Invincible Youth\" in which she was a part of G7, consisting of 7 female idols from various groups. She was also cast on the reality show \"We Got Married\" with Nichkhun of 2PM. The couple was collectively known as Khuntoria in the variety show. Nichkhun and Song both gained entertainment-wide popularity as a result of the show's success.",
"So What (Xu Weizhou song) So What (Chinese: 那又怎样, Pinyin: \"Nà yòu zěnyàng\") is a song recorded and composed by Chinese singer-songwriter Xu Weizhou. It is the second single released from Xu's album \"The Time\". \"So What\" is a pop song with a length of three minutes and fifty-five seconds. It was composed by Xu Weizhou himself and the lyrics were written by Zhang Chang. It is included in 1st quarter of \"The Time\". The whole quarter was officially released on 10 August 2017 while the official music video was released on 11 September at several Chinese streaming sites as well as YouTube. Its music video was shot in London. Xu performed the song live for the first time during the iQiyi Screaming Night Concert on 19 August 2017.",
"Song Zu'er Sun Fanqing (born Sun Bijuan, 23 May 1998), professionally known as Song Zu'er (), is a Chinese actress. Song Zu'er was born Sun Bijuan on 23 May 1998 in Tianjin, China. Song studied in the United States for two years, and has an English name \"Lareina\". Song was enrolled in the Beijing Film Academy in 2018, after placing third in the National Higher Education Entrance Examination. In 2005, Song began her acting career with a supporting role in the drama \"The Sea and Sky Boundless\". She then continued to act in various dramas, and gained recognition for playing Nezha in the 2009 television series \"Prelude of Lotus Lantern\". In 2016, Song returned to acting in the comedy film \"Papa\", where she starred alongside Xia Yu. In 2017, Song joined the variety program \"Divas Hit the Road\" and became known to audiences. The same year, Song played a supporting role in the youth drama \"Boy Hood\" where she starred alongside TFBoys. In 2018, Song played lead roles in the fantasy historical drama \"The Dark Lord\", as well as the comedy web series \"Gossip High\". She received positive reviews for her acting performance and line delivery. In 2019, Song starred in the fantasy epic drama \"\". The same year, she was cast in romance comedy drama \"Cupid's Kitchen\". \"Forbes China\" listed Song under their 30 Under 30 Asia 2019 list which consisted of 30 influential people under 30 years old who have had a substantial effect in their fields. In 2020, Song appeared in CCTV New Year's Gala for the first time, acting out a skit \"Airport Sisters\". The same year, she starred in the fantasy historical drama \"Guardians of the Ancient Oath\". On July 16 of the same year, she joined the main cast of the Novoland: Eagle Flag series where she played the brilliant young Yu Ran, the Princess of the Winged Tribe, until the end of the series on September 2 of the same year. In 2021, she joined the main cast of the series The Bond where she will play Qiao Simei, one of the sisters of the Qiao family.",
"Song Weilong (actor) Song Weilong (, born March 25, 1999) is a Chinese actor and model. He is best known for his roles as Yuan Song in \"Find Yourself\" and as Ling Xiao in \"Go Ahead\". Song was born in Dalian, Liaoning, raised in a family with two older sisters. At age 9, Song Weilong developed an interest in classic martial arts after watching the action movie \"The New Legend of Shaolin\" starring Jet Li. He tried out for and learned wushu for a year in junior high school, and later enrolled in Shaolin Tagou Martial Arts School of Henan Province. In 2015, Song Weilong signed with Yu Zheng Studio and officially became an actor. He made his first appearance in the variety show \"Run for Time\", and also joined the talk show, \"Day Day Up\". These appearances led to increased recognition for Song in China. In 2016, he made his acting debut in the fantasy drama \"Demon Girl II\". The same year, he was cast in the Chinese-South Korean production \"Catman\"; as well as in youth film \"Passage of My Youth\" produced by Hong Kong cinematographer Cheung Ka-fai. In 2017, Song starred in fantasy romance drama \"Long For You\", adapted from the comic \"The Distance of Light Between You and Me\". The series achieved 1 billion views throughout its run. The same year, he was also cast in the youth melodrama \"Beautiful Reborn Flower\" opposite Lin Yun. In 2018, Song starred opposite Guan Xiaotong in the historical drama \"Untouchable Lovers\"; as well as sci-fi adventure film \"Dream Breaker\". In 2019, Song starred in the youth romance film \"Love The Way You Are\". He won the Best New Actor award at the China Movie Channel Media Awards. \"Forbes China\" listed Song under their 30 Under 30 Asia 2019 list which consisted of 30 influential people under 30 years old who have had a substantial effect in their fields. In 2020, Song starred in the romantic comedy drama \"Find Yourself\" alongside Victoria Song. The series was a hit and led to a rise in popularity for Song. Song then starred in the historical romance drama \"In a Class of Her Own\", and slice-of-life family drama \"Go Ahead\". He ranked 45th on \"Forbes\" China Celebrity 100 list.",
"Song Wenjie Song Wenjie (; born 15 January 1991) is a Chinese professional footballer who plays for Chinese Super League club Guangzhou City. Song Wenjie joined Qingdao Hailifeng's youth academy in 2002. In February 2010, Qingdao Hailifeng was engaged in bribery and private business dealings in matches held from 2007 to 2009 and was banned from all future league matches. Song and his teammates became unattached players without a club. After being released, he signed a contract with Chinese Super League side Qingdao Jonoon in March 2010 after a successful trial with the club. Song was promoted to Qingdao Jonoon's first team in the summer of 2010 and made his senior debut on 31 October 2010 in a 0–0 away draw against Shanghai Shenhua. Song was given further more opportunities to play for the senior team during the 2011 league season after then manager Chang Woe-Ryong took charge of the team. On 8 May 2011, he scored his first two senior goals in a 4–1 home win against Nanchang Hengyuan. Song scored six goals in nineteen appearances and won the Chinese Football Association Young Player of the Year award at the end of the 2011 season. On 27 February 2015, Song transfer to China League One side Hebei China Fortune. He made his debut for the club on 14 March 2015 in a 1–0 home loss against Beijing Institute of Technology. On 15 April 2015, he scored his first goal in a 2–0 away win against Guangxi Longguida in the 2015 Chinese FA Cup. On 25 April 2015, Song scored his first league goal, earned a penalty and assisted once in a league match against Tianjin Songjiang, which ensured Hebei's 3–2 win. On 21 July 2015, he suffered a rupture of cruciate ligament in his right knee in a league match against Harbin Yiteng, which ruling him out of the field for the rest of the season. Song, who was recovering from injury, was named in Hebei China Fortune's reserves squad in the 2016 season. He returned to the first team squad in July 2017.",
"Xie Na Xie Na () (born May 6, 1981), also known as \"Nana,\" is a Chinese host, singer and actress. She is famous for co-hosting the Hunan Satellite TV program Happy Camp with fellow hosts He Jiong, Li Weijia, Du Haitao, and Wu Xin. She graduated from Sichuan Normal University, where she majored in performance. She has over one hundred and thirty million followers on Weibo as of June 2021, making her one of the most widely followed celebrities in China. Xie Na arrived in Beijing at age 18 to pursue a career in the entertainment industry. Prior to becoming a host, Xie Na started her career as an actress, starring in movies, TV series and stage productions. In 2006, she released her autobiography \"Na Shi Yi Zhen Feng\" (Chinese: 娜是一阵疯). In 2008, her second book \"Na Xie Nian Hua\" (Chinese: 娜写年华) was published. Xie Na also released her debut album 'Bo Luo Bo Luo Mi' (Chinese: 菠萝菠萝蜜) in 2006; she is signed with Huayi Brothers. Xie Na founded her personal clothing line \"HUANXING\" on October 15, 2010, with a flagship store in Taobao Mall online. The brand has been worn by Zhang Jie(her husband), He Jiong, Su Xing, Cao Ying, and other celebrities. On May 5, 2011, Xie Na and singer Jason Zhang registered their marriage in Chengdu, China. Their wedding ceremony was held on September 26, 2011, in Shangri-La City. In July 2013, Xie Na attended Boston University's Center for English Language & Orientation Programs (CELOP) for a 6-week program to improve her English skills. On February 1, 2018, she gave birth to twin daughters. In addition to releasing her own music, in 2010, Xie Na also participated in Happy Camp's album \"You'll See the Happiness\" (Chinese: 快乐你懂的), as one of the hosts for the show.",
"Yang Song Yang Song (born 23 June 1989 in Yuxi) is a Chinese tumbling trampoline gymnast, representing his nation at international competitions. He won medals at world championships, including at the 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014 and 2015 Trampoline World Championships. He took up gymnastics in 1995, and began trampolining in 2000 in Yunnan Province. He was named an International Elite Athlete by the General Administration of Sport of China in 2008. In March 2018, Yang was convicted of contractual fraud and sentenced to 10 years and four months in prison. He pursued higher education at the Beijing Sport University.",
"Xu Wei (musician) Xu Wei (Simplified Chinese: 许巍, pinyin:Xǔ Wēi; born 21 July 1968) is a Chinese rock musician. He was born and raised in the Pangliu village, near Xi'an. Xu Wei began learning to play the guitar at the age of sixteen, when he started high school. In April 1986, he attended the first guitar-singing competition in Xi'an, and won first prize. After writing his first song, Xu abandoned university entrance exams to pursue a career in music. At the end of 1987, Xu Wei joined the People's Liberation Army, working in the arts troupe of Shaanxi military region. In 1988, he came into contact with rock music for the first time. The following year, he was offered entry into the Fourth Military Medical University but turned down the opportunity. During the three years in the army, Xu taught himself to compose music and write songs, producing several pop songs. Xu Wei left the army in the winter of 1990. In 1993 he organised the band Fly (). He still participates in the composition of rock music, but his style has been influenced by pop music.",
"Song Xiaoying Song Xiaoying () is a Chinese film and television actress."
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[
"October 20, 1994"
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What is the date of death of Francesco Maria Farnese's father?
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Francesco Maria Farnese Francesco Maria Farnese (15 August 1619 – 12 July 1647) was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal. He was born in Parma, the son of Ranuccio I Farnese, duke of Parma, and Margherita Aldobrandini, niece of Pope Clement VIII. He was appointed as cardinal by Pope Innocent X in 1644, but he never came to Rome to receive the cardinalatial hat. After the death of his brother Odoardo I Farnese in 1646, Francesco Maria acted for two years as regent of the Duchy of Parma of Piacenza for his nephew Ranuccio II. He died at Parma in 1647.
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"Ranuccio Farnese (1509–1529) Ranuccio Farnese (1509–1529) was the natural son of Alessandro Farnese by Silvia Ruffini, born before his father was elected pope as Paul III. His siblings were Pier Luigi, Paolo and Costanza.",
"Costanza Farnese Costanza Farnese (December 19, 1500 in Rome – May 23, 1545 in Rome) was a daughter of Alessandro Farnese and Silvia Ruffini. Born before her father became Pope Paul III, her siblings were Pier Luigi, Paul, Ranuccio and Lucrezia. She married Bosio II Sforza, count of Santa Fiora e Cotignola, they had:",
"Giuseppe La Farina Giuseppe La Farina (20 July 1815 in Messina – 5 September 1863 in Torino) was an influential leader of the Italian Risorgimento. He was founder of the Italian National Society in 1857, a society dedicated to the unification of Italy. He was born in Messina in Sicily on 29 July 1815. Minister of Cavour, was highly involved in Garibaldi's departure for Sicily. Ostensibly sent by Cavour to dissuade Garibaldi from going, he in fact did little of the sort. A nationalist at heart, he was believed to be one of the few to whom Cavour actually revealed his intentions regarding the Sicilian campaign during the dictatorship of Garibaldi, and eventual unification. He died in Turin on 5 September 1863 aged only 47. His ashes were later relocated to his family tomb in Messina. A large monument to his memory stands in the south-west corner of the cloister of the Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence. In Messina a street (Via Giuseppe La Farina) and a high school are named after him. In 1919 the Italian Navy named a ship after him.",
"Odoardo Farnese, Duke of Parma Odoardo Farnese (28 April 1612 – 11 September 1646), also known as Odoardo I Farnese to distinguish him from his grandson Odoardo II Farnese, was Duke of Parma, Piacenza and Castro from 1622 to 1646. Odoardo was the eldest legitimate son of Ranuccio I Farnese and Margherita Aldobrandini. After Ranuccio's natural son and his potential rival, Ottavio, was relegated in a prison, he reigned initially under the regency of his uncle Odoardo Farnese and, after the latter's death, of his mother, Margherita Aldobrandini. He came of age in 1628 and in the same year he married Margherita de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany Cosimo II de' Medici's daughter. His first notable act as Duke was an alliance with France in 1633, a move designed to counter Spanish predominance in northern Italy and support his territorial ambitions. He also asked for loans to improve the army, but his first campaigns were ineffective: Piacenza was occupied by the Spanish troops, and his army was defeated by Francesco I d'Este. Spanish troops overran the duchy and devastated the countryside, but did not attempt to lay siege to the cities. In the absence of French assistance, Odoardo was convinced by Pope Urban VIII to sign a treaty of peace with Spain in 1637. His aggressive rule of Castro, a Farnese fief in the Papal States north of Rome, who the Barberini (Pope Urban's family) were eager to acquire, caused Odoardo to be excommunicated in 1641. Instead of reconciliation, he sought alliances with Venice, Florence and the Duchy of Modena, and invaded northern Lazio with 7,000 troops. His army was composed mostly of cavalry, and were unable to recover Castro by siege. Although the Farnese fleet was destroyed and the Duke often proved recalcitrant, in the peace of 1644, the city of Castro was returned to him and Odoardo was reconciled with the Roman Catholic Church and readmitted to the Sacraments. Odoardo died suddenly in Piacenza, his favorite residence, on 11 September 1646.",
"Portrait of Pier Luigi Farnese Portrait of Pier Luigi Farnese is a heavily-damaged 1546 oil on canvas painting of Pier Luigi Farnese, Duke of Parma by Titian, now in Room 2 of the National Museum of Capodimonte. It was produced on the artist's return to Venice from Rome in 1546. Its subject was a son of Pope Paul III, dressed in the armour and accoutrements of a papal gonfaloniere. He was stabbed to death in 1547 in a plot instigated by the Landi and Anguissola families on the advice of the duke of Milan Ferrante I Gonzaga.",
"Alessandro Farnese (cardinal) Alessandro Farnese (5 October 1520 – 2 March 1589), an Italian cardinal and diplomat and a great collector and patron of the arts, was the grandson of Pope Paul III (who also bore the name \"Alessandro Farnese\"), and the son of Pier Luigi Farnese, Duke of Parma, who was murdered in 1547. He should not be confused with his nephew, Alessandro Farnese, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, grandson of Emperor Charles V and great-grandson of Pope Paul III. Farnese was born at the family castle at Valentano in Tuscany On October 7 1520 (current province of Viterbo), the son of Pierluigi Farnese, who was the son of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese (Pope Paul III); and Girolama Orsini, daughter of Ludovico Orsini, seventh Conte di Pitigliano, and Giulia Conti. They were married in Rome on 6 August 1519. Young Alessandro studied at Bologna along with his cousin, Guido Ascanio Sforza di Santa Fiora. He was a member of the Collegio Ancarano, which had been founded in the 15th century by Petrus de Ancarano de nobilibus de Farnesino provinciae Patrimoniae B. Petri in Tuscia, for students specializing in legal studies. On 18 December 1534, at the age of 14, he was appointed Cardinal Deacon of the Title of Sant'Angelo in Pescheria by his grandfather Paul III, who had been elected to the papacy two months previously. On 11 August 1535, he was appointed Abbot Commendatory of the Abbey of Tre Fontane on the Via Ostiense, a position he held until 1544. In 1535, he was also appointed Abbot commendatory of S. Étienne de Caën. Young Cardinal Farnese received many other offices and benefices, becoming Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church (13 August 1535 – 2 March 1589), He also became Governor of Tivoli (1535-1550), Archpriest of St. Mary Major Basilica (1537-1543), Archpriest of St. Peter's Basilica (1543-1589).",
"Filippo Farsetti Filippo Vincenzo Farsetti (Venice, 13 January 1703 - Venice, 22 September 1774), was an Italian art collector and patron of the arts. Filippo was the son of Anton Francesco Farsetti and his wife Marina Foscari. The Foscari were an ancient Venetian patrician family, which reached its peak in the 14th–15th centuries with the dogeship of Francesco Foscari (1423-1457). The Farsetti, on the other hand, originally came from Tuscany, though they had divided into numerous branches that established themselves throughout Northern Italy. Filippo's branch had become part of the patrician class of Venice as late in 1664, by payment of a hundred thousand ducats. Though relatively recent arrivals, therefore, they were very rich, and this meant for Filippo a comfortable and carefree childhood and youth. He spent his first years engrossed in his studies and far from political concerns. The tranquility of those years contributed doubtless to his decision to receive minor orders, which is why he is often referred to as the “abate” Farsetti, though he never became a priest. In this context “abate”, though literally the word means “abbot”, was used at the time in a way similar to the French “abbé” as an honorific title for any cleric of minor rank. Farsetti spent much of his life travelling, visiting among other places Rome, Naples, Florence, and Paris. His interest was in establishing friendly relations with many men of culture. He was also a great patron of the arts and by his patronage contributed to the introduction into Venice of Neoclassicism. The art collection he formed in his residence on the Grand Canal, Ca' Farsetti, was famous and became a sort of museum that was open to the curious, to artists, to his fellow citizens and to foreign tourists, and its visitors included Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. The collection is known to have included 253 plaster casts of classical and modern sculptures (mostly by Ventura Furlani), various copies in oils by Luigi Pozzi of works executed in Rome by Raphael and by Annibale Carracci.",
"Pietro Farina Pietro Farina (7 May 1942 − 24 September 2013) was an Italian Roman Catholic bishop. Ordained to the priesthood in 1966, Farina was named bishop of the Diocese of Alife-Caiazzo, Italy, in 1999 and then Bishop of the Diocese of Caserta in 2009 where he died in office.",
" His wife Giulia Farnese (d. 1564) was the daughter of Galeazzo Farnese, Duke of Latera and Isabella, daughter of Giuliano dell'Anguillara and Girolama Farnese (d. 1504). Giulia's maternal grandmother Girolama Farnese was the sister of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese, Pope Paul III, and Giulia Farnese, the mistress of Rodrigo Borgia, Pope Alexander VI. The second Giulia Farnese's paternal great-grandfather was Bartolomeo Farnese, Count of Montalto and Canino, and the brother of Girolama, Alessandro (the future Pope Paul III) and Giulia Farnese. He was born in 1470 and married Iolanda Monaldeschi, with whom he had the son Pedro Bertodolo Farnese and the daughters Isabella and Cecilia. Bartolomeo died in 1552 and was the founder of the Duchy of Latera, which existed until 1668. Her grandmother Girolama was born in 1466 and was murdered with a sword on the 1st of November at not forty years of age, roughly ten years after her second marriage, for alleged infidelity by her stepson Giovanni Battista dell'Anguillara in Stabiae Castle. Her first marriage had been to Puccio Pucci, whom she married on the 10th of November 1483. From her second marriage to Count Giuliano dell'Anguillara and Stabiae whom she had married on the 15th of February 1495, came the daughter Isabella (Elisabeth) della Anguillara, who later married Galeazzo Farnese, the grandson of Bartolomeo, and the children of that marriage, the daughters Violante and Giulia Farnese. Some sources give the year of Girolama's death as 1504, some as 1505. Puccio Pucci died in 1494, and she married her second husband the following year. Vicino's wife Giulia Farnese was thus related to Pope Paul III two times over, as the child of the only child of his tragically murdered sister, and through the line that inherited the family title and holdings through his brother Bartolomeo as the daughter of Bartolomeo's grandson.",
"Ottavio Farnese, Duke of Parma Ottavio Farnese (9 October 1524 – 18 September 1586) reigned as Duke of Parma and Piacenza from 1547 until his death and Duke of Castro from 1545 to 1547 and from 1553 until his death. Born in Valentano, he was the second son of Pier Luigi Farnese, Duke of Parma and Piacenza, grandson of Pope Paul III, and brother to Cardinal Ranuccio Farnese. On 4 November 1538 he married Margaret of Austria, the illegitimate daughter of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. Ottavio was 14 years old, while Margaret, recently widowed by the death of Alessandro de' Medici, was 15. At first she disliked her youthful bridegroom, but when he returned wounded from an expedition to Algiers in 1541 her aversion was turned to affection. Farnese had become lord of Camerino in 1540, but he gave up that fief when his father became duke of Parma in 1545. After the Parmesan nobility assassinated Pierluigi Farnese in 1547, troops of the Emperor occupied Piacenza. Pope Paul III attempted to regain Piacenza; he set aside Ottavio's claims to the succession of Parma, where he appointed a papal legate, giving him back Camerino in exchange, and then claimed Piacenza from the emperor — not for the Farnese, but for the Church. Farnese attempted to seize Parma by force, and having failed, entered into negotiations with Ferrante Gonzaga. This rebellion on the part of his grandson is believed to have hastened the Pope's death on 10 November 1549. During the interregnum that followed, Ottavio again tried to induce the governor of Parma to give up the city to him, but met with no better success; however, on the election of Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte to the papacy as Julius III, the duchy was conferred on him in 1551. This did not end Farnese's quarrel with the Emperor Charles V, for Gonzaga refused to give up Piacenza and even threatened to occupy Parma, so that Ottavio was driven into the arms of France."
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Who is the maternal grandfather of Louis Joseph, Dauphin Of France?
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Louis Joseph, Dauphin of France Louis Joseph Xavier François (22 October 1781 – 4 June 1789) was Dauphin of France as the second child and first son of King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. As son of a king of France, he was a "fils de France" ("Child of France"). Louis Joseph died at the age of seven from tuberculosis and was succeeded as Dauphin (and thus heir-apparent) by his four-year-old brother Louis Charles. Louis Joseph Xavier François de France was born at the Palace of Versailles on 22 October 1781. He was named after his maternal uncle, Joseph II. The new-born was the long-awaited "Dauphin", his father's heir to the throne of France, as the Salic Law, which excluded women from acceding the throne, applied to his elder sister, Marie Thérèse Charlotte, "Madame Royale". The birth of Louis Joseph ruined the hopes of his uncle, the "comte de Provence", of succeeding his brother Louis XVI. His private household was created upon his birth. He was under the care of Victoire de Rohan, the Governess of the Children of France, until she was replaced in 1782 by Yolande de Polastron, "duchesse de Polignac", one of his mother's favourites. His "sous-gouverneur" was the "Maréchal de camp" Antoine Charles Augustin d'Allonville. His wet nurse was Geneviève Poitrine, who was later accused of transmitting tuberculosis to the young Dauphin. Louis Joseph was very close to his sister and to his parents, who watched attentively over his education. He was always praised for being a very bright child for his age; however, it soon became apparent that he was of fragile health. Around April 1784, when he was three years old, Louis Joseph had a series of high fevers. Out of fear for his health, he was transported to the Château de La Muette where the air was reputed to have healing properties. The time spent at La Muette seemed to have helped Louis Joseph recover, and almost a year later, in March 1785, he returned there and was inoculated against smallpox. However, his health remained fragile. In 1786, the fevers returned, but his household regarded them as being of no importance. These fevers, however, were the first signs of tuberculosis.
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" He was the maternal grandfather of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, husband of Queen Elizabeth II. Louis Alexander of Battenberg was born in Graz, Styria, on 24 May 1854, the eldest son of Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine by his morganatic marriage to Countess Julia von Hauke. Because of his morganatic parentage, Louis did not inherit his father's rank in the Grand Duchy of Hesse; and, from birth, his style of \"Illustrious Highness\" and title of Count of Battenberg instead derived from the rank given to his mother at the time of her marriage. On 26 December 1858, he automatically became \"His Serene Highness\" Prince Louis of Battenberg when his mother was elevated to Princess of Battenberg with the style of \"Serene Highness\", by decree of her husband's brother, Louis III, Grand Duke of Hesse. Shortly after Louis's birth, his father was stationed with the Austro-Hungarian Army of occupation in Northern Italy during the Second Italian War of Independence. Louis's early years were spent either in the north of Italy or at Prince Alexander's two houses in Hesse, the castle of Heiligenberg in Jugenheim, and the Alexander Palace in Darmstadt. Because his mother spoke French to him and he had an English governess, he grew up trilingual. Among the visitors entertained at Heiligenberg were Prince Alexander's relations, the Russian imperial family, and his cousin, Prince Louis of Hesse. Influenced by his cousin's wife, Princess Alice, a daughter of Queen Victoria, and by Prince Alfred, another of Queen Victoria's children, Battenberg became a naturalised British subject and joined the Royal Navy on 3 October 1868 at the age of fourteen. He was admitted by the Board of Admiralty without the production of a medical certificate, which was contrary to the usual regulation. He had been found medically unfit \"on account of small, flat chest, slight lateral curvature of the spine and defective vision\", but was allowed to join so as not to disappoint the Queen. He was entered as a naval cadet aboard , Nelson's old flagship, then used as a permanently moored receiving ship. In January of the following year, the Prince and Princess of Wales cruised the Mediterranean and Black Seas in the frigate ; and the Prince of Wales requested that Louis be appointed to the vessel, before his training was complete.",
"Louis Alexandre, Prince of Lamballe Louis Alexandre de Bourbon (Louis Alexandre Joseph Stanislas; 6 September 1747 – 6 May 1768) was the son and heir of Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, great grandson of Louis XIV by the king's legitimised son, Louis Alexandre de Bourbon. He was known as the \"Prince of Lamballe\" from birth. He pre-deceased his father, and died childless. \"Louis Alexandre\" was born on 6 September 1747, at the Hôtel de Toulouse (now the seat of the \"Banque de France\", in the 1st arrondissement of Paris), the Paris residence of his family. His father, the Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, \"duc de Penthièvre\", was the only legitimate child of Louis Alexandre de Bourbon, the youngest legitimised son of King Louis XIV and Madame de Montespan. His mother, Princess Maria Teresa d'Este, was the daughter of the Duke of Modena, also a descendant of Madame de Montespan, and related to the House of Orléans. The prince de Lamballe, as he was known all his life, was the couple's only surviving son. He was one of seven children. At the death of his older brother Louis Marie de Bourbon, the Prince of Lamballe became the heir to the Penthièvre fortune, much of which had been extorted by Louis XIV from his childless cousin \"la Grande Mademoiselle\", and bestowed upon Louis XIV's legitimised elder son, Louis Auguste de Bourbon, \"duc du Maine\". His title, prince de Lamballe, came from one of the \"seigneuries\" owned by his father; it was neither a sovereign princedom nor a legal title. Rather, it was a \"titre de courtoisie\". His mother died in childbirth in 1754 at the age of twenty-seven. His father chose his bride, the Italian born Princess Maria Teresa Louisa of Savoy. The wedding celebration lasted from 17 January 1767, until 27 January with feasts in Turin and Nangis. Prior to the wedding, Louis Alexandre eager to see his future bride, went secretly where Maria Teresa was staying. He met her disguised as a simple country servant and offered her a bouquet of flowers in his \"master's\" name. During the wedding ceremony the next day, the princess was shocked to discover that the humble man from the previous day was in fact the prince himself.",
"Vincent de Bourbon, Count of Guingamp Vincent de Bourbon, Count of Guingamp (Vincent Marie Louis; 22 June 1750 – 14 March 1752) was a son of Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of Penthièvre and died before his second birthday. Fourth child born to Louis Jean Marie de Bourbon, Duke of Penthièvre, by his wife, Princess Maria Teresa d'Este. His only brother to survive childhood was'Louis Alexandre, Prince of Lamballe. Vincent died at the Palace of Versailles in his mother's suite of rooms there, Years after his death his posthumous sister, Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon moved his remains to the Royal Chapel of Dreux.",
"Louis, Duke of Burgundy (1751–1761) Louis Joseph Xavier, Duke of Burgundy (13 September 1751 – 22 March 1761), was a French prince of the House of Bourbon and heir apparent of the throne of France. Although he was the first live-birth son, he died of extra-pulmonary tuberculosis at the young age of nine. Louis Joseph Xavier was born at the Palace of Versailles. He was the second surviving child and eldest son of Louis, Dauphin of France and Maria Josepha of Saxony, and was thus the oldest brother to the future kings Louis XVI, Louis XVIII and Charles X. It is a known fact that he was the favorite child of his parents, and was said to be handsome and bright. He was put in the care of Marie Isabelle de Rohan and given the title of Duke of Burgundy by his grandfather, King Louis XV. He was much loved by those who were close to him, especially his older sister Marie Zéphyrine, who died at the age of five in 1755. It is unknown if the Duke, who was not even four years old yet, was affected by this. But it is known, however, that the absence of his older sister was felt by the Duke. The young Duke was pushed off a wooden horse by one of his playmates in 1759. As he was recognized for his kindness, he did not tell anyone about this, in order to prevent his friend from getting into any trouble. After this incident, the Duke of Burgundy's health started to deteriorate quickly. The family's physician, Dr. Barbier, decided to operate on him in 1760. The Duke was operated on while he was conscious. Knowing that he would die, the Dauphin had him baptised on 29 November 1760, with Louis XV and Marie Leszczyńska, his grandparents, as his godparents. Until that moment, he had been known just as \"Burgundy\". By 1761, the Duke was bound to his bed, unable to move his legs, with what was diagnosed as extra pulmonary tuberculosis of the bone. He later died from this disease, on 22 March 1761.",
"Élisabeth of France Élisabeth Philippe Marie Hélène of France (3 May 1764 – 10 May 1794) was a French princess. She was the youngest child of Louis, Dauphin of France, and Duchess Maria Josepha of Saxony, and she was a sister of King Louis XVI. Élisabeth's father, the Dauphin, was the son and heir of King Louis XV. Élisabeth remained beside her brother and his family during the French Revolution and was executed at Place de la Révolution in Paris during the Terror. She is regarded by the Catholic Church as a martyr and was declared a Servant of God by Pope Pius XII. Élisabeth was born on 3 May 1764 in the Palace of Versailles, the youngest child of Louis, Dauphin of France and Marie-Josèphe of Saxony. Her paternal grandparents were King Louis XV of France and Queen Maria Leszczyńska. As the granddaughter of the king, she was a Petite-fille de France. At the sudden death of her father in 1765, Élisabeth's oldest surviving brother, Louis Auguste (later to be Louis XVI) became the new Dauphin (the heir apparent to the French throne). Their mother Marie Josèphe died in March 1767 from tuberculosis. This left Élisabeth an orphan at just two years old, along with her older siblings: Louis Auguste, Louis Stanislas, Count of Provence, Charles Philippe, Count of Artois and Marie Clotilde of France. Élisabeth and her elder sister Clothilde of France were raised by \"Madame de Marsan\", Governess to the Children of France. The sisters were considered very dissimilar in personality. While Elisabeth was described as \"proud, inflexible, and passionate\", Clothilde was in contrast estimated to be \"endowed with the most happy disposition, which only needed guiding and developing\". They were given the usual education of contemporary royal princesses, focusing upon accomplishments, religion and virtue, an education to which Clothilde reportedly willingly subjected herself. They were tutored in botany by M. Lemonnier, in history and geography by M. Leblond, and in religion by Abbé de Montigat, Canon of Chartres, and they followed the court among the royal palaces, with their days divided between studies, walks in the Park, and drives in the forest.",
"Louis, Prince of Brionne Louis of Lorraine (Louis Charles; 10 September 1725 – 28 June 1761) was a member of the House of Guise, a cadet branch of the House of Lorraine. He married three times and through his daughter, is an ancestor of the present House of Savoy. He was the Grand Squire of France and Governor of Anjou. He married three times. His last wife, Princess Louise of Rohan (1734–1815) was the daughter of the Prince of Rochefort. In December 1743, he was created the Grand Squire of France, a post which had been occupied by his distant cousin Charles de Lorraine. The post was one of the Great Officers of the Crown of France and a member of the King's Household. The position was roughly equivalent to the United Kingdom positions of Master of the Horse and the Crown Equerry. Louis XV made him a Brigadier of the King's Armies in April 1745 and a knight of the Order of the Holy Spirit, the most prestigious knighthoods in France (21 May 1752).",
"Madame Adélaïde Marie Adélaïde de France, (23 March 1732 in Versailles – 27 February 1800 in Trieste), was a French princess, the sixth child, and the fourth daughter of King Louis XV of France and his consort, Marie Leszczyńska. As the legitimate daughter of the King, she was a \"fille de France\". She was referred to as \"Madame Quatrième\" (\"Madame the Fourth\"), until the death of her older sister Marie Louise in 1733, as \"Madame Troisième\", (\"Madame the Third\"); as \"Madame Adélaïde\" from 1737 to 1755; as \"Madame\" from 1755 to 1759; and then as \"Madame Adélaïde\" again from 1759 until her death. Adélaïde and her sister Sophie possessed the Duchy of Louvois from 1777 until 1792. The duchy had been created for them by their nephew Louis XVI, in their own right. She was named after her paternal grandmother, Marie Adelaide, Dauphine of France, and was raised at the Palace of Versailles with her older sisters, Madame Louise Elisabeth, Madame Henriette, and Madame Marie Louise, along with her brother Louis, Dauphin of France. Her younger sisters were raised at the Abbaye de Fontevraud from 1738 onward because the cost of raising them in Versailles with all the status to which they were entitled was deemed too expensive by Cardinal Fleury, Louis XV's chief minister. Adélaïde was originally expected to join her younger sisters to Fontevraud. However, she was allowed to stay with her brother and her three elder siblings in Versailles after a personal plea to her father. She was put in the care of Marie Isabelle de Rohan, Duchesse de Tallard. According to Madame Campan, \"Madame Adelaide, in particular, had a most insatiable desire to learn; she was taught to play upon all instruments, from the horn (will it be believed!) to the Jew’s-harp.\" She studied Italian under Goldoni, and music under Beaumarchais. One of the reasons as to why the expense of her younger sisters at Versailles was regarded as too high, was that the royal children were allowed to participate in court life at a very young age. They were allowed to attend as well as arrange festivities already as children.",
"Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême Louis Antoine of France, Duke of Angoulême (6 August 1775 – 3 June 1844) was the elder son of Charles X of France and the last Dauphin of France from 1824 to 1830. He was disputedly King of France and Navarre for less than 20 minutes before he himself abdicated, due to his father's abdication during the July Revolution in 1830. He never reigned over the country, but after his father's death in 1836, he was the legitimist pretender as Louis XIX. He was a \"petit-fils de France\" at birth, and was initially known as Louis Antoine d'Artois. After his father's accession to the throne, he became \"Dauphin de France\", and his surname changed to de France, following the royal custom for princes with such rank. Louis Antoine was born at Versailles, as the eldest son of Charles Philippe, Count of Artois, the youngest brother of King Louis XVI of France. He was born one year after the death of his great-grandfather, Louis XV of France. His mother was Princess Maria Theresa of Savoy (known as \"Marie Thérèse\" in France), the daughter of Victor Amadeus III of Sardinia and Maria Antonia of Spain. From 1780 until 1789, Louis Antoine and his younger brother, Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Berry, were educated by Armand-Louis de Sérent \"marquis de Sérent\", their \"gouverneur\", in the \"château de Beauregard\", a few miles from Versailles. On the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 the two young princes followed their father into exile to first Turin, then to Germany and finally England. In 1792, Louis Antoine joined the émigré army of his cousin, the Prince of Condé. In June 1795, his uncle, the \"comte de Provence\", proclaimed himself King Louis XVIII. Later that year, the 20-year-old Louis Antoine led an unsuccessful royalist uprising in the Vendée. In early 1797, he joined his brother and uncle in the German Duchy of Brunswick, hoping to join the Austrian Army. The defeat of Austria by France obliged them to flee, and they took refuge in Mittau, Courland, under the protection of Tsar Paul I of Russia.",
"Louis Armand II, Prince of Conti Louis Armand de Bourbon (10 November 1695 – 4 May 1727) was Prince of Conti, from 1709 to his death, succeeding his father, François Louis de Bourbon. As a member of the reigning House of Bourbon, he was a \"Prince du Sang\". His mother was Marie Thérèse de Bourbon, daughter of Henri Jules, Prince of Condé and granddaughter of Louis de Bourbon, \"le Grand Condé\". He was nominated as the Prince of Orange by King Louis XIV of France in 1712. His male line descendants died out in 1814; through his daughter, however, he is an ancestor of the present-day pretenders to the throne of France and Italy, the kings of Spain and Belgium and the Grand Duke of Luxemburg. Born at the Palace of Versailles, he was one of seven children born to his parents, and their only son to live past the age of 5. At the age of 8, on 30 June 1704, he was baptised. Held at Versailles, King Louis XIV had Mary of Modena as the guest of honour at the ceremony; Mary was the widow of the exiled King James II of England. Louis was often described as being \"hideous\"; he was humpbacked and very unattractive. At the age of 13 his father died in Paris (22 February 1709) and Louis Armand succeeded to the Conti title and wealth, although there was no real principality. On 1 January 1711, Louis Armand was made a knight of the Order of the Holy Spirit. On 9 July 1713, Louis Armand married his maternal first cousin, Louise Élisabeth de Bourbon, known as \"Mademoiselle de Bourbon\". Another proposed bride was her sister, Louise Anne de Bourbon. Louise Élisabeth was the daughter of Louis III, Prince of Condé and Louise-Françoise de Bourbon, a legitimised daughter of King Louis XIV and his famous mistress, Madame de Montespan. The event, also took place at Versailles and was part of a double marriage; on the same day, his oldest sister, Marie Anne de Bourbon, married Louis Henri I, Prince of Condé, known as the Duke of Bourbon.",
" As son of the king, he was a Fils de France (\"son of France\"), and as the eldest son, Dauphin of France. His father Henry IV was the first French king of the House of Bourbon, having succeeded his second cousin, Henry III (1574–1589), in application of Salic law. Louis XIII's paternal grandparents were Antoine de Bourbon, duc de Vendôme, and Jeanne d'Albret, Queen of Navarre. His maternal grandparents were Francesco I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, and Joanna of Austria, Grand Duchess of Tuscany. Eleonora de' Medici, his maternal aunt, was his godmother. As a child, he was raised under the supervision of the royal governess Françoise de Montglat. The ambassador of King James I of England to the court of France, Sir Edward Herbert, who presented his credentials to Louis XIII in 1619, remarked on Louis’s extreme congenital speech impediment and his double teeth: Louis XIII ascended the throne in 1610 upon the assassination of his father, and his mother Marie de' Medici acted as his Regent. Although Louis XIII came of age at thirteen (1614), his mother did not give up her position as Regent until 1617, when he was 16. Marie maintained most of her husband's ministers, with the exception of Maximilien de Béthune, Duke of Sully, who was unpopular in the country. She mainly relied on Nicolas de Neufville, seigneur de Villeroy, Noël Brûlart de Sillery, and Pierre Jeannin for political advice. Marie pursued a moderate policy, confirming the Edict of Nantes. She was not, however, able to prevent rebellion by nobles such as Henri, Prince of Condé (1588–1646), second in line to the throne after Marie's second surviving son Gaston, Duke of Orléans. Condé squabbled with Marie in 1614, and briefly raised an army, but he found little support in the country, and Marie was able to raise her own army. Nevertheless, Marie agreed to call an Estates General assembly to address Condé's grievances. The assembly of this Estates General was delayed until Louis XIII formally came of age on his thirteenth birthday. Although his coming-of-age formally ended Marie's Regency, she remained the \"de facto\" ruler of France."
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"Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor"
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Where did the director of film The Vicar Of Vejlby (1931 Film) die?
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The Vicar of Vejlby (1931 film) Præsten i Vejlby ("The Vicar of Vejlby") is a 1931 Danish film about a murder in a vicarage directed by George Schnéevoigt and based on a novel by Steen Steensen Blicher. Starring Henrik Malberg and Karin Nellemose it marked the debut of actor Aage Winther-Jørgensen. The film was a remake of the 1920 version by August Blom; and was remade again in 1972 by Claus Ørsted. One year earlier, George Schnéevoigt had made the first Danish sound film of feature length; however, the dialogue was spoken in Norwegian. "Præsten i Vejlby" was the first feature-length sound film with Danish dialogue. Although the public had seen short Danish "talkies" since 1923, and experienced foreign features with sound for two years, the Danish language film was unique enough to create a huge success and make the film very profitable.
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"Gerald Grove Sir Gerald Grove, 3rd Baronet (18 December 1886 – 3 March 1962) was an army officer and filmmaker. He was one of the Grove Baronets. His father was Sir Walter Grove and his mother was the essayist Geraldine, Lady Grove. He was educated at Sherborne School in Sherborne, Dorset. Grove joined the British South Africa Police in Rhodesia in 1911 and served during World War I in the South-West Africa Campaign and East African Campaign and with the King's African Rifles, rising to rank of lieutenant. He was co-director of the 1929 film \"A Dangerous Woman\" and served in technical advisory roles in \"Tower of London\", \"Christopher Strong\", and the 1930 version of \"Raffles\". After holding several government positions, he succeeded to his title on 9 February 1932 and died unmarried 30 years later. He had inherited the manor of Sedgehill, Wiltshire, which was sold after his death.",
"Doctor Josser K.C. Doctor Josser K.C. is a 1931 British comedy film directed by Norman Lee and starring Ernie Lotinga, Jack Hobbs and Molly Lamont. Made at Elstree Studios it was part of the Josser series of comedies featuring Lotinga. It is sometimes confused with another production \"P.C. Josser\" although they are separate films made at different studios by different directors.",
"E. J. Babille E.J. Babille (May 3, 1883 – February 18, 1970) was born Edward Julius Babille in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He was an American assistant director in the silent and early sound film eras. In the first twelve years of his career he would work almost exclusively with three directors: E. Mason Hopper, Edward H. Griffith, and Paul Stein, who directed seventeen of the twenty-one films on which Babille was the assistant director. He left the film industry in 1939, and died on February 18, 1970.",
"Cape Forlorn Cape Forlorn is a 1931 British drama film directed by Ewald André Dupont and starring Fay Compton, Frank Harvey and Ian Hunter. It was the English-language version of a British International Pictures multiple-language production with France and Germany which also made \"Le cap perdu\" and \"Menschen im Käfig\". The film is also known as \"The Love Storm\". A lighthouse on a lonely coast of New Zealand is looked after by lighthouse keeper William Kell. Kell marries Eileen, a dancer in a cabaret, who winds up having an affair with Kell's assistant, Cass. Eileen then begins flirting with a stranger, Kingsley, an absconder who is rescued from the wreck of a motor launch. Kingsley and Cass quarrel; the woman rushes upon the scene with a revolver, fires blindly, and Cass Is shot dead. The movie was based on a play which premiered in 1930. It was written by Frank Harvey who appeared in the original cast. Shooting took place in late 1930 and it was made in English, French and German. The film was originally banned in Australia by the censor but this was overturned on appeal after a number of cuts were agreed upon. Reviews were poor. Shortly after the film was released in Australia, Harvey appeared in a production of the play at the Criterion Theatre in Sydney. Harvey said this was in part because the film version had so changed his play.",
"Jack E. Cox Jack E. Cox, BSC, known variously as J. J. Cox, Jack Cox, John J. Cox and John Cox, was an English cinematographer born in London, on 26 July 1896. After a prolific career of 85 films in 33 years, Cox died in Surrey on 29 July 1960.",
"Bjarne Henning-Jensen Bjarne Henning-Jensen (6 October 1908 – 21 February 1995) was a Danish film director and screenwriter. He directed 21 films between 1941 and 1974. He was born in Copenhagen, Denmark and died in Denmark. He was married to Astrid Henning-Jensen.",
"Edward Sloman Edward Sloman (19 July 1886, London - 29 September 1972, Woodland Hills, California) was an English silent film director, actor, screenwriter and radio broadcaster. He directed over 100 films and starred in over 30 films as an actor between 1913 and 1938. After directing over 100 films and starring in over 30, Sloman made his last film in 1938 and in 1939 left the film industry to enter radio broadcasting as a writer, producer and director. Unfortunately the majority of Sloman's works have been lost. However, his 1927 Universal silent \"Alias the Deacon\" starring Jean Hersholt is held by the Library of Congress. He died in Woodland Hills, California in 1972 aged 86.",
"Henry Cass Henry Cass (24 June 1903 – 15 March 1989) was a British director, particularly prolific in film in the horror and comedy genres. Previously an actor, he was also a prolific stage director of classical theatre at the Old Vic in the 1930s. In 1923, Lee DeForest filmed Cass for a short film \"Henry Cass Demonstration Film\" made in DeForest's Phonofilm sound-on-film process. The film was previewed at the Engineers Society of New York on 12 April 1923, and premiered at the Rivoli Theatre in New York on 15 April 1923 with 17 other short Phonofilms. He was married to the actress Joan Hopkins.",
"Creeping Shadows Creeping Shadows is a 1931 British crime film directed by John Orton and starring Franklin Dyall, Arthur Hardy and Margot Grahame. It was made at Welwyn Studios. Three victims plan to murder a retired informant.",
"Walter Forde Walter Forde (born Thomas Seymour Woolford, 21 April 1898 – 7 January 1984) was a British actor, screenwriter and director. Born in Lambeth, south London in 1898, he directed over fifty films between 1919 from the silent era through to 1949 in the sound era. He died in Los Angeles, California in 1984. Forde was the son of the music hall comedian Tom Seymour. During the 1920s, he was a silent film comedian, acting in a series of shorts before shifting into directing feature films. Emerging as an established film director in the 1930s, he directed films for Gainsborough Pictures and Ealing Studios."
] |
[] |
[
"Copenhagen"
] |
Do director of film Bruiser (Film) and director of film Kathanayaka have the same nationality?
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[] |
Thiru (director) Thiru Krishnamoorthy (born 6 July 1979) is an Indian film director and screenwriter who works in Tamil cinema. He has directed films such as "Theeradha Vilaiyattu Pillai" (2010), "Samar" (2013) and "Naan Sigappu Manithan" (2014). After assisting A. Rajasekhar in "Sathyam" (2008), Thiru made his directorial debut with "Theeradha Vilaiyattu Pillai" (2010) starring Vishal alongside three lead actresses. The film received mixed reviews and became hit in the box office. After that Thiru again collaborated with Vishal in two films "Samar" (2013) and "Naan Sigappu Manithan" (2014). The former dealt with protagonist who unknowingly involved in a dangerous game and the latter dealt with hero suffering from narcolepsy. He married Kani Thiru, daughter of film director Agathiyan. The couple have two daughters, Diya and Tashmai.
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[
"Sudheesh Sankar Sudheesh Sankar is an Indian film director who has directed Malayalam Television serials and few films. He has also directed a Kollywood film \"Aarumaname\", Sankar is known for the Dileep film \"Villali Veeran\" and the popular Malayalam TV-series like \"Omanathinkal Pakshi\", \"Ente Manasaputhri\" and\"Parasparam\". Sankar's new Tamil film Kathrikka Vendakka based on Organic farming is awaiting release.",
"Udayakantha Warnasuriya Udayakantha Warnasuriya is a Sri Lankan film director, producer, screenwriter and author. Considered to be one of Sri Lanka's best film makers, Warnasuriya has made many movies, including \"Gini Avi Saha Gini Keli,\" \"Rosa Wasanthe\", \"Hiripoda Wassa\", \"Randiya Dahara and \"Asai Man Piyabanna\". By 2018, Warnasuriya had directed 22 films, produced 7 films, wrote 5 film stories, 9 film scripts, 2 film dialogues and 3 film screenplays. In 2017, Warnasuriya was arrested for allegedly making a film to duplicate the performances of veteran film actor Bandu Samarasinghe. The actor made a complaint against Warnasuriya and similar actor Bindu Bothalegama. On a previous occasion, Warnasuriya and four others were summoned. They were released on a surety bail of Rs.10,000. Warnasuriya has written two books, based on his popular films.",
"Kaththi Kaththi (; ) is a 2014 Indian Tamil-language action drama film directed by A. R. Murugadoss, and produced by Allirajah Subaskaran under the banner Lyca Productions, along with Ayngaran International, as the co-producer and Eros International, who distributed the film. The film stars Vijay in a dual role as lookalikes Kathiresan and Jeevanantham, with Samantha Ruth Prabhu, Neil Nitin Mukesh, Tota Roy Chowdhury and Sathish appear in other prominent roles. It focuses on Kathiresan, a petty thief and lookalike of Jeevanantham, who attempts to lead a rebellion by farmers from the latter's village, Thanoothu, and helps them fight against corporate companies who exploited Thanoothu's water resources. This film marks the second collaboration of Vijay and Murugadoss, after \"Thuppakki\" (2012). Following an official announcement in November 2013, the principal photography for the film commenced from February—September 2014. Primarily shot across Chennai, it was also filmed in Kolkata, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Rajahmundry, Begumpet, Nellore and Kadapa. The cinematography for the film was handled by George C. Williams and the film was edited by A. Sreekar Prasad. The soundtrack and film score is composed by Anirudh Ravichander. \"Kaththi\" was released worldwide on 22 October 2014, coinciding with the Diwali festival, and received critical acclaim with critics praising the story and screenplay by Murugadoss, Vijay's performance, social message, action scenes, cinematography and Anirudh's musical score. Before the film's release, it faced controversies for plagiarism allegations, and the business link of Subaskaran, the film's producer, with Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa, which resulted Tamil fringe groups to protest against the film. \"Kaththi\" was a box-office success and emerged as one of the highest-grossing Tamil films, grossing . It was one of the highest-grossing Tamil film in U.S at that time. The film was remade into Telugu as \"Khaidi No. 150\", starring Chiranjeevi. A recipient of various accolades, the film won three out of seven nominations at the Filmfare Awards South, including Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil.",
"Vijay (director) B. Vijaya Reddy (15 July 1936 – 9 October 2020), better known as Vijay Reddy or Vijay, was an Indian film director who worked primarily in Kannada cinema with over 50 movies to his credit. His debut directorial venture was \"Rangamahal Rahasya\" (1970). He was known for his collaborations with leading Kannada actor Rajkumar for movies like \"Gandhada Gudi\" (1973), \"\"Mayura\" \" (1975), \"Naa Ninna Mareyalare\" (1976) and \"Sanaadi Appanna\" (1977) which are considered among the classic movies of Kannada cinema. Reddy was born in Tadepalligudem in the West Godavari district of Madras Presidency in British India to a farming family. He subsequently went to Madras (now Chennai) to look for work. Reddy started his career in the cinema industry as an assistant editor for B. Vittalacharya's Kannada directorial \"Mane Tumbida Hennu\". His directorial debut was \"Rangamahal Rahasya\" (1970), starring Srinath, the success of which earned him recognition in the industry. It was followed by \"Modala Rathri\" (1970) with the same lead actor but the movie was not a commercial success. His third directorial venture, \"Cow Boy Kulla\" (1973), with Dwarakish was a reasonable success. His career took a turning point in 1973 when he directed his fourth movie, \"Gandhada Gudi\" which was the 150th movie of Rajkumar, who was the leading actor of Kannada films at that time, and the third movie of Vishnuvardhan, who had become a popular actor with the success of his debut movie \"Naagarahaavu\". \"Gandhada Gudi\" became a milestone in Kannada films. Vijay's next five movies, \"Sri Srinivasa Kalyana\", \"Mayura\", \"Naa Ninna Mareyalare\", \"Badavara Bandhu\" and \"Sanaadi Appanna,\" all of which starred Rajkumar were huge commercial successes. He achieved national recognition with the 1977 movie \"Sanaadi Appanna\" which had acclaimed shehnai player Bismillah Khan playing the instrument for the lead actor Rajkumar.",
"Kathanayakudu Kathanayakudu may refer to:",
"Kathir Kathir is an Indian film director, producer, and screenwriter who works predominantly in Tamil cinema. Kathir was born in kalkarai, a small village in the Radhapuram Taluk of Tirunelveli District, state of Tamil Nadu, India. Kathir grew up in a middle-class family as the only son along with his three sisters. His father Subhash was a farmer and mother Isakiammal assisted him in his farming. Kathir had his elementary schooling in kalkarai elementary school. He finished his 5th standard there and joined St. Teresa's school in Vadakangulam. He completed his school studies here. Kathir got into the College of Fine arts and Crafts, Chennai. He did a five-year course in Fine arts and graduated with a Diploma in Fine Arts. Kathir started out as a poster designer in the film industry, and designed posters for films including \"Moondram Pirai\" (1981), \"Andha 7 Naatkal\" (1981), \"Darling, Darling, Darling\" (1982) and Mani Ratnam's \"Pagal Nilavu\" (1985) to make pocket money while he was in college. He worked as an assistant director for Pandiyarajan and GM Kumar. In 2001, he founded his own production studio Sound Light Studio through which he produced \"Kadhal Virus\". He also distributed the film all over Tamil Nadu. In 1996, \"Kadhal Desam\" emerged as the biggest hit of his career grossing 10 crore at the box office. Kathir scripted and was ready to make a film titled \"I Love You\" by 1997. After being unable to produce the film himself, he shelved the venture. He moved on to briefly begin pre-production work on a project titled \"Bangalore\" in late 1999, before opting not to continue. Kathir announced a comeback in 2008 and began work on a film titled \"Manavar Dhinam\" with Vinay in the lead role. Following a delay, the actor was replaced by Srikanth and a launch was held in 2009 by the production house Ayngaran International. However, the film was later shelved and the pair decided to collaborate for the new venture titled \"Kodai Vidumurai\". The film underwent a change in cast and work on the film, featuring Shaam, began again in July 2012. The film has since failed to make progress.",
"Somaratne Dissanayake Somaratne Dissanayake is a Sri Lankan film director, screenwriter and producer. He is the Chairman of ITN Sri Lanka and the president of the Film Makers Guild of Sri Lanka (FMG). He won the Peace prize of Chicago International Children's Film Festival and bronze award for Independent Theatrical Feature Films at Worldfest Houston for his debut film, \"Saroja\" (2000). In 2007, he received Presidential award for directing \"Samanala Thatu\" (2006). Somaratne abandoned his life in Australia to pursue a career in film. He started the stage play, \"Mee Pura Wesio\" in 1984 and then a television drama, \"Iti Pahan\" in mid 1990s. He did not come to the cinema at once. He studied cinema for another 10 years. He earned his MA in performing arts from the University of Sydney, Australia. He also obtained his PhD in cinema from the University of Colombo. He made his debut in the Sinhala film in 2000 with a controversial but blockbuster film \"Saroja\". In 2002, he produced his second directorial venture, \"Punchi Suranganavi\", followed by \"Sooriya Arana\" in 2004 and \"Samanala Thatu\" in 2005. his next film was released in 2008, \"Siri Raja Siri\". He then directed and screened the film \"Bindu\" in 2009. His next film \"Siri Parakum\" was released in 2013 and was a huge success. In 2016, Dissanayake directed and screened the film \"Sarigama\" which was a part of the world famous film \"The Sound of Music\". In 2017, he made another film called \"Underpants Thief\" or \"Jungi Hora\" but it has not been screened yet. The screening of his latest film, \"Tsunami\", began in 2020. All these films have been well-received, and almost every film has been a record success. He is married to producer and television host Renuka Balasuriya. In January 2015, he was appointed as the Chairman of the Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation (SLRC), only to resign later that year in August, due to personal reasons.",
"Rishab Shetty Prashant Shetty known professionally as Rishab Shetty is an Indian director and actor, born on July 7 who primarily works in Kannada-language cinema. He is a diploma holder in film direction from the Government Film and TV Institute in Bangalore and has worked with A. M. R. Ramesh on \"Cyanide\". Shetty then assisted Arvind Kaushik on a TV series and went on to make his acting debut in Thuglak. He played a small role as a police officer in Pawan Kumar's \"Lucia\". Rishab then played a key role in Ulidavaru Kandante, a movie directed by Rakshit Shetty. Shetty has a background in \"yakshagana\", a theatrical folk art from coastal Karnataka.",
"Joshy Mathew Joshy Mathew (Malayalam: ജോഷി മാത്യു) an Indian film director in Malayalam cinema, started his career in 1984 as an assistant to renowned director P. Padmarajan. In 1992 he made feature debut with Nakshatra Koodaram (1992). Then followed Oru Kadankatha Pole (1993), Rajadhani (1994), Man of the Match (1996), Pathaam Nilayile Theevandy (Train in the 10th Floor)(2009), Upadesiyude Makan (2010), Black Forest (2013) and In a land far away (2018).",
"A. Karunakaran A. Karunakaran (born 25 December 1971) is a Telugu film director known for \"Tholi Prema\" (1998), \"Happy\" (2006), and \"Ullasamga Utsahamga\" (2008). Karunakaran began his career as a clap director for \"Kadhal Desam\" (1996) after Sasi introduced him to Kathir. He worked as an assistant to Bhagyaraj and Shankar before making his directorial debut with \"Tholi Prema\" (1998). He conceived the script while in Madras and cast Pawan Kalyan after seeing him in a magazine. \"Tholi Prema\" was a box office success. His second film \"Yuvakudu\" was Bhumika Chawla's first film. The film was unsuccessful. His next film \"Vasu\" (2002) was not very successful at the box office, but garnered a cult following over the years. Karunakaran collaborated with Pawan Kalyan for \"Balu ABCDEFG\" (2005), but the film was a failure unlike \"Tholi Prema\". The following year, \"Happy\" (2006), based on the Tamil film \"Azhagiya Theeye\" (2004) released and was a box office success. Karunakaran garnered acclaim for \"Ullasamga Utsahamga\" (2008) starring newcomer Yasho Sagar. \"Darling\" (2010) released to positive reviews. He then directed a bilingual titled \"Endhukante Premanta\" in Telugu and \"Yen Endral Kadhal Enben\" in Tamil. The Telugu version released to negative reviews while the Tamil version was never released. \"Chinnadana Nee Kosam\" (2014) and \"Tej I Love You\" (2018) released to mixed reviews."
] |
[] |
[
"no"
] |
Did Enrique of Malacca and Nicholas Cummings share the same nationality?
|
[] |
Jeremiah Cummings Jeremiah Cummings may refer to:
|
[] |
[
"Enrique Fernández Enrique Fernández may refer to:",
"Enrique González Rojo Enrique González Rojo may refer to:",
"James Cummings James Cummings may refer to:",
"Enrique Hernández Enrique Hernández may refer to:",
"Enrique Martinez Enrique Martinez or Enrique Martínez may refer to:",
"Nicolás González Nicolás González may refer to:",
"Nicholas Cummings Nicholas Andrew Cummings (July 25, 1924 – June 8, 2020) was an American psychologist and author. Cummings first attended the University of California at Berkeley, receiving a bachelor's degree in psychology, before moving to Claremont Graduate University for his master's and Adelphi University for a doctorate in clinical psychology. Cummings was Chief of Mental Health with the Kaiser Permanente Health Maintenance Organization (1959–1979) and founding president of the California School of Professional Psychology (1970). He became instrumental in the development of the Psy.D. training program for clinical psychologists when he launched the National Foundation of Professional Schools of Psychology, an alternative to the American Psychological Association for accrediting university doctoral programs in clinical psychology. In 1979, Cummings was elected president of the American Psychological Association. In 1994, he co-founded with his wife the Nicholas & Dorothy Cummings Foundation. The Foundation is dedicated to ensuring that routine healthcare includes doctoral psychotherapy. In the 2010s, they donated $5 million to the Archives of the History of American Psychology at the University of Akron (Ohio), which renamed itself the Cummings Center for the History of Psychology as a result. Cummings and his daughter Janet L. Cummings founded the Cummings Graduate Institute for Behavioral Health Studies in 2014. Cummings was born in Salinas, California. At the time of his death, Cummings resided in Reno, Nevada with his wife, Dorothy Mills Cummings. They have two children and two grandchildren.",
"Nicholas Turner Nicholas Turner may refer to:",
"Enrique Nieto Enrique Nieto may refer to:",
"Fernando Enrique Fernando Enrique may refer to:"
] |
[] |
[
"no"
] |
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