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Are both directors of films Kalamegam and We Are Brothers from the same country?
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Kalaignanam Kalaignanam (born K. M. Balakrishnan), is an Indian writer, actor, producer and director who works in Tamil films. Kalaignanam was born in Elumalai Village. Rajinikanth essayed first independent lead role in the movie Bairavi produced by Kalaignanam. Bairavai movie was produced under the production company name "Valli Velan movies". After the success of the movie later Kalaignanam produced his movies under the production company name "Bhairavi productions". He has written his cinema experiences as four volume of books named "Cinema secret". Kalaignanam's elder son Murugan died in September 2017.
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[ "N. Lingusamy Nammalvar Lingusamy, (born 14 November 1965), is an Indian film director, screenwriter and film producer in Tamil cinema based in Chennai. Lingusamy made his directorial debut with the Mammootty starrer family-drama \"Aanandham\" in 2001 and followed by successful films as \"Run\" (2002), \"Sandakozhi\" (2005), \"Paiyaa\" (2010) and \"Vettai\" (2012). He and his brother N. Subash Chandrabose have also produced films through his production company, Thirupathi Brothers. Lingusamy born on 14 November 1967 and hails from a village Lakshmipuram, Theni, Tamil Nadu. He joined as an assistant director to director \"A. Venkatesh\" for his Tamil film \"Mahaprabhu-123\" and followed in his next film \"Selva\". He had also assisted Vikraman in \"Vaanathaippola\", a family drama on brothers. He made his directorial debut with the Tamil family drama \"Aanandham\", starring Mammootty. About the film, Linguswamy said: \"The film actually is based on real life. Born in a large family I was impressed with the incidents my mother narrated to me. They were deeply etched in my memory and I thought I would use them when I got a chance to direct a film. Thus when Mr. Chowdhry gave me an opportunity I narrated the stories and he found them highly appealing\". Linguswamy originally wanted to title the project, \"Thirupathi Brothers\", which he later went on to name his production house. \"Aanandham\" opened to positive reviews in May 2001, with a critic noting that \"it is a promising work from the debutant director\". The film won several awards including the Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil, Cinema Express Award for Best Film – Tamil, and two Tamil Nadu State Film Awards, while, The Hindu listed the film amongst the best of 2001. His second film was \"Run\" with Madhavan. The film, too, was a commercially successful and also received good reviews. After the success of \"Run\", Linguswamy announced his plans of re-collaborating with Madhavan in \"Sathyam\", a film about student politics.", "We Are Brothers We Are Brothers () is a 2014 South Korean comedy-drama film directed by Jang Jin. Two brothers were separated in childhood at an orphanage, only to find each other as adults 30 years later. But right after their reunion, their birth mother, who suffers from Alzheimer's disease, suddenly disappears. So Sang-yeon (a pastor raised in America) and Ha-yeon (a shaman) team up together and go on a road trip to search for her.", "M. Padmakumar M. Padmakumar is an Indian film director working in Malayalam cinema. He began his career working as an assistant director to a number of leading directors and later became an independent director through \"Ammakilikkoodu\" in 2003. His best known works include \"Vaasthavam\" (2006), \"Shikkar\" (2010), \"Jalam\" (2015), and \"Joseph\" (2018).", "Selvaraghavan Selvaraghavan is an Indian film director and screenwriter who has directed predominantly Tamil films. He debuted with \"Thulluvadho Ilamai\" (2002) but his father is credited for business reasons, which stars his brother Dhanush, Selvaraghavan went on to make a series of romantic drama films with \"Kadhal Kondein\" (2003) (also starring Dhanush) and \"7G Rainbow Colony\" (2004) before also venturing into coming-of-age films \"Pudhupettai\" (2006) and \"Mayakkam Enna\" (2011), both starring Dhanush. He has also ventured into making science fiction and fantasy films, such as depicting a fantasy Chola kingdom in \"Aayirathil Oruvan\" (2010) and a parallel universe in \"Irandam Ulagam\" (2013). He has been critically acclaimed for his directorial skills. Selvaraghavan was born to film director Kasthuri Raja and Vijayalakshmi. He has a brother, Dhanush, who is an actor, and two sisters, who are both doctors. In his youth, one of his eyes was removed after he developed retinal cancer. Despite coming from a family from the film industry, Selvaraghavan and his sisters were persuaded by their parents to seek a career with an academic background. He subsequently went on to attain a BEng. in Mechanical Engineering, though his exam performances were unremarkable and he acknowledges he was \"never going to become one of the best\". During his studies, he engaged part-time in different career paths in a process he describes as \"soul-searching\", before finding satisfaction as a writer. After he graduated in 1997, he approached producers to fund his screenplay writing, but was unsuccessful and often remained at home as an unemployed graduate. His family faced financial pressures in the early 2000s with his father being out of work, and subsequently they decided to put their remaining earnings into a venture titled \"Thulluvadho Ilamai\" (2002), which Selvaraghavan had written. Featuring his brother Dhanush in his first role, alongside Sherin and Abhinay, the film told the coming-of-age story of six high school students and featured a hit soundtrack by Yuvan Shankar Raja.", "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.", "Sethu Eyyal Sethu Eyyal is an Indian director and artist from Eyyal in Thrissur, Kerala. He was an assistant to A. K. Lohithadas. He is well known for his debut film Shyamaragam \"(History in the 100 years of Indian Cinema, a musical guru flows through 4 generations of music family of KJ Yesudas)\", which V. Dakshinamoorthy composed the music for the last time. He started his film career as an assistant director in the A. K. Lohithadas directed movie Kasthuri Maan, Chakram, Chakkara Muthu and Nivedyam.", "Kalari (2018 film) Kalari () is a 2018 Tamil-language action thriller film directed by Kiran and produced by Senith Keloth under the Nakshathra Movie Magic banner. The film stars Krishna, Vidya Pradeep, and Samyuktha Menon in the lead roles, while M. S. Bhaskar and Jayaprakash play pivotal roles. The soundtrack and background score were composed by V. Prasanna, while the cinematography and editing were done by R. B. Gurudev and Sathyaraj Natarajan respectively. The film was released on 24 August 2018. Directed by debutant Kiran, the film is set in Vathuruthy in Kochi and tells the tale of a strained father-son relationship. Krishna was signed to portray a man with agoraphobia who wants to lead a peaceful life, while his abusive father, essayed by M. S. Bhaskar, was characterised as a rogue who lives life at his own will. Vidya Pradeep was selected to play Krishna's pair, while Samyuktha Menon was signed to debut as Krishna's sister. R. B. Gurudev handled the film's cinematography, while playback singer V. Prasanna turned music composer with this film. Kiran had filmed the project in Vathuruthy owing to its large Tamil population and its proximity to a railway track, which features throughout the film. In regard to the title, Krishna noted the film has nothing to do with kalaripayattu, the art form. He stated that \"kalari\" in Tamil means war, and the film dealt with the internal and external wars of his character in the film. The shoot of the film began in January 2017 and continued throughout the year. \"The Times of India\" gave the film two out of five stars and wrote that \"Kalari is let down by the dated treatment. Neither the script nor the filmmaking feels fresh.\"", "Babu Pallassery Babu Pallassery is an Indian film scriptwriter, dialogue writer and actor who works in Mollywood. His screenplays include the film \"Maanthrikam\", starring Mohanlal. He has written many television serials for Malayalam channels. His best known works in serials are \"Thaali\", \"Gandharvayamam\" and \"Valsaylam\". His serial \"Kanmani\" is telecast by Surya TV. He is married to Sucy Babu. He has 2 sons, elder Lenin Babu, and younger Indian Pallassery. Both his sons have acted in movies as child artists. His younger son played a major character in the Malayalam movie \"Idukki Gold\".", "Manusangada Manusangada (English title: We are Humans) is an Indian Tamil-language indie drama film directed by Amshan Kumar. The film is based on a true story about the signaling of the rise of Dalit struggles in contemporary India against long standing human rights violations. The title 'Manusangada' is from Inquilab's poem of the same name and literally means 'We are humans too.' The film had its world priemere in Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival and its International Premiere at the Cairo International Film Festival. It was also selected in the Indian Panorama section of International Film Festival of India, Goa and was the only Tamil film to be selected that year. The film has also won the Best Feature Film award from the Puducherry Government in its 35th Indian Panorama Festival. When Kolappan's father dies, he isn't allowed to carry his father's body through the common pathway because he's a Dalit. He seeks help from official powers only to find that they are equally casteist. Refusing to be cowed down, Kolappan begins a protest and finds his village standing by him. Based on an actual incident, Kolappan's story is a look at the deeply-embedded prejudice that Dalits have endured and against which they are rising. Amshan Kumar chanced upon a news clipping of the incident in 2016, he set aside a screenplay of a William Shakespeare adaptation that he had been working on. Manusangada was shot with a handheld camera in a series of shots with the aesthetic that reflects the reality at hand. Kumar wanted to film it in a docu-drama style with a tragic narrative. The filming was completed in 22 days and was shot on location. The film was screened at the following Film festivals:", "P. Kalaimani P. Kalaimani was an Indian writer, producer and director who worked in the Tamil cinema. He has written story, screenplay and dialogues for more than 100 films. He was a writer who has been in the industry for three decades and seen success through his work, some of his greatest work are Bharathiraaja’s \"16 Vayathinile\", \"Mann Vasanai\", \"Gopurangal Saivathillai\", \"Muthal Vasantham\", \"Ingeyum Oru Gangai\" and many more. He was awarded \"Kalaimamani\" by the state government and he has also produced and directed few movies. He worked with the likes of Sathyaraj and Vijayakanth in his career spanning over three decades. His last film as dialogue writer was \"Kuruvi\". He has also written and directed films like \"Therkathi Kallan\" and \"Manitha Jaathi\". He produced lot of films under the banner of \"Everest Films\". He died at midnight on 3 April 2012 due to prolonged illness. He was survived by wife Saraswathi." ]
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[ "no" ]
Do both films Amba Ambika Ambalika and Ernest Goes To Camp have the directors from the same country?
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Amba Ambika Ambalika Amba Ambika Ambaalika (),dubbed into Hindi as Mahayudh is a 1976 Indian Malayalam film, directed and produced by P. Subramaniam. The film stars Srividya, Kaviyoor Ponnamma, Hari and Jose Prakash in the lead roles. The film has musical score by G. Devarajan. This film was based on "Mahabharata". The music was composed by G. Devarajan and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi.
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[ "Amba Amba or AMBA may refer to:", "Ambale Ambale may refer to:", "Amboli Amboli may refer to:", "Amasike Emelonye Amasike Emelonye (born 7 November 1962) is a Nigerian film producer and motorsports coach. He is known for producing the award-winning film \"Last Flight to Abuja\" (2012), and in February 2020 was a guest on the first ever Nigerian Outdoor Reality TV Series \"Camp Out 9ja\" (2020) written by Success Akpojotor and anchored by Soba Mac Pepple of KUFM.", "Amma (1949 film) Amma is a 1949 Sri Lankan film directed by Sirisena Wimalaweera. It was adapted from one of his plays that bore the same name. The cast included Eddie Junior, Pearl Vasudevi, D. R. Nanayakkara and N. R. Dias and was filmed at the Neptune Studio in Madras. It was screened at the Central Cinema in Maradana. Story involving a mother.", "Ambili (director) Ambili is a film director, art director, photographer and painting artist from the state of Kerala, India. His notable films are \"Veena poovu\", \"Ashtapadi\", \"Maunaragam\", \"Swantham Sarika\", Chamante Kabani and \"Samudhayam\". He lives in Ernakulam. Ambili was born and brought up in ‘Chentrappinni’ a coastal village in Thrissur, Kerala, South India. Ambili - the film director who has introduced a new visual culture in the Malayalam Cine world through his films. His rise to the stature of a director has been a steady one. From a still photographer, art director, make-up artist and designer, he rose to the height of a film director. He was, moreover, a born painter who knew the soul of colours and that had contributed much to this development. It was in the early years of 1960 that the classic cinema “Chemmeen” was released. The shooting of the film was mainly in Nattika beach and surroundings and was a wonder and excitement to the locals. Famous stars like Sathyan, Madhu, Sheela, Kottarakkara were all present. But for Ambili, who was only a sixth std student, the main attraction was another man - a man in shorts and t-shirt, with a smoking pipe between his lips. Later Ambili came to know that this fat man with a bulgan beard was non other than the director Ramu Karyatt. He was also aware of the fact that a director is the most important person in a cinema production. After his S.S.L.C. he joined in the Fine Arts College, Trichur. He has won many first prizes for painting in youth festivals. During his course, he came to know that the famous film directors P. N. Menon and Bharathan were the students of this institutions. The spark of desire created in his mind while witnessing shooting of 'Chemmeen' was kindled by this knowledge. After the course, he was immersed in his world of colours and pictures. In 1971, Ramu Karyatt contested in the parliament election. Ambili got a chance to design posters for him. The pictures he drew for the campaign, attracted the attention of Karyatt. Even though Karyatt was defeated in the election, Ambili was successful in forming a strong bond with him.", "Josef Ambor Josef Ambor (28 July 1908 - 1970) was a British cinematographer.", "Ambili Ammavan (film) Ambili Ammavan is a 1986 Indian Malayalam film, directed by KG Vijayakumar. The film stars Jagathy Sreekumar, Nedumudi Venu, Kalaranjini and Santhakumari in lead roles. The film had musical score by Kannur Rajan.", "Ernest Fernando Ernest Fernando (born 26 October 1938) is a Sri Lankan wrestler. He competed in the men's freestyle flyweight at the 1964 Summer Olympics.", "Ambikapathy (1957 film) Ambikapathy (also spelled Ambikapathi) is a Tamil language film starring Sivaji Ganesan and P. Bhanumathi as the main cast. The film was released in the year 1957. This film had a sequence in Gevacolor. This story, passed on through centuries through traditional verse and folklore, dates back to the early 12th century during the reign of Kulothunga Chola I. The movie version of the story is this: Kambar, the kavichakravarthi whose name in enshrined forever as the author of Ramavatharam, the Tamil version of Ramayana, is a poet in Kulothunga's court in Urayur. Despite his erudite scholarship, deep learning of Sanskrit and Tamil and extraordinary poetic skills, Kamban remains a humble, unassuming, deeply pious man, and a loyal subject of the King. All this earns Kamban a special place in the heart of Kulothunga who treats him with utmost deference and affection. Ottakoothar is another great poet in the King's court, and Kamban's ascent in the firmament and the King's unabashed admiration for Kamban's poetry has Ottakoothar simmering in jealousy. It is in this backdrop that the love story blossoms. Amaravathi, the beautiful princess and Ambikapathy, the handsome and talented son of Kambar, fall in love. Ambikapathy is a bold, assertive and supremely self-confident youth, who even at that age, exhibits poetic skills equal to that of his illustrious father. Ottakoothar is doubly dismayed when he hears of this affair, for he had planned to bring about the marriage of Amaravathi with his stooge, Prince Kulasekharan of Vengi. With a brilliant, cunning mind at work, Ottakoothar sets about poisoning the King's mind against Ambikapathi and contrives to bring about various situations wherein Ambikapathi might fall to disgrace. Luck seems to be on Ambikapathi's side as he comes unscathed through these traps. However, when Kamban discovers his son's love for the princess and realizes the gruesome retribution that would undoubtedly follow, he pleads with Ambikapathi to give up his love." ]
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[ "no" ]
When did the director of film Sathruvu die?
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P. N. Sathya P. N. Sathya (died 5 May 2018) was an Indian film director, writer and actor working in Kannada cinema. He was known for writing and directing crime drama films. He debuted with the crime film "Majestic" (2002) which introduced actor Darshan in the lead role and went on to direct many such films like "Don" (2003), "Daasa" (2003), "Shashtri" (2005), "Thangigagi" (2006), "Sugreeva" (2010) and "Shivajinagara" (2014). He has also acted in 21 films.
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[ "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.", "Balu Anand Balu Anand (1954 – 3 June 2016) was an Indian actor and director who worked in Tamil-language films (Kollywood). He appeared in over 100 films as an actor and directed several films, such as \"Naane Raja Naane Mandhiri\", \"Annanagar Mudhal Theru\" and \"Unakkaga Piranthen\". Anand is known as the director of successful films \"Naane Raja Naane Mandhiri\" starring Vijayakanth and the Sathyaraj, Radha, Ambika starrer \"Annanagar Mudhal Theru\", a remake of Malayalam film \"Gandhinagar 2nd Street\". In the early 2000s, Anand attempted to make a comeback through two films as a director, \"Paapoo...Paapoo\" and \"Low Class Loganathan\", but neither film was theatrically released. His last directorial venture \"Anandha Thollai\" starring Powerstar Srinivasan is still unreleased. Anand died of a heart attack in his home town of Kalampalayam.", "C. V. Rajendran C. V. Rajendran (12 March 1937–1 April 2018) was an Indian film director and producer who worked in the Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada and Hindi film industries. He was a cousin of famous director C. V. Sridhar. He worked with C. V. Sridhar as assistant and associate director and gained experience and the knowledge of successful filmmaking and started his own career. He introduced Sivaji Ganesan's son Prabhu as an actor through the film \"Sangili\". Rajendran died on April 1, 2018, at the age of 81 due to health issues at MIOT Hospital.", "Dhavala Satyam Davala Satyam is an Indian film director, producer and screenplay writer. He has worked predominantly in Telugu cinema since the early 1980s. Satyam is known for his revolutionary movies known as Erra Cinema in Telugu. His film Yuvatharam Kadilindi won a Nandi Award for Best Feature Film from the Government of Andhra Pradesh and M. Prabhakar Reddy won the Nandi Award for Best Actor in 1980. He associated with film personalities such Dasari Narayana Rao, Madala Ranga Rao, Chiranjeevi, Murali Mohan and R. Narayana Murthy. Satyam directed \"Chaitanya Ratham\" (1987), a controversial biopic on politician Vangaveeti Mohana Ranga and his brother Vangaveeti Radha despite the political pressures. Both Ranga and Radha were murdered by political opponents. The movie prints were destroyed.", "N. K. Vishwanathan N. K. Vishwanathan (died 25 March 2017) was an Indian film director and cinematographer who has worked on Tamil films. After beginning his career working as a cinematographer for Tamil films during the 1980s, he branched into film direction and made commercially successful films during the 1990s. Vishwanathan appeared as the cinematographer for many films since the 1970s predominantly worked in films directed by Rama Narayanan and also helped recommend actor Sathyaraj for his first role in \"Sattam En Kaiyil\" (1978). At the insistence of Kamal Haasan, he directed \"Sankarlal\" (1981) when the film's director T. N. Balu died during the shoot. He began directing films in the 1990s, working on family dramas. In the early 2000s, he worked on several devotional films as a cinematographer and developed his knowledge of CGI and VFX related scenes. Vishwanathan went on to direct \"Jaganmohini\" (2009), a remake of the 1978 film of the same name, with Namitha and Nila starring. Despite creating attention prior to release, it opened to mixed reviews, with a critic citing that the film felt \"dated\". He died on 25 April 2017 due to cardiac arrest.", "Manivasagam Manivasagam (died 2001) was an Indian film director, producer and screenwriter who worked on Tamil films. Manivasagam began his career with \"Namma Ooru Poovatha\" (1990) and continued to work on village action dramas, often collaborating with actor Sarath Kumar. He often produced his own films, and credited his wife, Rajeswari Manivasagam, as the chief producer. The failure of his film, \"Nadodi Mannan\" (1995), prompted the director to take a break from directing films. His final release was \"Mappillai Gounder\" (1997) which also opened to negative reviews and performed poorly at the box office. Manivasagam died in 2001. His son Gandhi made his directorial debut with \"Kalavani Mappillai\" starring Attakathi Dinesh.", "Samudrala Sr. Samudrala Raghavacharya (19 July 1902 – 16 March 1968), also known as Samudrala Sr., was an Indian screenwriter, lyricist, playback singer, director, and producer known for his works in Telugu cinema. Samudrala Senior made his screen debut in 1937, and known for his collaborations with Ghantasala. Samudrala Raghavacharya was born in 1902, in Pedapulivarru, Repalle Taluk, Andhra Pradesh, India.", "C. Pullaiah Chittajallu Pullayya (1898 – 6 October 1967), also known as C. Pullayya, was an Indian film director, known for his works predominantly in Telugu cinema. He is regarded as the father of Telugu theatre movement. In 1933, he made his film directorial debut with East India Film Company's first Indian film \"Sati Savitri\" which has received honorary diploma at Venice Film Festival. He then directed \"Sati Anasuya\", the first children's film and \"Lava Kusa\" (1934). He continued to direct \"Pakkinti Ammayi\", \"Vara Vikrayam\", and \"Maalati Madhavam\" under the East India Film Company. He directed \"Bala Nagamma\", \"Apoorva Sahodarargal\" and \"Vindhya Rani\" under Gemini Pictures after shifting base to Madras. He is well remembered for \"Lava Kusa\" (1963), the story of Lava and Kusa in Hindu epic Ramayana, which won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Telugu.", "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.", "Sobhan Sobhan (1968 – 6 January 2008) was a Telugu director who was best known for the hit movie \"Varsham\". Sobhan went to Chennai in 1989 to join the film industry. He initially worked for a film called Rowdyism, which was stalled after 10 days of shooting. He then joined Tripuraneni Varaprasad alias Chitti Babu as co director for Raithu Bharatham, He then joined Ram Gopal Varma as a co-director for Anaganaga Oka Roju. Later, he started his profession as a writer for Krishna Vamsi's film Sindhuram and worked with him for Murari, and also acted in films like Kshana Kshanam and Oka Raju Oka Rani. Later, he directed a few episodes of Malayalam TV serial \"Navaneetha\" (2000). During the making of Murari, he was in touch with Mahesh Babu, and that led to the film \"Bobby\". Sobhan was known for his able hand in scripting. He helped many directors during the script sessions of many super hit films. Sobhan died on 6 January 2008 due to cardiac arrest at the age of 40. Bhumika Chawla and her husband Bharath Thakur immediately rushed him to Image Hospitals in Madhapur. Doctors declared that he was brought dead. He is survived by his wife Soujanya and two sons, including actor Santosh Shoban. His elder brother, comedian Lakshmipati, too died that year." ]
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[ "22 February 2019" ]
Are director of film Desde Que Amanece Apetece and director of film The Last Survivors from the same country?
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The Survivors (1979 film) The Survivors () is a 1979 Cuban drama film directed by Tomás Gutiérrez Alea. It was entered into the 1979 Cannes Film Festival. "Los Sobrevivientes" was preserved by the Academy Film Archive, in conjunction with the Instituto Cubano de Arte e Industria Cinematográfica, in 2017.
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[ "The Last Floor The Last Floor (Spanish: El último piso) is a 1962 Argentine drama film directed by Daniel Cherniavsky. The film's art direction was by Gori Muñoz.", "The Last Train (2002 film) The Last Train () is a 2002 Uruguayan and Argentine, comedy drama film, directed by Diego Arsuaga, and written by Arsuaga, Fernando León de Aranoa, and Beda Docampo Feijóo. It's also known as Corazón de fuego in Argentina. The film's executive producer was Mariela Besuievski, and it was produced by Pablo Bossi, Gerardo Herrero, Oscar Kramer, and Carlos Mentasti. The film tells of an ambitious business man (Pauls) who wants to sell train 33, affectionately known as \"Corazón de fuego,\" to a company in Hollywood. A group of elderly men known as \"The Friends of the Rails\" think that to do so would be to sell an important part of the country's history and so devise to steal the train. The group of hijackers is led by \"El Professor\" (Alterio), and the train itself is driven by Pepe, who claims to have learned how to do so during the Spanish Civil War. The group is also accompanied by Dante Minetti (Soriano), who suffers from Alzheimer's, and Guito, Pepe's neighbor/friend's nine-year-old great-nephew. The escapade takes the train all across the small country, exhibiting Uruguay's vibrant landscape and varied climate, also revealing many abandoned towns and train stops. The film was released wide in Uruguay May 31, 2002, and in Argentina on August 22, 2002. The picture was screened at various film festivals, including: the Montréal World Film Festival, Canada; the Palm Springs International Film Festival, United States; the \"Cinémas d'Amérique Latine de Toulouse\", France; the Copenhagen International Film Festival, Denmark; the Hamburg Film Festival, Germany; and others. Wins Nominations", "Fernando Pérez (director) Fernando Pérez Valdés (born 1944) is a prominent Cuban film director. Pérez graduated from the University of Havana with a degree in Language and Spanish Literature, and began working in the Cuban film industry in 1971 as an assistant director, before directing his first documentary in 1975. His feature debut was the drama \"Clandestinos\" (1987) but it was not until \"Madagascar\" (1994) that he garnered significant international recognition. Pérez later directed \"La Vida es Silbar\" (1998) and \"Suite Habana\" (2003). \"Suite Habana\" is considered by some critics to be the best Cuban film in decades. \"Variety\" hailed it as \"A lyrical, meticulously-crafted and unexpectedly melancholy homage to the battered but resilient inhabitants of a battered but resilient city.\" His most recent film called \"Madrigal\" tells a story about life in the theater world. His next film was biopic that cover the childhood and early teenage years of Cuban national hero Jose Marti entitled Marti: El ojo del Canario, which premiered in 2010 and earned several awards in the film Festival Circuit. In recent years he completed La Pared de las Palabras (2014), Ultimos Dias en la Habana (2016) and Insumisa (2018). In the spring term 2016 Pérez was the fifth Friedrich Dürrenmatt Guest Professor for World Literature at the University of Bern.", "Carlos Atanes Carlos Atanes (born November 8, 1971) is a Spanish film director, writer and playwright. He was born in Barcelona, and is a member of The Film-Makers' Cooperative, founded by Jonas Mekas, Shirley Clarke, Ken Jacobs, Andy Warhol, Jack Smith and others. His first finished feature-length movie ws \"\", which he released in 2004. The movie won the \"Best Feature Film Award\" at the Athens Panorama of Independent Filmmakers in 2005 and was also nominated for the \"Méliès d'Argent\" at Fantasporto that same year. Critics often express the difficulty of valuing Atanes' cinematography and sometimes they even refrain from scoring it, since these are unusual films that escape the standard classification. Dave J. Wilson from \"Cinematic Shocks\" says regarding \"Maximum Shame\" “it exists outside of the cinematic norm not following its conventions (…) it is purely visual art rather than a real narrative a dreamlike mind-fuck of philosophical musings. It is not a question of whether it is good or not as it does not conform to cinematic conventions. Therefore, I will not be giving a rating for this review, as it is hard for me to judge it on such terms. Whether you like the film or not you will ultimately more likely all reach the same conclusion that it is at least a unique work.” \"Film Threat\", meanwhile, says that within \"Gallino, the Chicken System\" “is an entire universe of creativity, albeit one that may or may not reflect this plane of reality as we know it. I don’t know that the traditional sense of how we react to film applies here. It’s more of an art experience than a simple film (…) I don’t know that it’s for everyone (or anyone), but it’s certainly unique.” In addition to his work as a screenwriter and playwright, Carlos Atanes has published several books and essays on cultural issues, cinema and Chaos magic.", "Nelson Villagra Nelson Villagra (born 9 August 1937) is a Chilean actor, writer and director of stage and screen. He is recognised as one of the most masterful actors in Chilean cinema and is widely known in Chile for his exceptional portrayal of a mentally retarded murderer in Miguel Littín's \"El Chacal de Nahueltoro\" (1969). He also collaborated with Raúl Ruiz on \"Tres tristes tigres\" (1968), \"La colonia penal\" (1970) and \"Nadie dijo nada\" (1971). In 1973, Villagra was exiled from Chile as a result of the military coup which led to the Pinochet dictatorship. After a time in Europe, he went on to Cuba and worked with some of the key Latin American directors of the period, such as Humberto Solás (\"Cantata de Chile\") and Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, winning the Best Actor award for his role as 'El Conde' in Gutiérrez Alea's \"The Last Supper\" at the 1978 Biarritz Film Festival. In 1979, he played a military torturer in Sergio Castilla's film \"Prisioneros desaparecidos\", a role for which he won the Best Actor award at the San Sebastián Film Festival. Nelson Garrido Villagra was born in Chillán in southern Chile on 9 August 1937. His artistic activities began in 1950, at the age of 13, when he was enrolled at the School of Artistic Culture of Chillán (Escuela de Cultura Artística de Chillán) under the tuition of Professor Carlos Cortés with whom he worked on Radiodifusión Cultural de Chillán. Later in 1950, Villagra joined Chillán Cultural Broadcasting, a cultural group, who later founded the Teatro Experimental de Chillán, Chillán Choir, and the Institute of Cultural Extension of the city. This group was led by Ciro Vargas Mellado, with help from the capital - Santiago de Chile - Enrique Gajardo Velasquez. Both Mellado and Velasquez had a large influence on Villagra's theatrical and cultural training. In 1955 he was admitted to the School of Theatre at the University of Chile. By this time, Villagra already had a solid theatrical background that made him stand out among the students of the School.", "Tornado: The Last Blood Last Blood, also known as Tornado: The Last Blood is an Italian \"macaroni combat\" war film directed by Antonio Margheriti and starring Giancarlo Prete. An army sergeant attacks his corrupt captain and is court-martialed but before being executed he escapes and, in the enemy-infested jungles of Vietnam, begins a private war against his fellow soldiers and Vietnamese army soldiers. After escaping border, he was shot dead The film was released on a US VHS as \"Tornado\" in the 1980s by Lightning Video and on German DVD and Blu-Ray as \"Im Wendekreis des Söldners\" in the 2010s by Ascot Elite Home Entertainment.", "Stefan Avalos Stefan Avalos is an American musician and filmmaker best known for his work in the latter field. Together with his partner Lance Weiler, he made \"The Last Broadcast\" (1997), a horror film based on found footage. The two men wrote, directed, starred in, and produced the film together. It was shown at film festivals, winning Best Feature Film Silver Prize at the Chicago Underground Film Festival. Trained as a classical violinist, Avalos performed as a soloist with, among others, the Philadelphia Orchestra. Avalos studied classical violin from childhood, but by early high school, he realized his true love was film. He made amateur movies in high school and studied filmmaking in college. He has worked in many aspects of the film business, producing and directing commercials for foreign television, as well as working for numerous American clients. These included \"Rescue 911\", \"Frontline\", and MTV. In 1993, he wrote, produced and directed his first feature film, 'The Game' (also known as \"The Money Game\"). Together with his partner Lance Weiler, he made \"The Last Broadcast\" (1997), a horror film based on found footage. Later, partnering with Esther Robinson and David Beard, Avalos created Wavelength Releasing. In October 1998, Wavelength Releasing made the first fully digital national theatrical release of a feature film via satellite: \"The Last Broadcast\". In 1999, \"The Last Broadcast\" was the first feature motion film to be screened digitally at the Cannes Film Festival. Avalos has lectured in Europe, the United States, South America, Japan and Canada about digital filmmaking, and written articles about it for numerous publications. In 2004, Avalos made the supernatural thriller, \"The Ghosts of Edendale\". Other work includes animation for \"Lost in La Mancha\" (2002), a documentary directed by Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe. In 2017, Avalos directed, produced, edited and shot his first documentary, \"Strad Style\". It follows the work of an Ohio man in trying to build a Stradivarius-quality violin for a highly ranked Romanian violinist. It premiered at Slamdance Film Festival. It won the Grand Jury Award and Audience Award for Best Feature Documentary. Stefan Avalos was recognized in 1997 as \"one of the twenty-five people helping to reinvent entertainment\" by \"Wired\" magazine.", "The Final Judgement The Final Judgment (1992), original title El juicio final (1992), is a Spanish short film, written, directed and produced by Gustavo Fuertes. Fuertes also took control of special effects, make-up and editing. \"The Final Judgment\" was the first short film in Dolby Stereo to be shot in Spain. It was exhibited by Half World, and obtained a Silver Plaque in the Chicago International Film Festival. Laced with black humor, and a theatrical parody, \"The Final Judgment\" recounts the story of a pilot, Man (Ángel Relló), who is the only survivor of a supposed World War. The film looks at how Man will cope when he has to face God (Andrea Guardiola), Death and Father Time (Manuel Pereiro), in what will be his Final Judgment. The film is claimed to be the first to depict the character of God using an actress. The film utilised many ironic references to the first Gulf War, which had just finished when the film was made.", "Nicolás Celis (film producer) Nicolás Celis (born 15 October 1986) is a Mexican film producer. He received a nomination for the Academy Awards for best film for his work as a producer in the film \"Roma\", alongside Alfonso Cuarón and Gabriela Rodríguez. For the same film he received four BAFTA Awards, the award for Best International Film at the British Independent Film Awards, two Golden Globes and three Academy Awards In 2017, the producer was named \"Talent to watch\", by The Hollywood Reporter Among his first works is the drama-horror feature film, \"We Are What We Are\" directed by Jorge Michel Grau, who competed for the Caméra d'Or at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival. This film had an American remake directed by Jim Mickle in 2013. In 2015, he collaborated as executive producer of \"Desierto\", Jonás Cuarón, with Gael García Bernal and Jeffrey Dean Morgan, movie that won he FIPRESCI prize at the Toronto Film Festival. Later on he produced Tatiana Huezo´s documentary Tempestad (2016), a film which was selected by the AMACC to compete for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar as well as the Goya Award. He has collaborated in several Amat Escalante films, such as \"Heli\" (2013) which won the Palme d'Or for best direction and \"The Untamed\" (2016), feature film which premiered at the Venice Film Festival. Among his most recent co-productions is \"Birds of Passage\", directed by Ciro Guerra and Cristina Gallego, this film was selected to open the Directors' Fortnight at Cannes. Another co-production, \"Holy Beasts\", by directors Israel Cárdenas and Laura Amelia Guzmán, premiered in the Panorama section in the 2019 Berlinale. He has participated in meetings and workshops like Cannes Producer's Network and Torino FilmLab, among others. Most recently he served on the main jury for the Shanghai International Film Festival.", "Mário Bastos Mário Bastos (born 1986), often known by the stage name Fradique, is an Angolan filmmaker. He is notable as the director of the critically acclaimed films \"Alambamento\", \"Independência\" and \"Ar Condicionado\". Apart from directing, he is also a writer, producer, assistant director and editor. He was born in 1986 in Luanda, Angola. In 2008, Fradique attended the New York Film Academy and obtained his bachelor's degree in fine arts (directing) at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco. In 2009, he made his first short film, \"Alambamento\". The film won the award for the Best Short Film at the Luanda International Film Festival and was an Official Selection in the Vancouver International Film Festival and Tenerife International Film Festival. In 2010, Fradique formed the production company Geração 80 with Jorge Cohen and Tchiloia Lara. In 2011, he attended the Berlinale Talent Campus for further studies. From 2010 to 2015, he worked on his first full-length documentary, \"Independência\". The film focuses on Angola's liberation struggle and later won Angola's Culture National Prize for Cinema. It is regarded as one of the best films of all time in African cinema. The film also won the award for the Best Documentary at the Cameron International Film Festival and was an Official Selection at the Durban International Film Festival, Luxor African Film Festival and the Pan African Film Festival. He also directed art-house music videos for Angolan artists such as Nástio Mosquito and Aline Frazão. In 2020, he made his first fiction film, \"Ar Condicionado\", which had its premier at the Rotterdam International Film Festival. It was the official selection for Uganda at the Fribourg International Film Festival in 2020. It received critical acclaim from international film festivals." ]
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[ "no" ]
What is the place of birth of the director of film The Uncle?
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The Uncles The Uncles is a 2000 Canadian drama film directed by James Allodi. The film stars Chris Owens as John, an Italian Canadian restaurant manager in Toronto who is supporting his brother Marco (Kelly Harms), a college student, and sister Celia (Tara Rosling), who is disabled after a head injury. When Celia develops an obsession with kidnapping neighbourhood babies to indulge her maternal instincts, John and Marco hatch a plan to get her pregnant so that she'll have her own baby and stop stealing other people's. The film's cast also includes Dino Tavarone, Veronica Hurnick, Nicola Lipman, Deborah Grover, Alan Van Sprang, Tony Nappo and Carlos Díaz. The film premiered at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival. It was a finalist for the Best Canadian Film award at the Toronto Film Critics Association Awards 2001, and was named to TIFF's year-end Canada's Top Ten list. Owens received a Genie Award nomination for Best Actor at the 22nd Genie Awards in 2002.
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[ "The Nephew The Nephew is a 1998 film directed by Eugene Brady, which tells the story of a young biracial American man, Chad Egan-Washington (played by Hill Harper). Following the death of his father, and later his mother, a long time Irish immigrant to the United States, the teenage and biracial Chad travels from his home in New York to a small Irish island where his mother was brought up, to live with his uncle, a smalltime farmer. In addition to facing initial prejudices, Chad finds himself the center of a grievance his uncle Tony (Donal McCann) holds against local bar owner Joe Brady (Pierce Brosnan), for his illicit relationship with Chad's mother, which Tony opposed, before she left twenty years before. Further complications ensue when Chad develops a relationship with Brady's daughter Aislinn (Aislin McGuckin). Her admirer Peter O'Boyce (David Quinn), who works in her father's bar, is jealous and attempts to stop the ensuing romance. \"The Nephew\" was the first film released by Irish DreamTime, a production company which had been founded by Pierce Brosnan and film producer Beau St. Clair in 1996. Locations in Ireland used for shooting The Nephew included Roundwood, Wicklow Town, Wicklow Head. A large prop Cromlech was built for the movie. The film grossed £241,000 ($0.4 million) in the United Kingdom and Ireland.", "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.", "The Uncle from Sumatra The Uncle from Sumatra (German: Der Onkel aus Sumatra) is a 1930 Austrian silent comedy film directed by Gyula Szöreghy and starring Wolf Albach-Retty, Mary Kid and Rina Marsa.", "Uncle Nino Uncle Nino is a 2003 American film directed by Robert Shallcross, produced by David James, and starring Joe Mantegna, Anne Archer, Pierrino Mascarino, Trevor Morgan, and Gia Mantegna. The film deals with a dysfunctional family, who have lost their way, and a distant relative played by Pierrino Mascarino intends to bring them closer together. A father, Robert Micelli (Joe Mantegna), has become a stranger to his family and thinks only of his lawn and job. After decades of no contact, Robert's Uncle Nino (Pierrino Mascarino) flies to America for an unexpected visit, with a suitcase full of homemade Italian wine. Nino helps the family realize the true value of family.", "Yannick Andréi Yannick Andréi (18 February 1927 – 28 December 1987) was the alias of French film director and screenwriter Jean Antione Andréi. Andréi was born in Bordeaux, France and died in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. Andréi began to work in film in 1953 as an assistant director for Jean-Pierre Melville's film \"Quand tu liras cette lettre\". In 1959 he began to work as a screenwriter on \"Bonjour la chance\" the French adaptation of Edgar Neville's \"La ironía del dinero\". Andréi's first film as director and screenwriter was \"Samedi soir\" in 1961. During his career he worked most often as a television director. Toward the end of his career he held an acting role in \"Paris-minuit\", a film directed by his son Frédéric Andréi. Yannick Andréi is the father of actor and director Frédéric Andréi.", "Uncle Brian Uncle Brian is a Canadian 2010 comedy-drama film directed by Nick McAnulty and starring Daniel MacLean in the title role. The film premiered at the 2010 New York City International Film Festival where it was honoured with two award nominations including for Best Feature Film, and winning the Best Lead Actor award for Daniel MacLean.", "Albert S. Rogell Albert S. Rogell (August 21, 1901 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma - April 7, 1988 Los Angeles, California) was an American film director. Rogell directed more than a hundred movies between 1921 and 1958. He was the uncle of producer Sid Rogell.", "Uncle Vanya (1957 film) Uncle Vanya is a 1957 American film adaptation of the 1899 play \"Uncle Vanya\" by Anton Chekhov. Filmed concurrently with an Off Broadway production, it was both co-produced and co-directed by actor Franchot Tone, who starred as Dr. Astroff. Tone's wife at the time, Dolores Dorn-Heft, co-starred as Elena Andreevna, appearing in the only role not featuring an actor from the stage version in New York, where the part was played by Signe Hasso. The title role was played by George Voskovec. Edited from Stark Young's translation of Chekhov's Russian text, the film runs 98 minutes. It was released on DVD in June, 2010. Tone performed the play off Broadway in 1956. He decided to make a film of it, using more sets. It was shot over 24 days.", "Peter Werner Peter H. Werner (born January 17, 1947, in New York City, New York) is an American film and television director. Werner was born to a Jewish family, in New York City, New York, one of three children born to Elizabeth (née Grumbach) and Henry Werner. He has one sister, Patsy Werner Hanson, and one brother, Tom Werner. In 1977, Werner won the Oscar for Best Live Action Short Film for directing the short film \"In the Region of Ice\". Since then he worked on primarily directing television amassing a number of television film credits namely \"Mama Flora's Family\", \"Two Mothers for Zachary\", \"Call Me Claus\", \"I Married a Centerfold\", \"Gracie's Choice\", \"Mom at Sixteen\", \"Tempting Fate\", among other films including \"Front of the Class\" (2008). His television series credits include \"Ghost Whisperer\", \"Medium\", \"\", \"A Different World\", \"The Wonder Years\", \"Moonlighting\", and for the Graham Yost series \"Boomtown\" and \"Justified\", among other series. He also directed a television movie in 2010 called \"Bond of Silence\". Werner's first wife was Marie Ashton; they later divorced and she remarried to Gerard L. Friend. He remarried to Kedren Jones. Werner is the father of three children: Lillie Werner Singh, Katharine Werner, and James Werner. He is the older brother of television producer Tom Werner.", "Uncle Arthur Uncle Arthur may refer to:" ]
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[ "London" ]
Which film was released more recently, Pottu Amman (Film) or Raja Manthiri?
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Raja Manthiri Raja Manthiri () is a 2016 Tamil-language Indian comedy-drama film written and directed by Usha Krishnan and produced by V.Mathiyalagan and P. G. Muthiah Productions. The film stars Kalaiyarasan, Kaali Venkat, Shaalin Zoya and Vaishali in the leading roles. Featuring music composed by Justin Prabhakaran, the film was released on 24 June 2016. Usha Krishnan, an assistant of Suseenthiran, worked on the film's script in 2013 and selected Kalaiyarasan to play a leading role before he had signed on to star in his breakthrough role in "Madras" (2014). After being impressed by Usha's commitment as an assistant director, cinematographer Muthiah chose to make "Raja Manthiri" as his first production. The film was shot throughout the middle of 2015 and had entered post-production by September 2015. The film's release was put on hold for several months until the team could find an apt release date. The soundtrack of the movie was composed by Justin Prabhakaran. The film released in June 2016 to mixed reviews from critics. Sify noted the film "is an average entertainer and people, who watch village comedies, might find this as a decent watch", while Behindwood.com added it "entertains with its comical script and endearing performances by the cast". Baradwaj Rangan of the Hindu wrote "Raja Mandhiri follows the formula where practically nothing happens in the first half, and the big blow-up at interval point is where the story really gets going. But some bits work."
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[ "Chinna Muthu Chinna Muthu is a 1994 Indian Tamil-language action drama film directed by Shanmuga Sundaram. The film stars Radha Ravi in the title role with Rajeev, Y. G. Mahendran, Vaishnavi, Chandrasekhar in supporting roles. \"Chinna Muthu\" marked the directorial debut of Shanmuga Sundaram, who earlier worked as a dialogue writer for \"Annaamalai\" (1992). Radha Ravi played the title role, and it was his third film which he had produced under his production company. Soundtrack was composed by Deva. \"Chinna Muthu\" was released on 19 February 1994. \"The Indian Express\" gave a negative review criticising Radha Ravi's acting that \"he indulged in a lot of over-acting\" and that his \"earlier productions were much better efforts\".", "Ammani Ammani is a 2016 Indian Tamil-language drama film written and directed by Lakshmy Ramakrishnan. It features herself, Subbalakshmi and Nithin Sathya in the leading roles. The film, produced by Ven Govinda, released on 14 October 2016. Lakshmy Ramakrishnan was motivated to make the film after meeting an elderly ragpicker during her talk show and created a fictional story from her interaction with the woman. Veteran actress Subbalakshmi, who worked with Ramakrishnan in Gautham Vasudev Menon's \"Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa\" (2010), was cast in the titular role, while Ramakrishnan revealed she would also play a parallel lead role. Other actors including Robo Shankar and Nithin Sathya also later joined the cast. The film was shot throughout early 2015 in Chennai. Post-production work began in July 2015 and the team began promotions during September 2015, with teaser trailers of the film released publicly. A \"curtain-raiser\" event for the film was held in Kuwait, followed by the launch of another teaser in Dubai during the same month. A release date of Diwali 2015 was initially announced, but was subsequently evaded following a dispute between Ramakrishnan and producer Ven Govinda. After a further year of stalemate, the team later prepared the film for a release in October 2016. The soundtrack to \"Ammani\" was composed by K, who reunited with Lakshmy Ramakrishnan following their collaboration in her directorial debut, \"Aarohanam\" (2012). The soundtrack album, featuring four tracks, was released on 7 October 2016. Sify.com reviewed the album, noting \"On the whole, the soundtrack of \"Ammani\" impresses owing to the innovative blend of tracks that it has\", adding that \"although one would have hoped to have more tracks in the soundtrack, these three tracks could sit well with the movie\". The Times of India called the album, \"a short but decent effort by K\". The film opened in October 2016 to very positive reviews from critics. Sify.com wrote Ramakrishnan \"has conveyed a relevant message to the society\" and \"as a director, she has woven all those feel good factors within the commercial format of film making\".", "Ethirigal Jakkirathai Ethirigal Jakkirathai () is a 1967 Indian Tamil-language thriller film produced and directed by R. Sundaram under Modern Theatres. The script was written by A. L. Narayanan, with music by Vedha. The film stars R. S. Manohar, with Ravichandran, L. Vijayalakshmi, Thengai Srinivasan, V. S. Raghavan, Manimala, Ammukutty Pushpamala and Master Prabhakar in supporting roles. The film was released on 11 August 1967. Dinathayalan (V. S. Raghavan) is a rich and respectable man that has financially and emotionally helped orphan siblings Raj (Manohar) and Prabha (L. Vijayalakshmi). He also arranges for his only son Baskar (Ravichandran) to marry Prabha as the two are in love. Raj's work as an police inspector pits him against Dinathayalan, who retaliates. Raj is pushed into a corner and makes increasingly questionable decisions isolating him from his family. Prabha and Baskar's wedding is also called off. The lovers work to reunite the families and help Raj. Music was composed by Vedha and lyrics were written by Kannadasan. The song \"Nerukku Ner\" and \"Aha Aha Indru\" are based on \"O Mere Sona Re\" and \"Aaja Aaja Main Hoon Pyar\" from the 1966 Hindi film \"Teesri Manzil respectively\".", "Themmangu Paattukaaran Themmangu Paattukaaran is a 1997 Indian Tamil film, directed by Gangai Amaran and produced by Rajkiran. The film stars Ramarajan, Aamani, Goundamani and Senthil in lead roles. The film had musical score by Ilayaraja. Soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.", "Raja Mukthi Raja Mukthi () is a 1948 Indian Tamil language film starring M. K. Thyagaraja Bhagavathar, V. N. Janaki and P. Bhanumathi. M. G. Ramachandran had done a supporting role. The film was released on 9 October 1948. King Rajendra Varman and Queen Mrinalini are reigning over the Vyjayanti empire. Mahendra Varman is the rival and the neighbouring King. Kannika is the minister's daughter, who is in love with King Rajendra Varman and aims to attain him at any cost. This convoluted tale of palace intrigue, suspicion, unreciprocated love, seduction, villainy and piety was interspersed with excellent music. M. K. Thyagaraja Bhagavathar produced this movie himself under his banner \"Narendra Pictures\". He had done so in order to avoid shooting the movie in Madras city, where he had been imprisoned for more than 2 years. He booked Prabhat Studios in Poona and leased a bungalow to accommodate his cast. Most of the technicians are from Prabhat Studios. Alathur Subramaniam, one the two Alathur Brothers 'trained' the singers while the background music was composed by C. R. Subburaman. Lyrics by Papanasam Sivan. M. K. Thyagaraja Bhagavathar, P. Bhanumathi, Serukalathur Sama and C. T. Rajakantham are the singers. Playback singer is M. L. Vasanthakumari.", "P. G. Muthiah P. G. Muthiah is an Indian director, cinematographer and film producer, who has been working in the Tamil film industry. Muthiah has started his career as Cinematographer in the movie \"Poo\" (2008) and \"Kanden Kadhalai\" (2009), often collaborating in ventures by director R. Kannan. In 2015, Muthiah decided to produce films and financed three low budget drama films — \"Raja Manthiri\" (2016) and \"Peechankai\" (2017) — through his studio, PG Media Works. In 2018, he directed and produced the movie \"Madura Veeran\" starring Samuthirakani and Shanmuga Pandian.", "Murattu Karangal Murattu Karangal () is a 1986 Indian Tamil-language Western film written and directed by Rajasekar. The film stars Thiagarajan and Sulakshana, with Sathyaraj, Jaishankar, Ravichandran and Bhanu Chander in supporting roles. It was released on 10 January 1986. Soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja. Jayamanmadhan of \"Kalki\" panned the film, saying the cinematography was its only redeeming feature.", "Raja Mariyadhai Raja Mariyadhai () is a 1987 Indian Tamil-language drama film directed by Karthick Raghunath. The film stars Sivaji Ganesan, Karthik and Jeevitha. The film, had musical score by Shankar–Ganesh. The film was a remake of Telugu film \"Simham Navvindi\". Rajasekar (Sivaji Ganesan) is an industrialist who has strict expectations of his employees and those around him. Raghuram (Karthik) works for Rajasekar and is a stool pigeon, constantly ratting out fellow employees to improve his own standing in his boss' eyes. He also hides his relationship with his girlfriend Vaidehi (Jeevitha) as Rajasekar is against love and expects Raghuram to remain a bachelor. Vaidehi, fed up with waiting, insists on marriage. The two marry in secret and after lying to Rajasekar, go to Ooty for their honeymoon. Confusion arises when Rajasekar also lands in Ooty, meets Vaidehi and starts to see her as a surrogate daughter. The soundtrack was composed by Shankar–Ganesh and the lyrics were by Vairamuthu.", "Thaai Manasu Thaai Manasu () is a 1994 Tamil-language drama film directed by Kasthuri Raja. The film stars Saravanan, Suvarna Mathew, Babloo Prithiveeraj and Meera, with Vijayakumar, Manorama, Goundamani, Senthil and Karikalan playing supporting roles. The film, produced by Jothi Raja and Balan, had musical score by Deva and was released on 2 December 1994. The film begins with Chinna Marudhu (Saravanan) giving milk (Thalaikoothal) to end the sufferings of his mother Muthamma (Manorama). In the past, Thangapandi (Vijayakumar) was the village chief and was a follower of Mahatma Gandhi and he was married to Muthamma. They had two sons : Periya Marudhu (Babloo Prithiveeraj) and Chinna Marudhu. Chinna Marudhu and Annalakshmi (Suvarna Mathew) were in love since their childhood while Periya Marudhu fell in love with Rasathi (Meera). The two young couples finally got married with their parents' blessings. Thangapandi's village was the only village where the citizens didn't vote for the elections; only because Thangapandi hated the politicians and lost faith in politics. Being an important and populated village in the district, the politicians tried to convince Thangapandi but they failed each time so they charged the heartless liquor smuggler Kangeyan (Karikalan) to brainwash the villagers' mind. First, Kangeyan sent his henchmen to kill Thangapandi but Chinna Marudhu and Periya Marudhu saved him in time. Then, Kangeyan brainwashed the weak brother Periya Marudhu and turned him against his family. What transpires later forms the crux of the story. The film score and the soundtrack were composed by Deva. The soundtrack, released in 1994, features 4 tracks with lyrics written by the director Kasthuri Raja. Malini Mannath of \"The New Indian Express\" described the film as \"unhappy Paradox\".", "Manthri Maalikayil Manasammatham Manthri Maalikayil Manasammatham is a 1998 Indian Malayalam film, directed by Kalabhavan Ansar and produced by Noushad. The film stars George Vishnu, Jagathy Sreekumar, Harisree Ashokan Job Pottas and Meera in the lead roles. The film has musical score by Berny-Ignatius. The music was composed by Berny-Ignatius and the lyrics were written by Kaithapram." ]
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[ "Raja Manthiri" ]
Are Berkeh-Ye Khalaf and Rostam Beyg located in the same country?
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Rostam Beyg Rostam Beyg (; also known as Pāzanī, Rostam Bak, Rostam Begī, and Rostam Beyk) is a village in Poshtkuh Rural District, Falard District, Lordegan County, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 131, in 30 families. The village is populated by Lurs.
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[ "Rostamabad-e Kuchak Rostamabad-e Kuchak (, also Romanized as Rostamābād-e Kūchak; also known as Rostamābād) is a village in Kermajan Rural District, in the Central District of Kangavar County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 512, in 111 families.", "Baba Rostam Baba Rostam () may refer to:", "Rostam, Sistan and Baluchestan Rostam (; also known as Deh-e Rostam and Mazra‘eh-ye Rostam) is a village in Dust Mohammad Rural District, in the Central District of Hirmand County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 41, in 9 families.", "Pain Rostam Pain Rostam (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Rostam) is a village in Balatajan Rural District, in the Central District of Qaem Shahr County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 102, in 26 families.", "Rostamabad, Fars Rostamabad (, also Romanized as Rostamābād) is a village in Deris Rural District, in the Central District of Kazerun County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 312, in 71 families.", "Baba Rostam, Hamadan Baba Rostam (, also Romanized as Bābā Rostam) is a village in Shaban Rural District, in the Central District of Nahavand County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,137, in 300 families.", "Rostami, Bu ol Kheyr Rostami (, also Romanized as Rostamī; also known as Bandar-e Rostamī and Rustami) is a port in Busheher, Delvar District, Tangestan County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,427, in 341 families.", "Rostam Mahalleh Rostam Mahalleh (, also Romanized as Rostam Maḩalleh) is a village in Asalem Rural District, Asalem District, Talesh County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 208, in 46 families.", "Rostami, Hormozgan Rostami (, also Romanized as Rostamī) is a village in Bandar Charak Rural District, Shibkaveh District, Bandar Lengeh County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 362, in 70 families.", "Deh-e Rostam Deh-e Rostam () may refer to:" ]
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[ "yes" ]
Do both films, Thieves in Thailand and Forces of Nature (2004 film), have the directors who are from the same country?
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Forces of Nature (2004 film) Forces of Nature is an 2004 American IMAX 3D documentary film about strong forces that shape the Earth's surface. It is produced by the National Geographic Society, and includes coverage of It is directed by George Casey and narrated by Kevin Bacon.
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[ "Stealing Rembrandt Stealing Rembrandt (original title \"Rembrandt\") is a 2003 Danish-language film. An action-comedy, the film concerns a father and son who accidentally steal a painting by Rembrandt. A Danish/UK co-production, the film was directed by Jannik Johansen and written by Anders Thomas Jensen and Jannik Johansen. The film was premiered at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival. On 29 January 1999, Rembrandt's \"portrait of a lady\" (as well as another painting by Bellini) was stolen from the poorly protected Nivaagaard Samlingen in Nivå in Denmark. The depiction in the film of the level of security at that time is fairly accurate, as well as the involvement of bounty hunters as civilian agents in the case. Also, the persons involved were related as depicted, although the role of the father (Mick in the movie) was actually the uncle (of Tom in the movie).", "Born to Fight (2004 film) Born to Fight (, \"Gerd ma lui\") is a 2004 Thai action film directed by Panna Rittikrai. It followed \"\", on which Rittikrai served as martial arts choreographer, and featured more of his \"no strings attached\" stuntwork. Many of the actors in \"Born to Fight\" were Thai national athletes. The film is a reboot of Rittikrai's 1984 film of the same name. Royal Thai Police undercover cops Deaw and Puntakarn participate in a sting operation to apprehend the drug lord General Yang and shut down his cartel in the Chonburi Province. After a destructive truck chase, they manage to capture General Yang, but Puntakarn is killed by a bomb set by the drug lord in one of his trucks. Hoping to relieve the pain of his loss, Deaw accompanies his sister, taekwondo champion Nui, to a charity event sponsored by the country's Sports Authority to distribute relief goods to Pha-thong Village, located near the Thai/Burmese border. Deaw and Nui, along with other athletes representing their respective sports, arrive at the village and entertain the locals. All is going well when suddenly, an armed militia invades the village, killing a number of people and holding the rest hostage. The militia demands the release of General Yang within 24 hours in exchange for the lives of the surviving villagers; failure to comply will result in the militia broadcasting the slaughter of all of the villagers to the World. The Prime Minister's attempt at liberating the village fails when the militia's surveillance cameras spot Special Forces troops within the premises, resulting in more villagers being executed and the deadline shortened to 8:00 a.m. the next day. While infiltrating the militia's camp, Deaw discovers that they will fire a nuclear missile toward Bangkok once General Yang is released and then blow up the village after they escape. Before he can act, he is captured and thrown in with the rest of the villagers. The next morning, General Yang is released from prison and airlifted toward Pha-thong Village. As the army helicopters arrive and the militia escorts the drug lord, a radio broadcast of the Thai National Anthem inspires the athletes and villagers to rise up and battle their captives. Unarmed, they attack the heavily armed soldiers and get some revenge for those murdered by them.", "Full Force Nature Full Force Nature is an American documentary television series that is narrated by Bill Ratner and ran on The Weather Channel from January 15, 2006 until 2011. \"Full Force Nature\" focuses on extreme weather and weird weather events that are caught on video camera. On April 28, 2009, Echo Bridge Home Entertainment (under license from GRB Entertainment) released the show on DVD in Region 1. On January 25, 2010, Echo Bridge Home Entertainment (under license from GRB Entertainment) released both volumes of \"Full Force Nature\" on DVD in Region 1. On December 20, 2016, GRB Entertainment made the show available for streaming on YouTube. In 2018, the series was available online on the streaming services Netflix and Tubi, but the show was later removed on Netflix in 2019 and Tubi in 2020. The Philippine version of the show was hosted by actor Richard Gutierrez, and aired on GMA Network under the \"Bilib Ka Ba? Nights\" () block of the network from December 2, 2008 until February 17, 2009.", "Thieves by Law Thieves by Law, or Ganavim Ba Hok is a 2010 documentary film charting the rise of Russian organized crime in the wake of the fall of the Soviet Union. In the film several noted crime figures are interviewed, a number of which are currently wanted by Interpol.", "Dragon Force (film) Dragon Force, also known as Powerforce, is a 1982 martial arts film that was directed by Michael Mak. It starred Bruce Baron, Frances Fong, Chi-Hung Chan, Sam Sorono, Yun Ho, Jackson Ng and Bruce Li. A princess is kidnapped by a general. An agent teams up with an international crime fighting organization called Dragon Force to rescue her. Mak's efforts paid off. They used script-writers with Western names as well as some cast members. The film was shown in 52 countries and made a good profit in the millions. The film was also shot originally in English. It is also called \"Power Force\" and \"Shen Tan Guang Tou Mei\". The story was written by Terry Chalmers, Dennis Thompsett and John Au Wa Hon.", "Born to Fight (1984 film) Born to Fight (, \"Gerd ma lui\") is a 1984 Thai martial arts action film directed by Panna Rittikrai in his directorial debut. Sianfong is a lawyer working for a crime family in Hong Kong. He acquires evidence that his wealthy client's devious son-in-law Tungseung has been stealing money from the family. Tungseung sends a deadly gang of martial artists known as the Green Dragons to silence Sianfong, who flees to Thailand. A Thai cop and martial artist named Tong searches for the lawyer to have him returned alive to Hong Kong, fighting off gang members along the way. Sahamongkol Film International produced a name-only remake of the film directed by Panna Rittikrai in 2004. It stars Dan Chupong and involves terrorists launching nuclear missiles from a small border village.", "The Eyes of Thailand The Eyes of Thailand is a 2012 documentary film directed and produced by Windy Borman and produced by Tim VandeSteeg. The film chronicles the work of Soraida Salwala, who opened the world's first elephant hospital (Friends of Asian Elephants Hospital) in Lampang, Thailand and together with her team, created the world's first elephant prosthesis. \"The Eyes of Thailand\" tells the true story of Soraida Salwala's 10-year quest to help two elephant landmine survivors, Motala and Baby Mosha, walk again after losing their legs in landmine accidents. Along with Soraida's efforts to care for the injured elephants and ultimately help them to walk again, the film also highlights the dangers posed by landmines. Director/Producer Windy Borman started making this film in 2007. The film has gone through several revisions due to ongoing changes in the story of Motala and Mosha. Ashley Judd lends her voice as the film's narrator, saying about the film - \"I hope it will raise awareness to protect Asian elephants—and all beings—from the terror of landmines.\"", "Birdnesters of Thailand Birdnesters of Thailand () is a 1991 French short documentary film directed by Éric Valli. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.", "The Intruder (2004 film) The Intruder () is a 2004 French drama film directed by Claire Denis. The film had its world premiere in the Competition section at the 61st Venice International Film Festival on 9 September 2004. It was released in France on 4 May 2005. Louis Trebor, an ex-mercenary living in the Jura Mountains, is suffering increasingly from a heart condition. He abandons his home, beloved dogs, and estranged son in pursuit of a black market heart transplant in Korea before traveling to Tahiti, where he spent time in his youth, in the hope of connecting with a son he has never met. The film is inspired by a brief essay of the same name by Jean-Luc Nancy. Claire Denis also takes inspiration from Robert Louis Stevenson's writing and Paul Gauguin's South Seas paintings. A footage from Paul Gégauff's film \"Le Reflux\" is used in the film. The film had its world premiere in the Competition section at the 61st Venice International Film Festival on 9 September 2004. It was released in France on 4 May 2005. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 86% based on 29 reviews, and an average rating of 6.8/10. The website's critical consensus reads, \"The impressionistic narrative may confound the viewer, but Denis crafts wonderfully poetic, dreamlike imagery.\" On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 85 out of 100, based on 13 critics, indicating \"universal acclaim\". Amy Taubin of \"Film Comment\" commented that \"Denis is one of cinema's greatest narrative poets, and \"The Intruder\", the story of an adventurer, is her most adventurous cinematic poem.\" Jay Weissberg of \"Variety\" wrote, \"More opaque than her past works and unlikely to garner her new fans, Denis gives near equal weight to reality, dreams, nightmares and premonitions, resisting a traditional narrative in order to question the possibilities of escape within the modern world.\" \"Slant Magazine\" placed the film at number 77 on the \"100 Best Films of the Aughts\" list.", "Force of Nature (duo) Force of Nature (stylized as FORCE OF NATURE) is a hip-hop DJ and production duo from Tokyo, Japan. The group is composed of members , known by his stage name KZA, and , known by his stage name DJ Kent or The Backwoods. Known internationally for their DJ work as well as their production, the duo is also credited as part of the production team that scored the music for the anime series \"Samurai Champloo\". In the 1990s, KZA (then known by the name Kita & Zawa), DJ Kent, and Akira \"Mic Akira\" Nakano were originally in a Japanese hip-hop group called Yotsukaido Nature (四街道ネイチャー), which was named after the city of Yotsukaidō, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. KZA, a founding member of the group, was an emcee with Mic Akira at the time while Kent joined the group as a DJ and producer after the departure of the original DJ for the group. Yotsukaido Nature made appearances such as on the track \"Ookinaosewa (Say What)\" from Japanese hip-hop group Kimidori's self-titled album in 1993. They would go on to release their self-titled EP, the single \"HIGH-NIKKEN\", and a collaboration with Japanese punk rock band Super Stupid in 1995. In 1996, the group would also take part in the hip-hop concerts Thumpin' Camp and the Little Bird Nation Summer Festival that were both held at the Hibiya Open-Air Concert Hall in Tokyo, Japan. After teaming up to produce a breakbeat called \"Urban Combatt 2001\" for their 1998 studio album \"V.I.C. Tomorrow\", KZA and DJ Kent took the name \"Force of Nature\" as the name of their production project, which was a play on the word \"Yotsu\" (meaning \"fourth\" which is similar to \"force\") and inspired by the names of both the album \"Done by the Forces of Nature\" by the American hip-hop group Jungle Brothers and the name of the American hip-hop group Naughty By Nature." ]
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[ "no" ]
Where was the place of death of the director of film We Have Only One Life?
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We Have Only One Life We Have Only One Life () is a 1958 Greek comedy film directed by George Tzavellas.
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[ "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.", "Where There's Life Where There's Life is a 1947 American thriller comedy film directed by Sidney Lanfield. The film's title derives from a line in \"Don Quixote\" (\"Where there's life, there's hope\") as a play on the name of its star, Bob Hope. Also in the cast are Signe Hasso, William Bendix, and George Coulouris. Hope plays an American radio announcer named Michael Valentine who finds out he is the new king of \"Barovia\", although a secret society called the Mordia, which believes it has assassinated Valentine's father, King Hubertus II, has other ideas.", "Steve Gordon (director) Steve Gordon (October 10, 1938 – November 27, 1982) was an American screenwriter and film director who wrote and directed the 1981 comedy \"Arthur\", starring Dudley Moore. Gordon died in New York City on November 27, 1982, from a heart attack. He was 44 years old. Gordon was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for \"Arthur\". The film not only marked his directorial debut, but his only work as a film director. He had written only one previous feature film, \"The One and Only\" (1978), starring Henry Winkler, having spent several years writing for television. Gordon was born in Chester, Pennsylvania but was raised by his aunt and uncle in Ottawa Hills, Ohio, after his parents died. Gordon grew up in a Jewish family in the Toledo suburb of Ottawa Hills, Ohio, and graduated from Ottawa Hills High School in 1957. Gordon then attended Ohio State University, where he majored in political science and history; he graduated in 1961. Gordon had resided in New York City since his graduation from Ohio State. He never married. According to his brother, Gordon had been suffering from chest pains and had visited the doctor five days before his death. Gordon's niece was eating lunch with him at his New York City apartment when he suffered a fatal heart attack. He was interred at Woodlawn Cemetery in Toledo, Ohio. In December 1982, Gordon's brother, Toledo radiologist Dr. Michael Gordon, created an annual scholarship for Ottawa Hills High School students in Steve's name. In 2010 he was one of five people inducted into the Ottawa Hills Foundation's Community Hall of Fame.", "Three Lives and Only One Death Three Lives and Only One Death () is a 1996 French film directed by Chilean filmmaker Raúl Ruiz. It was entered into the 1996 Cannes Film Festival, and was the penultimate film to star Marcello Mastroianni, before his death in 1996. Pierre Bellemare, a French radio personality appears to recount four strange, seemingly non-coexisting, tales that make up the complex narrative structure of \"Three Lives and Only One Death\". In the first tale we are introduced to Andre Parisi, a family man who has woken up with a terrible headache. Andre leaves to a local cafe where he meets one of the multiple enigmatic central characters, Matteo Strano (Marcello Mastroianni). Matteo offers Andre champagne and 1000 francs to listen to his story. Prior to the scene of Matteo's own storytelling, he reveals he was once married to Andre's wife. Matteo recounts the day he went out, on a whim, and rented out an apartment. Matteo insists this apartment is inhabited by fairies who eat time and who ultimately devoured 20 years of his life in one night. Matteo uses the story of his “strange journey in time” to entice Andre into going to his “fairy house.” Andre accepts Matteo's request and is surprised to find that the apartment actually exists. Matteo takes Andre's fondness for the apartment as an acceptance of a deal that allows Matteo to go home, leaving Andre to remain in the bewitched apartment. When Andre refuses to take Matteo's place “he finds himself with a hammer in his head, thus retrospectively explaining his headache as a premonition.” After a 20-year hiatus Matteo returns to his former home and his former wife, Maria, as if nothing had changed. Bellemare then recounts the tale of George Vickers, a 69-year-old bachelor and Professor of \"Negative Anthropology\" at the Sorbonne. When Vickers ascends the main stairs at the Sorbonne, to give the opening lecture at a major conference on Negative Anthropology, he pauses and is overcome by a strange force and feeling. The strange force takes him to a graveyard where he shortly experiences grief. When a storm breaks out he becomes profoundly happy, so much so that he does not look for shelter. He becomes a beggar overnight and strangely finds success.", " In 1968, Stock left Magnum to start his own film company, Visual Objectives Inc., and made several documentaries, but he returned to the agency a year later, as vice president for new media and film. In the mid-1970s, he traveled to Japan and the Far East, and also produced numerous features series, such as photographs of contrasting regions, like Hawaii and Alaska. In the 1970s and 1980s he focused on color photography of nature and landscape, and returned to his urban roots in the 1990s focusing on architecture and modernism. In 2006, Stock married writer Susan Richards. They lived in Woodstock, New York, with their four dogs. In 2011, a documentary film \"\", narrated by Stock himself was released. It was completed before his death. Robert Pattinson portrayed him in the biographical drama film \"Life\" (2015), about Stock's friendship with James Dean. Dennis Stock died of colon and liver cancer in Sarasota, Florida.", "All of Life in One Night All of Life in One Night (Italian: Tutta la vita in una notte) is a 1938 Italian drama film directed by Corrado D'Errico and starring Luisa Ferida, Camillo Pilotto and Mino Doro. It was made at the Pisorno Studios in Tirrenia. The film's sets were designed by Salvo D'Angelo.", " 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. In 2009 Arkaitz Basterra Zalbide made a documentary about Jasný called \"Life and Film (The Labyrinthine Biographies of Vojtěch Jasný)\" which was later released as a book. He died in Přerov, Czech Republic in November 2019, fifteen days shy of his 94th birthday.", "Everyone's Life Everyone's Life (Chacun sa vie et son intime conviction) is a 2017 French comedy film written and directed by Claude Lelouch. Twelve tales about intimate convictions leading to a thirteenth. The film reunites several celebrated French stars. The film was shot between July and August 2016. Most of the scenes have been shot in Bourgogne, precisely in Beaune and Dijon.", "Just a life – the story of Fridtjof Nansen Just a life – the story of Fridtjof Nansen () is a 1968 Norwegian/Soviet drama film directed by Sergei Mikaelyan, starring Knut Wigert and Veslemøy Haslund. The film depicts three important episodes in the life of Fridtjof Nansen (Wigert): his North Pole expedition, his diplomatic work with the League of Nations and his humanitarian work during the 1930s famine in Ukraine.", "Michael Glawogger Michael Glawogger (3 December 1959 – 23 April 2014) was an Austrian film director, screenwriter and cinematographer. From 1981 to 1982, Glawogger studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, and from 1983 to 1989 at the Vienna Film Academy. Like fellow Austrian director Ulrich Seidl, with whom he collaborated several times, he was mainly known for his documentary films, such as \"Megacities\" (1998), \"Workingman's Death\" (2005) and \"Whores' Glory\" (2011). In 2008 he was a member of the jury at the 30th Moscow International Film Festival. In 2013, Glawogger contributed one chapter to \"Cathedrals of Culture\", a 3-D film on architecture produced by Wim Wenders. Four days after incorrectly being diagnosed with typhus, he died from malaria on 22 April 2014 shortly before midnight in Monrovia, Liberia during a movie production. In February 2015, a book of stories entitled \"69 Hotel Zimmer\" was released. The stories used hotel rooms Glawogger had visited (or in some cases only heard about in passing) as a departure for stories that reflect the visual richness for which his films are celebrated." ]
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[ "Athens" ]
Did Frederick Joseph Loftus-Tottenham and Arban Severin have the same nationality?
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Arban Severin Arban Severin (née Ornelas) (born October 20, 1976) is an American composer, musician and film actress. Born in Beaumont, Texas, USA, to two classical musicians; her mother is a violinist, her father, a trumpet player, jazz bassist and professor of music. She is named after the 19th century French cornet composer, Jean-Baptiste Arban who her father wrote his doctoral dissertation on. Arban is married to Steven Severin (former bassist/songwriter with Siouxsie and the Banshees and latterly film and theatre score composer) by whom she has had a son, Cage. (named after 20th-century American avant-garde composer, John Cage) Her maternal grandmother, Violette Newton, was named Poet Laureate of Texas in 1973, and is the author of several books, mostly poetry. She comes from a long line of musicians on her father's side. Her paternal grandfather, Antonio "Tony" Ornelas, was part of a group of jazz musicians who started the Corpus Christi Jazz Festival. His saxophone hangs in a museum in that city, Corpus Christi, Texas She attended art schools in Texas and Seattle, studying painting, multi-media and design. Although she comes from a family of musicians she never learned to play an instrument, instead focusing on the visual arts, specifically drawing and painting. It was not until she was 24, that she started up an electronic duo named Darling Hate with SoCal electronic musician Paul Palazuelos. They released a few songs as demos online, which caught the attention of Siouxsie and the Banshees bassist Steven Severin. Severin brought Arban over to London to record the demos in a "proper" studio, this is how they met and consequently fell in love and married. Her father's family is originally from Mexico. Her mother's family immigrated to America from England, Scotland (by way of Northern Ireland), Germany and France. Formerly the singer and a musician in the band Darling Hate, she is now credited as the co-producer (with her husband) of the soundtrack derived album "London Voodoo" (the original soundtrack to the British independent supernatural thriller) and joint composer, again with her husband, of "Beauty and the Beast"; a score originally created for performances by dancer/choreographer Shakti.
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[ "Severin (surname) Severin is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "Paul Severin Paul Vincent Severin (August 14, 1918 – April 6, 2006) was an American football player and coach. He grew up in Natrona, Pennsylvania, attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and played college football for the North Carolina Tar Heels football team. He played at the end position for the Tar Heels and was selected as a first-team All-American in both 1939 (Associated Press) and 1940 (Associated Press, Newspaper Enterprise Association, \"Football Digest\", and \"Newsweek\"). Severin served as the head football coach at Randolph–Macon College in Ashland, Virginia from 1950 to 1957, compiling a record of 37–26–7. Severin died in Ashldand, on April 6, 2006, at age 87.", "Guy Severin Guy Ilyich Severin (, \"Gay Ilyich Severin\"; July 24, 1926 – February 7, 2008) was a Russian scientist, engineer, academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, doctor of technical science, professor, full member of the International Academy of Astronautics, inventor and producer of a number of aerospace life-rescue systems and space-suits. In 1949, he graduated from Moscow Aviation Institute (МАI). From 1947, Severin worked in Flight Research Institute in Zhukovsky, where he was occupied with research and flight test of the aircraft crew rescue and in-flight refuelling systems. A collective of engineers led by Severin worked out some major principles and working prototypes of landing systems and rocket emergency escape slides for Vostok spacecraft. From 1964, Severin served as Chief Designer, General Designer and, eventually, General Director of the joint-stock company NPP Zvezda, located in Tomilino. Under his direction, the company developed ejection seats (including well-known K-36), space-suits, life support systems and rocket emergency escape slides for USSR/Russia aircraft, spacecraft and orbiting space stations (starting from \"Vostok 1\" and the special inflatable EVA airlock of the \"Voskhod 2\"), an open space manoeuvring unit, etc. He participated in preparations for Yuri Gagarin's and other Soviet cosmonauts space flights on \"Vostok\", \"Voskhod\" and \"Soyuz\" spacecraft. He was married and had two children. Two times wins USSR mountain skiing championship. Died at a hospital after breaking both legs while skiing on a mountain ski lodge imitation near Moscow on February 7, 2008. The civil funeral was held at the House of Culture Zvezdniy in Tomilino on February 11, 2008. Present among the attendees was Boris Chertok, last remaining colleague of Sergei Korolev. On July 24, 2008 a memorial to Severin was opened on the territory of the NPP Zvezda in Tomilino - a bronze bust. A number of local officials appeared for the opening ceremony.", "Erik Severin Erik Oskar Severin (18 July 1879 – 15 November 1942) was a Swedish curler who won a silver medal at the 1924 Winter Olympics in Chamonix. He was a banker by profession.", "Kurt Severin Kurt Severin (July 31, 1902 – March 1984) was a German-born American photographer, journalist and adventurer active from the 1930s to 1970s. Kurt Severin was born in 1902 in Hanover, Germany. While still in school he took up photography as a hobby. Instead of fulfilling his parents’ wishes that he become a painter, he left school early to start a career as a typewriter salesman. He did not get into photography until 1927 when he was in Central America as a special correspondent for the \"Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung\". Severin's photographs were at first distributed by the Three Lions agency and then by Black Star, on which \"LIFE\" magazine depended for a large part of the approximately 200 photographs selected for publication each week which could not be supplied by the mere ten staff photographers it was employing at its peak in the 1950s. Bertram D. Wolfe in the \"New York Times\" of November 12, 1944, described him as “a photographer who first won a professional reputation by managing to click a camera just as a bullfighter got his pants torn off by a bull. Aided by this happy incident, he wandered as free-lance photographer for fifteen years through the cities, plains, jungles and mountains of Latin America.” \"Rotary\" magazine in 1958 also profiled him; “Kurt Severin, photographer…, paints, writes, and travels widely, especially in Central and South America. He lives in Miami, Florida, a good departure point for trips southward.” His output was exhaustive and his travels from his base in Florida covered South and Central American countries Peru, Bolivia, Colombia, Brazil, Venezuela, Guatemala, Mexico, Paraguay, Uruguay, Costa Rica, Panama and the Caribbean, and he also produced stories in New Guinea and other Pacific islands, and in Russia. Severin was wide-ranging and adaptable, photographing subjects in combat and in jungle settings, but also comfortable covering stories on the elite students and staff of Harvard Law School and the ‘coming out’ of a cotton magnate's daughter An inveterate adventurer, he professed that \"I don't know fear. It is one thing I am not acquainted with.", "Saint-Sever-de-Rustan Saint-Sever-de-Rustan is a commune in the Hautes-Pyrénées department in south-western France.", "Saint-Séverin, Quebec Saint-Séverin, Quebec can refer to:", "Severi Severi may refer to:", "Saint-Séverin, Chaudière-Appalaches, Quebec Saint-Séverin is a parish in the Robert-Cliche Regional County Municipality in Quebec, Canada. It is part of the Chaudière-Appalaches region and the population is 292 as of 2009. It is named after Reverend Édouard-Séverin Fafard, founder of the parish in 1864. ", "Severiano Severiano may refer to:" ]
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[ "no" ]
Who is the father of the performer of song The House That Jack Built (Song)?
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The House That Jack Built (song) "The House That Jack Built" is a song written by Bobby Lance and Fran Robbins. It was originally recorded by Thelma Jones and released on the Barry label earlier in 1968. That version did not make the U.S. charts. Later in 1968, was recorded and performed by Aretha Franklin. The song reached #2 on the U.S. R&B chart and #7 on the "Billboard" Hot 100. The song's B-side, "I Say a Little Prayer", reached #3 on the U.S. R&B chart, #10 on the "Billboard" Hot 100, and #4 in the U.K. in 1968.
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[ "Jack McTamney John \"Jack\" McTamney (born April 10, 1963) is an American singer, songwriter and performer. Born in the Port Richmond neighborhood of Philadelphia, PA, and the youngest of 6 children, he has a career spanning over two decades, performing both solo and in groups such as the Jack McTamney Band, and The Tonebenders. The real Jack McTamney was born to Joseph McTamney and Mary McTamney (née Shields), the youngest of six children (Joseph, Mary Ellen, Francis, Gerard, and Bernadette). His brother Francis (Fran) taught him to play his first chords, and his other siblings, Mary Ellen and Gerard (Jerry), chipped in to buy him his first guitar when he was 15. He attended Northeast Catholic High School, and during that time, became interested in the teachings of Meher Baba, attributing this to his influence by the music of Pete Townshend and The Who. Cuts from Jack's first album, \"Halfway to NowHere\" were profiled on the Iain Anderson's Radio Scotland programme on the BBC on March 30, 2011.The Philadelphia alternative newspaper, The Philadelphia City Paper, profiled Jack in its February 2, 2012 issue. This prompted a reunion of the Jack McTamney Band, now playing as Jack McTamney and the Tonebenders, at the Dawson Street Pub on February 3, 2012. Jack routinely worked with several artists, depending on where and when he was playing.", "Arlo Guthrie Arlo Davy Guthrie (born July 10, 1947) is an American retired folk singer-songwriter. He is known for singing songs of protest against social injustice, and storytelling while performing songs, following the tradition of his father Woody Guthrie. Guthrie's best-known work is his debut piece, \"Alice's Restaurant Massacree\", a satirical talking blues song about 18 minutes in length that has since become a Thanksgiving anthem. His only top-40 hit was a cover of Steve Goodman's \"City of New Orleans\". His song \"Massachusetts\" was named the official folk song of the state, in which he has lived most of his adult life. Guthrie has also made several acting appearances. He is the father of four children, who have also had careers as musicians. Guthrie was born in the Coney Island neighborhood of Brooklyn, the son of the folk singer and composer Woody Guthrie and dancer Marjorie Mazia Guthrie. He is the fifth, and oldest surviving, of Woody Guthrie's eight children; two older half-sisters died of Huntington's disease (which also killed Woody in 1967), an older half-brother died in a train accident, another half sister died in a car accident, and a fourth sister died in childhood. His sister is the record producer Nora Guthrie. His mother was a professional dancer with the Martha Graham Company and founder of what is now the Huntington's Disease Society of America. Arlo's father was from a Protestant family and his mother was Jewish. His maternal grandmother was Yiddish poet Aliza Greenblatt. Guthrie received religious training for his bar mitzvah from Rabbi Meir Kahane, who formed the Jewish Defense League. \"Rabbi Kahane was a really nice, patient teacher,\" Guthrie later recalled, \"but shortly after he started giving me my lessons, he started going haywire. Maybe I was responsible.\" Guthrie converted to Catholicism in 1977, before embracing interfaith beliefs later in his life. \"I firmly believe that different religious traditions can reside in one person, or one nation or even one world,\" Guthrie said in 2015. In 2020, following his retirement, Guthrie expressed a philosophical affinity for gospel music, noting: \"Gospel music to me is the biggest genre of protest music. If this world ain’t doing it for you, and your hopes are in the next one you can't get more protest than that.", "Jack Singer Jack Singer (1917 – February 2, 2013) was a Canadian real estate developer, financier, and philanthropist. Although he owned numerous properties across Canada and the USA, he is most famous for his acquisition of Zoetrope Studio in Hollywood, once the primary film property of director, Francis Ford Coppola. Furthermore, the impressive and world-class Jack Singer Concert Hall in Calgary is named after him. Jack Singer was born in Calgary in 1917, one of four siblings: Hymie, Diane (Aceman), and Rosalie (Franks). Singer and his late wife, Shirley (née Cohen), had two sons, Alan Singer and the late Stephen Singer, plus five grandchildren: JL, Leslie, Adam, Quinn, and Carly. His mother, Bella Singer, was born in 1880 in Radom, Poland, the eighth of eleven children. In 1905 she married Abraham Singer and the couple soon left to seek a better life in Canada. Bella first worked as a housekeeper at the Palliser Hotel, and then ran rooming houses during the early years, while Abraham began a number of successful business ventures. He was a scrap dealer, a second-hand store operator, a Banff hotelier, and later owned a number of farming and commercial realty operations. Singer’s immigrant parents used their savings to help hundreds of Jews escape persecution before and during the Second World War, and in doing so, instilled in their son an entrepreneurial and philanthropic spirit. The Singers required each person they brought over to bring somebody else, ready to work. Perhaps 1,600 Canadians now count themselves descended from Bella’s \"pyramid scheme.\" In 1944, Singer married Shirley Cohen. At the urging of a close friend who was smitten with Cohen, Singer reluctantly agreed to date her, fully intending to hand off Cohen to his buddy. However, upon their first meeting, Singer fell madly in love and, instead of a matchmaker, he became a groom. It would not be long before the Singers were a fashionable power couple in Calgary social circles and, until her death in 2001, their impact upon the city’s culture was most significant. Singer always held a special fondness for the entertainment business. Over the years, as he spent more time in Southern California, he became friends with many Hollywood actors, including Peter Lorre, Truman Capote, and George Burns.", "The House That Jack Built (album) The House That Jack Built is a 2012 album by Jesca Hoop, released through Bella Union, and recorded in Los Angeles. An announcement was released on March 19, 2012, containing samples of the songs and clips of the videos, narrated by a stop-motion marionette skeleton 'Sketch', claiming to be the skeleton of Jesca Hoop. Bonus track (available online with album purchase)", "Jack Lawrence Jack Lawrence (born Jacob Louis Schwartz, April 7, 1912 – March 16, 2009) was an American songwriter. He was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1975. Jack Lawrence was born in Brooklyn, New York to an Orthodox Jewish family of modest means as the third of four sons. His parents Barney (Beryl) Schwartz and Fanny (Fruma) Goldman Schwartz were first cousins who had run away from their home in Bila Tserkva, Ukraine to go to America in 1904. Lawrence wrote songs while still a child, but because of parental pressure after he graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School, he enrolled in the First Institute of Podiatry, where he received a D.P.M. degree in 1932. The same year, his first song was published and he immediately decided to make a career of songwriting rather than podiatry. That song, \"Play, Fiddle, Play\", won international fame and he became a member of ASCAP that year at age 20. In the early 1940s, Lawrence and several fellow hitmakers formed a sensational review called \"Songwriters on Parade\", performing all across the Eastern seaboard on the Loew's and Keith circuits. Lawrence joined the United States Maritime Service during World War II and wrote the official song of the Maritime Service and Merchant Marine, \"Heave Ho! My Lads, Heave Ho!\" as a lieutenant in 1943, while bandleader at Sheepshead Bay Maritime Service Training Station in New York. One of Lawrence's first major songs after leaving the service was \"Yes, My Darling Daughter\", introduced by Dinah Shore on Eddie Cantor's radio program. The song was Shore's first record. His song \"If I Didn't Care\" introduced the world to The Ink Spots. And although Frank Sinatra was already a well-known big band singer, Lawrence's \"All or Nothing at All\" was Sinatra's first solo hit. In 1946, Lawrence published a song he had written during his tour of duty in World War II. It was released in February 1947 and eventually spent 2 weeks at 1. He wrote it for the then-five-year-old daughter of his attorney, Lee Eastman: Linda Eastman, future first wife of Beatle Paul McCartney. The song was called \"Linda\".", "George Ware (songwriter) George Ware (24 July 1829 – 30 December 1895) was an English singer, songwriter and theatrical agent. Born in Shoreditch, London, he spent some time as a sailor and as a soldier, before taking to the stage as a singer. He first established his reputation at the Oriental Music Hall in Poplar, and became well-known during the 1850s as \"the extraordinary three-voiced singer\", who could sing alto, tenor and bass. He began writing songs and found popular success with \"The House That Jack Built\", performed by Sam Cowell, and \"The Whole Hog or None\", performed by E. W. Mackney, a song to which numerous topical verses were added. Ware also worked as a booking agent for Phineas T. Barnum, and established himself as a manager of theatres and music halls. He was in regular contact with music hall proprietors around the world, and organised tours for some of the leading acts. He also managed acts including Mackney, Katie Lawrence, Arthur Lloyd, and Nelly Power, for whom he wrote \"The Boy I Love is Up in the Gallery\" in 1885. When he heard the 15-year-old Marie Lloyd singing the song, he signed her up as one of his leading performers. He died in Holborn, London in 1895, aged 66.", "Father John Misty Joshua Michael Tillman (born May 3, 1981), better known by his stage name Father John Misty, is an American musician, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and record producer. He has also performed and released studio albums under the name J. Tillman. Maintaining a steady output of solo recordings since 2004, Tillman had been a member of or toured with Demon Hunter, Saxon Shore, Fleet Foxes, Jeffertitti's Nile, Pearly Gate Music, Siberian, Har Mar Superstar, Poor Moon, Low Hums, Jonathan Wilson, and has toured extensively with Pacific Northwest artists Damien Jurado, Jesse Sykes, and David Bazan. He has also made contributions to albums by popular artists, including Beyoncé, Lady Gaga, Kid Cudi, and Post Malone and has produced one album for Matthew Daniel Siskin, known as Gambles. Tillman grew up in an Evangelical Christian household in Rockville, Maryland, a suburb outside of Washington, D.C. He is the son of Barbara and Irvin C. Tillman, an engineer at Hewlett-Packard, who met at a Christian youth group. His mother was raised in Ethiopia, where her parents were missionaries. The eldest of four children, he has a brother and two sisters. Before Tillman settled on a career as a musician, he briefly had ambitions of becoming a pastor because of the performance aspect when he was approximately six years old. He has commented that his parents strongly emphasized Christianity in his upbringing, to a degree which he has described as \"culturally oppressive\". He was estranged from his parents for many years, but they have reconciled. After learning drums at a young age, Tillman learned guitar when he was 12. Tillman was raised in a Baptist church, attended an Episcopal elementary school, then a Pentecostal Messianic day school. Tillman said he was naive when he was growing up because there was limited secular cultural influence within the home and no secular music was allowed. Around the age of 17, his parents modified their cultural stipulations – he was allowed to listen to secular music that had a \"spiritual theme\". For this reason, his early purchases included albums like Bob Dylan's \"Slow Train Coming\" as he was able to demonstrate that Dylan was classified as a \"Christian artist\". After attending Nyack College in New York for a year, Tillman moved to Seattle when he was 21.", "Jack Johnson (musician) Jack Hody Johnson (born May 18, 1975) is an American singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, actor, record producer, documentary filmmaker, and former professional surfer. Johnson is known primarily for his work in the soft rock and acoustic pop genres. In 2001, he achieved commercial success after the release of his debut album, \"Brushfire Fairytales\". Johnson has reached number one on the \"Billboard\" 200 chart with his albums \"Sing-A-Longs and Lullabies for the Film Curious George\" in 2006, \"Sleep Through the Static\" in 2008, \"To the Sea\" in 2010 and \"From Here to Now to You\" in 2013. His album \"In Between Dreams\" peaked at number two on the chart in 2005 and again in 2013. Johnson is active in environmentalism and sustainability, often with a focus on the world's oceans. Johnson and his wife Kim created the Johnson Ohana Charitable Foundation and the Kōkua Hawaii Foundation. In 2008, Johnson adopted the concept of greening (reduce and reuse), and donated 100% of the proceeds of the \"Sleep Through the Static\" tour to the Johnson Ohana Charitable Foundation. Similarly, the proceeds from the 2010 \"To the Sea\" album tour went to All at Once, a Johnson-backed collaboration of greening charities promoting fan involvement. The son of well-known surfer Jeffery Johnson, Jack was born and raised on the North Shore of Oahu, Hawaii. He began to learn how to surf at the age of 5. At 17, he became the youngest invitee to make the finals of the Pipeline Masters, one of surfing's most prestigious events, on Oahu's North Shore. One week later, however, his stint as a professional surfer ended when he suffered a surfing accident at the Pipeline that put more than 100 stitches in his forehead and removed a few of his teeth; this later became the inspiration for the song \"Drink the Water\". He appeared as a surfer in \"The Endless Summer II\" in 1994. Jack Johnson graduated from Kahuku High School in Oahu. He would later attend the University of California, Santa Barbara, and graduated in 1997 with a B.A. in film studies.", "Jack Rhodes Andrew Jackson 'Jack' Rhodes (January 12, 1907 - October 9, 1968) was an American country music producer and songwriter, with songwriting credits on over 625 released songs. Several of his songs became hit records, including \"A Satisfied Mind\", \"Silver Threads and Golden Needles\", \"Conscience I'm Guilty\", \"The Waltz of the Angels\", \"Beautiful Lies\", and \"Till the Last Leaf Shall Fall\". Inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1972 (posthumously), he is most recently celebrated as one of the founding fathers of Rockabilly, having written specifically for Gene Vincent and Capitol Records. He was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame in 2009. Jack Rhodes memorabilia is currently on exhibit at the Mineola Historical Museum in Mineola, Texas and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in Nashville. Rhodes is recognized for the groundbreaking rockabilly songs \"Rockin' Bones\", \"Action Packed\", and \"Woman Love\". Revered as an influential mentor for many an upstart artist in the mid to late 1950s, he and his collaborators wrote many songs for Gene Vincent while on the Capitol label. BMI awarded him for over a million radio broadcasts for \"Silver Threads and Golden Needles\", and he has received numerous gold records for various releases. One of these was a US country music #1 hit with \"A Satisfied Mind\" by Porter Wagoner. Jack Rhodes was born on January 12, 1907 in Martin's Mill, Texas, an unincorporated community located in Van Zandt County. Little is known about his early childhood except that he never completed school. The 1940 U.S. Census indicates that Rhodes' highest level of education was through the 6th grade in primary school. Like many school-age children during that period, he quit to help support his family. He had five siblings and one step brother. During World War II, he worked in the Houston, Texas shipyards. Rhodes started his career as a songwriter after breaking his back in a work-related accident. While recovering, he began writing songs, trying to stave off the boredom of being bedridden. Rhodes owned a café in Grand Saline, Texas, and later opened The Trail 80 Motor Courts, a gas station and restaurant in Mineola, Texas.", "The House that Jack Built: La Maison Que Jacques A Batie The House that Jack Built: La Maison Que Jacques A Batie is a 1958 picture book written and illustrated by Antonio Frasconi. The book tells the story of This Is the House That Jack Built in English and French. The book was a recipient of a 1959 Caldecott Honor for its illustrations." ]
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[ "C. L. Franklin" ]
What is the place of birth of the director of film Magic Man (Film)?
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Magic Man (film) Magic Man is a 2010 thriller film directed by Stuart Cooper and starring Billy Zane and Alexander Nevsky.
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[ "Simon, the Magician Simon, the Magician (Hungarian: Simon mágus) is a Hungarian-French film written & directed by Ildikó Enyedi. The film premiered at the 1999 Locarno Festival In Competition where it won the Don Quixote Award - Special Mention. The film was released on DVD in 2002. The film is about a Budapest magician named Simon who is called to help solve a crime by the Parisian police.", "Donald G. Jackson Donald G. Jackson (April 24, 1943 – October 20, 2003) was an American filmmaker. Born in Tremont, Mississippi, Jackson grew up in Adrian, Michigan. As an adult he struggled to become a filmmaker for many years while working at an auto factory. Finally, in the mid-1970s he made his first feature film, a horror film parody, \"The Demon Lover\". This film was soon followed by the wrestling film, \"I Like to Hurt People\". These films financed his move to Hollywood, California, where he remained until his death. Jackson is perhaps most well known for creating and directing the cult film, \"Hell Comes to Frogtown\". Throughout his career Jackson worked with several filmmakers including Roger Corman and James Cameron but it was not until he began a long collaboration with American filmmaker Scott Shaw that the team created Zen Filmmaking. Zen Filmmaking is a distinct style of filmmaking where no scripts are used in the creation of a film. Jackson died of leukemia on October 20, 2003 and was interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles.", "George Fivas George Peter Fivas II (born May 25, 1973) is an American film producer, music producer, director and actor living in Los Angeles. He is one of the founding organizers of the jazz and popular music group, Apollo. His directorial debut came in the form of \"Summer Solstice\" (2003), an independently produced coming-of-age drama, which includes a well-reviewed performance from Academy Award nominee and Golden Globe winner Karen Black (\"Five Easy Pieces\" and \"The Great Gatsby\"), and was released on Netflix in 2006. He directed a music video for the song \"A New World\" (2008) by The JMD Project, a hit dance track in Europe, whose video has been broadcast on MTV Germany and other European outlets as an introduction to the Metropolis Revived concert series. Fivas is also a published scientist, having co-authored several papers on seismological phenomena in the Intermountain Region of The United States.", "Don Coscarelli Don Coscarelli Jr. (born February 17, 1954) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. Born to Italian settlers in Libya, he is best known for horror films. His credits include the \"Phantasm\" series, \"The Beastmaster\", and \"Bubba Ho-Tep\". Coscarelli was born to Italian settlers in Libya and raised in Southern California. Although his family was not connected with the motion picture business, he was fascinated with cameras and filmmaking at an early age. Long before he was old enough to attend film school, his short films, made with the help of neighborhood friends in his hometown of Long Beach, California, were winning prizes on television. At the age of 19, Coscarelli became the youngest director to have a feature film distributed by a major studio when he sold his independently produced drama \"Jim the World's Greatest\", to Universal Pictures. The film was the first collaboration for Coscarelli with actor Lawrence Rory Guy, who went on to achieve horror icon status under the screen name Angus Scrimm. \"Jim the World's Greatest\" was an official selection of the USA Film Festival. Coscarelli is best known for \"Phantasm\", and its sequels. The original \"Phantasm\" was a worldwide critical and box-office success and won the Special Jury Prize at the Festival du Cinema Fantastique at Avoriaz, France. Coscarelli also co-wrote (with Paul Pepperman) and directed \"The Beastmaster\", which was described by \"Entertainment Weekly\" as \"a surefire audience favorite.\" \"The Beastmaster\" has spawned two sequels and a television series. Coscarelli was the recipient of the Bram Stoker Award for Best Screenplay for his film \"Bubba Ho-Tep\", which he also directed. Based on a short story by Joe R. Lansdale, \"Bubba Ho-Tep\" stars Bruce Campbell, Ossie Davis, and frequent Coscarelli collaborator Reggie Bannister. In addition to being a critical hit, \"Bubba Ho-Tep\" was also a festival favorite, playing prestigious international film festivals like the Toronto International Film Festival, SXSW, Florida Film Festival, Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Films, and the Hong Kong International Film festival. At HBO's US Comedy Arts Festival, Coscarelli was the recipient of the Best Screenplay Award.", "Alfred Spellman Alfred Spellman is an American film and television producer who co-founded the media studio rakontur. Spellman was born in Miami Beach, Florida on November 15, 1978. He graduated from North Miami Beach Senior High School.", "Vadim Jean Vadim Jean (born Bristol, 9 December 1963) is an English film director, producer, and executive producer. After graduating with a degree in history from Warwick University, he found work on Mike Figgis' \"Stormy Monday\", before establishing his own production company in 1989 covering a wide variety of subjects, from sport to corporate videos. He first came to public attention as a director when \"Leon the Pig Farmer\" won him the FIPRESCI International Critics' Prize at the 1992 Venice Film Festival, the Best Newcomer award from the London Critics' Circle, the Most Promising Newcomer at the Evening Standard British Film Awards, and the Chaplin Award for the best first feature from the Edinburgh International Film Festival. He repeated his critical success in 1999 when \"One More Kiss\" won the Audience Award at the Atlantic Film Festival, and was nominated for Best Film at the International Filmfest Emden. His Hollywood debut was \"Jiminy Glick in Lalawood\" starring Martin Short as his celebrity interviewing alter-ego, produced by Gold Circle films. The film also features Steve Martin and Kurt Russell as themselves. It was selected as the closing gala at the 2004 Toronto International Film Festival. In 2010 he directed \"In the Land of the Free...\" a feature documentary narrated by Samuel L. Jackson. It tells the story of three men known as the Angola Three who among them have spent over a century in solitary confinement in the Louisiana State penitentiary. It was nominated best documentary at the 2011 Evening Standard British Film Awards.", "David Schmoeller David Schmoeller (born December 8, 1947) is an American film director, producer and screenwriter. He is notable for directing several full-length theatrical horror films including \"Tourist Trap\" (1979), \"The Seduction\" (1982), \"Crawlspace\" (1986), \"Catacombs\" (1988), \"Puppet Master\" (1989), and \"Netherworld\" (1992). In May, 2012, Schmoeller was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Fantaspoa Film Festival in Porto Alegre, Brazil where his new feature film, \"2 Little Monsters\" (2012) was screened along with his other notable films. Schmoeller was born in Louisville, Kentucky, and was raised and educated in Texas. He completed a Masters program in Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin. Fluent in Spanish, he was briefly an interpreter for ABC Sports during the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. He spent six months as an intern with writer-director Peter Hyams on the film \"Capricorn One\", before writing and directing his first theatrical feature, \"Tourist Trap\" (1979). \"Tourist Trap\" was based on Schmoeller's University of Texas thesis film \"The Spider Will Kill You\". Shot in 24 days, it features a score by Pino Donaggio, performances from Chuck Connors and Tanya Roberts, and contains sound effects culled from \"The Time Machine\" (1960) and \"Gone with the Wind\" (1939). Though it was not a major hit at the time, it has since developed a cult following and been praised by renowned horror author Stephen King (who lauded the film as an obscure classic in his book \"Danse Macabre\" (1981)). \"Tourist Trap\" would also mark Schmoeller's first collaboration with executive producer Charles Band, who would produce several of Schmoeller's films, first though his own production company and later with Empire International Pictures and Full Moon Features. For his sophomore film, Schmoeller directed \"The Seduction\" (1982), a thriller film starring Morgan Fairchild and Andrew Stevens. The film was not well-received and generated several Golden Raspberry nominations (though it won none of them).", "Magic Town Magic Town is a 1947 comedy film directed by William A. Wellman and starring James Stewart and Jane Wyman. The picture is one of the first films about the then-new practice of public opinion polling. The film was inspired by the Middletown studies. It is also known as The Magic City. The \"magic\" of the title is the mathematical miracle (as it is called in the film) that certain towns can be used to fairly accurately predict the actions of the whole country. Lawrence \"Rip\" Smith (James Stewart) is a former basketball player and ex-military who now runs a company that perform polls and consumer surveys. Lately he has started obsessing about being able to find a perfect mathematical \"miracle formula\" to perform the perfect survey, and compete for real with his rival companies. Because he lacks funds, he is far behind his number one rival George Stringer. One day Rip discovers that a survey made by a friend and ex-Army colleague of his, Hoopendecker (Kent Smith), in the small town of Grandview, exactly matches one that Stringer has made on a national level. Rip concludes that the small town demographic is a perfect match for the country as a whole, and believes he has finally found his miracle formula. Eager to test his theory, Rip sells a survey on progressive education to a client, with a promise the result will stand for the whole country. Furthermore he promises to deliver the result the same day as Stringer's company, even though the rival has been working on the project for quite some time. Rip and his team of professionals then travel to Grandview to perform the survey. They are pretending to be insurance salesmen. But trouble starts already when Rip overhears a conversation between a woman named Mary Peterman (Jane Wyman) trying to convince the mayor (Harry Holman) to expand the town and build a number of new buildings: a civic center. Rip wants this town to stay exactly as it is, so he can make his perfect surveys, mirroring the demographic of the country. Rip holds an electrifying speech to preserve the town, and the conservative members of the town council listen to him rather than Mary, whose proposition is laid to the side. Mary writes a bold and angry editorial against Rip in the local newspaper, which is run by her family. Rip starts a charm offensive towards Mary to soften her up, but she holds her ground. The two combatants are attracted to each other though.", "Karel Zeman Karel Zeman (3 November 1910 – 5 April 1989) was a Czech film director, artist, production designer and animator, best known for directing fantasy films combining live-action footage with animation. Because of his creative use of special effects and animation in his films, he has often been called the \"Czech Méliès\". Zeman was born on 3 November 1910 in Ostroměř (near Nová Paka) in what was then Austria-Hungary. At his parents' insistence, he studied business at high school in Kolín. In the 1920s, he studied at a French advertising school, and worked at an advertising studio in Marseilles until 1936. It was in France that he first worked with animation, filming an ad for soap. He then returned to his home country (by now the First Czechoslovak Republic, known as Czechoslovakia), after visiting Egypt, Yugoslavia, and Greece. Back in Czechoslovakia, Zeman advertised for Czech firms like Baťa and Tatra. In 1939 he attempted to make an extended stay in Casablanca, but was barred by the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia established by Nazi Germany; unable to get the necessary papers in time, Zeman was required to remain in his home country during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. During the war he worked as a head of advertisement at Dům služeb in Brno. Film director Elmar Klos came to Brno to film a newsreel about window-dressing competition, which Zeman won. Klos offered Zeman a job at Zlín's animation studio. After some consideration (his wife and children were already established in Brno), Zeman accepted the job in 1943. At the studio, Zeman worked as an assistant to the pioneering animator Hermína Týrlová, and in 1945 he became the director of the stop-motion animation production group. The same year, in collaboration with , he made his first short film, \"Vánoční sen\" (\"A Christmas Dream\"). The short, which combined animated puppets with live-action footage, marked the beginning of Zeman's experiments with new techniques and genres. Zeman then went on to solo work, including a series of satirical cartoon shorts starring a puppet called Mr.", "Magic (1917 film) Magic () is a 1917 Hungarian drama film directed by Alexander Korda and starring Victor Varconi, Magda Nagy and Antal Nyáray." ]
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[ "Hoboken" ]
Where was the director of film Stage Fright (1950 Film) born?
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Stage Fright (1950 film) Stage Fright is a 1950 British film noir directed and produced by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Jane Wyman, Marlene Dietrich, Michael Wilding and Richard Todd. Others in the cast include Alastair Sim, Sybil Thorndike, Kay Walsh, Hitchcock's daughter Pat Hitchcock in her movie debut, and Joyce Grenfell in a vignette. The story was adapted for the screen by Whitfield Cook, Ranald MacDougall and Alma Reville (the director's wife), with additional dialogue by James Bridie, based on the 1947 novel "Man Running" by Selwyn Jepson. Eve Gill is an aspiring actress at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London. She is interrupted in rehearsal by her friend (and crush), actor Jonathan Cooper, the secret lover of flamboyant stage actress/singer Charlotte Inwood. Via a flashback, he says Charlotte visited him after killing her husband; she was wearing a bloodstained dress. Jonathan claims he went back to her house for another dress but was seen by Nellie Goode, Charlotte's cockney maid/dresser. He escaped the police and needs help. Eve takes him to her father's house on the coast to hide. Commodore Gill, (whose name is twice misspelled in the credits), notices that the blood on Charlotte's dress has been smeared on deliberately; he and Eve think that Charlotte framed Jonathan. Jonathan angrily destroys the dress and, thus, the most useful piece of evidence. Eve starts to investigate. She hears Charlotte's dresser Nellie Goode boasting about her newfound notoriety in a bar. While she is there, Eve meets Detective Inspector Wilfred O. Smith, and they become friendly. Eve then poses as a reporter; she bribes Nellie to tell Charlotte she is ill and introduce her cousin "Doris Tinsdale" as a replacement. Using her acting skills, Eve becomes "Doris" and starts working for Charlotte. Eve discovers Charlotte is having an affair with her manager Freddie Williams (Hector MacGregor). Eve and "Ordinary" Smith become more friendly. When Smith visits Charlotte, Eve has to disguise the fact that she is also "Doris," the maid. Smith makes a courtship visit to Eve and her mother at home, where the Commodore drops subtle hints that Jonathan has left the seaside house. Despite her widowed status, Charlotte continues to perform her West End musical show.
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[ "Sacha Pitoëff Sacha Pitoëff (11 March 1920 – 21 July 1990) was a Swiss film actor and theatre director. Born in Geneva, Switzerland, the son of Georges and Ludmilla Pitoëff, Sacha Pitoëff played his first film role in 1952. Appearing in over 50 films, he is probably best known for his performance in Alain Resnais's enigmatic \"Last Year at Marienbad\" (1960), as a character known simply as \"M\". He was also featured in roles of various sizes in such films as René Clément's \"Is Paris Burning?\" (1967) and Jacques Demy's \"Donkey Skin\" (1970). Toward the end of his career, he began appearing in horror films, including Dario Argento's \"Inferno\" (1980) and the low budget \"Patrick Still Lives\" (1980). His height, face and hands suggest he may have had Marfan syndrome.", "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.", "Glen Byam Shaw Glencairn Alexander \"Glen\" Byam Shaw, CBE (13 December 1904 – 29 April 1986) was an English actor and theatre director, known for his dramatic productions in the 1950s and his operatic productions in the 1960s and later. In the 1920s and 1930s Byam Shaw was a successful actor, both in romantic leads and in character parts. He worked frequently with his old friend John Gielgud. After working as co-director with Gielgud at the end of the 1930s, he preferred to direct rather than act. He served in the armed forces during the Second World War, and then took leading directorial posts at the Old Vic, the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre and Sadler's Wells (later known as the English National Opera). Byam Shaw was born in London, the youngest of five siblings (four sons and one daughter) born to artist John Byam Liston Shaw and his wife, Caroline Evelyn Eunice Pyke-Nott (1870–1959), also an artist. He was educated at Westminster School, where his contemporaries included his elder brother, James Byam Shaw, later a well-known art historian, and John Gielgud, who became a lifelong friend and professional colleague. The actor Michael Denison, biographer of Byam Shaw in the \"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography\" writes that Byam Shaw made his professional stage debut in August 1923 with no prior training. Denison speculates that Byam Shaw's cousin, actress May Ward, a close friend of Dame Ellen Terry, \"may have been enough to make him take the plunge\". \"The Times\" said of him, \"Tall, gentle, and graceful in movement, he was valuable in any cast, particularly in classics and in the Russian plays.\" Byam Shaw's first appearance was at Torquay in the west of England, in C. K. Munro's comedy \"At Mrs. Beam's\". In 1925 he made his London debut, playing Yasha in J.B. Fagan's production of \"The Cherry Orchard\", in a cast that included Alan Napier as Gaiev, O.B. Clarence as Firs and Gielgud as the young student Trofimov. Over the next few years Byam Shaw appeared in three more plays by Chekhov, and in plays by Strindberg and Ibsen.", "Pierre Dux Pierre Dux (21 October 1908 – 1 December 1990) was a French stage director, stage actor, and film actor. He appeared in 50 films between 1932 and 1990.", "The Boy from Indiana The Boy from Indiana is a 1950 American sports drama film directed by John Rawlins and starring Lon McCallister, Billie Burke and George Cleveland. The film's sets were designed by the art director Lucius O. Croxton.", "Cry Murder Cry Murder is a 1950 American crime film directed by Jack Glenn and written by James Carhardt and Nicholas Winter. The film stars Carole Mathews, Jack Lord, Howard Smith, Hope Miller, Tom Pedi and Eugene Smith. The film was released on January 6, 1950 by Film Classics.", "Michel Barbey Michel Barbey (1927-) is a French stage, film, and television actor known for his comic roles. He starred in the 1950 film \"Dominique\".", "Joseph Pevney Joseph Pevney (September 15, 1911 – May 18, 2008) was an American film and television director. Born in New York City, Pevney made his debut in vaudeville as a boy soprano in 1924. Although he hated vaudeville, he loved the theatre and developed a career as a stage actor, appearing in such plays as \"Home of the Brave\", \"The World We Make\", \"Key Largo\", \"Golden Boy\" and \"Nature Son\". A short career as a film actor followed, his most significant appearance being in the classic boxing film \"Body and Soul\" (1947) with John Garfield, in which he played the role of Shorty Pulaski. Before turning to film, he served in the Signal Corps in World War II, then did more time on stage. Beginning with \"Shakedown\" (1950), Pevney became a film and television director, with a directing career that spanned over 80 productions from 1950 to 1984. Among his films were Robert Louis Stevenson's \"The Strange Door\" (1951) with Charles Laughton and Boris Karloff, \"Meet Danny Wilson\" (1952) with Frank Sinatra, \"Desert Legion\" (1953) with Alan Ladd, \"3 Ring Circus\" (1954) with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, \"Female on the Beach\" (1955) with Joan Crawford and Jeff Chandler, \"Tammy and the Bachelor\" (1957) with Debbie Reynolds, Walter Brennan and Leslie Nielsen, \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957) with James Cagney as Lon Chaney, \"Cash McCall\" (1959) with James Garner and Natalie Wood, \"The Crowded Sky\" (1960) with Dana Andrews, and Westerns such as \"The Plunderers\" (1960). Pevney also directed multiple episodes of noted television series, including \"Bonanza\", \"\", \"The Paper Chase\", and \"Trapper John, M.D.\". He tied with Marc Daniels for directing the largest number of original \"Star Trek\" episodes (14 in total), including \"The Devil in the Dark, \"Arena\", Harlan Ellison's \"The City on the Edge of Forever\", \"Amok Time\", \"Journey to Babel\", and \"The Trouble with Tribbles\".", "Jack McNaughton Jack McNaughton (22 December 190522 February 1990) was a British stage and film actor. As a character actor he mostly played supporting roles, but occasionally featured in major roles such as playing the male lead in the 1951 comedy \"Cheer the Brave\". He was married to the Canadian-born actress Kay Callard.", "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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[ "Leytonstone" ]
Who was born first, Makarios Djan or Janiel Simon?
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Makarios Djan Makarios Djan (born 3 June 1955) is a Ghanaian sprinter. He competed in the men's 4 × 100 metres relay at the 1984 Summer Olympics.
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[ "Simonyan Simonyan () or in Western Armenian Simonian ) or Germanified Simonjan is an Armenian surname. Notable people with the name include:", "François Simon François Simon may refer to:", "Patrick Simon Patrick Simon may refer to:", "Jan Gan Jan Gan or Jangan () may refer to:", "Simon Richter Simon Richter (born 16 January 1985) is a Danish-born Gambian professional football defender, who plays for Tårnby FF. He also represented the Gambia national team. Richter debuted for the Gambia national football team in a friendly 2-1 win over the Central African Republic on 27 March 2017. He is the son of a Gambian father and a Danish mother and the twin brother of Jonathan Richter.", "Daniel Jansen Daniel or Dan Jansen may refer to:", "Julia Simon Julia Simon may refer to:", "Carlos Simon Carlos Simon may refer to:", "David Simons David Simons may refer to:", "Yohanan Simon Yohanan Simon (; November 3, 1905 – January 16, 1976) was a German-born Israeli painter. Yohanan Simon, painter was born in 1905, Berlin. From 1927 he lived mainly in France. Beginning in 1934 he worked in New York for the magazine \"Vogue\". In 1936 he immigrated to Mandate Palestine. Until 1953 he was a member of Kibbutz Gan Shmuel. He executed a number of murals for Israeli ships, public buildings and hotels, including Bank of Israel offices in New York and a hotel in Côte d'Ivoire. He also illustrated books and designed stage sets." ]
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[ "Makarios Djan" ]
Who lived longer, Constance Keys or Anthony De Jasay?
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Constance Keys Constance Mabel Keys (30 October 1886 – 17 March 1964) was one of the most highly decorated nurses from Australia who served in World War I. She was mentioned twice in despatches, was awarded the Royal Red Cross, First Class and the Médaille des Epidémies. Keys was born in Mount Perry, a small town in the Wide Bay–Burnett region of Queensland, the seventh child of Irish immigrant James Keys, a schoolteacher and botanist, and his wife Margaret. Trained at the Brisbane General Hospital as a nurse, she enlisted in September 1914 in the Australian Army Nursing Service, and was sent first to Egypt, later travelling onto Britain and then to France. She was the mother of Australian naturalist and conservationist Margaret Thorsborne .
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[ "Henry Anthony Henry Anthony may refer to:", "Constance DeJong Constance DeJong may refer to:", "Charles Anthony Charles Anthony may refer to:", "Anthony Thomas Anthony Thomas may refer to:", "David Key David Key may refer to:", "Alfred Anthony Alfred Anthony may refer to:", "Anthony Ashley Anthony Ashley may refer to:", "Anthony David Anthony David may refer to:", "Nelson Keys Nelson Keys (7 April 1886 in London, England – 26 April 1939 in London) was a British stage and film actor, a star in musical comedy and stage revue, including the 1924 \"Ziegfeld Follies\". He was the father of film producer Anthony Nelson Keys and director John Paddy Carstairs, who wrote his biography, \"Bunch\" in 1941.", "Anthony Williams Anthony or Antony Williams may refer to:" ]
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[ "Anthony De Jasay" ]
Did the magazines Reef Hobbyist Magazine and Investment Executive, originate from the same country?
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Reef Hobbyist Magazine Reef Hobbyist Magazine, founded in 2007 in California, is a reef-focused magazine that teaches hobbyists of all levels how to succeed at reef-keeping. The magazine is published in print in the U.S. and is also available online for free to hobbyists through its website. There was also a Chinese version published for readers in Asia, but it is no longer being published. Having an emphasis on responsible reef-keeping, many of the articles offer information on captive breeding and propagation of reef fish and corals. The hard copy magazine comes out quarterly and can be found in local fish stores across the U.S.Recently, one of the founders of Reef Hobbyist Magazine co-founded Aquarium Hobbyist Magazine, a freshwater-focused magazine addressing all types of freshwater aquariums.
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[ "The Investor The Investor is an English online business news service launched on June 14, 2016, in Seoul, South Korea, with the aim of providing global investors with timely and accurate information on Korea's business landscape. Founded by Korean media and lifestyle company Herald Corporation, The Investor produces more than 100 articles daily, written by a team of Korean and international writers from South Korea's largest English daily The Korea Herald and its sister Korean publication Herald Business. One of the main features of The Investor is real-time regulatory filings offered for the first time in English in South Korea. Another is a complete database of the 100 richest people in Korea that includes their personal information and net worth—including the value of their unlisted stocks and real estate. This list is scheduled to be expanded to 300 richest people by 2017. The service also delivers English reports from research institutes, investment banks and brokerages.", "Australian Banking & Finance Australian Banking & Finance Magazine is a trade magazine of the Australian banking and finance community, providing coverage of the financial services sector, with a 30,000-strong readership. It is produced by Australian Financial Publications, an Australian financial industry media company that produce, manage and deliver magazines, conferences, forums, briefings and custom and online communications. The magazine is published monthly in print format, with eleven editions a year. A daily online newsletter was established in 2010 providing coverage of day-to-day events in the banking and finance industry.", "Kingdom (magazine) Kingdom is a quarterly magazine covering all aspects of luxury golfing lifestyle, conceived and built in association with American golfer Arnold Palmer. The magazine was first published in December 2003. The magazine is published by golf media specialists, TMC USA, and was the brainchild of publisher, Matthew Squire, and the then president of Arnold Palmer Design Company, Ed Seay. Originally conceived as an annual magazine solely for the private members of Arnold Palmer designed golf courses, \"Kingdom\" is now widely available. Averaging 200 pages in length and weighing over two pounds, it can be considered a coffee table publication. Editorial content is not limited to Palmer; many famous celebrities and golfers from Tom Watson to Vince Gill have appeared. There are also features on travel, golf, design, fitness, and other lifestyle articles. The magazine has drawn critical praise for its standard of production and design, an aspect that has been principally driven by British art director, Matthew Halnan. The magazine also has an accompanying website, kingdom.golf which, along with the print magazine, is jointly overseen by Los Angeles based lifestyle editor Reade Tilley and golf editor Robin Barwick. The magazine also has its own page on Arnold Palmer's website.", "Your Trading Edge Magazine Your Trading Edge Magazine is a bi-monthly magazine for traders and active investors covering CFDs, stocks, options, futures, forex and commodities. \"YourTradingEdge\" (\"YTE\") began as a customer newsletter for the Sydney Futures Exchange (SFE) in 1997. SFE then began professionally publishing it as a magazine. In early 2001, \"YTE\" was acquired by MarketSource International. Many of the former contributors re-joined the new \"YTE\" during the first year, including highly respected industry identities Michael Pascoe and Dawn Bolton-Smith. The magazine is distributed in Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Brunei and Indonesia, as well as the United Kingdom. In 2006 the title was picked up by Australia's largest newsagency chain, \"Newslink\". It was also picked up by Qantas, Virgin Blue, Air New Zealand and Singapore Airlines for distribution in their frequent flyer lounges. In 2010 \"YTE\" launched its first digital edition on the BeBook e-reader, then later via Exact Editions and the Apple Store. In 2017, \"YTE\" was relaunched and acquired by EOS Publications. \"Your Trading Edge Magazine\" is published by EOS Publications in Melbourne.", "Investir Investir was a French language monthly business magazine published in Paris, France, between 1974 and 2011. \"Investir\" was established in 1974. It was relaunched in 1988. The magazine had been published by Hachette Filipacchi until 2001 when it began to be published Quebecor World Inc. It was part of Groupe les Echos, publishing subsidiary of LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA. It was published monthly by Investir Publications SA, and its headquarters was in Paris. It provided in-depth analyses and practical tips for managing the assets to its readers and audience, including major companies in the country. The magazine founded Actionnaira which was a personal investment trade show and organized numerous trade-related events and activities. Jacques Derouin was among the editors-in-chief of \"Investir\" who left the post in August 2005. He also held the same post for \"Investir Hebdo\", a weekly sister magazine of \"Investir\". On 5 February 2011 \"Investir\" merged with another business magazine, \"Journal des Finances\", to form \"Investir-Le Journal des Finances\". The circulation of \"Investir\" was 108,000 copies in 1994. In 1997 the magazine sold 100,000 copies. Its circulation became 190,000 copies in 1999. At the beginning of the 2000s \"Investir\" was one of three leading business magazines in France with higher circulation than the others. During the period of 2007-2008 the circulation of \"Investir\" was 98,000 copies.", "Entrepreneur (magazine) Entrepreneur is an American magazine and website that carries news stories about entrepreneurship, small business management, and business. The magazine was first published in 1977. It is published by \"Entrepreneur Media Inc\"., headquartered in Irvine, California. The magazine publishes 10 issues annually, available through subscription and on newsstands. It is or has been published under license internationally in Mexico, Russia, India, Hungary, the Philippines, South Africa, and others. Its editor-in-chief is Jason Feifer and its owner is Peter Shea. Every year since 1979, \"Entrepreneur\" has published a list of its top 500 franchise companies. The magazine also published many other lists and awards, one of the most prominent being the Entrepreneur 360 formed to identify businesses mastering the art and science of growing a business. Companies are evaluated based on the analysis of 50-plus data points organized into five pillars: Revenue and Customers, Management Efficiency, Innovation, Financial Evaluation, and Business Valuation. In 1996, the magazine launched its website, Entrepreneur.com, which expanded to include features, contests and other publications and spin-offs. It is recognised as one of America's leading business publications, competing with the likes of Forbes Magazine, Fortune and Fast Company. The \"Franchise\" \"500\" is an annual list compiled and published by \"Entrepreneur\" that ranks 500 of the most prominent American franchising companies through a submission and review process. The \"Franchise\" 500 first began in 1979 and has been published every year since. \"Entrepreneur\" publishes the \"Entrepreneur StartUps\" magazine, available through subscription and on newsstands. The magazine publishes a blog managed by a dedicated online staff. It is also published in digital editions through its mobile apps. In 1999, the website \"YoungEntrepreneur.com\" was created as a spin-off of Entrepreneur.com. It is an online forum for young entrepreneurs. In 2010, \"Entrepreneur\" launched the website \"SecondAct.com\", which is targeted towards an older audience. When launched, the site used advertising as its sole source of revenue. \"Entrepreneur\" also publishes books through its Entrepreneur Press division. The company has a backlist of over 200 titles on business and entrepreneurship. In April 2017, Reid Hoffman announced the launch of a new podcast called \"Masters of Scale\", hosted by \"Entrepreneur\" magazine.", "Investor Daily Investor Daily (or Investor Daily Indonesia on its nameplate) is a daily business newspaper published in Jakarta, Indonesia. The paper is owned by BeritaSatu Media Holdings, a subsidiary of Lippo Group. \"Investor Daily\" was first published on 26 June 2001 as \"Investor Indonesia\", with Adi Hidayat as the first editor-in-chief. The paper, which was owned by standalone company Investor Group, was initially an evening newspaper; it took its name from its sister publication \"Investor\" magazine which was published earlier in 1998. In 2002, Lippo Group acquired Investor Group, its name then changed to the present name and turned into morning publication. Investor Group later provided the bases for Lippo Group's media business that would currently become BeritaSatu Media Holdings in 2011.", "Reef (company) Reef is a brand of casual sandals, known as thongs, created by two Argentine brothers, Fernando and Santiago Aguerre. In 1984, they moved from Argentina to the San Diego beach community of La Jolla, California, where they began Reef. Their product became popular amongst surfers and beach goers. Reef has subsequently grown into one of the world's leading active sandal manufacturers. Reef was acquired by VF Corporation in 2005 and was subsequently sold to The Rockport Group in 2018.", "Financial Advisor (magazine) Financial Advisor is a monthly financial services magazine which delivers market information for financial advisors. Its articles focus on strategies and management advice for advisors of affluent clients. Its targeted readership includes financial planners, investment advisors, and broker-dealers. \"Financial Advisor\" is published by Charter Financial Publishing Network, Shrewsbury, New Jersey and has a circulation of 110,000 copies. The magazine is headquartered in Shrewsbury, New Jersey.", "Air Enthusiast Air Enthusiast was a British, bi-monthly, aviation magazine, published by the Key Publishing group. Initially begun in 1974 as \"Air Enthusiast Quarterly\", the magazine was conceived as a historical adjunct to \"Air International\" magazine. \"Air International\" was (and still is) involved with current aviation topics and the \"Quarterly\" concerned itself with historical matters. Each issue contained 80 pages; as a result certain articles were divided and each part appeared over a number of issues. \"Air Enthusiast\" was illustrated with colour and black-and-white photos, diagrams, profiles and three-view drawings. Earlier issues featured cutaway drawings, but these were dropped. The articles provided detail for varieties of aircraft and events. The magazine was published by three publishing companies and changed editors once, with William Green and Gordon Swanborough as joint editors for 16 years and Ken Ellis as the current sole editor of 16 years also. The magazine ceased publishing with issue #131, September/October 2007." ]
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[ "no" ]
Do both directors of films The Old Fritz and The Seventh Sign share the same nationality?
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The Old Fritz The Old Fritz (German: Der alte Fritz) is a 1928 German silent historical drama film directed by Gerhard Lamprecht and starring Otto Gebühr, Julia Serda and Bertold Reissig. Part of the cycle of Prussian Films, it was released in two parts. Gebühr played the role of Frederick the Great on many occasions during the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany. The film's art direction was by Otto Moldenhauer.
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[ "Fritz Lang filmography Fritz Lang (1890–1976) was an Austrian film director, producer and screenwriter. In Lang's early career he worked primarily as a screenwriter, finishing film scripts in four to five days. Lang directed major German films of the silent and early sound eras including \"Metropolis\" (1927) and \"M\" (1931) respectively. After fleeing from the Nazi regime, Lang directed some of the most important American crime and film noir motion pictures of the studio era, such as \"The Big Heat\" (1953). Lang appeared as himself in Jean-Luc Godard's \"Contempt\" (\"Le Mepris\", 1963).", "Fritz Klotzsch Fritz Klotzsch (16 May 1896 – 9 January 1971) was a German film producer and production manager. He was head of production at Bavaria Film for two years.", "Fritz Karl Fritz Karl (born December 21, 1967) is an Austrian film, television and stage actor born in Gmunden, Upper Austria. He is one of the busiest Austrian actors. Karl lives in both Munich and Vienna with his longtime companion Elena Uhlig. The two of them have two children, born in 2007 and 2010. He has three more children from a previous relationship.", "Fritz Wagner (actor) Fritz Wagner (19 March 1915 - 19 January 1982) was a German actor. He appeared in more than sixty films from 1939 to 1976.", "Fritz Alberti Fritz Alberti (22 October 1877 – 15 September 1954) was a German actor.", "Fritz Kraenke Fritz Kraenke (1890–1947) was a German art director. He worked on the sets of more than thirty films during the silent era.", "Bruno Fritz Bruno Fritz (4 March 1900 – 12 June 1984) was a German actor. He appeared in more than sixty films from 1934 to 1971.", "The Seventh Son (film) The Seventh Son (German: Der siebente Junge) is a 1926 German silent drama film directed by Franz Osten and starring Maria Mindzenty, Ferdinand Martini and Carl Walther Meyer. It premiered in Berlin on 23 March 1926. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich.", "The Sign of the Malay The Sign of the Malay (German:Das Zeichen des Malayen) is a 1920 German silent film directed by Carl Heinz Boese.", "Fritz Peter Buch Fritz Peter Buch (21 December 1894 – 6 November 1964) was a German screenwriter and film director. He worked frequently during the Nazi period, but struggled in the post-war years. He directed Zarah Leander in one of her comeback films \"Cuba Cabana\" (1952), in what proved to be his final directorial effort." ]
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[ "no" ]
What is the date of death of the performer of song Duodenum (Song)?
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Duodenum (song) "Duodenum" is a song by Frank Zappa that first appeared as part of "Lumpy Gravy Part One" on the Verve Records edition of "Lumpy Gravy". It is an instrumental (although it contains vocals on the 1984 "Lumpy Gravy" remix) that runs for approximately 1:32 and is the second identifiable track on the album, preceded by "The Way I See It, Barry" and followed by "Oh No". Documentation purports that this piece was likely produced and recorded by Zappa sometime between 1963 and 1965. The duodenum, in anatomy, is part of the digestive system and connects the stomach to the small intestine. "Fillmore East - June 1971", released in 1971, contains a performance of "Duodenum" with added lyrics under the name "Bwana Dik." The song was used as part of a routine during which the band member most considerably endowed or popular with groupies was given the moniker "Bwana Dik." "Duodenum" also appears in its instrumental form on the 1991 live double album "Make a Jazz Noise Here" as "Theme from Lumpy Gravy." The Persuasions, the classic doo-wop a cappella group that Frank Zappa signed to his Bizarre label in the 1960s, covered "Duodenum" as their album opener on their 2000 Zappa tribute, "Frankly A Cappella: The Persuasions Sing Zappa." The Spotnicks released a cover of the track under the name "Lumpy Gravy" as the B-side to a cover of Diamonds (instrumental) by Jet Harris. The Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra covered the track as "Theme from Lumpy Gravy" on their 2010 album "Goldfingers."
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[ "John Wilkinson (guitarist) John Richard Wilkinson (July 3, 1945 – January 11, 2013) was an American singer and guitarist best known for performing with Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and The Greenwood County Singers in 1964. After Wilkinson once performed on a television show in Los Angeles, he received a phone call from Elvis who asked him to join his TCB Band. He went on to perform more than 1000 times with Elvis as his rhythm guitarist until Elvis died in 1977. In 1983, Wilkinson married the love of his life, Terry. In 1989, he suffered a stroke, and later in his life, he struggled with cancer. Wilkinson died on January 11, 2013, at age 67 with his wife by his side. Terry died on September 10, 2017.", "Dương Thụ Dương Thụ (Vân Đình, Ứng Hòa Hanoi, 10 February 1943) is a Vietnamese songwriter.", "Art Sullivan Marc Liénart van Lidth de Jeude (22 November 1950 – 27 December 2019), known professionally as Art Sullivan, was a Belgian singer. He was successful in many countries, including Belgium, France, Portugal and Germany. Art Sullivan sold ten million records between 1972 and 1978. Compilations of his hits are still released. He died from pancreatic cancer on 27 December 2019. The family members of the Noble House of Van Lidth de Jeude are living in Belgium and the Netherlands. The parents of Art Sullivan are Marie-José d'Udekem d'Acoz and Josse Liénart van Lidth de Jeude. His mother, daughter of Baron Guy d'Udekem is a distant relative of Queen Mathilde of Belgium; they have little contact. Singles released in France/Belgium include: Most of the information comes from:", "Haskell Sadler Haskell Robert \"Cool Papa\" Sadler (April 16, 1935 – May 6, 1994) was an American blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist. Born in Denver, Colorado, United States, Sadler moved to California and worked in clubs in the San Francisco Bay Area starting in the 1960s. He played a number of times at the San Francisco Blues Festival. Sadler wrote \"747\" as recorded by Joe Louis Walker, and \"Yesterday\" recorded by Tiny Powell. In the 1970s, he recorded as \"Cool Papa\" for TJ Records. Cool Papa proved to be a guiding hand to Gene \"Birdlegg\" Pittman, then a new arrival in the Bay Area, and Pittman played alongside Sadler for 13 years. He developed diabetes, and had a leg amputated in 1990. He died, aged 59, in Berkeley, California, in 1994.", "Gregg Allman Gregory LeNoir Allman (December 8, 1947 – May 27, 2017) was an American musician, singer and songwriter. He was known for performing in the Allman Brothers Band. Allman grew up with an interest in rhythm and blues music, and the Allman Brothers Band fused it with rock music, jazz, and country at times. He wrote several of the band's biggest songs, including \"Whipping Post\", \"Melissa\", and \"Midnight Rider\". Allman also had a successful solo career, releasing seven studio albums. He was born and spent much of his childhood in Nashville, Tennessee, before relocating to Daytona Beach, Florida and then Richmond Hill, Georgia. He and his brother, Duane Allman, formed the Allman Brothers Band in 1969, which reached mainstream success with their 1971 live album \"At Fillmore East\". Shortly thereafter, Duane was killed in a motorcycle crash. The band continued, with \"Brothers and Sisters\" (1973) their most successful album. Allman began a solo career with \"Laid Back\" the same year, and was perhaps most famous for his marriage to pop star Cher for the rest of the decade. He had an unexpected late career hit with his cover of the song \"I'm No Angel\" in 1987, and his seventh solo album, \"Low Country Blues\" (2011), saw the highest chart positions of his career. Throughout his life, Allman struggled with alcohol and substance abuse, which formed the basis of his memoir \"My Cross to Bear\" (2012). His final album, \"Southern Blood\", was released posthumously on September 8, 2017. Allman performed with a Hammond organ and guitar, and was recognized for his soulful voice. For his work in music, Allman was referred to as a Southern rock pioneer and received numerous awards, including one Grammy Award; he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Georgia Music Hall of Fame. His distinctive voice placed him 70th in the \"Rolling Stone\" list of the \"100 Greatest Singers of All Time\". Gregory LeNoir Allman was born on December 8, 1947, at Saint Thomas Hospital in Nashville, Tennessee to Geraldine Robbins Allman (1917–2015) and Willis Turner Allman (1918–1949).", "Reg Webb Reginald William \"Reg\" Webb (17 May 1947 – 28 January 2018) was an English musician and singer-songwriter. He achieved success not only with his own band Fusion (which later became The Reg Webb Band and featured a young Nik Kershaw, Kenn Elson and Alan Clarke), but also touring with Lenny Kravitz, The Outfield, Suzi Quatro, Vanessa Paradis and others. He was also part of a duo called Short People. Webb predominantly played keyboards and was a vocalist. Webb was born in Chelmsford, Essex, England. He became blind at the age of 13 months after being diagnosed with bi-lateral retinoblastoma which resulted in surgery to remove both of his eyes. Reg Webb died on 28 January 2018 from pulmonary embolism, a consequence of metastatic bladder cancer; he was 70.", "Chris Roberts (singer) Chris Roberts (born Christian Franz Klusáček; 13 March 1944 – 2 July 2017) was a German schlager singer and actor. He was born in Munich-Schwabing and was married to the singer and actress Claudia Roberts; they often performed on stage together. Roberts was most popular as a singer in Germany in the 1970s; he charted there with 24 songs between 1968 and 1980. He also acted in a number of films during that time. He represented Luxembourg as a part of a sextet in the Eurovision Song Contest 1985 in which they sang \"Children, Kinder, Enfants\". They earned 37 points and attained 13th position. Roberts' first two singles, \"Baby's Gone\" and \"Welchen Weg soll ich gehen\", were released under the artist name Chris Robert. Chris Roberts died after suffering lung cancer. He was survived by his wife Claudia Roberts.", "Gus Backus Donald Edgar \"Gus\" Backus (September 12, 1937 – February 21, 2019) was an American singer and actor. He started his career as a member of The Del-Vikings and later became a successful Schlager singer in Germany. Backus was born on Long Island and started his music career with the Del-Vikings, the first notable doo-wop group with both black and white members which had two \"Billboard\" Hot 100 Top Ten hits. After he was stationed as an Airman in the U.S. Air Force at Wiesbaden Air Base in 1957, Backus had to leave The Del-Vikings and started singing Schlager music in 1960s West Germany. He sang all his songs in German with an American accent. 19 of his songs between 1960 and 1967 made the charts, including eight Top Ten hits. He landed a Number 1 hit in the German charts with his song \"Der Mann im Mond\" (\"The Man in the Moon\") in 1961. Backus also did German cover versions of songs by Elvis Presley, Paul Anka, and Conway Twitty. In addition to singing, Backus also appeared in nearly 30 film and television productions between 1959 and 1970, often showcasing his songs. Backus came back to America for some years in the 1970s and worked as a foreman on oil fields in Texas, later returning to Germany. He lived for the rest of his life in Germering near Munich and retired from singing in 2014. He was married three times and fathered four children.", "Eddie Zack Edward Adrian Zackarian (January 2, 1922 – January 9, 2002) was an American country music artist. Zack was primarily known for his appearances on various radio shows. Zack was born in 1922 in Rhode Island and first sang at the age of 16 with his brother Richie, who should start a career later under the stage name \"Cousin Richie\". In 1939 Zack founded \"The Dude Ranchers\". By 1948 Zack had released his first record, and in 1951 signed a contract with Decca Records. In 1953 he moved to Columbia Records. Some titles were \"You Knew Me When You Were Lonely\", \"Cryin 'Tears\" and \"I'm Gonna Roll And Rock\", many of which were recorded together with brother Richie. Eddie Zack died in 2002 after an operation, at the age of 79.", "Rosemary Clooney discography Singer Rosemary Clooney (May 23, 1928 – June 29, 2002) is known for many songs, including \"Come On-a My House\", \"Botch-a-Me\", \"Mambo Italiano\", \"Tenderly\", \"Half as Much\", \"Hey There\" and \"This Ole House\". This is a partial discography." ]
[]
[ "December 4, 1993" ]
What is the place of birth of Nayla Moawad's husband?
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Nayla Moawad Nayla Moawad (, ) (born 3 July 1940) is a Lebanese politician and former First Lady of Lebanon. Outside of Lebanon, she is best known as the widow of former President René Moawad, who was assassinated on 22 November 1989. Within Lebanon, she is a high-profile politician in her own right, having served as a member of the National Assembly since 1991. Following her reelection in June 2005, she was appointed to the Cabinet on 19 July as Minister for Social Affairs. Born in Bsharri, Lebanon, as the daughter of Nagib Issa El-Khouri and Evelyne Roch. Her father was the scion of a prominent Maronite Christian family and a relative of Bechara El Khoury, Lebanon's first post-independence president. She was educated at the Ecole des Franciscaines Missionnaires de Marie, Rue du Musee, a Catholic school, and subsequently graduated from Saint Joseph's University with a bachelor of arts degree in French literature and history. She later studied English at Cambridge University in the United Kingdom. From 1962 to 1965, Moawad worked as a journalist for the daily newspaper, "L'Orient." In 1965, she married René Moawad, surprising many people since he was the scion of a rival clan, who was fifteen years her senior. Despite the disparity in their ages, and despite the traditional antagonism between their families, the marriage was a happy one and produced two children. Rima, a lawyer and a graduate of Harvard University, and Michel, also a lawyer and businessman, who graduated from Sorbonne University in Paris. Moawad sought to perpuate her slain husband's legacy by founding the René Moawad Foundation in 1990, which works for social justice and economic development in Lebanon and the Arab world. Since 1994, she has served as president of the Center for Research and Education on Democracy. Moawad became a member of the National Assembly in 1991, representing the Zgharta-Tripoli constituency in northern Lebanon. She served on numerous parliamentary committees, specializing in such diverse fields as finance, children's rights, and education. She campaigned strongly for women's and children's rights, and opposed political corruption.
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[ "Nayef Nayef () is both a given name and a surname. Notable people with the name include: Given name: Surname:", "Nayef bin Ahmed Al Saud Nayef bin Ahmed Al Saud (born 15 July 1965) is a member of Saudi royal family and a military official who was the head of land forces intelligence and security authority. He was detained in March 2020 together with other Saudi royals, including former Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, his father, Ahmed bin Abdulaziz and Nawwaf bin Nayef. Nayef bin Ahmed was born on 15 July 1965. He is one of Prince Ahmed's children. Prince Nayef is a graduate of King Abdulaziz War College. In 1986 he received a master's degree in international relations from Georgetown University. Then he obtained another master's degree in business administration from George Washington University. He obtained a PhD from Cambridge University. In the early 2000s Prince Nayef was a colonel in the Saudi Armed Forces dealing with strategic planning. He also worked at the Ministry of Interior in various capacities. He served as the head of land forces intelligence and security commission. Prince Nayef was arrested in early March 2020. Prince Nayef's wife, Fahda, is the daughter of Khalid bin Abdullah and Al Jawhara bint Abdulaziz.", "Nayef Rashed Nayef Rashed (born 1949) is a Middle-Eastern actor living in the United Kingdom. After training at London's Drama Centre, he has appeared in such television favourites as \"Only Fools and Horses\", \"The Bill\", and feature films such as \"Navy Seals\". He appeared in the film \"Salmon Fishing in the Yemen\" as the Rebel Leader.", "Nayalgué, Boulkiemdé Nayalgué (or Nayalgay) is a town in the Koudougou Department of Boulkiemdé Province in central Burkina Faso. The town has a population of 1,807.", "Reham Khan Reham Nayyar Khan (Urdu/Pashto: ; born 3 April 1973) is a British-Pakistani journalist, author, and filmmaker. She is a former wife of Imran Khan, who later became Prime Minister of Pakistan in 2018, The publication of her memoir shortly before the 2018 Pakistani general election led to claims that its publication was intended to damage Imran Khan's electoral prospects. Reham was born to Nayyar Ramzan, a Pakistani physician. She is ethnically of Pashtun origins from the Lughmani clan, a sub-clan of the Swati tribe. She is fluent in four languages which include English, Urdu, Pashto and her ancestral Hindko. Her family hails from the town of Baffa, lying 15 km west of Mansehra in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Her parents moved to Libya in the late 1960s, where Reham was born in Ajdabiya in 1973. She has one sister and one brother. She is the niece of Abdul Hakeem Khan who was a former governor of the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province and former Chief Justice of Peshawar High Court. Reham has a Bachelor Degree in Education from Jinnah College for Women, Peshawar. She married Ejaz Rehman (Spelling variants include \"Ijaz\"), her first cousin and British psychiatrist, when she was 19. Following their divorce, Khan began working as a broadcast journalist. She has three children who have lived with her since the divorce. On 6 January 2015, Imran Khan confirmed his marriage to Reham which ended on 30 October 2015 in a divorce. On 2 January 2022, Khan revealed on Twitter that she had narrowly escaped a gun attack in Islamabad when returning home from her nephew's wedding. She said her car was shot at and two men on a motorcycle and they held the vehicle at gunpoint. Reham started her career in 2006 hosting shows on Legal TV. In 2007, Reham began presenting for Sunshine Radio Hereford and Worcester. In 2008, Khan joined BBC as weather girl. In 2013, Khan came to Pakistan and joined Pakistani news channel News One (Pakistani TV channel). She later joined Aaj TV.", "Nayef bin Fawwaz Al Sha'lan Nayef bin Fawwaz Al Shaalan Al Ruwaily (born 1956) () is a Saudi Arabian businessman. He was convicted of drug trafficking in a French court. Nayef was educated at University of Miami, where he lived from the late-1970s to mid-1980s. He speaks eight languages. Nayef invested in the oil business in Colombia and Venezuela. He was a high-ranking diplomat. He is a maternal grandson of the founding monarch, King Abdulaziz. Nayef's older brother, Nawaf, is married to a daughter of King Abdullah. Nayef is the twin brother of Saud. Nayef's father-in-law is Abdul Rahman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Saudi Arabia's former deputy minister of defense and aviation who was a member of the powerful Sudairi Seven. Nayef's twin brother Saud is also son-in-law of Prince Abdul Rahman.", "Nayeem (actor) Khawaja Naim Murad, better known as \"Naim or Nayeem\", is a Bangladeshi film actor of the 1990s. He acted in and also produced several films. In almost all of his films, Naim starred with his wife, the film actress Sabreena Taniya Shabnaz Naim, also known simply as \"Shabnaz\". Ehtesham's 'Chandni' (The moon ray) hit the box office with a new pair Naim-Shabnaz in 1991. Nayeem started his career as a film actor in 1991 by acting in the film named \"Chandni\" directed by Ehtesham. He acted over 21 films with the actress Shabnaz. He then stopped working in films and moved into his family business. In 2015, he decided to start his career as producer and director. He is searching for new face for the remake of his first film \"Chandni\". They have two daughters - Nameera Naim and Mahdiyah Naim.", "Nayaah (gospel singer) Nana Yaa, better known by her stage name Nayaah, is a Ghanaian Gospel singer and songwriter based in Luton, United Kingdom. She began singing when she was 10 years old in Accra, Ghana and has toured Ghana and Nigeria extensively.", "V. K. Nayar Lt. Gen. V. K. Nayar PVSM, SM (died 30 November 2015) was a former Indian Army officer and Governor of Nagaland. While in the Army, he served as a Paratrooper, an infantryman, a Counter-insurgency specialist and Army commander (GOC-in-C, Western Command). He was married to Sajni Nayar, had one son (also an Army Officer) and one daughter. He died on 30 November 2015.", "Mahinder Watsa Mahinder Watsa (11 February 1924 – 28 December 2020) was an Indian sexologist known for his sex columns in newspapers and magazines. His contributions to promote sex education in India earned him the 2014 Dr. Ved Vyas Puri Award. Mahinder Watsa's father was a military physician. Watsa was Punjabi. When he was around 7 years old, his family spent some time in Rangoon. During his time at a medical college in Mumbai, Watsa stayed with friends of his family. Through them, he met his future wife, Promila. Despite coming from different backgrounds and castes (he was Punjabi, she was originally from Sindh), and going against a tradition of arranged marriages, the two wed after being friends for a number of years. The couple had a son and lived for a while in the 1950s in the United Kingdom, during which time Watsa worked as a hospital houseman and registrar. The family returned to India after his father fell ill and Watsa found work in Glaxo as a medical officer, while simultaneously running a private practice as a gynecologist and obstetrician. Watsa began a career as a columnist in the 1960s when, in his late 30s, he was asked to start writing a medical advice column for a women's magazine. He continued authoring health columns for several women's magazines, such as Femina, Flair, and Trend, into the 1970s until he encountered resistance from an editor who insisted upon censoring queries about sexual health. Watsa however maintained his writing through numerous alternative outlets including men's magazines (such as 'Fantasy') and, later, websites. One of the readers of the Femina column had filed an obscenity lawsuit claiming that the publishers were fabricating the letters to increase readership. The editor, Sathya Saran, managed to convince the judge to drop the case by delivering a sack of unopened letters to him. Through his work as a columnist he became aware of the lack of sex education in India. In 1974, while working as a consultant for the Family Planning Association of India (FPAI), Watsa proposed that a sexual counselling and education program should be introduced. Despite oppositions, FPAI accepted his advice and started India's first sex education, counselling and therapy centre. In 1976, he organised India's first workshop on human sexuality and family life." ]
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[ "Zgharta" ]
Which film has the director who was born first, Meiseken or The Vulture (1982 Film)?
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The Vulture Wally (1940 film) The Vulture Wally () is a 1940 German drama film directed by Hans Steinhoff and starring Heidemarie Hatheyer, Sepp Rist and Eduard Köck. It was shot on location in the Tyrol. The film is based on a popular novel which has been adapted for the screens several times.
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[ "The Vulture's Eye The Vulture's Eye is a 2004 horror film directed by Frank Sciurba and starring Anne Flosnik, Fred Iacovo, Jason King, James Nalitz, Brooke Paller, and Joseph Reo. Inspired by Bram Stoker's novel \"Dracula\", it is set in Virginia. A young woman, Lucy, in falls from her horse while on a ride in the Virginia countryside and is rescued by her new neighbor, the foreign Count Klaus Vogul. The Count becomes obsessed by the sultry Lucy and all of her friends.", "Kurt Meisel Kurt Meisel (18 August 1912 – 4 April 1994) was an Austrian actor and film director. He appeared in 65 films between 1934 and 1994. He also directed 21 films between 1949 and 1984. Meisel was married to the actress Ursula Lingen. He was born and died in Vienna, Austria, and is buried on the Vienna Zentralfriedhof.", "The Bloody Vultures of Alaska The Bloody Vultures of Alaska (German: Die blutigen Geier von Alaska) is a 1973 German Western film directed by Harald Reinl and starring Doug McClure, Harald Leipnitz and Angelica Ott. It was made as a co-production between West Germany and Yugoslavia. The film's sets were designed by the art director Željko Senečić. Location shooting took place around Dachstein in Austria and the Plitvice Lakes and Dubrovnik in Yugoslavia. It is set in Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush.", "Vulture (talk show) Vulture is an Australian television chat show focused on the arts. It was broadcast by ABC in 2005. It was presented by Richard Fidler and produced by Guy Rundle, and featured a panel of guests who discussed art and culture. The program ceased broadcasting in November 2005.", "M. Butterfly (film) M. Butterfly is a 1993 American romantic drama film directed by David Cronenberg. The screenplay was written by David Henry Hwang based on his play of the same name. The film stars Jeremy Irons and John Lone, with Ian Richardson, Barbara Sukowa, and Annabel Leventon. Loosely based on true events (see Bernard Boursicot and Shi Pei Pu), the film concerns René Gallimard (Jeremy Irons), a French diplomat assigned to Beijing, China, in the 1960s. He becomes infatuated with a Peking opera performer, Song Liling (John Lone), who spies on him for the Government of the People's Republic of China. Their affair lasts for 20 years and they subsequently marry, with Gallimard all the while apparently unaware (or willfully ignorant) of the fact that in Peking opera, \"Dan\" roles are traditionally performed by men. At the end of the film Gallimard kills himself (although the man he is based on, Bernard Boursicot, did not do this in real life.) One theme of the film (as with the play) is Orientalist stereotypes, but Cronenberg removed many of the political overtones from the story in order to focus more intensely on the relationship between Gallimard and Song. A key line in the film is \"Only a man knows how a woman is supposed to act.\" \"M. Butterfly\" grossed $1,500,000 in the domestic box office. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 43%, based on 21 reviews, and an average rating of 5.60/10. The website's critics consensus reads: \"David Cronenberg reins in his provocative sensibility and handles delicate material with restraint, yielding a disappointing adaptation that flattens \"M. Butterfly\" into a tedious soap opera.\" On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 43 out of 100, based on 19 critics, indicating \"mixed or average reviews\".", "The Vulture (1967 film) The Vulture is a 1967 horror film directed by Lawrence Huntington and starring Robert Hutton, Akim Tamiroff, Broderick Crawford, and Diane Clare. One stormy night in Cornwall, schoolteacher Ellen West becomes hysterical when she sees a gigantic bird with a human face fly out of the open grave of Francis Real, an 18th-century seaman. Real, buried alive with a huge, murderous bird he had found in the South Pacific, had sworn vengeance on all descendants of Squire Stroud, the man who ordered his interment; nevertheless, Brian Stroud, the present squire, is unconcerned by the prophecy of doom. American scientist Eric Lutyens, husband of Brian's niece Trudy, is troubled when he finds the mutilated body of a sheep in what appears to be a vulture's nest. He visits Professor Koniglich, a scientist friend of Brian's who believes himself to be a descendant of Real, and correctly surmises that Koniglich had attempted to disintegrate his own body in the grave and reassemble it through nuclear energy; unfortunately, the professor had failed to consider the bird buried there, and a mutation resulted. Before Eric can warn the Strouds, Brian and his brother Edward are found dead on a cliffside, and Trudy is carried away to the same site by the bird after she is lured to Koniglich's house. At the cliff, Eric finds his wife threatened by the beast with Koniglich's head and screams at her to use the gun he had given her. Trudy shoots the bird and it crashes to its death on the rocks below; Eric then weights it with an anchor, tows it out to sea, and sinks it. The script was based on an original story by Huntington which was first known as \"Manutara\". He sold it to producer Jack O. Lamont who managed to get some financing from Paramount provided American names were cast in the leads. The remainder of the £50,000 budget was raised from Britain's Homeric Films and NFFC along with Canada's Ihod Productions. TV Guide awarded the film one out of four stars, writing \" Ridiculous casting makes this one a laugh riot.\" On his website \"Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings\", Dave Sindelar called it \"ludicrous\", criticizing the film's monster, backstory, and what he called a\"budget-strapped threadbare look\".", "The Vulture (1981 film) The Vulture is director Yaky Yosha's third feature, first screened in 1981. Its release, not long before the first war in Lebanon, dealt with the problematic immortalization industry resultant from young war casualties. The film provoked great controversy among the Israeli public, which felt it has crossed a blood-red line. The Israeli censors cut \"The Vulture\", but when selected to represent the country at the Cannes Film Festival, it was screened uncut. Boaz, a young officer, returns home from the Yom Kippur War (1973). He left for the war with two friends and returned with one dead and one badly injured. Down and out and lonely, Boaz aimlessly wanders the streets of Tel-Aviv. To comfort himself, Boaz goes to console his dead friend's parents, only to find himself sucked into a most complex relationship with the bereaved parents. First out of courtesy, then out of cynicism, Boaz gives them all they are missing: a poem their son allegedly wrote, false tales of heroism and some occasional snapshots. Out of thin air Boaz erects a false monument of a dead hero out of a fairly mediocre child, who did not get to leave much behind him. Before long, Boas is running a full scale immortalization industry, “manufacturing” for each bereaved family a creative, sensitive son. A soldier and a poet. Boaz becomes romantically involved with his dead friend's girlfriend, and simultaneously with the beautiful coordinator in the army's memorial department. And so, by day they serve a holy trinity of comfort and immortality and by night they are fallen angels, ménage à trois. Before too long, the next war breaks out. Boaz is called again for duty. Now an older, experienced officer, Boaz makes sure every single soldier in his company carries in his pocket a personal poem, just in case. \"The Vulture\" represented Israel at the Cannes Festival 1981.", "El monasterio de los buitres El Monasterio de los Buitres (English: \"The Monastery of the Vultures\") is a Mexican motion picture categorized as religious drama. It was filmed in 1973. In an old monastery in Mexico, the faith of all the young aspiring priests is tested by the Father Prior using psychoanalysis. During the process, the young men manifested indecision, sexual problems (as incest or homosexuality) and lack of faith.", "Smithereens (film) Smithereens is a 1982 American drama film directed by Susan Seidelman and starring Susan Berman, Brad Rijn (billed as \"Brad Rinn\"), and punk rock icon Richard Hell. The film follows a narcissistic young woman from New Jersey who comes to New York City to join the waning punk subculture, only to find that she's gravitated towards Los Angeles; in order to pay her way across country, she engages in a number of parasitic relationships, shifting her allegiances to new \"friends\" in an ongoing effort to ultimately endear herself to someone who will finance her desired lifestyle. \"Smithereens\" marked the debut of Oscar-nominated screenwriter Ron Nyswaner (\"Philadelphia\") and features a score by The Feelies. It was the first American independent film invited to compete for the Palme d'Or at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival. \"Smithereens\" is a precursor to Seidelman's next film, \"Desperately Seeking Susan\"; both films share similar themes of female identity and self-reinvention. Wren (Susan Berman) is a runaway from New Jersey who has come to New York City in the hopes of becoming a figure in the punk rock scene, only to find that the movement is now centered in Los Angeles. Wren finds herself relegated to sneaking into the city's remaining punk hot spot, the Peppermint Lounge, to try to ingratiate herself with the bands that play there, in the hopes that one of them will take her on as a groupie. She also engages in a campaign to litter the city with photocopied pictures of herself bearing the legend \"WHO IS THIS?\" in an attempt to generate mystique. Though she works part-time at a Xerox shop by day, Wren nominally uses her position there to surreptitiously print out her fliers, and supplements her lifestyle by mugging women in the subway. Wren runs across Paul (Brad Rijn), a young man from Montana in the middle of a road trip who has briefly taken up residence in the city before heading on to New Hampshire. Though he sleeps in the back of his dilapidated van, Paul has saved enough money to otherwise live comfortably. When Paul expresses interest in Wren, she agrees to date him, though she’s emotionally abusive and makes it clear to Paul that she’s more interested in the stability he can offer her.", "Günter Meisner Günter Meisner (18 April 1926 – 5 December 1994) was a German film and television character actor. He is remembered for his several cinematic portrayals of Adolf Hitler and for his role as Arthur Slugworth in \"Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory\". He was fluent in four languages and appeared in many English-language, German-language and French-language films. Born in Bremen, Meisner briefly worked at a steel foundry before training as a radio operator with the Luftwaffe's \"Fallschirmjäger\" (paratroopers). After the war, though he was interested in a career in sculpture and painting, in 1948 he switched to drama and studied under Gustaf Gründgens at Düsseldorf's State Conservatory, where he also got his first job at the local \"Schauspielhaus\". Meisner often played stock character Nazi officers and other sinister characters. He portrayed Hitler in the 1982 Franco-German action comedy, \"L'as des as\" (Ace of Aces), and in the ABC television miniseries, \"The Winds of War (miniseries)\". He also appeared in the CBS miniseries, \"\" and Southern Television's, \"\". Other films Meisner took part in were \"Is Paris Burning?\", \"The Quiller Memorandum\", \"Funeral in Berlin\", and \"The Boys from Brazil\". He was Mr. Slugworth/Mr. Wilkinson in the 1971 film version of \"Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory\". He also appeared in several television commercials. As a theatre actor and director, Meisner founded the \"Gallery Diogenes\" in Berlin in 1959 for visual art and mainly absurd theater. In 1961, he also founded the \"International Association for Arts and Sciences\". From 1967 to 1969 Meisner participated in relief efforts in Biafra, Nigeria. He also produced two films criticising racial discrimination: \"Don't Look for Me in Places Where I Can't Be Found\" and \"Bega Dwa Bega\" (One for All), a Swahili-language film for the Tanzanian Film Unit. Meisner died on 5 December 1994 at the age of 68 of heart failure, during the filming of an episode of the television series \"Tatort\". He is buried in Berlin's Friedhof Heerstraße Cemetery." ]
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[ "Meiseken" ]
Are Schnitt Acht and Falconer (Band) from the same country?
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Falconet Falconet may refer to:
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[ "Among Beggars and Thieves Among Beggars and Thieves is the sixth album by the Swedish power metal band Falconer, released on September 2, 2008 through Metal Blade Records. It was produced by Andy LaRocque. A heavier album than Northwind, it tells the tale of the hardships of medieval Sweden. Some of the songs seem heavily inspired by actual historical events. For example, the song \"Man of the Hour\" apparently deals with the fate of the Swedish 17th century warship \"Kronan\", the lyrics of \"Mountain Men\" bear a strong resemblance to the Engelbrekt rebellion, and \"Boiling Led\" appears to be about the assassination of Sverker I of Sweden. All songs written by Stefan Weinerhall.", "Fjørt Fjørt (stylised as FJØRT) are a German post-hardcore band from Aachen, formed in February 2012. They have released three studio albums and one EP, and are currently signed to the record label Grand Hotel van Cleef. On 23 November 2012, the band released their first EP, \"Demontage\", on Truelove Entertainment. Although it only consisted of six tracks, two music videos – for \"Glasgesicht\" and the title track \"Demontage\" – had also been released. During the time leading up to the release of the band's debut full-length album, Fjørt had played around 150 shows. Then, on 21 March 2014, \"D'accord\" was released on This Charming Man Records. 2015 saw the band take a step towards signing to a larger label, Grand Hotel van Cleef, through which they released their second album \"Kontakt\" on 22 January 2016. In the subsequent months the band embarked upon their first headline tour of Germany, Austria and Switzerland alongside We Never Learned to Live.", "Falcon Brewery Falcon Brewery (Bryggeri AB Falken) was a brewery company in Falkenberg, Sweden. After being bought by Carlsberg it is now one of their production facilities. The brewery was founded in 1896 by John L Skantze who picked Falkenberg because financial support was found there. In 1955 they started selling beer under the Falcon name. The company continued to grow, but after the ban on Class IIB beer the company came into difficulties and in 1977 it was bought by Pripps and was combined with Sandwalls in Borås (closed in 1981). 1985 the company was split into Falken that manufactured and Falcon that handled marketing, distribution and sales. In 1994 the company was merged as Falcon. 1989 Falcon was combined with Till breweries in Östersund. 1996 the company was sold to Carlsberg.", "Armod Armod \"(Poverty)\" is the seventh album by the Swedish power metal band Falconer, released on 3 June 2011 through Metal Blade Records. Compared to the previous albums, \"Armod\" is more influenced by folk music and is sung entirely in Swedish (except for the bonus tracks which are Black Widow, O, Silent Solitude, Grimborg and by the Roses' Grave included on the Digipak version released on 7 June 2011).", "Slechtvalk Slechtvalk (the Dutch word for peregrine falcon) is a Christian black metal band from the Netherlands, formed in 1999. Previously signed to Fear Dark Records and currently to Whirlwind Records, the group has released five albums, a split-CD with Kekal, a single and a DVD. Their second album, \"The War That Plagues the Lands\", reached No. 2 at Lowland's Top 50 Metal Charts. Their third album, \"At the Dawn of War\", coincided with the release of a live-DVD, \"Upon the Fields of Battle\", a maxi single for \"Thunder of War\", and was named one of \"HM Magazine\" \"100 best Christian metal albums of all time\". The band's fifth album, \"Where Wandering Shadows and Mists Collide\", was released on December 20, 2016. Slechtvalk began as a solo project in 1997 by singer/guitarist Shamgar, formerly of Ascension and Mordax. The project was first called Dommer (1999–2000), before Shamgar finally settled on Slechtvalk. The debut album, \"Falconry\", was released in 2000 by the now-defunct Dutch label Fear Dark which had bands such as Eluveitie, Royal Anguish, Taketh and Kekal on its roster. \"Falconry\" was received positively, and Dutch metal magazines such as Aardschok interviewed Shamgar. As a result of this exposure, Shamgar was in the position to form a band, and was joined by soprano singer Fionnghuala, folk singer and rhythm guitarist Ohtar (also with Dutch folk metal band Heidevolk), bassist Nath, drummer Grimbold, keyboardist Sorgier, and dancer Meallá. In 2002, Slechtvalk released their second full-length album, \"The War That Plagues the Lands\". As a teaser they first released a split CD with Kekal from Indonesia (also signed on Fear Dark); each band recorded four songs and a cover (Slechtvalk covered Antestor's \"Kongsblod\", from \"The Return of the Black Death\"). \"The War That Plagues the Lands\" was well received. In 2005, the band released their third album, \"At the Dawn of War\", with a more symphonic sound and elements of folk metal.", "William Falconer William Falconer may refer to:", "Schnitzer Schnitzer is a German noun meaning \"carver\" and is the surname of: Schnitzer may also refer to:", "Falconer (surname) Falconer is a Scottish surname, either a sept of Clan Keith or a clan on its own, having as crest an angel in a praying posture or, within an orle of laurel proper, as motto \"VIVE UT VIVAS\" (\"Live that you may have life\") but without a chief, being merely an armigerous clan. It is an Anglicized version of the Old French \"Faulconnier\", the name being derived from the occupational name for a trainer of falcons. It can also be used as a first name or as a middle name.", "Echt (band) Echt was a German pop band from Flensburg active from 1997 to 2002. Their second album \"Freischwimmer\" charted as no. 1 in the German album charts in 1999.", "Nichts Nichts (English: \"nothing\") is a German rock band from Düsseldorf that saw success with the Neue Deutsche Welle post-punk movement. Originally active from 1981 to 1983, it re-formed in 2009. The band formed in 1981 with Tobias Brink on drums, Michael Clauss on guitar, Andrea Mothes on vocals and Chris Scarbeck on bass. Brink and Clauss had previously played together in local punk band KFC. They released their first LP \"Made in Eile\" (\"Made in a hurry\") in 1981 on independent record label Schallmauer Records. The sleeve listed the band members as \"Micky Matschkopf\", \"Fritz Fotze\", \"Prunella Pustekuchen\" and \"Paul Popperkind\", with Clauss and Brink using their pseudonyms whilst with KFC. The album track \"Radio\" became their first single. Their second album \"Tango 2000\" was released in 1982 and saw some commercial success. It included the singles \"Tango 2000\" and \"Ein deutsches Lied\" (\"A German Song\"). In autumn 1982 Michael Clauss and bassist Chris Scarbeck left the band. For the third LP \"Aus Dem Jenseits\" (\"From the other side\"), released in 1983, they brought in two new musicians. The band split up in 1983. Michael Clauss reformed Nichts with a new line-up to play concerts in Germany and Austria in 2009 and 2010. In 2011 they released an album entitled \"Zeichen auf Sturm\" (Signs of a storm)." ]
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[ "no" ]
Which film has the director who is older, Don 2 or The Price Of Possession?
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Don 2 Don 2: The King Is Back, better known as Don 2, is a 2011 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film written, co-produced and directed by Farhan Akhtar. It is the second and final installment in the "Don series". Jointly produced by Excel Entertainment and Red Chillies Entertainment, the film stars Shah Rukh Khan, Priyanka Chopra, Lara Dutta, Om Puri, Boman Irani and Kunal Kapoor. A sequel to the 2006 film "Don" (2006), Khan appears as the titular character. The film's story takes place five years after the previous film when Don (Shah Rukh Khan), a powerful and ruthless crime boss, plans to take over the European drug cartel. Meanwhile, Roma (Priyanka Chopra) has joined the Interpol to hunt him down. The film's music was composed by Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, while Javed Akhtar wrote the lyrics. Jason West served as the film's cinematographer and Ritesh Soni was its editor. After the success of the first film, Akhtar had planned a sequel in 2010 which did not work out. It was then officially announced in early 2010, with filming scheduled to begin later that year. Principal photography took place in Berlin, where it was shot extensively. To date, this film marks the last directional venture of Akhtar. "Don 2" was released on 23 December 2011 in 2D and 3D formats, which also included dubbed versions in Telugu and Tamil languages. The film received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics, receiving praise for the cast's performance, story, cinematography, production design, background music, and action sequences. However, its pace and songs received criticism. With a box office gross of over , "Don 2" was a global box office success. At the time of its release, the film was the 2nd highest-grossing Indian film of 2011. The film received a number of accolades across various ceremonies in India. The film received five nominations at the 57th Filmfare Awards, including Best Film, Best Director for Akhtar and Best Actor for Khan, winning Best Sound Design and Best Action. The film opens five years after the events of "Don".
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[ "Don (1978 film) Don is a 1978 Indian Hindi-language crime action thriller film written by Salim–Javed (Salim Khan and Javed Akhtar), directed by Chandra Barot and produced by Nariman Irani. The film stars Amitabh Bachchan, Zeenat Aman, Pran, Iftekhar and Helen. Bachchan plays the titular dual role, as Bombay underworld criminal Don and his lookalike Vijay. The plot revolves around Vijay, a Bombay slum-dweller who resembles the powerful criminal Don, being asked by police superintendent D'Silva (Iftekhar) to masquerade as Don due to the latter's death, in order to act as an informant for the police and track down the root of the criminal organization. The film features music by Kalyanji Anandji, with lyrics by Anjaan and Indeevar. It was the third highest-grossing Indian film of 1978, and was classified a golden jubilee by Box Office India. The film spawned the \"Don\" franchise; Javed Akhtar's son Farhan Akhtar created a remake \"\" (2006) and its sequel \"Don 2\" (2011), both starring Shah Rukh Khan. It also inspired several South Indian remakes, notably the Tamil film \"Billa\" (1980), a breakthrough film for Rajinikanth. \"Don\" is also known for its theme music, which was used in the \"American Dad!\" episode \"Tearjerker\" (2008). The intro to \"Yeh Mera Dil\" was sampled by the Black Eyed Peas for the song \"Don't Phunk with My Heart\" (2005). The movie was also unofficially remade in 1991 into Punjabi language Pakistani movie titled \"Cobra\". \"Don\" is one of the films that catapulted Bachchan to superstardom in his career. The film begins with Don as one of the most successful criminals in Bombay who always eludes the authorities, marking himself on Interpol's \"Most Wanted\" list. To that end, the police, led by Deputy Superitendent of Police D'Silva and Inspector Verma, is working with Interpol operative R.K. Malik in their attempts to nab Don.", "Loot 2 Loot 2 is a Nepali film directed by Nischal Basnet and produced by Madhav Wagle. The sequel of the Nepali blockbuster film \"Loot\" (2012), it was released on 24 February 2017, garnering रू15 million on its opening day, which is one of the biggest openings in Nepali film history. By the end of its fifth day in theaters, it successfully earned over रू105 Million. \"Loot\" ended with Haku Kale plotting against his four team members to take over entire robbed money. The four gang members, who were framed for the bank robbery, now escape from the prison and want to take revenge against Haku Kale for everything that happened to them. Now that Haku Kale is no more a street don but one of the biggest crime lords of the city, the entire plot of movie revolves around the four members trying to make him pay for what he did. \"Loot 2\" collected NPR 15 million on the first day of release, the biggest opening in Nepali film history. By the end of day 5, it earned over NPR 55 million.", "La Possession (film) La Possession is a 1929 French film directed by Léonce Perret.", "1 Chor 2 Mastikhor 1 Chor 2 Mastikhor, is a 2017 Indian-Costa Rican comedy-drama film directed by Prabhakar Sharan and produced under the banner of Pacific Investment Corporation. The film stars Nancy Dobles, Prabhakar Sharan, Mario Chacón, José Castro and Scott Steiner. The movie was released on 15 December 2017. The film was filmed in Costa Rica and released in Spanish as Enredados: La Confusión. Leo, played by Sharan, is in a deep dilemma to choose between love and money. The movie focuses on a robbery takes a U-turn after an accident after which Leo chooses love over money.", "Possession (2002 film) Possession is a 2002 romantic mystery drama film written and directed by Neil LaBute and starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Aaron Eckhart. It is based on the 1990 by British author A. S. Byatt, who won the Booker Prize for it the year it was published. In a fictional story, literary scholars American Roland Michell (Aaron Eckhart) and British Maud Bailey (Gwyneth Paltrow) independently find that the socially antagonistic relationship between the Victorian era poets Randolph Henry Ash (Jeremy Northam) and Christabel LaMotte (Jennifer Ehle) may have concealed a secret connection as lovers. Ash is traditional and conservative and LaMotte is a freethinking bisexual. Rival scholars become aware of their efforts and each seeks to be the first at the public disclosure of this major finding about the poets. In a parallel relationship, Michell and Bailey have their own deepening connection. Three early drafts of the film's screenplay were written by American playwright David Henry Hwang in the 1990s, but the project languished in pre-production for years. Directors such as Sydney Pollack and Gillian Armstrong worked on the film and eventually gave up before LaBute became director. LaBute made drastic changes to the story, based partially on notes that original author Byatt had made on earlier drafts of the screenplay, as she recognized that Roland Michell had to \"exist on screen\" in a different way than he did in the book. LaBute recalled: LaBute changed Roland's nationality from British to American, and made him more brash and active. He denied that this was \"shameless pandering to the audience. ... in part, it was [just] more comfortable for me to write Roland that way.\" Ralph Fiennes was approached for the role as Randolph Ash that eventually went to Jeremy Northam. Daniel Zalewski of \"The New York Times\" noted that director LaBute, \"known for savagely blunt stage and screen dramas ... has here infused a British novelist's main characters with the same stutter-and-slang rhythms, male-bonding repartée and sarcastic volleys that define his own distinctly American work.\" He said, \"In the end, Mr. LaBute's grafting of his own sensibility onto Roland creates a weird tonal clash.", "The Price of Life (1994 film) The Price of Life () is a 1994 Croatian film directed by Bogdan Žižić.", "Creep 2 Creep 2 is a 2017 American found footage psychological horror film directed by Patrick Brice and written by Brice and Mark Duplass. It is a sequel to Brice's 2014 film \"Creep\", which was also written by Duplass and Brice. Duplass reprises his role from the first film as a serial killer who lures unsuspecting videographers to their deaths, with Desiree Akhavan portraying his latest target. The film had its world premiere at the Sitges Film Festival on October 6, 2017, and was released on October 24, 2017, by The Orchard. Like its predecessor, \"Creep 2\" was also critically acclaimed, with much praise focused on the film's writing, atmosphere, dark humor, and the performances among the leads. Brice confirmed that a sequel was in development. A prolific serial killer, using the name \"Aaron\" after a previous victim, finds himself dissatisfied with his killings and undergoing a midlife crisis. When his latest ad for a videographer lures YouTuber Sara to his remote cabin, Aaron changes his approach by admitting he is a serial killer who will let Sara live for the next 24 hours if she records a documentary on his life. Sara, doubting his revelation, agrees to film Aaron in the hope that the video will popularize her unsuccessful web series about eccentric Craigslist clients. Over the course of the day, Aaron struggles to intimidate Sara, who plays along with his various eccentricities. While Sara continues to doubt that Aaron is a serial killer, Aaron informs her that he intends to conclude the documentary by having her kill him. He eventually manages to horrify Sara by staging a suicide attempt, which almost causes her to leave. However, after Aaron reveals that his life was not in danger, she remains to hear Aaron share intimate details about himself, culminating in the two sharing a kiss. Aaron brings Sara outside to announce that the documentary will end with them committing suicide together. Sara attempts to escape when she sees Aaron stab himself in the stomach, but Aaron stabs her and drags her into an open grave he dug. As Aaron gives a closing monologue, a still-alive Sara emerges from the grave and strikes him in the back of the head with a shovel before fleeing. Afterwards, Sara is recorded in public by an unidentified individual whistling a tune heard in Aaron's videos. When Sara notices the individual filming her, the camera abruptly cuts away.", "The 2nd (film) The 2nd is a 2020 American action film directed by Brian Skiba and starring Ryan Phillippe and Casper Van Dien. The film was released digitally and on demand on September 1, 2020. While picking up his son at his college dorm, Delta Team Leader Vic Davis meets his son's crush Erin Walton, the daughter of a Supreme Court justice. However, Vic notices an unusual number of people on the premises watching Erin closely. When Erin reveals that her driver is not her usual escort, Vic plunges into action to rescue Erin from a kidnapping plot that puts both his and his son's lives in jeopardy.", "One & Two One & Two is a 2015 American independent fantasy thriller film written and directed by Andrew Droz Palermo. The film stars Kiernan Shipka, Timothée Chalamet, Elizabeth Reaser, and Grant Bowler. The film had its world premiere on February 9, 2015, at the Berlin International Film Festival. The film was released on August 14, 2015, in a limited release and through video on demand by IFC Midnight. The film follows a Christian family of four who live peacefully in purposeful isolation. The children, Eva and Zac, are able to teleport short distances, provided they can see where they are going. They use their powers for fun as they chase each other around the farm and drop into the lake. A large wall surrounds the family property. Their father, Daniel, is a stern disciplinarian who forbids them from using their powers as he believes them unnatural. His wife Elizabeth is extremely frail, suffering from seizures where she cannot breathe, and he believes her illness is punishment from God due to his children using their powers. When Eva and Zac sneak out after dark to play and Elizabeth has a near-fatal seizure, Daniel punishes them by making them face their bedroom walls and nailing their clothes to the wall, preventing them from teleporting away. Despite this, Eva continues using her powers, while Zac refuses to join her. When she tries to teleport an injured bird back to its nest, the bird dies, revealing that teleporting with anyone would end fatally for that individual. Eva continues to sneak out. When Elizabeth dies, Daniel blames Eva. He knocks her out, puts a bag over her head and sets her adrift down the river in a boat. He buries one of Eva’s dresses in a grave beside her mother’s on the family plot. He tells Zac that she is taken care of, heavily implying that he has killed her. Zac is furious and visits her makeshift grave to mourn. Eva drifts to a nearby town, where she is found and taken to hospital. Eva struggles in the modern setting. She escapes the hospital, ending up under a bridge by a river, where she meets three kind elderly homeless people. They feed her crackers and play the guitar by the fire until the police arrive, causing Eva to become afraid and teleport away. Eventually she meets a girl her age on the street, whom she follows to a youth home for girls. Soon, she runs away again and decides to return home to Zac.", " The film's story takes place five years after the previous film when Don, a powerful and ruthless crime boss, plans to take over the European drug cartel. Meanwhile, Roma (Priyanka Chopra) has joined the Interpol to hunt him down. \"Don 2\" was released worldwide 23 December 2011 on 3,105 screens in the domestic market, including 500 prints in 3D, and on 650 screens in 40 countries. The dubbed versions in Telugu and Tamil were released with the Hindi version. It received mixed to positive reviews from critics. , the film holds a 69% approval rating on review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, based on thirteen reviews, with an average rating of 6.68 out of 10. On its first day, \"Don 2\" had 80-percent occupancy levels throughout India. In multiplexes its occupancy level was 75%-80% percent and 70–75 percent in single-screen theatres. The film grossed from its Hindi version, in the process becoming the third-highest opening-day grossing Indian film (fourth-highest for the Hindi version) and the highest opening-day grossing film on a non-holiday Friday. The second-week total of \"Don 2\" was the second-highest of 2011, after \"Ready\". By the end of its theatrical run the Hindi version of \"Don 2\" grossed in India and regional versions added a further 60 million for a grand total of including Tamil and Telugu, making it the highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2011. It grossed $11.24 million on the overseas market and was the third highest-grossing Bollywood film overseas at that time, after \"My Name Is Khan\" and \"3 Idiots\". It faces stiff competition with Mission Impossible Ghost protocol in its initial weeks which in some started topped the box office. Satellite rights for \"Don 2\" were sold to Zee TV for , and it was also released on the Zee Cinema HD channel. As luck would have it, D’Silva remembers his chance encounter with Vijay, a slum-dwelling simpleton trying to survive in the hustle and bustle of Bombay in order to support two small foster children, who is an exact lookalike of Don. D’Silva hatches a plan to transform Vijay into Don and place him back into the crime nexus, but this time as a police informer." ]
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[ "The Price Of Possession" ]
Which country the director of film Punk: Attitude is from?
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Punk: Attitude Punk: Attitude is a film by Don Letts. It explores the "punk" revolution, genre and following from its beginning in the mid-1970s up to its effect on modern rock music and other genres. The cast is a veritable list of alternative musicians and directors offering their opinions on what has been called a musical revolution. The film was officially released on April 25, 2005 at the Tribeca Film Festival in the U.S.A. Reviews have generally been favorable with an average of 3.5 - 4 stars with many people commenting on the accuracy and approach of the film. The film begins showing the roots of punk music with many views on various artists and genres who accentuated the beginning of the genre, like the MC5 and the Velvet Underground. "Punk: Attitude" then proceeds chronologically to sort through the various artists and alumni who were central to the movement, drawing light on the general idea or "Attitude" of the punk movement, which spoke out for a generation. Bands such as The Ramones, The Stooges, The Clash and The Sex Pistols feature prominently throughout. The movie offers a canvas of praise and respect given from many interviewees as these bands are heralded commonly as the beginning of Punk progressively through the movie. Rare concert footage and personal accounts of gigs and band meetings highlight the aggression and destructive entities with surprising accuracy. The movie wraps up by emphasizing the influence that punk has on modern music. One of the film's celebrated attributes comes in the form of its cast, showcasing the who's who of Punk Rock/Alternative culture contemporaries like David Johansen, Thurston Moore, Henry Rollins, Captain Sensible, Jim Jarmusch, Mick Jones, Jello Biafra, Siouxsie Sioux, and Darryl Jenifer. In 2005 the film was released on DVD through Capitol Entertainment but has since gone out of print. On January 11, 2010 Shout! Factory re-released the film complete with all the original bonus material as well as another DVD worth of extras.
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[ "Attitude (Collette album) Attitude is the second and final studio album by New Zealand-born Australian pop singer Collette. \"Attitude\" was released in April 1991 and peaked at No. 107 in Australia. CD/Cassette/Vinyl (467674.2/4/1)", "Jan Zajíček Jan Zajíček (born 4 March 1977 in Prague, Czechoslovakia) is a Czech film director, screenwriter and artist. Jan Zajíček was born on 4 March 1977, in Prague, Czechoslovakia. He studied fine art at the Václav Hollar School of Art and film directing at the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU). In 1992 he began to create graffiti art, one of the earliest graffiti artists in Czechoslovakia (under the pseudonym \"Scarf\" or \"Skarf\"). His experience with graffiti later influenced his strongly visual cinematic style, characterised by its combination of live-action with animation and visual effects. Between 1993 and 2000 he was a member of the Czech hip hop group WWW, which played in Prague venues including Alterna Komotovka, RC Bunkr, ROXY, and Rock Café, and in 1996 supported Sinéad O'Connor. During his studies and after graduation, he was a lecturer of experimental audio-visual production at the Josef Škvorecký Literary Academy. Since 2010, he has been a resident at the MeetFactory Contemporary Art Centre. Zajíček has directed several award winning music videos. His first video, for the song \"Známka punku\" (The Sign of Punk) by the Czech punk band Visací zámek, was named Best Music Video of the Year by the Czech Music Academy. Other videos that received attention included \"Days Will Never Be the Same\", and \"Meleme, meleme kávu\" (Grinding the Coffee) by Czech hip hop artists Hugo Toxxx and Vladimir 518, which received \"Filter\" magazine's award for Best Music Video of the Year, and was selected by the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen for screening during its MuVi programme in 2010. From 2004 to 2013, Zajíček worked as a director and animator with several theatre groups, including Theatre XXL, VerTeDance, the National Theatre and the State Opera. In 2012, he created video content for the 60 metre screen at the Czech House for the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom. Along with Tomáš Mašín, he was also the co-director of Czech rock band Lucie's 2014 concert tour.", "The Punk Syndrome The Punk Syndrome (Finnish: Kovasikajuttu) is a 2012 Finnish documentary film about the punk rock band Pertti Kurikan Nimipäivät, whose members all are developmentally disabled. Directed by Jukka Kärkkäinen and J-P Passi, the film was pitched at Sheffield Doc/Fest's 2010 MeetMarket prior to completion, and premiered in cinemas in Finland on 4 May 2012. \"The Punk Syndrome\" follows a Finnish punk rock band whose members are living with autism and/or Down syndrome. The film employs a cinéma vérité style, meaning it doesn't provide a commentary or explanatory captions to what is seen on screen. The film shows the band members using punk music as an outlet to their frustration with everyday things, such as living in a group home, not being served coffee because of their disability and so on. The film has been said to open a window to the world of the disabled. During the film the band rises from total obscurity to become a small phenomenon and they also get to travel outside Finland. The movie has an upbeat tone and it has been compared to another band documentary \"Anvil! The Story of Anvil\". In Finland, \"The Punk Syndrome\" won the Audience Award at Tampere Film Festival in 2012 and the Jussi Award for the best documentary film in 2013. It was awarded as the \"most innovative feature film\" at the Visions du Réel film festival in Switzerland in 2012. In 2013 it also won the audience award in the SXGlobal category at the SXSW festival in Austin, Texas. In March 2013 the film was awarded a special award for \"passionate optimism and upholding the ideals of humanism in life\" at the 10th Docudays UA festival in Ukraine. In October 2013, the film won a Citizens' Prize at the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival. In \"Variety\" John Anderson described \"The Punk Syndrome\" as a \"funny, edgy and very human feature\" which might turn into a cult-hit. In his review in \"The Observer\", Philip French called \"The Punk Syndrome\" \"a very likable, relaxed film\". David Parkinson at \"Empire\" magazine gave it three out of five stars calling it \"candid and compassionate\".", "Attitude (Rip Rig + Panic album) Attitude is the third and final studio album by the post-punk band Rip Rig + Panic, released in 1983 by Virgin Records. In \"Melody Maker\", Lynden Barker described the album as \"marvellous\", saying that \"(t)hough not as immediately appealing as \"God\" ... it possesses a multi-layered makeup that becomes more and more exciting on each successive spin\". Douglas Baptie of \"The Digital Fix\" wondered \"Why wasn't it more popular?\" and said that the album \"somehow combines the best qualities of the previous two\". \"The List\"'s Neil Cooper called \"Attitude\" \"the most honed, conventionally focused and 'produced'\" of Rip Rig + Panic's three. Adapted from the \"Attitude\" liner notes.", "Think Tank on European Film and Film Policy The Think Tank on European Film and Film Policy is a think tank founded in 2007 to promote and develop the effectiveness of European Film Policy. It strives to generating change to ensure that filmmaking environments do not evolve into stagnant subsidy cultures. It is based at Filmbyen in Copenhagen, Denmark. The president of the Think Tank is Henning Camre, previously the director of the Danish Film Institute. The other members of the Board of Directors:", "Punk in Africa Punk in Africa, is a 2012 multilingual African documentary historical punk music film co-directed by Deon Maas and Keith Jones and co-produced by director himself with Jefe Brown. The film stars Ivan Kadey, Paulo Chibanga, Lee Thomson, and Warwick Sony. The film revolves around the story of the multiracial punk movement within the political and social upheavals experienced in three Southern African countries: South Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe. The film made its premier on 29 January 2012 in the United States. The film received mixed reviews from critics and screened at many film festivals. The film music done by multiple musical bands across Southern Africa such as: Suck, Wild Youth, Safari Suits, Power Age, National Wake, KOOS, Kalahari Surfers, The Genuines, Hog Hoggidy Hog, Fuzigish, Sibling Rivalry, 340ml (Mozambique), Panzer, The Rudimentals (Zimbabwe ), Evicted, Sticky Antlers, Freak, LYT, Jagwa Music, Fruits and Veggies, Swivel Foot. In 2013, the DVD of the film was released as an international version without a regional code and with English, German, Spanish and Portuguese subtitles for the English-language audio version.", "Queercore: How to Punk a Revolution Queercore: How to Punk a Revolution is a 2017 English-language German documentary film directed by Yony Leyser about the social and cultural movement known as Queercore. The documentary focuses on the movement's diverse elements, including zine culture, music, film, and activism. The film debuted at the Sheffield Doc/Fest on June 12, 2017 and was acquired for distribution in Europe by Edition Salzgeber. It was also acquired for television by Arte in France and by ZDF in Germany. It was announced on February 9, 2018 that all U.S. rights for the film had been acquired by distributor Altered Innocence, with a U.S. theatrical release planned for late 2018. The film premiered theatrically on September 23, 2018 and was released on DVD, Blu-ray and VOD on January 8, 2019.", "Dynamite Tommy , better known by his stage name Dynamite Tommy, is a Japanese musician, record producer and businessman. He first rose to prominence as vocalist of the punk rock band Color in the late-1980s and early-1990s, but now predominantly works behind the scenes running his record label Free-Will. Dynamite Tommy formed the punk rock band Color in 1985, for which he was initially the guitarist before quickly taking over the role of vocalist. In 1986, Tommy formed the independent record label Free-Will to distribute his band's work. It is one of two labels credited with helping to spread Japan's visual kei movement. It has also been a major contributor in spreading modern visual kei outside Japan. During a break in Color activities in 1992, Tommy teamed up with Kenzi of the recently disbanded Kamaitachi to form Sister's No Future. In 2008, Tommy wrote and directed the music film \"Attitude\", with various Japanese rock artists from the 1970s–1990s appearing as themselves. Tommy called in Taiji and Tatsu (Gastunk) to help with the film's music and, after later recruiting Kenzi, this led to the creation of The Killing Red Addiction. The group made its debut at the Whisky a Go Go in Los Angeles on 22 June 2009. They released a cover of Gastunk's \"Devil\" on iTunes on 13 January 2010. Among the artists Tommy has produced include Dir en Grey, Phantasmagoria, Miyavi, and The Gazette. He has also been involved in the formation of fashion brands DIRT (produced by Toshiya of Dir en Grey) and KOMACHI 2266531 Dark Lolita (a Gothic Lolita line designed by Dada of Velvet Eden). He also wrote the screenplay to Miyavi's film \"Oresama\" and produced the 2001 anime adaptation of \"Grappler Baki\". In 2016, Tommy started producing the idol group 2o Love to Sweet Bullet. It is composed of eight young girls with an average age of 16. Despite having been in the business for over three decades, Tommy has said that he does not even like music, explaining that he only enjoys the dynamics of being in a band. In 2016, he stated that he has no plans to return to musical activities.", "Farhad Najafi Farhad Najafi (; born 8 September 1986) is an Iranian film director, screenwriter and movie producer. Farhad was born in Naishabur, Iran. After he entered the conservatory art school for studying graphic designing, he found out his passion in professional photography and following after that in movie industry and directing. He made his first documentary film called \"Iran and Naria\" in the very early months of entering art school despite the obstacles and limited environment of movie industry in Iran. A short film called \"motion\" was only needed four months to be created by him after then. At the only age of nineteen, he began to write the screenplay of his first movie \"First move\", after producing four short films. Then he launched the direction of his first series \"Matador\" which is the most successful action genre Iranian TV-show so far. Making successful and award-winning action movies and series such as , and which has won the best film of Moscow international festival in action genre, has made him to climb up the career ladder surprisingly.", "Attitude (magazine) Attitude (stylized in all lowercase) is a British gay lifestyle magazine owned by Stream Publishing Limited. It is sold worldwide as a physical magazine, and as a digital download for the iPad and iPhone via the App Store, and for Android devices via the Android Market. The first issue of \"Attitude\" appeared in May 1994. A separate Thai edition was published from March 2011 to April 2018, a Vietnamese edition launched in November 2013, and editions in Belgium and the Netherlands launched in February 2017. \"Attitude\" began publication in 1994 as part of the Northern and Shell Group owned by Richard Desmond, and having been through a succession of owners subsequent to its sale in 2004 (commensurate with Desmond's takeover of Express Newspapers) it was acquired in September 2016 by contract publisher Stream Publishing. The owner of Stream Publishing, Darren Styles, had previously launched the successful \"Attitude Awards\" for the brand (in October 2012) and acquired the English-language rights to \"Winq\", the luxury lifestyle magazine for gay men, from its Amsterdam-based owner (the Media Mansion) in August 2013. Celebrities who have appeared on the cover include Prince William, Boy George, Madonna, David Beckham, Michael Sam, Lady Gaga, Tom Daley and Matty Lee, RuPaul, Tom Hardy, Jonathan Bailey, Gareth Thomas, Ian Somerhalder, John Grant, Mark Wahlberg, Jonathan Groff, Andrew Scott, Tony Blair, Daniel Radcliffe, Heath Ledger, Sacha Baron Cohen as Brüno Gehard, David Cameron, Ed Miliband, Robbie Rogers, the Spice Girls, Take That, James Franco, Dominic Cooper, James Anderson, Nick Jonas, Jussie Smollett with Naomi Campbell, Mark Feehily, Kevin McDaid, Kylie Minogue, Marilyn Manson, Elton John, McFly, Nicola Adams, Robbie Williams, Rupert Everett, Justin Timberlake, Philip Olivier, Freddie Ljungberg, Marina and the Diamonds, George Michael, Rufus Wainwright, Will Young, Harry Judd of McFly, Christina Aguilera, Dermot O'Leary, John Barrowman, Gary Lucy, Beth Ditto, Cheyenne Jackson, Scissor Sisters, Adam Lambert and Liam Payne. Many of these covers have been world exclusives." ]
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[ "British" ]
What is the date of birth of Luke Bullen's wife?
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Luke Bullen Luke Bullen (born 9 February 1973 in Norwich, England) is an English drummer and percussionist. Bullen studied at London drum school Drumtech and joined the band Addict in 1995; the band was signed to V2 Records in 1996. Bullen left Addict in 2000 and formed Zanderman with Addict's lead singer Mark Aston. In 2001, Bullen joined Joe Strummer and The Mescaleros to promote the newly released album "Global A Go-Go". He was drumming for Scottish singer-songwriter KT Tunstall, and he was romantically involved with the singer. On Christmas Day, 2007, Bullen proposed to Tunstall, and the couple were married on the Isle of Skye on 6 September 2008; however, in 2012, they separated, and in May 2013 they were divorced.
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[ "Mike Bullen Michael J. Bullen (born 13 January 1960) is an English screenwriter. Bullen grew up in the West Midlands of England, attending the Solihull School and later Magdalene College, Cambridge. He left with a degree in history of art and became a radio producer for the BBC World Service. Unhappy with the quality of British television targeted at people his age, Bullen took a course in screenwriting and developed a one-off comedy drama for Granada Television. This led to the commissioning of \"Cold Feet\", a multiple-award-winning comedy drama that aired for two separate runs on the ITV network, the first from 1998 to 2003, and the second from 2016 to 2020. The series won Bullen the Writer of the Year award at the 2003 British Comedy Awards. He wrote two more series for Granada; \"Life Begins\", which ran for three years, and \"All About George\", which ran for only one. His works have been described as being \"about the intricacies of interpersonal relationships and what happens when they break down\". Bullen moved with his wife and two children to Australia in 2002. Two years later he directed his first short film, \"Amorality Tale\". He co-created the Australian/UK television series \"Tripping Over\" in 2006 and the writer and director of the Australian television pilot \"Make or Break\" in 2007. He returned to producing work for British television in 2010 with the BBC pilot \"Reunited\", and moved back to the UK in 2011. Bullen was born in Bramhall, Cheshire. Bullen's father, Alex, was a chemical engineer, and his mother, Joan, was a housewife. Mike and his sister Jane were raised in Solihull, where he attended Solihull School. At the age of 18 he was accepted to Magdalene College, Cambridge, to read economics. He did not enjoy the subject, so switched to history of art. His first experiences of writing came when he was a child and wrote a newspaper for his neighbours. At Cambridge, he dramatised a Johann Wolfgang von Goethe novel. Following his graduation, Bullen began a career as a media planner buyer for an advertising company. The job did not excite him and he has described it as \"pretty pointless\". He quit the job to go backpacking in south-east Asia.", " He was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1877 and received an honorary degree from the University of Glasgow in 1889. He was created CB in 1890. He married Eliza Mary Martin (1823/4-1887) on 10 May 1851 at St George's, Bloomsbury and they had at least two sons, one of whom, Arthur (1857-1920), became a successful editor of Elizabethan works and a publisher. The year after Eliza's death he married Amy Reynolds (1862/3-1954), the daughter of a Bristol iron merchant. Bullen died at his house, 62 Abingdon Road, Kensington, on 10 October 1894, and was buried with his first wife and one of his sisters on the east side of Highgate Cemetery. Sidney Lee's article, revised by P. R. Harris, in the \"Dictionary of National Biography\" (2004)", "Joseph Bullen Admiral Joseph Bullen (14 April 1761 – 17 July 1857) was an officer of the British Royal Navy who served during the American Revolutionary, French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Bullen was the second son of the Reverend John Bullen, Rector of Kennett, Cambridge, and of Rushmoor-cum-Newburn, Suffolk, and entered the Navy in November 1774 as a midshipman, on board the 36-gun frigate , commanded by Captain The Honourable William Cornwallis. He followed Cornwallis into the 50-gun ship , and was present at the Battle of Red Bank and siege of Fort Mifflin, in October and November 1777. Under Cornwallis he then served in the 50-gun ships , and , and 64-gun ship , in which he took part in the Battle of Grenada on 6 July 1779. Bullen was promoted to lieutenant on 6 March 1778, and shortly afterwards joined the 28-gun , commanded by Captain Horatio Nelson, and was present during the attack on Fort St. Juan during the San Juan Expedition of 1780. He then returned to \"Lion\", under Cornwallis, and was lent to the 90-gun ship , Captain John Williams, and participated as officer in charge of half the middle gun-deck in the Battle of the Saintes on 12 April 1782. His subsequent appointments were to the on 2 May 1785, and then the on 6 July 1786, both 74's stationed as guardships at Plymouth, commanded by Captain Anthony Molloy. On 16 June 1790, he moved to the , under Captain Peter Rainier, fitting out at Spithead for the East Indies. On 6 February 1793, soon after the outbreak of war with France, he was appointed to the 64-gun , Captain Horatio Nelson, and was actively employed in the Mediterranean. On 11 September 1793 he moved to the , flagship of Lord Hood at the siege of Toulon. For three weeks Bullen commanded \"Fort Mulgrave\", a battery mounted opposite the town, and on 20 November 1793 was appointed commander of the 20-gun sloop . That vessel being absent at the time, he was appointed acting-captain of the 36-gun frigate , employed as a floating battery.", "William Bullen William Bullen (dates unknown) was an English cricketer during the last quarter of the 18th century. Bullen was an all-rounder, described as a fast bowler and a \"powerful hitter\". Bullen played in 113 first-class cricket matches between 1773 and 1797, playing primarily for Kent county cricket teams and \"England\" sides. He is reputed to have \"regularly bowled a cricket ball a distance of 300 yards\".", "Steve Bullen Steven Frank Gregory Bullen (born 12 July 1992) is an English cricketer. He made his first-class debut on 7 April 2015 for Leeds/Bradford MCCU against Yorkshire as part of the 2015 Marylebone Cricket Club University Matches. He has also played minor counties cricket for Wiltshire.", "Lee Bullen Lee Bullen (born 29 March 1971 in Edinburgh) is a Scottish former professional football player and coach, and is the current manager of Scottish Championship side Ayr United. In a career that has spanned more than 20 years, Bullen has played football professionally in Scotland, England, Australia, Greece and Hong Kong. Having started his career as a striker, Bullen converted to defence midway through his career, and has also been used in various other positions. Bullen was named as Sheffield Wednesday's greatest ever captain in a 2014 online poll. Bullen started his career in Scotland with Dunfermline Athletic, but failed to make an appearance before moving to Penicuik Athletic, a Junior Football team. Bullen then spent time at Meadowbank Thistle, Stenhousemuir and Whitburn. After failing to become an established player at a professional club in Scotland, Bullen moved to Australia to pursue his footballing career, playing for CYC Stanmore and Wollongong Wolves. During his time in Australia, Bullen was scouted by a Hong Kong football club, Kui Tan, and he made the switch to Hong Kong. He played in the Hong Kong Football League for 4 seasons in total, moving from Kui Tan to Golden then on to South China. On 26 May 1996, Bullen played for a Hong Kong XI side in an unofficial friendly against England in their build up to Euro 96. In 1998 Bullen moved to Greece and spent 2 years at Kalamata in the Greek Football League. In 2000 at the age of 29, Bullen returned to Scotland, signing for Dunfermline Athletic. Bullen spent five years at the Scottish club. After leading Dunfermline to the Scottish Cup Final, Bullen moved to English club Sheffield Wednesday on a free transfer in the summer of 2004. He immediately became an integral part of their play-off push after making his debut on 7 August in a 3–0 defeat on the opening day of the season at Hillsborough against Colchester United and scoring his first goal the next game on 10 August, away at Blackpool to lead the team to a 2–1 victory. In November 2005 the Captain's armband was passed onto him by Chris Marsden who was forced into retirement by injury. Bullen finished his first season in Sheffield with seven league goals.", "Saskia Bullen Saskia Mary Bullen (born 20 July 1983) is a New Zealand former cricketer who played as a slow left-arm orthodox bowler. She appeared in three Twenty20 Internationals for New Zealand between 2009 and 2010. She played domestic cricket for Auckland.", "Keith Bullen (poet) Keith Brebner Bullen (died 30 July 1946) was a British poet and teacher who was part of the Salamander group in Cairo during World War II. Bullen was the son of W A Bullen who had emigrated to Cape Town in 1891, and was born and brought up in Cape Town. In the 1920s he was a member of the teaching staff at The English School, in Cairo. At the school he met, and married in 1928, Wanda Tomlinson the daughter of Robert George Tomlinson, Director of Salt's Brewery in Burton on Trent. They returned to England to set up a preparatory school at Malvern. Bullen, though a brilliant English scholar was no businessman and the school failed in 1934. He returned to Cairo to work for the British Council. They were appointed by the council to run the Gezira Preparatory School, a British Council School in a Cairo suburb. The school was attended by Edward Said. During his time in Cairo Bullen ran an \"open house\" on Sunday mornings which became a centre for poets and art lovers. These informal meetings were welcome to all regardless of nationality, colour or creed, and in 1941 came to the attention of members of the allied forces in Cairo. Bullen co-founded the Salamander Society of poets and writers, along with John Waller and John Cromer Braun, an intelligence officer. The society rescued the work of the Cairo poets when they had been posted all over the Middle East and published it in . The 5,000-copy edition sold out in six weeks. Bullen also wrote and published his own poetry including translations from French poets. Bullen died in 1946, but his widow founded her own school, Manor House School, in Zamalek, Cairo. This was in a flourishing condition and had just opened a new branch in Mohandeseen, Cairo, when sequestered by the Egyptian authorities at the time of the Suez crisis. Mrs Bullen and her daughter Anne moved to Beirut where they reopened the school. However, after the outbreak of trouble in the Lebanon they had to leave. In 1976 at the request of the Egyptian government, Mrs Bullen, now aged 72, and her daughter reopened the Manor House School in Heliopolis, Cairo. A year later in 1977, the Mohandeseen branch was opened, and the school had 600 pupils.", "James Buller (1772–1830) James Buller (9 November 1772 - 14 November 1830) was a British politician and Member of Parliament for West Looe between 1802 and 1805 and a further term between 1806 and 1812. Buller was educated at University of Westminster and the Inner Temple, being called to the bar in 1795. He married his wife Mary on 23 June 1795. Buller served as a Commissioner of Bankruptcy between until 1807. Buller was elected as the MP for West Looe at the 1802 general election, standing down in 1805 to allow Ralph Daniell to take a seat. In 1806, he re-stood for the seat taking over from Quintin Dick. Following his leaving Parliament, Buller served as the Clerk in Ordinary to the Privy Council from January 1812 until his death in 1830. James Buller was the third son of John Buller, coming from the with long ties to Parliament.", " In 2001–02, he was Master of the Drapers Company, having been a Member of Court since 1993. He entered the House of Lords in 1996 and following the Conservative party's defeat in the 1997 general election he became an Opposition Whip in the House of Lords. Lord Luke was Opposition Spokesperson for Wales (2000–06), Transport (2002–04), Defence (2004–10) and Tourism (2010). He retired from the House on 24 June 2015. Lord Luke married firstly Silvia Maria Roigt in 1959. They divorced in 1971, and he married secondly Sarah Louise Hearne, daughter of the actor Richard Hearne in 1971. He had one son, Ian James Lawson Johnston, 4th Baron Luke, and two daughters by his first wife, and one son by his second wife. He died on 2 October 2015 at the age of 82, just over three months after his retirement from the Lords." ]
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[ "23 June 1975" ]
When did the director of film Should A Mother Tell? die?
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Should a Mother Tell? Should A Mother Tell? is a lost 1915 silent film drama directed by J. Gordon Edwards and starring Betty Nansen. The scenario was by future director Rex Ingram with the film being produced and distributed by Fox Film Corporation.
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[ "How Do We Tell Our Children? How Do We Tell Our Children? () is a 1949 German comedy film directed by Hans Deppe and starring Leny Marenbach, Mathias Wieman and Hilde Körber. The film was made by the major German studio UFA in 1944, but was not released until several years after the end of the war. The film's sets were designed by the art director Wilhelm Vorwerg. Shooting took place in the Babelsberg Studios and on location in Dresden and Switzerland. In a suburb of Dresden, a widowed doctor with four children lives opposite a divorcee with three children. Gradually they fall in love despite the constant feuding between their children.", "Dear Mother (film) Dear Mother (; ) is a 2020 French film written and directed by Laurent Lafitte. Lafitte also stars in the film, alongside Karin Viard and Vincent Macaigne. The movie was adapted from a play of the same name by Sébastien Thiéry. It was an official selection at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival. While working out at the gym, forty-year-old lawyer Jean-Louis Bordier realizes that his heart has stopped beating. He no longer feels a pulse but remains conscious, managing to go about his regular activities without any noticeable difference. His best friend, veterinarian Michel, tries to help, without knowing what to do. Jean-Louis' wife, Valérie, consults her spiritual life coach for advice. The latter comes up with a creative but rather unconventional solution, involving Jean-Louis' mother. Laurent Lafitte, who had discovered the play \"L'Origine du monde\" by Sébastien Thiéry in 2013, announced the project in 2019 as his directorial debut. Lafitte initially planned to portray Michel's character, as he found him to be the funniest. Filming began on 3 June 2019, taking place in Paris and Île-de-France, and lasted eight weeks. In June 2019, it was announced that \"Dear Mother\" would be released in France on 11 November 2020. The film was scheduled to premiere at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival, which was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The French national release was set for 4 November 2020 but due to the closure of cinemas during the pandemic, it was postponed until 2021. Netflix released the film in North America in 2022.", "Regret to Inform Regret to Inform is a 1998 American documentary film directed by Barbara Sonneborn. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. After airing on PBS' \"POV\", \"Regret to Inform\" won a Peabody Award in 2000. The film was made over a span of ten years. The documentary features filmmaker Barbara Sonneborn as she goes to the Vietnamese countryside where her husband was killed. Her translator is a fellow war widow named Xuan Ngoc Nguyen and together, the two women try to understand their losses. The film includes interviews with Vietnamese and American widows.", "Lukas Heller Lukas Heller (21 July 1930 – 2 November 1988) was a German-born screenwriter. Heller was born to a Jewish family in Kiel. His father was political philosopher Hermann Heller. He was known for writing the screen adaptions for several Robert Aldrich films such as \"What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?\" (1962) and \"Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte\" (1964); for the later film he won an Edgar Award with Henry Farrell, who wrote the source text for both films. Heller was married to Caroline (née Carter) who was an English Quaker. They had four children: British writers Bruno and Zoë Heller, Lucy Heller, and Emily Heller. His half-sister was the Swedish journalist Cordelia Edvardson. He died on 2 November 1988 and was buried on the eastern side of Highgate Cemetery.", "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.", "A Mother's Confession A Mother's Confession is a 1915 silent film written and directed by Ivan Abramson, and starring Christine Mayo and Austin Webb. Typical of Ivan Abramson's exploitation dramas, this film chooses to explore the ills of illegal marriage. Henry Patterson, played by Otto Kruger, is married to Lola (Christine Mayo) and living in Chicago with their young son Harold. But Henry also marries rich heiress Louise Douglas in Denver (where he finds his mining interests to be worthless) to save his family from poverty. Both wives are kept in the dark about this bigamy. When Henry returns years later and confesses to Lola, he is accidentally killed by Lola's friend (and love interest) Fred Warren. Lola marries Fred after he is found not guilty of murder. Later, Lola's son falls in love with his half-sister Muriel Warren, and Lola rushes to stop the marriage—confessing her sins to the priest. Muriel becomes a nun, and Lola goes to live with Harold. The film was banned by the British Board of Film Censors in 1916. Chadwick Pictures re-released a re-edited version of the film in 1920 as \"A Wife's Story\".", " Two of his films, \"Lay My Burden Down\", about the plight of black sharecroppers in the rural south, and \"Every Seventh Child\", about Catholic education were shown at the New York Film Festival. His first film, \"The Streets of Greenwood\" about voting rights in Mississippi, won the Gold Medal at the San Francisco Film Festival. With his wife, Mary, he wrote several highly rated network movies and co-authored the book \"But There Are Always Miracles.\" He died from assisted suicide in Zurich on February 9, 2022 at the age of 87.", "Arthur Hoerl Arthur Hoerl (December 17, 1891 – February 6, 1968) was an American screenwriter and film director. Hoerl was born in New York, son of Louis Hoerl, a German immigrant silver polisher, and Teresa Hoerl. Arthur completed three years of high school, according to the 1940 US Census. He wrote for 150 films between 1921 and 1968. One of his best known credits is co-writer for the film \"Tell Your Children\" (1936) which is now known as \"Reefer Madness\". For Broadway, 1932, he wrote the play \"A Few Wild Oats.\" He also directed four films between 1932 and 1934. Hoerl died in Hollywood, California.", "Robert Getchell Robert Getchell (December 6, 1936 – October 21, 2017) was an American screenwriter. Getchell wrote the 1974 film \"Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore\" and created the sitcom based on that film, \"Alice\". Getchell was also the screenwriter for the 1981 docudrama film \"Mommie Dearest\" which is based on Christina Crawford's nightmarish childhood with her violent and manipulative alcoholic adoptive mother, the actress Joan Crawford. The film was meant to be taken seriously with a subject concerning child abuse/trafficking however, Getchell's unusual script became over-the-top and unintentionally amusing that it won the 2nd Golden Raspberry award for worst Screenplay which developed \"Mommie Dearest\" into a memorable cult film. He died on 21 October 2017 aged 81. Putt, Jr., Barry M. (2019). \"Alice: Life Behind the Counter in Mel's Greasy Spoon (A Guide to the Feature Film, the TV Series, and More)\". Albany, Georgia: BearManor Media. .", "Michael Carreras Michael Henry Carreras (21 December 1927 – 19 April 1994) was a British film producer and director. He was known for his association with Hammer Films, being the son of founder James Carreras, and taking an executive role in the company during its most successful years. As producer, he worked on \"The Curse of Frankenstein\" (1957), \"Dracula\" (1958) and \"The Curse of the Werewolf\" (1960) and \"She\" (1965) among over sixty other films. He also wrote a smaller number of screenplays. He later turned to directing, with \"The Savage Guns / Tierra brutal\" (1961), \"Maniac\" (1963), \"The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb\" (1964), \"Slave Girls\" (1967), \"The Lost Continent\" (1968) and \"Shatter\" (1975) among others. In 1971, he took over directing \"Blood from the Mummy's Tomb\" after director Seth Holt died partway through filming. Carreras died from cancer in London on 19 April 1994. Producer Director" ]
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[ "December 31, 1925" ]
Are both directors of films The Splendid Sinner and The Convicted from the same country?
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The Splendid Sinner The Splendid Sinner is a lost 1918 American silent World War I drama film directed by Edwin Carewe and starring Opera star Mary Garden. It was produced and released by Goldwyn Pictures.
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[ "Convicted (1931 film) Convicted is a 1931 American pre-Code film directed by Christy Cabanne and starring Aileen Pringle and Jameson Thomas. Tony Blair, a producer of Broadway plays, is murdered on a California-bound passenger liner, and a series of events leads to an assumption that Claire Norvelle has committed the killing. Despite the fact that Blair was an obnoxious character, murder is murder and Barbara is accused of the crime. Complications arise when another murder occurs. The startling solution clears Barbara and provides a surprising explanation of the two murders. \"The Motion Picture Guide\", first published in 1985, describes \"Convicted\" as a \"nicely developed murder mystery\". However, in his 2010 biography and guide \"Wild Bill Elliot: A Complete Filmography\", author Gene Blottner characterizes the film as \"an adequate but undistinguished low-budget murder mystery\".", "Magnificent Sinner Magnificent Sinner (original French title: Katia) is a 1959 French film by director Robert Siodmak about the romance between Tsar Alexander II of Russia and the then-schoolgirl Catherine Dolgorukov, who later became his mistress and finally his morganatic wife. It stars Romy Schneider as Katia, a schoolgirl who becomes the Tsar's mistress and Curd Jürgens as Tsar Alexander II of Russia. The film, originally released as \"Katia\", was a remake of a 1938 French film of the same name, which starred Danielle Darrieux. Produced in France, \"Magnificent Sinner\" stars Curd Jürgens as Tsar Alexander II, with Romy Schneider as the schoolgirl Katia who first becomes his mistress, before being elevated to the rank of princess. The romance between emperor and commoner leads to court intrigue and a weakening of the ties of loyalty between the Tsar's ministers and their ruler, and is instrumental in Alexander's ultimate assassination. Film critic Leonard Maltin gave the film two out of four stars, describing it as \"lackluster.\" Bosley Crowther of \"The New York Times\" equally panned it as \"an overstuffed costume picture\" and \"a hackneyed and ponderous bore.\" \"It would be just as good, if not better,\" he continued, \"if it had been a tractor with which the Tsar fell in love.\"", "The Virtuous Sinner The Virtuous Sinner (German: Der brave Sünder) is a 1931 German comedy film directed by Fritz Kortner and starring Max Pallenberg, Heinz Rühmann and Dolly Haas. The film was made at the Babelsberg Studio in Berlin, although its setting and many of its principal participants were Austrian. It is based on the play \"The Embezzlers\" which was in turn based on a novel by the Soviet writer Valentin Kataev. Max Pallenberg was a successful stage comedian, but had previously rejected all offers to appear in films based on his theatre appearances. He was finally convinced by the producer Arnold Pressburger to try and film one of his stage successes. The film also offered Kortner a chance to fulfill his ambitions to become a director. The film's art director was Julius von Borsody. Pichler and Wittek, two junior employees of a bank from a provincial Austrian town, travel to Vienna, where they become accidentally embroiled in their director's scheme to embezzle the bank's funds and flee with his mistress. They become desperate as they fear their disgrace. But events ultimately sort themselves out, the dishonest director is arrested, and Pichler is appointed to replace him while Wittek is able to marry Pichler's daughter Hedwig.", "The Divine Sinner The Divine Sinner is a 1928 American silent film directed by Scott Pembroke and starring Vera Reynolds, Nigel De Brulier and Bernard Siegel. This film is now lost.", "Henry Jaeger Karl-Heinz Jaeger (1927–2000) was a German author, reformed criminal, and journalist, best known for his semi-autobiographical prison novel \"\" (1962) which was filmed in 1964 as \"Condemned to Sin\".", "Convicted (1938 film) Convicted is a 1938 American/Canadian action film directed by Leon Barsha. It stars Charles Quigley, Marc Lawrence and 19-year-old Rita Hayworth, on the verge of Hollywood stardom. This is the last of the quota quickies made for the British market by producer Kenneth J. Bishop in Victoria, B.C. from 1933 to 1937. The screenplay by Edgar Edwards was based on the Cornell Woolrich story \"Face Work\".", "Sinner or Saint Sinner or Saint may refer to:", "Poor Sinner Poor Sinner () is a 1923 German silent drama film directed by Pier Antonio Gariazzo and starring Alfred Abel, Diana Karenne and Fritz Kortner.", "All the Beautiful Sinners All the Beautiful Sinners is a 2003 novel by Stephen Graham Jones.", "Sinner or Saint (film) Sinner or Saint is a 1923 American silent drama film directed by Lawrence C. Windom and starring Betty Blythe, William P. Carleton and Gypsy O'Brien." ]
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[ "no" ]
Do the movies Sunshine State (Film) and Massive Retaliation (Film), originate from the same country?
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Massive Retaliation (film) Massive Retaliation is a 1984 American film directed by Thomas A. Cohen. It includes the film debut of Bobcat Goldthwait as quirky redneck antagonist Ernie Rust. The movie has been compared to "The Shelter" by Rod Serling, which it somewhat resembles in terms of story-line and subject matter. When word comes of nuclear war between the USA and Russia in the Middle East comes out, three families leave their homes in the city and head to a survivalist outpost.
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[ "Total Retaliation Total Retaliation is the seventh studio album by American beatdown hardcore band Terror. It was released on September 28, 2018, by Pure Noise Records.", "Sunland Heat Sunland Heat () is a 2004 American martial arts film directed by Halder Gomes and starring J.J. Perry. Working as stunt in American martial arts films, Gomes came with the idea of producing a martial art film shot in his birth city, Fortaleza, Ceará. However, Gomes prepared no script, then he went to a local film school and announced he was looking for a script writer for a martial arts film. The next step was to raise funds, which was done through gubernamental tax incentives. For the casting Gomes put an ad in the \"Back Stage West\", and received about 3,000 subsmissions. He was worried to cast people who had already travelled to another country because he thought the recentness of September 11 attacks could affect actor's performance. The film was shot both in Ceará and Los Angeles during a period of four weeks.", "Romans (2017 film) Romans is a 2017 British drama film directed by Ludwig Shammasian and Paul Shammasian and written by Geoff Thompson. The film stars Orlando Bloom, Janet Montgomery, Charlie Creed-Miles, Anne Reid, Alex Ferns and Josh Myers. The film premiered at the 2017 Edinburgh International Film Festival. In the United States, the film was released under the title Retaliation. On 10 November 2015 Orlando Bloom joined the cast of the film. On 27 November 2015 Janet Montgomery joined the cast of the film. Principal photography began on 16 November 2015. The film premiered at the Edinburgh International Film Festival on 1 July 2017. The film was released in North America as \"Retaliation\" on 24 July 2020.", "The 51st State The 51st State (also known as Formula 51) is a 2001 action comedy film directed by Ronny Yu, written by Stel Pavlou, and starring Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Carlyle, Emily Mortimer, Ricky Tomlinson, Sean Pertwee, Rhys Ifans, Stephen Walters and Meat Loaf. The film follows the story of an American master chemist (Jackson) who heads to Britain to sell his formula for a powerful new drug. All does not go as planned and the chemist soon becomes entangled in a web of deceit. The film premiered in the United Kingdom on 7 December 2001. It was released internationally under the name \"Formula 51\" in October 2002, where it grossed $14.4 million, just over half of the budget. In 1971, a policeman witnesses Elmo McElroy, a recent college graduate with a degree, smoking marijuana. Due to his arrest and conviction, he is unable to find work as a pharmacologist. In the present day, a drug lord called \"the Lizard\" calls a meeting of his colleagues, hoping to sell a new substance invented by Elmo. The meeting goes badly when Elmo, in a bid to escape from the Lizard's manipulation, blows up the building, killing everyone but the Lizard. Enraged, the Lizard contacts Dakota, a contract killer, who previously killed the only witness in a case against the Lizard. Dakota initially refuses the hit, but accepts when the Lizard offers to clear her gambling debts and give her a $250,000 bonus. Felix DeSouza, a local \"fixer\" in Liverpool has been sent by Leopold Durant, head of a local criminal organisation, to collect Elmo from Manchester airport, in exchange for two tickets to a sold-out football match between Liverpool and Manchester United. On route to the airport Felix enters a pub full of Manchester United supporters and antagonises them before letting off a rocket flare inside; the United fans give chase but his friends rescue him in their car. Elmo lands in Manchester, is collected by Felix and is taken to the meeting with Durant. At the meeting, Elmo pitches POS 51, a synthetic drug that can be produced with minimal facilities and is 51 times as potent as other drugs.", "Diplomatic Immunity (1991 Canadian film) Diplomatic Immunity is a Canadian political thriller film, released in 1991. It marked the narrative feature film debut of Sturla Gunnarsson. The film stars Wendel Meldrum as Kim Dades, a Canadian diplomat working in El Salvador on a foreign aid program, who discovers that a community housing project paid for by the Canadian government has been overrun by the Salvadoran army. The cast also includes Michael Hogan as Jack Budyansky, a Canadian expatriate living in El Salvador; Michael Riley as Les Oberfell, an American who supports the Salvadoran army's fascist tactics; Ofelia Medina as Sara Roldan, a local matriarch and community worker; Pedro Armendáriz Jr. as Oswaldo Delgado, a Salvadoran politician who is far less interested in resolving the crisis than he appears to be; and Salvador Sánchez as Colonel Hernandez, the leader of the military contingent. The film was shot primarily in Mexico, in conjunction with Estudios América. Written by Steve Lucas, who co-produced with Gunnarsson, the film personnel also included cinematographer Harald Ortenburger, composer Jonathan Goldsmith, film editor Jeff Warren, production designer Theresa Watcher, costumier Mónica Araiz and sound engineer José Antonio García. A young Alfonso Cuarón worked as first assistant director The film garnered four Genie Award nominations at the 12th Genie Awards in 1991: two for Best Supporting Actor (Hogan and Riley), one for Best Supporting Actress (Medina), and one for Best Original Score (Jonathan Goldsmith).", "Sunshine State Arch Sunshine State Arch is a national historic site located at the intersection between NW 13th Ave. and NW 167th St., at the entrance to the Sunshine State Industrial Park (Sunshine State International Park, Inc.) in Miami Gardens, Miami-Dade County, Florida, USA. It was inspired by the monumental Gateway Arch in St. Louis. The Sunshine State Arch was finished in 1964, three years before the Gateway Arch. It was designed by Walter C. Harry. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.", "Solar Attack Solar Attack (also called Solar Strike) is a 2006 television film by CineTel Films and Lions Gate Entertainment, starring Mark Dacascos, Joanne Kelly and Louis Gossett Jr. \"Solar Attack\" concerns large coronal mass ejections (CMEs) that cause the Earth's atmosphere to burn, potentially suffocating all life on Earth. All of this happens during a time of political tension between the United States and Russia. Disaster is eventually averted by the detonation of nuclear missiles at the poles, releasing vapor that extinguishes the burning methane caused by the CMEs. While a solar probe operated by the fictional Solar and Near Earth Laboratory (SNEL) is obtaining data, a large CME or solar flare destroys the probe. A crewed spacecraft, \"Galileo\", is caught in the CME and destroyed; the tragedy is blamed on defective Russian equipment. CMEs knock satellites out of orbit, turning them into deadly meteors, and a CME hits New Zealand, destroying it and turning it into a huge mass of molten rock. After a multi-millionaire, Lucas Foster (Mark Dacascos), funds a program to fight global warming, it is discovered that the Earth's atmosphere is now 5 percent methane. Multiple CMEs are bound to hit the Earth, ignite the methane, and suffocate every living thing on Earth. Foster, who is also a scientist, tries to convince his skeptical colleagues. The government officials and fellow scientist Joanna Parks (Joanne Kelly), his ex-wife, do not believe Foster either. As the CMEs strike, it is determined that 25-megaton nuclear missiles fired at the North Pole will release vapor that will extinguish the methane flares. Fortunately, Foster knows a Russian Navy submarine captain who reluctantly lets him board his submarine. Foster explains that although satellite communication has been disabled, the submarine can communicate via a transatlantic telegraph cable located at a depth of 800 m. The sub is designed to dive to 700m, but the captain tells his reluctant lieutenant to dive to 800 m nevertheless. The submarine survives the dive with minor damage. Communication between the captain and the Russian President results in the latter, who has been informed of the situation by U.S. President Ryan Gordon (Louis Gossett Jr.), telling the captain to go ahead with the plan. Meanwhile, the Russian submarine has detected a U.S. Navy submarine.", "Retaliation (song) \"Retaliation\" is a single by Hip Hop group Jedi Mind Tricks, the third released from their second album \"Violent by Design\", following \"Heavenly Divine\" and \"Genghis Khan\". Released in 2001, the single was the group's last release on self-run Superegular Recordings. The following year, the group migrated to Babygrande Records. \"Retaliation\" contains a musical sample from \"El Rio Y Las Rosas\" by Rosita Peru, a vocal sample from \"Cross My Heart\" by Killah Priest, and a vocal sample from \"Money in the bank\" by Kool G. Rap. The single also contains the edited \"Retaliation (Remix)\", and the B-Side track \"Blood Runs Cold\", featuring Heltah Skeltah's Sean Price, both originally only available on this single. Babygrande Records re-released \"Violent by Design\" in 2004, including both \"Retaliation (Remix)\" and \"Blood Runs Cold\" as bonus tracks. The \"Retaliation\" single marked the last appearance from group member Jus Allah on a Jedi Mind Tricks track. By 2002, he had split from the group due to personal conflict, returning the group to its original lineup of Vinnie Paz and Stoupe the Enemy of Mankind. Jus reconciled with the group in 2006, and appeared on the group's latest album, \"A History of Violence\".", "Revenge (1978 film) Revenge () is a 1978 Romanian action film directed by Sergiu Nicolaescu.", "Retaliation (Keak da Sneak album) Retaliation is a solo album by rapper Keak da Sneak. It was released on January 15, 2002, by Black Market Records, and was produced by Sean T, Keak da Sneak and One Drop Scott. It sold 2,500 copies on its first week on shelves." ]
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[ "yes" ]
When did the director of film Albert Schweitzer (Film) die?
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Albert Schweitzer (film) Albert Schweitzer is a 1957 American biographical documentary about Albert Schweitzer directed by Jerome Hill. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for 1958.
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[ "Bernhard Schweitzer Bernhard Schweitzer (3 October 1892, in Wesel – 16 July 1966, in Tübingen) was a German classical archeologist. From 1911-1917, he studied classical archaeology and philology in Heidelberg and Berlin. He received his doctorate in 1917 in Heidelberg under Friedrich von Duhn with a thesis on \"Studies on the chronology of the geometric styles in Greece I\". In 1921, Bernhard Schweitzer studied in Heidelberg and in 1925 became a professor. He succeeded Herbert Koch in Leipzig. In November 1933, he was one of the signers of the at German universities and colleges to Adolf Hitler and the National Socialist state. Schweitzer was not a member of the Nazi party, but only joined its affiliated social welfare organization, the National Socialist People's Welfare (Nationalsozialistische Volkswohlfahrt), in 1937. In 1945, he became the first rector of the University of Leipzig to the end of the war. In 1948, he was the successor of Carl Watzinger at Tübingen, where he retired in 1960.", "The Great White Man of Lambaréné The Great White Man of Lambaréné (Le grand blanc de Lambaréné) is a 1995 biopic of Albert Schweitzer by the Cameroonian filmmaker Bassek Ba Kobhio. The film, made on the site of Schweitzer's hospital at Lambaréné on the Ogooué River in Gabon, has received critical attention as a post-colonial re-interrogation of the myth of Schweitzer.", "Richard Schweizer Richard Schweizer (23 December 1899 – 30 March 1965) was a Swiss screenwriter who won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1945 for his work in \"Marie-Louise\", as well as the Academy Award for Best Story in 1948 for his work in \"The Search\". Schweizer also directed the film \"Kleine Scheidegg\" (1937). Director Screenwriter", "Franz Schnyder Franz Schnyder (5 March 1910 – 8 February 1993) was a Swiss film director and screenwriter. He directed 15 films between 1941 and 1968. His film \"Der 10. Mai\" was entered into the 8th Berlin International Film Festival.", "Otto Retzer Otto Retzer (born 1945) is an Austrian actor, producer and director.", "Alfred Weidenmann Alfred Weidenmann (10 May 1916 – 9 June 2000) was a German film director, screenwriter, and author of children's books. He directed more than 30 films between 1942 and 1984.", "István Schweitzer István Schweitzer (1887–1981) was a Hungarian military officer, who served as commander of the Hungarian First Army during the Second World War.", "Albert Herman Albert Herman (1887–1958) was an American actor, screenwriter and film director. Herman was a prolific director, working mainly on low-budget movies for companies such as Producers Releasing Corporation. He is sometimes credited as Al Herman.", "Albert W. Hale Albert W. Hale (January 1, 1882 - February 27, 1947) was an early film director and producer in the U.S. He directed some 35 films from 1912 until 1915. He worked for Majestic Studio and National Film Corporation. Hale was born in Bordeaux, France on January 1, 1882. He married Julia F. Johnson.", "Franz Schroedter Franz Schroedter (9 May 1897 – 14 November 1968) was a German art director." ]
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[ "November 21, 1972" ]
What nationality is the director of film The War On Democracy?
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The War on Democracy The War on Democracy is a 2007 documentary film directed by Christopher Martin and John Pilger, who also wrote the narration. Focusing on the political situations in nations of Latin America, the film criticizes both the United States' intervention in foreign countries' domestic politics and its "War on Terrorism". The film was first released in the United Kingdom on 15 June 2007. Critics accuse the film of fostering anti-American sentiment. The film was produced over a two-year period. Carl Deal, chief archivist on the Michael Moore films "Fahrenheit 9/11" and "Bowling for Columbine," provided the archive footage used in the film. It is mastered in high-definition video. "The War on Democracy" was screened at both the 2007 Cannes Film Festival and the Galway Film Festival. The film was sold to distributors Lionsgate for distribution in the U.K. and Hopscotch distribution in Australia and New Zealand. Pre-release screening took place at two Fopp locations on 12 June 2007, including one that was followed by a question and answer session with co-director John Pilger. Some in Chile accused Pilger of Chilenophobia by "attacking all Chileans who 'did not speak up to the dictatorship'" and "accusing Pinochet of fascism." Peter Bradshaw wrote in "The Guardian": Andrew Billen wrote in "The Times": James Walton in "The Daily Telegraph" thought that while "Pilger stressed that Venezuela's potential utopia is under threat", he "made exactly the same claims for Chavez that he was making for the Sandinistas in Nicaragua" in the 1980s. In Pilger's account of US involvement in Latin America, Walton wrote, "while this was the most familiar section of the programme, it was also the most powerful and persuasive – because, once he was attacking his baddies, Pilger duly seemed on more solid ground. His recital, pretty polished by now, included chapter and verse on American involvement in torture, massacres and terrorism. He exposed (again) "the epic lie" that this was done for the sake of democracy". "The War on Democracy" won the One World Media TV Documentary Award in 2008. "The War on Democracy" grossed $199,500 at the box office in Australia.
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[ "Democrats (film) Democrats is a 2014 Danish documentary film directed by Camilla Nielsson about politics in Zimbabwe following the contentious 2008 election and the subsequent coalition effort to rewrite the country's constitution. Following the contentious 2008 Presidential election in Zimbabwe, a coalition that includes Paul Mangwana and Douglas Mwonzora work to rewrite the Zimbabwean constitution. \"Democrats\" played at the Copenhagen International Documentary Festival on September 6, 2014. Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 100% of 22 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 8.4/10. Metacritic rated it 88/100 based on eight reviews, indicating \"Universal acclaim\". Guy Lodge of \"Variety\" wrote, \"Even the slyest political satire couldn't outdo this riveting docu study of Zimbabwe's troubled coalition government.\" John DeFore of \"The Hollywood Reporter\" called it both accessible and academically useful. Glenn Kenny of \"The New York Times\" made it a NYT Critics' Pick and called it an \"outstanding, unsettling documentary\". Among other awards, the film won Best Documentary at the Tribeca Film Festival, Best Director at the One World Human Rights Film Festival, Best International Documentary at the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival, Special Jury Mention and Reel Talent Award at the Copenhagen International Documentary Festival, and Best Documentary at the Nordisk Panorama – Nordic Short & Doc Film Festival.", "Manolis Mavrommatis Manolis Mavrommatis (born August 15, 1941 ) is a Greek politician and former Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for New Democracy, belonging to the European People's Party. Born in Platanias, Crete, he studied sociology in the University of Rome, as well as Cinema, Theater and Radio techniques. He started off as a director for short-films and documentaries and moved on to directing theatrical acts for both the radio and the stage. In 1975 he started working as a sports journalist and covered a variety of major sporting events (Olympic Games, FIFA World Cup, UEFA European Championship etc.) up until his election to the European Parliament in 2004. He is married to actress Rena Venieri and has a son, Michael Mavrommatis.", "Democracy (play) Democracy is a play by Michael Frayn which premiered in London at the Royal National Theatre on September 9, 2003. Directed by Michael Blakemore, and starring Roger Allam as Willy Brandt and Conleth Hill as Günter Guillaume, it won the \"Evening Standard\" and Critics' Circle awards for Best Play. \"Democracy\" premiered on Broadway at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre on November 18, 2004, and ran for 173 performances. It was nominated for the Tony Award and Drama Desk Award as Best Play. It has also been staged in Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki (2005) , Wellington, Vancouver, Toronto and Moscow (2016). A revival of the play, directed by Paul Miller at Sheffield's Crucible Theatre, transferred to London's Old Vic Theatre in 2012. The play, based on actual events, deals with the decision West German chancellor Willy Brandt had to make about exposing the Communist spy Günter Guillaume who worked as his secretary and had heard some of the state's most important secrets.", "Steve York Steven H. York (born July 1, 1943) is a documentary filmmaker and video game creator who has worked in Europe, Asia, Africa, and North and South America on subjects ranging from religious fundamentalism to American history to nonviolent conflict. Originally from St. Louis, Missouri, York moved to Washington, D.C. in 1972, where he began editing and directing films for Bill Moyers and Charles Guggenheim. Since 1976, York has written, produced and directed films and television programs ranging from network series to prime-time specials, political campaign spots, advocacy and educational films. His latest production, \"Orange Revolution\", is a feature-length documentary about the stolen election in Ukraine in 2004 and the demonstrations that followed. It is currently airing on local public broadcast stations. He has received two George Foster Peabody Awards: One for an ABC News Special, \"Pearl Harbor: Two Hours That Changed the World\", anchored by David Brinkley, and another for his one-hour film about the nonviolent opposition movement which brought an end to the regime of Slobodan Milosevic, \"Bringing Down A Dictator\", narrated by Martin Sheen, which aired on PBS in the spring of 2002. In 1997 York began development on an in-depth examination of the history of nonviolent conflict. \"A Force More Powerful\" debuted as a feature-length documentary in the fall of 1999 and was expanded into a three-hour series for broadcast on national public television in the fall of 2000. York also produced \"A Force More Powerful: The Game of Nonviolent Conflict\", a computer game that incorporates many of the themes of strategic nonviolent conflict explored in his recent films and \"\", which was released in the summer of 2010. Other notable films and television programs by Steve York include \"Turning Point at Normandy: The Soldiers' Story\" (ABC News, with Peter Jennings); the Emmy-nominated \"Vietnam Memorial\" (PBS Frontline); \"Letter from Palestine\", a first-person profile of a Palestinian medical team in the West Bank; and two films about the U.S. Supreme Court: a two-part PBS series, \"This Honorable Court\", and \"The Supreme Court of the United States\", a 30-minute film which ran continuously in the Court's Visitors' Center for over a decade. Along with his partner Miriam Zimmerman, York runs his production company, York Zimmerman Inc.", "Javad Shamaqdari Javad Shamaqdari (; born January 5, 1960) is an Iranian filmmaker and the former deputy culture minister of film under President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He has attacked the film \"300\" as psychological warfare and accused American 'cultural authorities' and Hollywood of attacking Iranian culture. He has since rebuffed American film director Oliver Stone's offer to make a film about President Ahmadinejad, saying Iran would only allow it if an Iranian director was allowed to make a film about George W. Bush. Like \"300\", Stone's 2004 biopic \"Alexander\" was controversial in Iran for its depictions of ancient Persians. In April 2012, he responded to \"What Must Be Said\" with a letter to Günter Grass: \"I have read your literary work, highly responsible both from a human and historical point of view, and I found it extremely timely. Telling the truth in such a way may truly awaken the west's silent and dormant conscience\".", "Robert Stone (director) Robert Stone is a British-American documentary filmmaker. His work has been screened at dozens of film festivals and televised around the world, notably seven of his films have appeared on PBS's \"American Experience\" series and four of his films have premiered at the Sundance Film Festival (including Closing Night Film in 2009). He is an Oscar nominee for Best Feature Documentary and a three-time Emmy nominee for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking. Stone was born in England and educated in the United States. His father Lawrence Stone was a noted historian and chair of the History Department at Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey where Robert grew up, graduating Princeton High School in 1976. He was later educated at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, did a brief stint at Sorbonne University in Paris and at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute in New York. Known in large part for his innovative use of archival material in historical documentaries, Stone has directed several well received documentaries that he has shot himself, including \"American Babylon\" (2000) and, most recently, \"Pandora's Promise\" (2013), which makes the environmental case for nuclear energy as a solution to climate change. His only foray into fiction filmmaking was a counter-factual fake historical documentary for German television called \"World War Three\" in 1998. In addition to his work making feature-documentaries, in the early 1990s he was commissioned to create a 24-part semi-interactive permanent installation at the JFK Presidential Library in Boston. His work with environmental issues, particularly the worldwide acclaim surrounding his film Pandora's Promise, led him to co-found the non-profit clean energy advocacy group Energy for Humanity with environmental campaigner Kirsty Gogan and philanthropist Daniel Aegerter. Stone is also one of 18 co-authors of the Ecomodernist Manifesto which challenges conventional thinking about the meaning of sustainable development. He also co-authored a companion book of the same name to be published by Ballantine Books. Stone lives in New York's Hudson Valley with his wife, Shelby Stone, a film and television produce, and his two sons, Luc and Caleb, from a previous marriage. His debut work was the Academy Award-nominated \"Radio Bikini\" (1988), about nuclear tests performed around Bikini Atoll in 1946.", "Hacking Democracy Hacking Democracy is a 2006 Emmy nominated documentary film broadcast on HBO and created by producer / directors Russell Michaels and Simon Ardizzone, with producer Robert Carrillo Cohen, and executive producers Sarah Teale, Sian Edwards & Earl Katz. Filmed over three years it documents American citizens investigating anomalies and irregularities with 'e-voting' (electronic voting) systems that occurred during the 2000 and 2004 elections in the United States, especially in Volusia County, Florida. The film investigates the flawed integrity of electronic voting machines, particularly those made by Diebold Election Systems, exposing previously unknown backdoors in the Diebold trade secret computer software. The film culminates dramatically in the on-camera hacking of the in-use / working Diebold election system in Leon County, Florida - the same computer voting system which has been used in actual American elections across thirty-three states, and which still counts tens of millions of America's votes today. In 2007 \"Hacking Democracy\" was nominated for an Emmy award for Outstanding Investigative Journalism – Long Form. The documentary follows Bev Harris and Kathleen Wynne, director and associate director for nonprofit election watchdog group Black Box Voting, as they attempt to discover the extent to which it would be possible to alter results on the electronic voting machines of Diebold Election Systems (now Premier Election Solutions). Andy Stephenson, an employee of Black Box Voting from July–December 2004, assisted with comparisons of audit documents in Volusia County and obtained a secret videotape of Harris interviewing a voting machine testing lab. Kathleen Wynne captured live video of Harris finding voting machine records in a Volusia County trash bag, and captured video of Cuyahoga County, Ohio elections workers admitting that the initial 3% recount ballots had not been randomly selected during the 2004 presidential election. Harris and Wynne then embarked on a series of five voting machine hack tests with Dr. Herbert Hugh Thompson and Harri Hursti in 2005 and 2006. During the course of the documentary, multiple methods of tampering with the votes are shown. The first is through editing the database file that contains the voting totals. This file is a standard Microsoft Access database, and can be opened by normal means outside of the encompassing voting program without a password. Some jurisdictions have disabled Microsoft Access, making it more difficult to alter the database, but this protection was shown to be bypassed by Dr.", "George Mendeluk George Mendeluk () (born March 20, 1948, in Augsburg, Bavaria) is a German-born Canadian film director, television director and writer of Ukrainian descent. Throughout his career he has amassed a number of credits in film and television. His directorial television credits include \"Miami Vice\", \"Night Heat\", \"The New Alfred Hitchcock Presents\", \"The Young Riders\", \"Counterstrike\", \"\", \"\", \"\", \"\", \"\", \"Queen of Swords\", \"First Wave\", \"Relic Hunter\", \"Romeo!\", \"Odyssey 5\" and among other series. Since 2006, Mendeluk has focused primarily on directing television films namely \"Deck the Halls\" (2005) starring Gabrielle Carteris and \"Judicial Indiscretion\" (2007) starring Anne Archer and Michael Shanks. Mendeluk directed the 2017 epic romantic-drama film \"Bitter Harvest\", depicting Holodomor, the man-made genocide in 1930s Ukraine that Joseph Stalin methodically planned to starve 5 to 10 million Ukrainians to death. The story and original script was written by Richard Bachynsky Hoover a Kingston Ontario raised Canadian half Ukrainian living in Kyiv Ukraine raising his young son Yevhen Nyanchenko born in Smila Cherkashyna which is portrayed as a tribute to his son and his mothers family as the Cossack farming village in the film where many thousands of Ukrainians had died of hunger in that region as well the river Tyasmin nearby where the film opens up with Yuri and Natalka swimming as children as Richards own son did with him and his sons family as a little boy raising him there his first few years . The writer Richard Bachynsky Hoover who was also the Executive producer credited for finding the films financing investor and had Mendeluk attached and scouted most locations and casting and film crews in Kyiv for the project had later sent Mendeluk his script and had him hired as the films director by his Toronto Canadian Ukrainian backer producer Ian Ihnatowycz. After reading Bachynsky Hoovers original screenplay material director Mendeluk was thrilled to direct the film for them.", "The Audacity of Democracy The Audacity of Democracy is a 2009 American independent documentary film produced by Lorenda Starfelt and directed by Brad Mays for LightSong Films in North Hollywood. The film, which was shot in New York City, Washington, D.C.; Chicago, Illinois; Dallas and Austin, Texas; and Denver, Colorado is an in-depth look at the P.U.M.A. (People United Means Action) movement in general and one of its most controversial leaders, Darragh Murphy, in particular. Brad Mays quickly came under fire from various online pro-Obama blogs, citing conflict-of-interest due to the production having been financed by PUMA-Pac itself. A vociferously anti-PUMA site called StupidPumas posted a paged entitled \"Stupid Brad Mays,\" criticizing the filmmaker for not doing proper investigative work on the PUMA movement. Mays acknowledged these concerns, while maintaining that the film would be an objective account of what he saw and heard during the Democratic primary. About a week before the Democratic convention in Denver, all of Mays' camera equipment was stolen while en route to Chicago. Although most of the gear was eventually replaced, the crucial Chicago shoot was seriously compromised. When Mays decided, for the sake of balance, to film interviews with internet journalist Tommy Christopher, an outspoken critic of the PUMA movement, the rank and file of the PUMA movement quickly denounced the filmmaker, distancing themselves from the entire project. In multiple subsequent Blog-Radio interviews, Brad Mays has expressed extreme dissatisfaction with his film, revealing that he had not been allowed to complete shooting in the manner originally agreed to, adding that many of the PUMA members who had decided to switch their support to John McCain did not care for the way their new-found Republican leanings played onscreen. According to a WordPress.com announcement for the movie, \"this two hour film offers a sympathetic yet unflinching look at a genuine grass-roots political action group determined, for good or ill, to change the course of American history.\" Citing alleged electoral malfeasance including caucus fraud on the part of rival candidate Barack Obama's juggernaut campaign, PUMA attempted, without success, to secure the Democratic Party's presidential nomination for their candidate of choice, Senator and former First Lady Hillary Clinton.", "Emile de Antonio Emile Francisco de Antonio (May 14, 1919 – December 15, 1989) was an American director and producer of documentary films, usually detailing political, social, and counterculture events circa 1960s–1980s. He has been referred to by Randolph Lewis as, \"…the most important political filmmaker in the United States during the Cold War.\" De Antonio was born in 1919 in the coal-mining town of Scranton, Pennsylvania. His father, Emilio de Antonio, an Italian immigrant, fostered the lifelong interests of Antonio by passing on his own love for philosophy, classical literature, history and the arts. He attended Harvard University alongside future president John F. Kennedy. Despite this, De Antonio was familiar with the working class experience, making his living at various points in his life as a peddler, a book editor, and the captain of a river barge (among other duties). He would later go on to make a film about Kennedy's assassination called \"Rush to Judgment\" (1966), an early rebuttal of the Warren Report. After serving in the military during World War II as a bomber pilot, de Antonio returned to the United States where he frequented the art crowd, often associating with such Pop artists as Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, and Andy Warhol, in whose film \"Drink\" de Antonio appears. Warhol was famously quoted praising de Antonio with the words, \"Everything I learned about painting, I learned from De.\" In 1959, de Antonio developed G-String Productions in order to distribute the Beat Generation film \"Pull My Daisy\", and it was at this time that de Antonio discovered filmmaking. His first film, \"Point of Order!\" (1964), was a compilation film covering Joseph McCarthy and the Army-McCarthy hearings. In 1968, de Antonio signed the \"Writers and Editors War Tax Protest\" pledge, vowing to refuse tax payments in protest against the Vietnam War. De Antonio chronicled this art scene in his documentary \"Painters Painting\" (1972). He did not actually begin creating films until the age of 43, after making significant contributions to the modern art world through his uncensored promotion of the work of his contemporaries. In 1969, the Metropolitan Museum of Art held a water-stone exhibition titled New York Painting and Sculpture: 1940–1970, that included 408 works by 43 artists." ]
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[ "Australian" ]
When did Joanna Elisabeth Of Holstein-Gottorp's husband die?
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Duchess Marie Elisabeth of Saxony Duchess Marie Elisabeth of Saxony (22 November 1610 – 24 October 1684) was duchess consort of Holstein-Gottorp as the spouse of Duke Friedrich III of Holstein-Gottorp. As a widow, she became known as a patron of culture. She was a daughter of John George I, Elector of Saxony, and his spouse Princess Magdalene Sibylle of Prussia. She was engaged in 1627 and married in 1630. Her marriage was arranged by the Danish queen Dowager Sophie, and the duchess Dowager of Saxony, Hedwig of Denmark. In her dowry, she brought paintings by Lucas Cranach the Elder. In 1659, she became a widow, and in 1660 moved to Wittum Husum Castle. Her household at Husum became renowned as a culture center, and she herself a noted patron. She produced an interpretation of the Bible in 1664. She was married on 21 February 1630 to Duke Friedrich III of Holstein-Gottorp and had sixteen children:
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[ "Sophie Augusta of Holstein-Gottorp Sophie Augusta of Holstein-Gottorp (5 December 1630 in Gottorp – 12 December 1680 in Coswig) was regent of Anhalt-Zerbst in during the minority of her son from 1667 until 1674. She was a daughter of Frederick III, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp and Duchess Marie Elisabeth of Saxony. On 16 September 1649 in Gottorp, she married John VI, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst. After her husband died in 1667, she became regent for her minor son Charles William, until he came of age in 1674. She had fourteen children:", "Johanna Magdalene of Saxe-Weissenfels Johanna Magdalene of Saxe-Weissenfels (17 March 1708 – 25 January 1760), was a Duchess consort of Courland and by marriage member of the House of Kettler. By birth she was member of the Saxe-Weissenfels line of the House of Wettin. She was the born as only surviving daughter of Johann Georg, Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels and his wife, Princess Fredericka Elisabeth of Saxe-Eisenach. On 20 September 1730, in Danzig, she married Ferdinand Kettler, the Duke of Courland, who was 75 years old at the time. The marriage remained childless.", "Joanna of Hainaut Joanna of Hainault (1315–1374) was a Duchess of Jülich by marriage to William V, Duke of Jülich. She was the third daughter of William I, Count of Hainaut, and Joan of Valois. She was a younger sister of Philippa of Hainault, Queen of England, and Margaret II, Countess of Hainault. Joanna married William V, Duke of Jülich, their children were as follows:", "Joanna, Duchess of Durazzo Joanna of Durazzo (1344 – 20 July 1387) was the eldest daughter and eldest surviving child of Charles, Duke of Durazzo, and his wife, Maria of Calabria. She succeeded as duchess on the death of her father in 1348 when she was only a child of four years old. Joanna was a member of the House of Anjou-Durazzo. She reigned as Duchess of Durazzo from 1348-1368. She married twice; firstly to Louis of Navarre and then to Robert IV of Artois, Count of Eu. Joanna's father died in 1348 and Joanna succeeded him, being the eldest surviving child. However, Joanna remained in Naples rather than going to Durazzo. It was here she was betrothed to her cousin Charles Martel, son of Queen Joan. Charles Martel was heir in Hungary due to a lack of male heirs. The boy was moved to Hungary, however the engagement was broken when the young boy died around 1348 in Hungary. In 1365 aged twenty one, Joanna married her first husband Louis of Navarre, who became Duke of Durazzo in right of his wife. He was the son of Joan II of Navarre. In 1368 Durazzo was captured by the Albanian Topia dynasty under the leadership of warlord Karl Thopia. Joanna and her husband immediately began planning the reconquest of not only Durazzo, but all the lands of the former Angevin Kingdom of Albania, conquered by the Bulgarian Sratsimir dynasty in 1332. They were successful in rallying the support of Louis' brother Charles II the Bad and Charles V King of France in this undertaking. In 1372, Louis brought over the Navarrese Company of mercenaries, who had fought with him during the war in France, to assist them in taking Durazzo. Their ranks swelled considerably in 1375 with new recruits directly from Navarre. Many documents survive telling us of the complex nature of the military planning and engineering which was undertaken to ensure success. This they attained, taking the city in midsummer 1376. Louis died shortly after. Louis and Joanna had no children. Joanna never fully regained full control of Durazzo and by 1385 the City was back in the hands of Karl Thopia. Around 1376 Joanna remarried to Robert IV of Artois, Count of Eu. This marriage was also childless.", "Joanna Elisabeth of Holstein-Gottorp Johanna Elisabeth of Holstein-Gottorp (24 October 1712 – 30 May 1760) was a member of the German House of Holstein-Gottorp, a princess consort of Anhalt-Zerbst by marriage, and the regent of Anhalt-Zerbst from 1747 to 1752 on behalf of her minor son, Frederick Augustus. She is best known as the mother of Empress Catherine the Great of Russia. Johanna Elisabeth was born as the daughter of Christian August, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp (1673–1726), Prince of Eutin and Prince-Bishop of Lübeck and his wife, Albertina Frederica of Baden-Durlach (1682–1755). She was a member of the influential House of (Schleswig-)Holstein-Gottorp, but only from a minor branch. Since her father was not rich, but had a total of eleven children, he sent Johanna to the court of her godmother, Elisabeth Sophie Marie of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Norburg (1683–1767), who had no children of her own. Johanna was thus brought up in one of the most luxurious courts of Northern Germany, together with the three daughters of Elisabeth Sophie Marie's husband, Augustus William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1662–1731). In 1727, the fifteen-year-old Johanna was married to the thirty-seven-year old Prince Christian August of Anhalt-Zerbst (1690–1747), who was an heir to the Principality of Anhalt-Zerbst and a general in the Prussian army under Frederick William I of Prussia. After the wedding, the couple lived in the small city of Stettin, Pomerania (later known as Szczecin, Poland), where the husband's regiment was stationed. The marriage of Johanna and Christian August turned out to be a mismatch, both because of their large age gap and their different personalities. The soldier husband was a sober and simple man, used to giving orders and not talking much, while his young wife loved socializing. In addition, Christian August could only afford a small townhouse on his military pay, but Johanna was used to the luxury of the ducal court of Brünswick.", "Anna of Holstein-Gottorp Anna of Holstein-Gottorp (27 February 1575 – 24 April 1610) was a German noblewoman, daughter of Duke Adolf of Holstein-Gottorp and Landgravine Christine of Hesse (daughter of Landgrave Philip I of Hesse). On 28 January 1598, she married Count Enno III of East Frisia. They had the following children:", "Countess Elisabeth of Leuchtenberg Elisabeth of Leuchtenberg (born: March 1537- died: 6 July 1579 in Dillenburg) was the daughter of Landgrave George III, Landgrave of Leuchtenberg and Margravine Barbara of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1495-1552). After her death, the German theologian Christoph Pezel wrote an obituary about her. At least two portraits of Elisabeth of Leuchtenberg exist. The first is in the collection of the Rijksmuseum in the form of an anonymous picture, made between 1850 and 1930, a reproduction of a painting by an unknown painter. The second is a drawing in circular shape. Another portrait, also made by an anonymous painter, was initially identified as portrait of Charlotte of Bourbon, but it was later identified by L.J. van der Klooster as possibly Elisabeth van Leuchtenberg. Elisabeth was the first wife of John VI of Nassau-Dillenburg, son of William \"the Rich\" of Nassau en Juliana of Stolberg. She married on 6 June 1559 at Dillenburg Castle. They had thirteen children: Elisabeth died in 1579. After her death, John VI had two later marriages, with still more children.", "Elizabeth of Holstein-Rendsburg Elizabeth of Holstein-Rendsburg (c. 1300 – before 1340) was the regent of the Duchy of Saxe-Lauenburg during the minority of her son from 1321 until 1330. She was by two consecutive marriages, duchess of Saxe-Lauenburg and queen of Denmark by marriage (1330-1331) to Eric Christoffersen, son of Christopher II of Denmark. A member of the House of Schauenburg, Elizabeth was the daughter of Henry I, Count of Holstein-Rendsburg, and Heilwig of Bronckhorst. Her first husband was John II, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg, whom she married in c. 1315. Elizabeth gave birth to a son who succeeded her husband as Albert IV, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg, but she ruled the duchy as regent due to his minority. In 1330, Duchess Elizabeth married Eric, junior king of Denmark, the son of her brother Gerhard's enemy, King Christopher II of Denmark. The couple had no children and the marriage was dissolved the next year. Her former husband died in war with Holstein in 1332.", "Augusta Marie of Holstein-Gottorp Augusta Marie of Holstein-Gottorp (1649–1728) was a German noblewoman. She was the daughter of Frederick III, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp and Duchess Marie Elisabeth of Saxony. Through her daughter Albertine Frederica, she is a female line great-grandmother of Catherine II and great-great-grandmother of Paul I of Russia. She married Frederick VII, Margrave of Baden-Durlach on 15 May 1670 in Husum. They had the following children:", "Frederick IV, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp Frederick IV (18 October 1671 – 19 July 1702) was the reigning Duke of Holstein-Gottorp. He was born in Gottorf Castle as the elder son of Duke Christian Albert of Holstein-Gottorp and Princess Frederica Amalia of Denmark. He was married on 12 May 1698 to Princess Hedwig Sophia of Sweden and they had an only child, Charles Frederick, who eventually fathered the future Tsar Peter III of Russia, therefore making Frederick a patrilineal ancestor to all Russian emperors after Catherine II. He took part in the Great Northern War and was killed by artillery fire in the Battle of Kliszów in Poland. According to Robert Massie's \"Peter the Great: His Life and World\", Duke Frederick arrived in Stockholm to marry his cousin, Princess Hedwig Sophia, soon befriending his first cousin and new brother-in-law, King Charles XII (their respective mothers, Frederica Amalia and Ulrika Eleonora, being daughters of Frederick III of Denmark). His visit made such an impression on Swedish society that the excesses surrounding him and the King earned him \"the Gottorp Fury\" as a nickname. Duke Frederick and King Charles regularly participated in wild festivities, drinking binges, and outlandish pranks. Generally, Duke Frederick's influence was the blame for the King's \"reckless\" lifestyle. There were even rumors at the time that the Duke sought to kill the King and usurp the throne. As it happened, according to Massie in the aforementioned book, the 17-year-old King Charles, in the summer of 1699, pushed himself to an unbearable point of excess and vowed never to touch another drop of liquor again. Apparently, writes Massie, the King stuck to beer thereafter, and even just drank beer when he was either wounded or post-battle. As for his relationship with his cousin Frederick, they remained on good terms, so much that King Charles gave him military assistance to defend Holstein-Gottorp from Danish invasion." ]
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[ "16 March 1747" ]
Who died later, Clyde Dickey or Turid Karlsen Seim?
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George Dickey George Dickey may refer to:
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[ "Jerry Turbidy Jeremiah Turbidy (July 4, 1852 – September 5, 1920) was a 19th-century professional baseball player. He played for the Kansas City Cowboys of the Union Association in 1884.", "Dick Sedar Dick Richard Sedar (March 27, 1931 - June 6, 2019) was an American politician in the state of Wyoming. He served in the Wyoming House of Representatives as a member of the Democratic Party. He attended the University of Wyoming and was a businessman.", "George H. Dickey George H. Dickey (1858–1923) was an American lawyer from Valley City, North Dakota. He served in the Territorial House of Representatives of the Dakota Territory Legislative Assembly in 1881–1882. Dickey County, North Dakota is named in his honor.", "Colin Dickey Colin Dickey (born September 3, 1977) is an American author, curator, and critic whose work deals with ghosts, death, and haunting, and explores how these symbols function as metaphors. He was the Managing Director of the Morbid Anatomy Museum and is a member of The Order of the Good Death. He currently teaches at National University (California) Dickey has an MFA in Critical Studies from California Institute of the Arts, and a PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Southern California.", "Clyde Phillips Clyde Phillips may refer to:", "Watchara Krearum Watchara Krearum (, born May 11, 1986) simply known as Tum or Sieng (Thai: ตั้ม / เซียง). He is a retired professional footballer from Buriram, Thailand.", "Jim Dickey James Dickey (March 22, 1934 – February 17, 2018) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Kansas State University from 1978 to 1985, compiling record of 24–54–2. In 1981, he redshirted 18 players, including eight seniors and almost all of his best players. With all of those players returning the following season in 1982, Dickey led Kansas State to their first bowl game appearance in school history, the Independence Bowl, where they lost to the Wisconsin Badgers. 1982 was also the first winning season for the program since 1970 under head coach Vince Gibson. After opening the 1985 season with two consecutive losses to I-AA teams, Dickey was forced to resign on September 15. Assistant athletic director Lee Moon coached the team for the remainder of the season posting a 1–8 record. Dickey was the father of the former Kansas State quarterback and former head football coach at the University of North Texas, Darrell Dickey. He died on February 17, 2018 at the age of 83.", "Charles Currey Charles Norman Currey (26 February 1916 – 10 May 2010) was a British sailor who won a silver medal in Finn class at the 1952 Olympics. Currey was born into a marine family. He had to abandon an anticipated career in the British Navy due to an illness, and instead became a renowned sailor and boat builder. At the onset of World War II he was accepted as a member of Royal Naval Reserve, and was eventually promoted to lieutenant commander and appointed as captain of a gunboat patrolling the English Channel. He then returned to boat building and became an expert in the Firefly dinghy. He was considered for the 1948 Olympic team in this boat class, and was selected in 1952, when he won a silver medal ahead the Swedish boat designer Rickard Sarby. After that Currey designed and sailed other types of dinghies, as well as powerboats. In the 1960 he was appointed as managing director of the Fairey Marine company, where he worked for the past decades. His son Alistair Currey also became an Olympic sailor.", "George Rickey George Warren Rickey (June 6, 1907 – July 17, 2002) was an American kinetic sculptor. Rickey was born on June 6, 1907, in South Bend, Indiana. When Rickey was still a child, his father, an executive with Singer Sewing Machine Company, moved the family to Glasgow, Scotland, in 1913. They lived near the river Clyde, and George learned to sail around the outer islands on the family's sailboat. Rickey was educated at Glenalmond College and received a degree in History from Balliol College, Oxford, with frequent visits to the Ruskin School of Drawing. He spent a short time traveling Europe and, against the advice of his father, studied art in Paris at Académie L'Hote and Académie Moderne. He then returned to the United States and began teaching at the Groton School, where among his many students was future National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy. After leaving Groton, Rickey worked at various schools throughout the country as part of the Carnegie Corporation Visiting Artists/Artists in Residence program (partially funded by the Works Progress Administration). His focus was primarily on painting. While taking part in these programs, he painted portraits, taught classes, and created a set of murals at Knox College, Galesburg, Illinois. He maintained an art studio in New York from 1934 to 1942, when he was drafted. Rickey's interest in things mechanical re-awakened during his wartime work in aircraft and gunnery systems research and maintenance. Following his discharge, he studied art at the New York University Institute of Fine Arts and later at the Chicago Institute of Design, funded by the G.I. Bill. He taught art at variety of colleges, including Muhlenberg College. While at Muhlenberg, he was commissioned by J. I. Rodale to illustrate an edition of Anton Chekhov's \"The Beggar and Other Tales\". Rickey later moved on to Indiana University South Bend. There, he encountered and was inspired by the work of David Smith. Rickey turned from painting to creating kinetic sculpture. Rickey combined his love of engineering and mechanics by designing sculptures whose metal parts moved in response to the slightest air currents. His first sculpture was shown in New York in 1951 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art group show \"American Sculpture 1951\".", "Paul Dickey Paul Dickey (12 May 1882 – 7 January 1933), was an American playwright and silent screen writer. He wrote 17 films between years 1914 and 1953. He was born in Chicago, Illinois and died in New York, New York, aged 50." ]
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[ "Turid Karlsen Seim" ]
What nationality is John Harbaugh's father?
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Jay Harbaugh Jay Patrick Harbaugh (); born June 14, 1989) is an American football coach who currently serves as special teams coordinator and safeties coach at the University of Michigan. A native of San Diego, California, Harbaugh attended St. Augustine High School He played defensive line in high school, but knee injuries ended his career. Harbaugh earned a bachelor's degree in sociology from Oregon State University. He is the adopted son of University of Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh, grandson of former player and coach Jack Harbaugh, and the nephew of Baltimore Ravens head coach, John Harbaugh. Harbaugh spent four seasons as an undergraduate assistant at Oregon State under head coach Mike Riley. Riley was the head coach of the San Diego Chargers in 1999 and 2000 when Jay's father Jim was playing quarterback. Jay Harbaugh spent three seasons in all working in Baltimore for the Ravens under his uncle John Harbaugh. In 2014, his work focused on statistical analysis, self-scouting reports and breakdowns of opposing defenses. He was on the Ravens’ staff the year they beat his father's San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII. On January 20, 2015, Jay was officially introduced as part of the Michigan football staff and served as the tight ends coach and as an assistant special teams coach for the Wolverines. For the 2017 season, Jay was named running backs and special teams coach. He moved back to tight ends and special teams coach for the 2021 season.
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[ " 2 AFC seed Steelers, he earned the nickname \"Captain Comeback\" (the second player to be so nicknamed after Roger Staubach) for his ability to win games in the fourth quarter when his team was significantly behind. Harbaugh is second in the Bears' record book for completions with 1,023, while Jay Cutler holds the record with 1,034. Harbaugh also ranks second with 1,759 attempts and third in yards with 11,567. In January 2005, he was inducted into the Indianapolis Colts Ring of Honor as one of the most successful and popular players in the club's Indianapolis era. During his final eight seasons in the NFL (1994–2001), Harbaugh was an NCAA-certified unpaid assistant coach under his father Jack Harbaugh at Western Kentucky University (WKU). Serving as an offensive consultant, he scouted and recruited high school student-athletes throughout several states including Florida, Indiana and Illinois. He was involved in recruiting 17 players on WKU's 2002 Division I-AA national champion team. His father was a football coach for 18 years, including 14 years as head coach at WKU. Harbaugh was quarterback coach for the Oakland Raiders in 2002 and 2003 under Bill Callahan. During his tenure with the Raiders, Harbaugh coached starting quarterback Rich Gannon, who led the Raiders' run to Super Bowl XXXVII, won the 2002 AP NFL MVP award, and was selected to the 2003 Pro Bowl after the 2002 season. Other Raiders quarterbacks coached by Harbaugh include Rick Mirer, Tee Martin, Marques Tuiasosopo, and Rob Johnson. Prior to the 2004 season, Harbaugh was named head football coach at the University of San Diego. In his first year, he directed the Toreros to an overall mark of 7–4, including 5 straight wins to end the season. The following year, the team improved to 11–1 and won the 2005 Pioneer Football League championship. In 2006, USD again went 11–1, winning their second consecutive Pioneer League title in the process. Harbaugh was named the head football coach at Stanford University in December 2006, replacing Walt Harris.", "Ken Harbaugh Ken Harbaugh (born December 15, 1973) is a former United States Navy pilot and nonprofit executive. Harbaugh was the Democratic Party nominee for the U.S. House of Representatives representing Ohio's 7th congressional district in the 2018 election. Harbaugh, who grew up in a military family, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Duke University in 1996 and a Juris Doctor degree from Yale Law School in 2008, and studied at Oxford University while an undergraduate at Duke. He served for nine years in the United States Navy as a naval aviator. His qualifications include Electronic Warfare Aircraft Commander, the lead pilot of an EP-3A Aries II electronic reconnaissance aircraft. In 2015, Harbaugh wrote an opinion piece in the \"New York Times\", criticizing what he regards as a lax VA disability compensation program. Ken Harbaugh was the 2020 Hooah Award winner, given annually to an American veteran “who defines citizenship through service to our country, both in uniform and beyond.” His writing on civil-military affairs has appeared in The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Bulwark, and the Yale Journal of International Law. He served as a commentator for National Public Radio and as host for Crooked Media’s Reclaiming Patriotism. He currently hosts several podcasts, including Warriors in Their Own Words, and Burn the Boats, which received a 2021 Ambies nomination for best political podcast of the year. In 2007, Harbaugh co-founded The Mission Continues, a nonprofit focusing on veterans issues, with Eric Greitens, who went on to become the Republican Governor of Missouri. The organization was included in Joe Klein's book \"Charlie Mike\". He is the former president of Team Rubicon, a nonprofit that deploys military veterans worldwide as emergency first responders. Harbaugh and his wife, Annmarie, have two daughters and a son. In 2009, the family moved from Connecticut to Chagrin Falls, Ohio, and then moved to California in 2014. They moved back to Ohio in 2016, purchasing a home in Avon.", "Gregory J. Harbaugh Gregory Jordan Harbaugh is a former NASA astronaut. Harbaugh was born November 29, 1955, in Cleveland, Ohio, and grew up in Willoughby, Ohio. Harbaugh graduated from Willoughby South High School in 1974 and went on to receive a Bachelor of Science degree in Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering from Purdue University in 1978 and a Master of Science in Physical Science from University of Houston–Clear Lake in 1986. He is married with three adult children. He currently resides with his wife Carol in southern Wisconsin. Harbaugh came to NASA's Johnson Space Center after graduation from Purdue University in 1978. He held engineering and technical management positions in Space Shuttle flight operations, and supported Shuttle flight operations from Mission Control for most of the flights from STS-1 through STS-51-L. He served as Lead Data Processing Systems (DPS) Officer for STS-9 (Spacelab-1) and STS-41-D, Orbit DPS for STS-41-B and STS-41-C, and Ascent/Entry DPS for STS-41-G. He also served as a senior flight controller addressing issues requiring real-time resolution, for several flights from STS-51-A through STS-51-L. Harbaugh has a commercial pilot's license with instrument rating, and over 1600 hours total flying time. Selected by NASA in June 1987, Harbaugh became an astronaut in August 1988. His technical assignments included work in the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL), the Shuttle Remote Manipulator System (RMS), telerobotics systems development for Space Station, the Hubble Space Telescope servicing mission development, spacecraft communicator (CAPCOM) in Mission Control, and extravehicular activity (EVA) for the International Space Station (ISS). He was assigned as the backup EVA crew member and capsule communicator (Capcom) for STS-61, the first Hubble Space Telescope servicing mission. A veteran of four space flights, Harbaugh has logged a total of 818 hours in space, including 18 hours, 29 minutes EVA.", " He first became a regular starting quarterback in 1990 with Chicago. In 1995 with Indianapolis, he led the Colts to the AFC Championship Game, was selected to the Pro Bowl and was honored as NFL Comeback Player of the Year. From 1994 to 2001, while still playing in the NFL, Harbaugh was an unpaid assistant coach at Western Kentucky University, where his father Jack was head coach. In 2002, he returned to the NFL as the quarterbacks coach for the Oakland Raiders. Harbaugh returned to the college ranks in 2004 as the head coach at the University of San Diego. After leading San Diego to consecutive Pioneer League championships in 2005 and 2006, he moved to Stanford in 2007, where he led the Cardinal to two bowl berths in four seasons, including a win in the 2011 Orange Bowl. Immediately afterward, Harbaugh signed a five-year deal as head coach of the NFL's San Francisco 49ers, where he led the team to the NFC Championship game in each of his first three seasons after the franchise missed the playoffs for eight consecutive seasons beforehand. He and his older brother, Baltimore Ravens coach John Harbaugh, became the first pair of brothers to serve as head coaches in NFL history. Their teams played in a Thanksgiving Classic game in 2011 and in Super Bowl XLVII at the end of the 2012 season. Born in Toledo, Ohio on December 23, 1963, Harbaugh is the son of Jacqueline M. \"Jackie\" (née Cipiti) and Jack Harbaugh. His mother is of half-Sicilian and half-Polish ancestry and his father is of Irish and German ancestry. Both Jim and his brother John were born in Toledo, while his father was an assistant football coach at nearby Perrysburg High School in Perrysburg. During Harbaugh's childhood, the family moved frequently, as his father held assistant coaching positions at Morehead State (1967), Bowling Green (1967–1970), Iowa (1971–1973), Michigan (1973–1979), Stanford (1980–1981), and Western Michigan (1982–1986). Harbaugh played for the junior league Ann Arbor Packers and then for Tappan Junior High before moving on to Pioneer High School.", "John W. Harbaugh John Warvelle Harbaugh (1926-2019) was an American geologist who spent most of his professional career at Stanford University devoted to research on mathematical modeling of dynamic systems, sedimentary basin simulation and oil exploration risk analysis. Since 1999, he is Professor Emeritus both at the Geological and Environmental Sciences Department and at the Energy Resources Engineering Department. He received numerous honors and awards for his accomplishments and service to the profession that include the Haworth Distinguished Alumni Award of University of Kansas (1968), the A.I. Levorsen Award (1970) from the Pacific Section of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG), the Distinguished Service Award also from AAPG (1987), the William Christian Krumbein Medal from International Association for Mathematical Geosciences (1986), and the Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Wisconsin–Madison (2003). In 2001, his colleagues and friends presented him with a festschrift. In 2013, the International Association for Mathematical Geosciences elected him as Honorary Member.", "Jim Irsay James \"Jim\" Irsay (born June 13, 1959) is an American businessman, known for being the owner and CEO of the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League (NFL). Jim Irsay's father, Robert Irsay, built a fortune estimated to be over $150 million through successful heating and air-conditioning companies. Irsay was born in Lincolnwood, Illinois, the son of Harriet (née Pogorzelski) and Chicago businessman Robert Irsay. His father was from a Hungarian Jewish family and his mother was the daughter of Polish Catholic immigrants. Irsay was raised Catholic, and did not know about his father's Jewish heritage until he was fourteen. Jim's brother, Thomas Irsay, was born with a mental disability and died in 1999, and his sister, Roberta, died in a car accident in 1971. Irsay attended high school at Loyola Academy in Wilmette, Illinois a suburb just north of Chicago and at Mercersburg Academy '78, Mercersburg, Pennsylvania. After high school, he attended, and graduated from, Southern Methodist University in 1982 with a degree in broadcast journalism. Irsay played linebacker for the SMU Mustangs football team as a walk-on, but an ankle injury ended his playing career. Irsay was 12 years old when his father, Robert Irsay, purchased the Baltimore Colts. After graduating from SMU in 1982 he joined the Colts' professional staff. He was named Vice President and General Manager in 1984, one month after the Colts relocated from Baltimore, to Indianapolis. After his father suffered a stroke in 1995, Jim assumed day-to-day management with the role of Senior Executive Vice President, General Manager and Chief Operating Officer in April 1996. When his father died in 1997 Jim engaged in a legal battle with his stepmother over ownership of the team, but later became the youngest NFL team owner at that time at 37. In 2009 Irsay was vocal about preventing a group that included talk-show host Rush Limbaugh from purchasing the St. Louis Rams. \"I, myself, couldn't even consider voting for him,\" Irsay said at an NFL owners meeting. \"When there are comments that have been made that are inappropriate, incendiary and insensitive... our words do damage, and it's something we don't need.", "A. G. Harbaugh Arthur Granville Harbaugh (October 21, 1872 – March 14, 1934) was an American college football coach, assayer, and chemist. Harbaugh born in Roseville, Iowa, or Roseville, Illinois (sources conflict), the son of James Alexander Harbaugh. He attended Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, receiving a bachelor of arts degree in 1900. Harbaugh served as the head football coach at the Agricultural College of the State of Montana (later renamed Montana State University) during the 1901 and 1905 seasons. He compiled a 3–3–1 record as the football coach at Montana Agricultural. Professionally, Harbaugh was an assayer and chemist. He worked for the Hearst Mines in Durango, Mexico, and later for the American Smelting and Refining Company in Madison County, Montana. After the 1905 football season, he took a job as an assayer in Tonopah, Arizona. He became the chief assayer for the Goldfield Consolidated Mines Company. In 1919, he formed the Union Assay Company. Harbaugh was married to Nellie Grimes in 1904. In 1934, he died at the Arizona State Hospital in Phoenix; the cause of death was pulmonary tuberculosis.", "John Mitchell (American football coach) John Mitchell, Jr. (born October 14, 1951) is an American football coach and former collegiate player. Over the course of his career, Mitchell has broken several racial barriers, one of which was being the first black player for the Alabama Crimson Tide. Currently, he is the assistant head coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League (NFL). As a player, Mitchell was the first African-American to play football for the storied Alabama Crimson Tide. In his second year with the program he became the first African-American co-captain at the school. The next year, he became the team's first black assistant coach and also the youngest coach to have ever been hired at Alabama. Later he would break another barrier by becoming the first black defensive coordinator in the Southeastern Conference. His coaching career has spanned nearly 40 years during which time he has worked with several icons of the football coaching pantheon, including college coaching greats Bear Bryant and Lou Holtz as well as Bill Belichick and Bill Cowher in the pros. Teams he has coached have won championships at both the college and professional levels. Mitchell was born in Mobile, Alabama on October 14, 1951; the third of five children of Helen and John Mitchell, Sr. His father worked as a civil engineer for the United States Coast Guard. At Williamson High School in Mobile, which was an all-black school, Mitchell played football and basketball. As a senior, he played on the offensive line. Though standing , he weighed just , which major colleges considered too light for the position. His lack of size explains why he was not offered a football scholarship out of high school by any major colleges in his home state. He did, however, field football scholarship offers from historically black powerhouses like Grambling State University and Tennessee State University. Sports were not everything for Mitchell; he finished third in the nation in a science fair with a group of classmates. All five members of the science fair team were offered academic scholarships by the University of Alabama and Auburn University. Although these were the two schools Mitchell had dreamed of playing football for, neither was recruiting black football players at the time, and Mitchell very much wanted to play \"big-time college football\". Mitchell determined that his best chance of eventually playing Division I football was by going the junior college route. He accepted a football scholarship from Eastern Arizona Junior College in Thatcher, Arizona. Mitchell played on both the offensive and defensive lines at Eastern Arizona.", "Carl Harbaugh Carl Harbaugh ( – February 26, 1960) was an American film actor, screenwriter and director. On Broadway, Harbaugh performed in \"The Greyhound\" (1912) and \"The Bludgeon\" (1914). He was married to Frances Lawson Bouis (? - 1922). Toward the end of his career, he continued to act in the biopic \"Gentleman Jim\" (1942), the action picture \"Northern Pursuit\" (1943) and the action flick \"Uncertain Glory\" (1944). He also appeared in \"The Far Country\" (1955) and \"The Tall Men\" (1955). Harbaugh last acted in \"The Revolt of Mamie Stover\" (1956). Harbaugh died on February 26, 1960 at the age of 74 in the Motion Picture Hospital.", "Henry Harbaugh Apple Henry Harbaugh Apple (November 8, 1869 – 1943) was an American clergyman and educator born in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania. He graduated from Franklin and Marshall College in 1889 and from the Theological Seminary of the Reformed Church in 1892. Ordained to the ministry of his denomination, he became pastor of St. John's Church in Philadelphia (1892) and of Trinity Church in York, Pennsylvania. In 1905 he was president of the Potomac Synod of the Reformed Church. In 1909 he was chosen president of Franklin and Marshall College." ]
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[ "American" ]
Where was the director of film Two Tickets To London born?
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Two Tickets to London Two Tickets to London is a 1943 drama film made by Universal Pictures, and directed by Edwin L. Marin. The screenplay was written by Tom Reed, based on story by Roy William Neill. The film stars Michèle Morgan and Alan Curtis. A U.S. naval officer is found guilty for treason, but escapes with the help of a café entertainer. Allmovie wrote "Too expensive for a B"-picture, yet not quite an A, Two Tickets to London is an acceptable vehicle for French leading lady Michele Morgan and Universal contract player Alan Curtis;" while "TV Guide" called it "A standard programmer," and rated it 2/5 stars.
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[ "Two Tickets to India Two tickets to India (, \"Dva bileta v Indiu\") is a 1985 Soviet/Russian traditionally animated short film directed Roman Kachanov. It was produced at the Soyuzmultfilm studio in Moscow and is based on the story of the same name by Kir Bulychov. Compared to the book the story was significantly shortened. The astronauts from the planet Geda fly to India on a symposium on animal protection of the Galaxy. As a result of a technical malfunction one of them finds himself in a scout's camp situated near Moscow, transformed into a tiger. By means of July and her grandmother, the astronaut manages to reach India.", "John Crowley (director) John Crowley (born 19 August 1969) is an Irish film and theatre director. He is best known for the films \"Brooklyn\" (2015) and his debut feature, \"Intermission\" (2003), for which he won an Irish Film and Television Award for Best Director. He is a brother of the designer Bob Crowley. Crowley earned a BA in English and Philosophy (1990) and an MA in Philosophy from University College Cork. Crowley became involved in theatre as a student, seeing it as a stepping stone to directing film. He began directing plays in Dublin in the early 1990s, reached London's West End by 1996 and eventually become an associate director at the Donmar Warehouse. In 2000, he directed \"Come and Go\" as part of the Beckett on Film series and made his feature debut \"Intermission\" (2003), a comedy drama set in Dublin, starring Colin Farrell, Cillian Murphy and Kelly Macdonald, based on a screenplay by playwright Mark O'Rowe. In May 2005, Crowley, along with Danny Boyle, launched the UK Film Council Development Fund's \"25 Words or Less: Director’s Cut\" scheme to develop a feature film project, stating that he wanted particularly to \"create a contemporary 'rebirth' or transformation story about a man or woman who begins as someone that spreads coldness.\" In 2007, Crowley reteamed with O'Rowe for the thought-provoking BAFTA-winning drama \"Boy A\", about a young man's return to civilian life after imprisonment for a brutal childhood killing, which was made for British television but was released theatrically in the US the following year. It won him the Best Director (Fiction) award at the 2008 British Academy Television Craft Awards. Additionally, Crowley was Tony nominated for the hugely successful London and Broadway runs of Martin McDonagh's play \"The Pillowman\" in 2003 and 2005. He directed Neve Campbell and Cillian Murphy in the West End production of \"Love Song\" in 2006-7, and in 2007 filmed a television version of Harold Pinter's \"Celebration\" starring Michael Gambon, Stephen Rea and Colin Firth. In 2009 he directed the film \"Is Anybody There?\", set in 1980s seaside Britain, written by Peter Harness and starring Michael Caine as a grumpy ex-magician.", "Two for Joy Two for Joy is a 2018 British drama film written and directed by Tom Beard and starring Samantha Morton, Billie Piper and Daniel Mays. It is Beard's feature directorial debut. The film has rating on Rotten Tomatoes out of 16 reviews. Beth Webb of \"Empire\" awarded the film four stars out of five. Stephen Farber of \"The Hollywood Reporter\" gave the film a positive review and wrote \"Beard expects us to learn about the characters through their physical interactions as well as their facial expressions, and we end up caring deeply about these people even without conventional movie storytelling.\"", "2Graves 2Graves is a one-man play by the British playwright Paul Sellar with an original score by Michael Nyman. The story, which is performed in verse, tells of how protagonist Jack Topps (Jonathan Moore) became a criminal following his father's murder. \"2Graves\" was the first performance to take place after the Arts Theatre in London's West End was refurbished in 2006. \"The Times\" and the \"Evening Standard\" were among many publications rating the play highly.", "Garry Anthony Fraser Garry Anthony Fraser is a Scottish BAFTA-award winning film director and producer. Garry was the second unit director in the hit film \"T2:Trainspotting 2\"", "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.", "Two Jacks Two Jacks is a 2012 comedy-drama film directed by Bernard Rose starring Sienna Miller and Danny Huston. It is an adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's 1856 short story \"Two Hussars\" and is Rose's fifth Tolstoy adaptation, following \"Anna Karenina\" (1997), \"Ivans XTC\" (2002), \"The Kreutzer Sonata\" (2008) and \"Boxing Day\" (2012). The film premiered in competition at the Montreal World Film Festival (August 23 to September 3, 2012). In 1992, Jack (Danny Huston), a legendary filmmaker, returns to Hollywood after a long absence. He is looking to secure finance for his new film project. His return to Tinseltown is heralded by a series of adventures, as he drinks freely, seduces a beautiful woman named Diana (Miller), quarrels with studio executives and finally procures funds for his new project by winning a poker game. Twenty years on, the filmmaker's son (Jack Huston) arrives in Hollywood looking to make his directorial debut amid questions of whether he has inherited his father's gift.", "Room for Two (film) Room for Two is a 1940 British comedy film directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Frances Day, Vic Oliver and Greta Gynt. The film was written by Gilbert Wakefield, based on his 1938 stage farce. The film's Italian setting was overtaken by events, as by the time of its release Fascist Italy had entered the Second World War against Britain. The story takes place in Venice, where a womanising Englishman Vic Oliver takes a strong interest in a married tourist who is played by Frances Day. Oliver disguises himself in drag and gets himself hired as the Days' maid. When Day's philandering husband, played by Basil Radford, shows up, the fun starts. Allmovie wrote, \"when Day's philandering hubby Basil Radford comes home, the laughs start rolling in.\"", "David Eady (film director) David Eady (April 22, 1924 – April 5, 2009) was a British film director and producer. Born in London, he was the son of Sir Wilfred Eady (of the Eady Levy). His films include documentaries, dramas (often second features) and children's films. He received a BAFTA nomination for his short film \"Play Safe\" (1978), and an Oscar nomination was given to the short he co-directed with Geoffrey Boothby, \"Bridge of Time\" (1950).", "Rushes Soho Shorts Film Festival The Rushes Soho Shorts Film Festival, more commonly known as Rushes Soho Shorts Festival, is a yearly display of short films hosted by Rushes Postproduction. It has taken place every summer since 1999. What began as a small series of screenings at the Curzon Cinema in London's Soho area, has grown considerably since its inception. A large number of recognizable names have both acted in films at the festival, and presented the festival itself. The former include David Tennant, Dita Von Teese, and Michael Sheen. The latter include Graham Norton, Joseph Fiennes, and Basement Jaxx. Outside of the summer festival, Rushes Soho Shorts curates work for other festivals and events. These programmes are often composed of work that has been submitted to previous Soho Shorts festivals. In 2005, LoveFilm designated Soho Shorts as \"one to look out for\" and other publications, including \"The Guardian\" and \"Little White Lies\" have been similarly positive." ]
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[ "Jersey City" ]
Where did the director of film Fireman Save My Child (1954 Film) die?
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Fireman Save My Child (1954 film) Fireman Save My Child is a 1954 American comedy film starring Hugh O'Brian and Buddy Hackett. The movie was originally intended for Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. It was directed by Leslie Goodwins. In San Francisco in the 1910s, the clownish musical band that runs Firehouse 12 often drowns out alarms with their loud music. Smokey Hinkle (Buddy Hackett), a bumbling inventor and scion of a renowned firefighting family, buys retired firehouse horse Emma to pull his buggy, but when Emma hears an alarm, she follows the fire trucks at top speed. Smokey arrives at the fire at the same time as his pal, fireman Smitty (Hugh O'Brian), who points out that the blaze is in Smokey's own house. Smokey uses his new invention, an ingenious fire extinguisher, to put out the flames, prompting Smitty to hire Smokey as a fireman in exchange for half of the profits from the sale of the extinguisher. Back at the firehouse, Smokey immediately starts a fire and struggles to convince Lt. McGinty (Spike Jones), who is busy leading band rehearsal that they must stop playing and put out the flames. Soon after, Capt. Bill Peters (Tom Brown) demonstrates his new mechanized fire-engine, and although it continually breaks down, he insists to Chief Rorty (George Cleveland) that his truck is the way of the future. Rorty agrees to let him motorize one firehouse, but frustrates Bill by assigning him to Firehouse 12. The squad immediately set to work on the new equipment, and although Smokey proves to be an inept fireman, he excels at Bill's tests because of his dedication to memorizing the manual. To slow Smokey's progress, the other firemen steal his pants, forcing him to repeatedly attend drills in his underwear. Meanwhile, Smokey sells Emma, and her new owner (Ned Davenport) grows frustrated as she continues to chase fire trucks, and sells her for pennies. During the next weeks, everyone in the firehouse except for Smokey gains skills with the mechanized hoses and ladders. During one drill Smokey falls from the speeding truck into the apartment of Harry (Henry Kulky), a large and jealous husband who assumes Smokey is having an affair with his wife (Adele Jergens).
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[ "Duncan Gibbins Duncan Gibbins (13 October 1952 – 3 November 1993) was a British film and music video director, as well as a screenwriter. Gibbins was known for his romance and thriller films as well as for the various music videos he directed. Gibbins's first break was with the 1986 release of, \"Fire with Fire\", about a young woman who attends a Catholic school and a young man from a nearby prison camp who fall in love with each other and must runaway together to escape the law, the church and their parents. On 3 November 1993, Gibbins died as a result of third degree burns he received from a fire at the home he was renting. He was forty-one years old at the time of his death. Gibbins was born in Jersey, on 13 October 1952. He attended The Arthur Terry School, in Sutton Coldfield, Birmingham, where he captained the school football team. He started out his career as an actor on radio, and in television as a reporter for BBC Midlands Today. At one point, Gibbins decided that he wanted to try out journalism but found that he did not much care for it. Before coming to the US in the mid-1980s, he produced and directed a few documentaries for the BBC and made music videos for such groups as the Eurythmics and Wham!. He made his feature-film debut in the US with the 1986 romantic drama film, \"Fire with Fire\" in 1986 which starred actors Craig Sheffer and Virginia Madsen. Gibbins later co-penned the script for Roger Spottiswoode's \"Third Degree Burn\", a made-for-TV movie in 1989. In 1991, Gibbins released \"Eve of Destruction\", an action thriller film starring Gregory Hines about a female scientist who creates a sexy android version of herself and equips it with both the passionate emotions she lacks and also a nuclear bomb, then the trouble begins. Gibbins made his final film, \"A Case for Murder\" in 1993, which starred Jennifer Grey and Peter Berg about a lawyer who gets involved with her partner, then suspects him of murder in a case they are trying together. On 3 November 1993, Gibbins narrowly escaped a wildfire that was roaring through all of Southern California and was engulfing the home he was renting in flames.", "Henri Lavorel Henri-Albert-Sylvestre Lavorel (5 July 19147 January 1955) was born in Annecy, Haute-Savoie and was married to the English actress Madeleine Carroll from 1946 to 1949. Lavorel died in a car crash in Versailles in 1955 aged 40. He worked as a producer, writer and director, most notably on \"Le Voyage en Amérique\" (1951) (writer, producer, director) and \"C'est arrivé à Paris\" (1953) (producer, director).", "The Man of My Life (1954 film) The Man of My Life () is a 1954 West German drama film directed by Erich Engel and starring Marianne Hoppe, René Deltgen and Otto Gebühr. The film's sets were designed by the art director Fritz Maurischat. It was shot at film studios in Göttingen and on location in Hamburg. When a violinist returns to his home town after fifteen years away he strikes up a relationship with an old flame who is now working as a nurse.", "Love Is Forever (1954 film) Love is Forever () is a 1954 West German drama film directed by Wolfgang Liebeneiner and starring Karlheinz Böhm, Ulla Jacobsson and Ingrid Andree. The film is based on the play \"Fires of St. John\" by Hermann Sudermann. It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin. The film's art direction was by Willi Herrmann and Heinrich Weidemann. It was shot using Agfacolor.", "Aleksandr Melnik Aleksandr Vladimirovich Melnik (; 11 June 1958, Chervonopartyzansk – 8 September 2021) was a Russian film director. Melnik graduated from Odessa Hydrometeorological Institute, and worked for a time as a journalist and publisher. He was a member of the Guild of Russian Filmmakers. He was the father of film producer Anton Melnik. Melnik died at the Kitabo-Oron waterfall (Big Irkindinsky waterfall), located in the western part of the Putorana Nature Reserve, 120 km from Norilsk, together with the head of the Ministry of Emergency Situations Yevgeny Zinichev during the scouting of a filming location. Melnik slipped and fell off a cliff into the water. Zinichev died after he dove off the cliff to save Melnik, according to the ministry. Melnik's funeral service was held at the Church of St. Nicholas in Tolmachi on 11 September 2021, and he was buried later that day in the village of , where he had lived.", "Maurice Kaufmann Maurice Harington Kaufmann (29 June 1927 – 21 September 1997) was a British actor of stage, film and television, who specialised in whodunits and horror films, from 1954 to 1981, when he retired. He was married to Honor Blackman from 1961 to 1975; they appeared together in the film, \"Fright\" (1971). They adopted two children, daughter Lottie and son Barnaby, before divorcing in 1975. Maurice Kaufmann died in 1997 in London from cancer, aged 70. He was nursed, on his deathbed, by his ex-wife, Honor Blackman.", "Rear Window Rear Window is a 1954 American mystery thriller film directed by Alfred Hitchcock and written by John Michael Hayes based on Cornell Woolrich's 1942 short story \"It Had to Be Murder\". Originally released by Paramount Pictures, the film stars James Stewart, Grace Kelly, Wendell Corey, Thelma Ritter, and Raymond Burr. It was screened at the 1954 Venice Film Festival. The film is considered by many filmgoers, critics, and scholars to be one of Hitchcock's best and one of the greatest films ever made. It received four Academy Award nominations and was ranked number 42 on AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies list and number 48 on the 10th-anniversary edition, and in 1997 was added to the United States National Film Registry in the Library of Congress as being \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant\". Recuperating from a broken leg, professional photographer L. B. \"Jeff\" Jefferies is confined to a wheelchair in his apartment in Greenwich Village, Manhattan. His rear window looks out onto a courtyard and other apartments. During an intense heat wave, he watches his neighbors, who keep their windows open to stay cool. They are a lonely woman whom Jeff nicknames 'Miss Lonelyhearts', a newlywed couple, a pianist, a pretty dancer nicknamed 'Miss Torso', a middle-aged couple whose small dog likes digging in the flower garden, and Lars Thorwald, a traveling costume jewelry salesman with a bedridden wife. Jeff is visited regularly by his socialite girlfriend, Lisa Fremont, and a nurse named Stella. One night after an argument with Lisa, Jeff is alone in his apartment and hears a woman scream, \"Don't!\" and the sound of breaking glass. Later that night, during a thunderstorm, he observes Thorwald making repeated late-night trips carrying a suitcase. The next morning, Jeff notices that Thorwald's wife is gone, and sees him cleaning a large knife and handsaw. Thorwald also has moving men haul away a large trunk. Jeff becomes convinced that Thorwald has murdered his wife, and shares this with Lisa and Stella, who believe him when they observe Thorwald acting suspiciously. Jeff calls his friend Tom Doyle, a New York City Police detective, and asks him to investigate Thorwald. Doyle finds nothing suspicious—apparently, Mrs. Thorwald is upstate. Soon after, the neighbor's dog is found dead.", "Leslie H. Martinson Leslie Herbert Martinson (January 16, 1915 – September 3, 2016) was an American television and film director. Martinson was born to Gertrude and Lewis Martinson in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, on January 16, 1915. He had a brother named Bertram. He was a newspaper journalist before accepting a long-term job as an MGM script clerk in 1936. He began directing TV western series in the early 1950s. His first feature film assignment was Republic Pictures' 1954 film \"The Atomic Kid\", a Mickey Rooney matinée vehicle. Beginning with episodes of the series \"Conflict\", Martinson became a prolific director for Warner Brothers Television. In 1954-1955, he directed the first of Mickey Rooney's three failed situation comedy television series entitled \"\". Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Martinson continued directing feature films and episodic television including \"Maverick\", \"PT 109\", \"Temple Houston\", \"Batman\", \"\", \"Mannix\", \"Diff'rent Strokes\", and the made-for-TV movie, \"Rescue from Gilligan's Island\". During the 1980s, Martinson directed episodes of \"Harper Valley PTA\", \"CHiPs\", and \"Airwolf\". Martinson was President Emeritus of the West Coast Jewish Theatre. He was married to television host and writer Connie Martinson. They resided in Beverly Hills, California. He turned 100 on January 16, 2015 and died on September 3, 2016 at the age of 101. Prior to his marriage to Connie, Leslie was married to Louise Fish.", "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.", "Harry Colomby Harry Colomby (August 20, 1929 – December 25, 2021) was an American producer and screenwriter. While still a schoolteacher of English and social studies at a High School in New York City, he became the manager of the jazz pianist Thelonious Monk in 1955, and remained so for the next 14 years. As a talent manager, he had only four clients, the others being jazz pianist/singer Mose Allison, comedian John Byner and the actor Michael Keaton. Colomby co-scripted and produced for the 1984 film \"Johnny Dangerously\" alongside with, Jeff Harris, Bernie Kukoff and Norman Steinberg. He died in Los Angeles, California on December 25, 2021, at the age of 92." ]
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[ "Hollywood" ]
Where was the place of death of the director of film Smoke On The Potato Fields?
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Smoke on the Potato Fields Smoke on the Potato Fields (, literally, "the smoke of potato haulm") is a 1977 Czechoslovak film directed by František Vláčil. It stars Rudolf Hrušínský. The film is an adaptation of Bohumil Říha's novel "Doktor Meluzin". The movie opens in an airport abroad, as the middle-aged Dr. Meluzin and his wife are parting. He has decided to return to his native Czechoslovakia, in search of himself, or of a self that he used to be; his wife is remaining behind. Meluzin takes a job as a primary care physician at a health center in the small village of Větrov. He is given a modest room in an apartment that belongs to the health center, which he is to share with a young couple named Kodet. The villagers are at first a little suspicious of Meluzin, and he unsure of his place with them. His first patient, an old man, flees when asked to undress for his exam, and the nurse assigned to work with Meluzin seems dismayed when he insists on maintaining medical records for the patients. He is standoffish, and apparently disapproving when the ambulance driver takes him along on a detour to visit the ambulance driver's girlfriend, an impulsive young redhead named Markéta Zitová. When Meluzin lights a fire in a field, one autumn afternoon, in order to roast potatoes that he's been given for dinner, a villager yells at him to extinguish it. His return to his childhood homeland doesn't seem to be going well. On strolls to the cemetery, however, he befriends the village sexton, who jestingly calls him a "colleague," and he also befriends his neighbor Pavla Kodetová, a schoolteacher, after she lights a fire for him one day in the Franklin stove in his room and invites him into her kitchen for "lívance" (pancakes), which reminds him of his mother, who made them with bilberries when he was a child. Her husband, Petr Kodet, somewhat younger than she is, remains suspicious of Meluzin, however, especially after Meluzin detects tension between the couple. Despite his suspicion, Petr confesses to the doctor that he and his wife haven't been able to have a child and asks for medical help.
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[ "Norman Cohen Norman Cohen (11 June 1936 in Dublin – 26 October 1983 in Van Nuys, California) was an Irish film director and producer, best known for directing two feature films based on television comedy programmes, \"Till Death Us Do Part\" (1969) and \"Dad's Army\" (1971). He was also a director of several of the \"Confessions of...\" sex comedy series: \"Confessions of a Pop Performer\" (1975), \"Confessions of a Driving Instructor\" (1976) and \"Confessions from a Holiday Camp\" (1977). In addition to those films, he also produced as well as directed the adaptation of Spike Milligan's \"\" (1973), and the comedy sequel \"Stand Up, Virgin Soldiers\" (1977). Cohen's first film production was \"The London Nobody Knows\" (1967) narrated by James Mason and his final film was \"Burning Rubber\" (1981). He died after suffering a heart attack in 1983.", "Jim O'Connolly James Philip O'Connolly (23 February 1926, in Birmingham – December 1986, in Hythe) was an English actor, director, producer and screenwriter. He is best known as the associate producer of many of the \"Edgar Wallace Mysteries\" b-films made at Merton Park Studios in the early 1960s, though he also directed a number of other low budget British movies, including \"The Hi-Jackers\" (1963), \"Smokescreen\" (1964), and \"Tower of Evil\" (1972), as well as several episodes of \"The Saint\".", "Deuchny Wood Deuchny Wood (also known as Deuchny Woodland Park) is a Forestry and Land Scotland site in Perth, Scotland. in size, it is adjacent to Kinnoull Hill Woodland Park, of which Deuchny Hill is one of the five constituent hills (the others being Kinnoull Hill, Corsiehill, Barnhill and Binn). The wood is home to a prehistoric hillfort, referred to as \"Iqudonbeg\" in 1403, at which several artefacts have been discovered. Deuchny Burn flows out of the woods to the south, while Langley Burn cuts through its northeastern corner. Jonathan Gloag, the 28-year-old son of Stagecoach Group co-founder Ann Gloag, hanged himself in Deuchny Wood in 1999.", "Ken Annakin Kenneth Cooper Annakin, OBE (10 August 1914 – 22 April 2009) was an English film director. His career spanned half a century, beginning in the early 1940s and ending in 2002, and in the 1960s he was noticed by critics with large-scale adventure epic and comedies films, like \"Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines\", \"Battle of the Bulge\", \"The Biggest Bundle of Them All\" and \"Monte Carlo or Bust!\". During his career, Annakin directed nearly 50 pictures. Annakin was born in and grew up in Beverley, East Riding of Yorkshire where he attended the local grammar school. After leaving school he became a trainee income tax inspector in the city of Hull. Annakin subsequently decided to emigrate to New Zealand, and travelled around the world in a variety of jobs. He was compere and stage manager of Eugene Permanent Waving Company's roadshow, touring the Northern provinces. When World War II broke out, Annakin became a firefighter in Soho, then joined the Royal Air Force. Injured in the Liverpool Blitz, Annakin joined the RAF Film Unit, where he worked as a camera operator on propaganda films for the Ministry of Information and the British Council. \"We Serve\" (1942), a recruiting film for women, was directed by Carol Reed, who made Annakin his assistant director; Annakin subsequently directed several training films for Verity Films, a group led by Sydney Box, who was soon to become head of Gainsborough Pictures. His early documentaries included \"London 1942\" (1942), \"A Ride with Uncle Joe\" (1943), \"Make Fruitful the Land\" (1945), \"We of the West Riding\" (1945), \"English Criminal Justice\" (1946), \"It Began on the Clyde\" (1946) and \"Fenlands\" (1946). Annakin had made a number of documentaries for Sydney Box, and when Box took over as head of Gainsborough Pictures he brought Annakin with him and assigned him to his first feature, \"Holiday Camp\" (1947). It was a solid hit and launched Annakin's career. Box called in Annakin to replace Michael Charlton, who was directing \"Miranda\" (1948) with Glynis Johns. The resulting film was another success.", "David Cherkassky David Yanovich Cherkassky (; 1931 – 30 October 2018) was a Ukrainian film director and screenwriter. He made several animation pictures for Kievnauchfilm. David Cherkassky was born in 1931 in Shpola, Ukrainian SSR. Cherkassky graduated from the Kiev Construction Engineering Institute. He noted that Soviet parents anticipated that the Soviet Union will participate in war and so registered their children later to delay them to be drafted to army. Cherkassky in interview acknowledged that he was born in 1931. During World War II, he and his mother were evacuated to a village near the Russian city of Chkalov (today Orenburg). David Cherkassky was a member of the Ukrainian [Ukrainian SSR] gymnast team. Since he was 50, and until he was 80, Cherkassky enjoyed alpine skiing. After the death of Stalin, Cherkassky found out that his family origin is a small city of Shpola in Central Ukraine and he has some extensive family in the United States. His father was a director of typography after the revolution and later he served as an assistant to People's Commissar of Justice. He was married to animator and animation director Natalya Marchenkova.", "Bud Barsky Isidor \"Bud\" Barsky (June 19, 1891 – December 18, 1967) was a screenwriter and film producer active mainly during the silent era. Born in Ukraine in what was then part of the Russian Empire, he emigrated to the United States as a young man and grew up in New York. At age 15, he toured Alaska's gold fields with a musical troupe. During the First World War, he served in the Signal Corps. He founded the eponymous Bud Barsky Corporation in 1924, which concentrated mainly on action and western films. He also directed one film, \"The Coast Patrol\", in 1925. In the 1930s he was the general manager of Columbia Pictures, and he was a producer at MGM, Warner Bros., and Grand National. He died at the UCLA Medical Center in 1967.", "John Eldridge (director) John Eldridge (1917–1962) was a short-lived British film director. Gaining fame as documentary film maker in the Second World War for the Ministry of Information his topics covered both war and very particularly architecture and urban planning. He appears to have knowledge and/or training in these fields. Often working with poets he had at least five collaborative projects with Dylan Thomas. He was born in Folkestone on 26 July 1917. Around 1950 he joined John Grierson's film unit: Group 3 Productions. Over and above directing he also did several screenplays, most notably that of Pool of London and Operation Amsterdam. Plagued by ill-health he died in Brompton Hospital in London on 14 June 1962.", "Arthur Ibbetson Arthur Ibbetson BSC (8 September 1922 in Bishop Auckland, England – 19 October 1997 in Hillingdon, Middlesex, England) was a British cinematographer. Ibbetson was born in Bishop Auckland, England in 1922, and died from cancer in Hillingdon, Middlesex, England. His best-known projects were films with or for children, including \"Whistle Down the Wind\" (1961), \"The Railway Children\" (1970) and \"Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory\" (1971).", "Ivan Yakovlevich Yukhimenko Ivan Yakovlevich Yukhimenko (; 2 October 1892, Kharkiv – 6 February 1943, Kazan) was a Ukrainian actor, director and teacher. It is thought that he died during the Kharkiv tragedy.", "Greenpark Productions Greenpark Productions Ltd is a British documentary film production company, founded by Walter Greenwood in Polperro, Cornwall in 1938. The company relocated to London in 1939. After the war it expanded into making upmarket corporate films. Amongst its roster of directors were Ken Annakin, Ralph Keene and Humphrey Swingler, brother of the poet Randall Swingler. Greenpark Productions was a founding member of the Film Producers Guild, which set new standards for UK documentary film production. The company, together with its film archive, was acquired in 1977 by David Morphet, an award-winning documentary film producer. Greenpark Productions Ltd is still in business as a film archive, based in Cornwall. (www.greenparkimages.co.uk) This filmography below is a list of films produced or co-produced by Greenpark Productions." ]
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[ "Prague" ]
Where was the place of death of the director of film De Blaa Drenge?
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De blaa drenge De blaa drenge (The Blue Boys) is a 1933 Danish family film classic directed by George Schnéevoigt and written by frequent collaborator Fleming Lynge with the score by Kai Normann Andersen. The film stars performer Liva Weel.
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[ "Peter de Kock Peter de Kock is a Dutch cameraman, film producer and director. He studied at the Film academy in Amsterdam and worked as a director of photography on many films and documentaries. De Kock made his directorial debut with the film \"The Hands of Che Guevara\", a documentary about the severed hands of the Latin American guerrilla fighter Ernesto Che Guevara that were put in a jar of formaldehyde and disappeared from public view. The film was a success at many international film festivals.", "Matthieu van Eysden Mattheus Marinus \"Matthieu\" van Eijsden (26 April 1896 in Amersfoort – 8 November 1970 in Haarlem) was a Dutch film and television actor. (His name was often spelled Van Eysden).", "Engelen des doods Angels of Death (original title: Engelen des Doods) is a 1998 Dutch documentary film by director Leo de Boer. During World War II, the Soviet General Andrey Vlasov was in control of the 2nd Shock Army. The documentary contains images of people studying the location near the city of Leningrad (now known as Saint Petersburg), where the 2nd Shock Army was annihilated in 1942.", "Andreas Dresen Andreas Dresen (born 16 August 1963 in Gera) is a German film director. His directing credits include \"Cloud 9\", \"Summer in Berlin\", \"Grill Point\" and \"Night Shapes\". His film \"Stopped on Track\" premiered at the Un Certain Regard section at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Prize of Un Certain Regard. Dresen is known for his realistic style, which gives his films a semi-documentary feel. He works very teamoriented and heavily uses improvisation. In 2013 he was a member of the jury at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival. Dresen was born in Gera. From 1984-85 Dresen worked as a sound engineer for the Schwerin Theatre. From 1984-1986 he was a trainee at East Germany's DEFA Studio for Feature Films as an assistant director to Günter Reisch. Between 1989-91 he studied directing at the Konrad Wolf College of Film and Television in Potsdam-Babelsberg and was a Master student in Günter Reisch's class at the Berlin Art Academy. Starting in 1985, Dresen directed several short films, documentaries, and films for television, and wrote screenplays. Documentaries", "Willem van de Sande Bakhuyzen Willem van de Sande Bakhuyzen (Arnhem, 13 November 1957 – Amsterdam, 27 September 2005) was a Dutch film director. He made his acting debut in the 1986 Academy Award-winning movie \"The Assault\". His directing debut came in 1990, with the television series \"\". He directed 16 movies in his career, many of which received international praise. His movies won 21 awards and were nominated for an additional 11 awards. Of these, six awards and three nominations were for the Golden Calves. His 2001 art film Touch and his 2002 television movie \"The Enclave\" were nominated for an Emmy Award. Van de Sande Bakhuyzen died from cancer in 2005, the day before the premiere of his movie \"Life!\".", "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.", "Marc Simenon Marc Jean Chrétien Simenon, (19 April 1939 in Brussels – 24 October 1999 in Paris) was a Belgian born French director and screenwriter. He was the son of writer Georges Simenon (1903-1989) and the husband of Mylène Demongeot from 16 September 1968. He died falling down the stairs at his home in Paris.", "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.", "Fons Rademakers Alphonse Marie \"Fons\" Rademakers (5 September 1920 – 22 February 2007) was a Dutch actor, film director, film producer and screenwriter. His 1960 film \"Makkers Staakt uw Wild Geraas\" was entered into the 11th Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Silver Bear Award. During a career spanning several decades he directed 11 films, including \"The Assault\", which won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1986, and \"The Village on the River\", nominated for the same award in 1959. Making him both the first Dutch director to be nominated and win this award. He granted a wide-ranging interview to Radio Netherlands in 1987. He died in 2007 in a Geneva hospital of emphysema, after the life-support machines were switched off at his request.", "Roef Ragas Rudolphus Henricus Cornelis \"Roef\" Ragas (25 May 1965 – 30 August 2007) was a Dutch actor from Harderwijk. He was the older brother of Bastiaan and Jeroen Ragas. From 1984 to 1990 Ragas studied Dutch at the University of Amsterdam. He graduated on the phenomenon of \"time\" in \"De zondvloed\" by Jeroen Brouwers. Then he went to the Amsterdam Theatre School, where he graduated in 1994. He was a founding member of the Association of New Film and Television Makers, NFTVM, and sat on the board of the Dutch Association of Film and Television Makers, NBF, and the Dutch Film Festival. Ragas had a relationship since 1990 and was married to actress Susan Visser. Together they had two children. On August 30, 2007, Ragas, died at the age of 42 during a visit to \"Harkema\" restaurant due to sudden cardiac arrest. On Thursday, September 6, 2007 he was buried in Zorgvlied Cemetery." ]
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[ "Copenhagen" ]
When is the director of film Seven Psychopaths 's birthday?
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Seven Psychopaths Seven Psychopaths is a 2012 British-American satirical black comedy crime drama film written and directed by Martin McDonagh. It stars Colin Farrell, Sam Rockwell, Woody Harrelson, and Christopher Walken, with Tom Waits, Abbie Cornish, Olga Kurylenko, and Željko Ivanek in supporting roles. The film marks the second collaboration among McDonagh, Farrell, and Ivanek, following the director's "In Bruges" (2008). It is a co-production of the United States and the United Kingdom. "Seven Psychopaths" had its world premiere on 7 September 2012 at the Toronto International Film Festival, and was theatrically released in the United States and Canada on 12 October 2012, and in the United Kingdom on 5 December 2012. The film received positive reviews from critics. Marty is a struggling writer trying to complete his screenplay, "Seven Psychopaths". His best friend, Billy, makes a living kidnapping dogs and collecting rewards for their safe return. His partner-in-crime is Hans, a religious man whose wife Myra has cancer. Marty writes a story about a psychopath, the "Quaker", who stalks his daughter's killer for decades, driving him to suicide. Billy suggests Marty use the "Jack of Diamonds" killer, perpetrator of a recent double murder, as one of the seven. Billy puts an ad in the paper inviting psychopaths to share their stories for Marty's script. Zachariah Rigby approaches him, sharing his story of having been a part of a serial killer duo who killed other serial killers: the Texarkana Moonlight Murderer, the Cleveland Torso Killer, and the Zodiac killer. However Zachariah wants Marty to include a message to Maggie, his former partner in crime and lover, in the credits. Billy and Hans steal Bonny, a Shih Tzu, the beloved pet of Charlie Costello, an unpredictable and violent gangster. His thugs, led by Paulo, discover Hans' connection to the kidnapping. They threaten to kill Marty and Hans, but the Jack of Diamonds killer arrives and kills them. Charlie traces Myra to the cancer ward and kills her when she refuses to tell him anything. Billy goes to meet his girlfriend, Angela, who is also Charlie's girlfriend. After telling her he kidnapped Bonny, she snitches. Billy, discovering Charlie killed Myra, shoots Angela in retaliation.
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[ "Bruce Seven Bruce Seven (June 4, 1946 – January 15, 2000) was an American pornographic film producer and director. He created 200 films and is a member of the AVN Hall of Fame and the XRCO Hall of Fame. Bruce Seven worked on special effects in the mainstream film industry before he entered the adult film business. He started filming bondage porn on 8 mm film as a hobby around 1970. He was first hired as a professional camera operator around 1980, shooting bondage features for Bizarre Video. In 1983 Seven and actor John Stagliano formed Lipstik Video, a producer of lesbian themed porn. For Lipstik, Seven produced and co-directed his first film \"Aerobisex Girls\". Seven said publicly that he made lesbian porn because it's his preferred masturbation aid, of which there was, when he started, very little. Bruce Seven married pornographic actress Bionca in 1984. She appeared in a number of Seven's S&M fetish films such as \"Autobiography of a Whip\" (1991), which also included future porn producer Ed Powers. From 1984 to 1986, Seven directed a line of videos for Vivid Entertainment featuring Ginger Lynn. He also produced and directed the \"Loose Ends\" series for 4-Play Video starting in 1985. In the late 1980s he became seriously ill from emphysema. He recovered in 1989. Starting in 1990, Seven made films for John Stagliano's Evil Angel Productions as an outside director. For Evil Angel, he directed bondage films including \"House of Dark Dreams\" and lesbian films including \"Where the Girls Sweat\". He also directed several films in the \"Buttman\" and 'Buttwoman\" series. In 1993, Seven worked with Bionca to launch her new production company, Exquisite Pleasures. He produced and co-directed \"Takin' It to the Limit\" with Bionca. The video was Bionca's debut as director and it won the 1994 XRCO Award for Best Video. He also directed the \"Buttslammers\" series of all-girl films. In 1995, Seven suffered a stroke which left him using a wheelchair. He continued to produce and direct, but he withdrew from day-to-day filmmaking.", "The Seventh Victim The Seventh Victim is a 1943 American horror film noir directed by Mark Robson and starring Tom Conway, Jean Brooks, Isabel Jewell, Kim Hunter, and Hugh Beaumont. Written by DeWitt Bodeen and Charles O'Neal, and produced by Val Lewton for RKO Radio Pictures, the film focuses on a young woman who stumbles on an underground cult of devil worshippers in Greenwich Village, New York City, while searching for her missing sister. It marks Robson's directorial debut and was Hunter's first onscreen role. O'Neal had written the script as a murder mystery, set in California, that followed a woman hunted by a serial killer. Bodeen revised the script, basing the story on a Satanic society meeting he attended in New York City and setting it as a prequel to \"Cat People\" (1942), with Conway reprising his role as Dr. Louis Judd. Filming took place over 24 days in May 1943 at RKO Studios in Los Angeles. Released on August 21, 1943, the film failed to garner significant income at the box office and received mixed reviews from critics, who found its narrative incoherence a primary fault. It was later revealed that Robson and editor John Lockert had removed four substantial scenes from the final cut, including an extended conclusion. In spite of its mixed reception, the film became a cult film in England, noted by critics for its homoerotic undertones. Mary Gibson, a young woman at Highcliffe Academy, an expensive boarding school, learns that her older sister and only relative, Jacqueline, has gone missing and has not paid Mary's tuition in months. Therefore, the school principal tells Mary that she'll have to leave the school, but could remain if she works as a teacher's aide. She decides to leave to find her sister, who owns La Sagesse, a cosmetics company in New York City. Upon arriving in New York, Mary finds that Jacqueline sold her cosmetics business eight months earlier to her assistant, Esther Redi. Jacqueline's close friend and La Sagesse employee, Frances Fallon, claims to have seen Jacqueline the week before, at Dante, an Italian restaurant in Greenwich Village. Mary locates the restaurant, and discovers that Jacqueline has rented a room above the store, without having moved in.", "Patrick Grandperret Patrick Grandperret (24 October 1946 – 9 March 2019) was a French film director, screenwriter and producer. His film \"Murderers\" was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival.", "Patient Seven Patient Seven is a 2016 American horror anthology film with segments directed by Danny Draven, Paul Davis, Ómar Örn Hauksson, Dean Hewison, Joel Morgan and Johannes Persson. The film is inspired by 1972 British Amicus Productions anthology film \"Asylum\" and primarily stars Michael Ironside, featuring Jack Plotnick, Drew Fonteiro, and Rane Jameson in the frame story, with individual anthology entries featuring their own casts. \"Patient Seven\" is composed of seven segments, each of which relates to some psychological psychosis, ranging from amnesia to hallucinations to schizophrenia, or horror movie trope, particularly zombies, vampires, and ghosts. The anthology's framing device features Michael Ironside as the sadistic Dr. Daniel Marcus who has chosen to interview a series of patients whose psychoses he believes are caused by some sort of previously experienced trauma. Dr. Paul Victor (Jack Plotnick) permits him to interview six patients who all match his requirements, leaving the orderlies Shane (Drew Fonteiro) and Kyle (Rane Jameson) to follow his orders. Marcus then proceeds to trigger each patient's fears through some element of their past, causing them to panic and relate their story through the flashbacks, each of which is related through one of the segments. He dismisses each patient with sharp, cruel rebukes of what he claimed are their 'fake' psychoses. After summoning all six patients, Marcus steps into the hallway to discover Shane and Kyle dead. He is hit over the head by one of the patients he tormented and wakes up in a strait jacket, surrounded by the patients who he has been tormenting. Just as he's killed, he suddenly jerks awake, and it's revealed that Marcus is the titular seventh patient, with Dr. Victor revealed to be his doctor. After relating a story of his own, Marcus is mocked by Victor the same way he mocked the 'patients' in his hallucination, but when Victor turns his back, Marcus attacks and breaks his neck. Picking up Victor's glasses, he says that it's \"Time to make his rounds\" before proceeding to go on a killing spree through the institution.", "Christopher Crowe (screenwriter) Christopher Crowe (born August 1, 1948) is a screenwriter, film producer, and film director noted for having written the screenplays for \"The Last of the Mohicans\", \"Nightmares\", and \"Fear\", for writing and directing \"Whispers in the Dark\", and for having created the television series \"Seven Days\", \"The Watcher\", \"The Untouchables\", \"B.L. Stryker\", and \"B. J. and the Bear\". Born in Racine, Wisconsin, Crowe graduated from William Horlick High School in 1967.", "Seven Hours of Violence Seven Hours of Violence () is a 1973 Italian crime-thriller film. It marked the directorial debut by Michele Massimo Tarantini.", "Montgomery Tully Montgomery Tully (6 May 190410 October 1988) was an Irish film director and writer. Born in Dublin, Tully studied at the University of London, and originally entered the film industry as a director of documentaries. Later, Tully worked on low-budget British films, and is mostly known for his crime dramas. One of his films, \"No Road Back\" (1957), featured Sean Connery in a very early role. His last film, \"The Terrornauts\", was made in 1967. He also worked in television, directing episodes of shows such as \"Edgar Wallace Mysteries\", \"Kraft Mystery Theatre\", \"Man from Interpol\" and \"Fabian of the Yard\".", "Seven (2019 Indian film) Seven is a 2019 Indian mystery thriller film directed and filmed by Nizar Shafi, and produced by Ramesh Varma. Shot simultaneously in Telugu and Tamil languages, the film features Havish, Rahman, Nandita Swetha and Regina Cassandra in lead roles. While investigating an enigmatic man named Karthik, a police officer is bewildered by the conflicting statements about his identity. Three young women seem to share a mysterious connection with him and claim Karthik as their husband who has gone missing a few days/months before. An old man from an asylum claims that he knew Karthik as Krishnamurthy, who had died thirty years ago. The next day the old man was found killed. After the old man's death, another woman called Priya appears and claims Karthik as her husband, who has been missing since the previous day. The police officers are in shock with her claim because they had arrested Karthik two days before as the suspect of the old man's murder. During the investigation, Karthik fails to recognize the other three women who claimed him as their husband. In the next scene the woman is brought to the imprisoned Karthik. When she sees Karthik, they both smile at each other and suddenly the woman pulls a gun and shoots him. The police officer stops her act and asks her intention for doing thus. She reveals her love story and marriage with Karthik. After her marriage, due to some misunderstanding Karthik leaves her, after a few months she reads news about Karthik and the affairs he had with other three women (who claimed Karthik as their husband in the first half of the story). She was shocked with the news and assumed that Karthik is a playboy who had spoiled four women's lives (including hers) so, she decides that he is not fit to live. Karthik escapes from the hospital and with the help of a journalist he goes in search of those girls to know their intention to cause such trouble in his life. There he finds all the allegations given towards him are false as they have staged a drama against Karthik on the request of Saraswati, an old lady. Sarswati, the woman behind the scene is the main culprit who saves those girls from getting raped which was staged by herself as she wanted the help of those girls to trouble Karthik for revenge.", "Pete Walker (director) Pete Walker (born 4 July 1939) is an English film director, writer and producer, specializing in horror and sexploitation films, frequently combining the two. Born in Brighton, Walker made films such as \"Die Screaming, Marianne\", \"The Flesh and Blood Show\", \"House of Whipcord\", \"Frightmare\", \"House of Mortal Sin\", \"Schizo\", \"The Comeback\", and \"House of the Long Shadows\". His films often featured sadistic authority figures, such as priests or judges, punishing anyone — usually young women — who doesn't conform to their strict personal moral codes, but he has denied there being any political subtext to his films. Because of the speed with which he had to make his films, Walker often used the same reliable actors, including Andrew Sachs and Sheila Keith, the latter playing memorable villainesses in four of Walker's pictures. Walker decided to retire from filmmaking after his last film in order to focus on buying and restoring cinemas. Malcolm McLaren hired Walker to direct a documentary on The Sex Pistols entitled \"A Star Is Dead\". Walker was an unlikely choice of director for this project and the deal fell through when the band split up. Walker's work was reviled and condemned by some contemporary critics, while others were surprised to find relatively sophisticated subtexts in what were made and marketed as commercial exploitation films. Although Walker's movies have never undergone a critical reappraisal in the same way as Hammer films or his American contemporaries Tobe Hooper and Wes Craven, the release in 2005 of a DVD boxed set of five of his films was greeted with some good notices in the British national press. On his own work, Walker has said when asked if his films had hidden depths, \"Of course they didn't. But recently I had to record commentary for the DVD releases, so I saw the films for the first time since making them, and you know what? They're not as bad as I thought. But searching for hidden meaning ... they were just films. All I wanted to do was create a bit of mischief.\" \"Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema\" by Simon Sheridan (fourth edition) (Titan Publishing, London) (2011)", "Wes Craven Wesley Earl Craven (August 2, 1939 – August 30, 2015) was an American film director, screenwriter, producer, actor, and editor. Due to the cultural impact and influence of his work, Craven has commonly been recognized as one of the greatest masters of the horror genre. Amongst his prolific filmography, Craven was best known for his pioneering work in the horror genre, particularly slasher films, where he mixed horror cliches with humor and satire. Craven created the \"A Nightmare on Elm Street\" franchise (1984–2010), specifically writing and directing the first film, co-writing and producing the third, \"\" (1987), and writing and directing the seventh, \"Wes Craven's New Nightmare\" (1994). He additionally directed the first four films in the \"Scream\" franchise (1996–2011). He also directed cult classics \"The Last House on the Left\" (1972) and \"The Hills Have Eyes\" (1977), the horror comedy \"The People Under the Stairs\" (1991), and psychological thriller \"Red Eye\" (2005). His other notable films include \"Swamp Thing\" (1982), \"The Serpent and the Rainbow\" (1988), \"Shocker\" (1989), \"Vampire in Brooklyn\" (1995), and \"Music of the Heart\" (1999). Craven received several accolades across his career, which includes a Scream Award, a Sitges Film Festival Award, a Fangoria Chainsaw Award, and nominations for a Saturn Award and several other film festivals. In 1995, he was honored by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films with the Life Career Award, for his accomplishments in the horror genre. In 2012, the New York City Horror Film Festival awarded Craven the Lifetime Achievement Award. On August 30, 2015, Craven died of a brain tumor at his home in Los Angeles, four weeks after his 76th birthday. Craven was born in Cleveland, Ohio, the son of Caroline (née Miller) and Paul Eugene Craven. He was raised in a strict Baptist family. Craven earned an undergraduate degree in English and psychology from Wheaton College in Illinois and a master's degree in philosophy and writing from Johns Hopkins University." ]
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[ "26 March 1970" ]
Do the movies The 10th Victim and Bunker Bean, originate from the same country?
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The 10th Victim The 10th Victim () is a 1965 film directed and co-written by Elio Petri, starring Marcello Mastroianni, Ursula Andress, Elsa Martinelli and Salvo Randone. An international co-production between Italy and France, it is based on Robert Sheckley's 1953 short story "Seventh Victim". Taking place in the year 2079 in the aftermath of world war 3, the film's focus is on a government-endorsed program known as "The Big Hunt", whereby contestants from around the world act as "hunters" and "victims" in two-person battles to the death as a means of avoiding mass warfare. The plot follows veteran Big Hunt contestants Caroline Meredith (Andress) and Marcello Poletti (Mastroianni), who are respectively assigned the roles of hunter and victim for one such confrontation, which is complicated by their budding romance. Like Petri's other films, "The 10th Victim" is a work of socio-political satire, while also combining science fiction themes with conventions of the "commedia all'italiana" genre. An avid reader of science fiction, Petri began work on an adaptation of Sheckley's story in 1961; producer Carlo Ponti came onboard the project due to the involvement of Mastroianni. A variety of screenwriters worked on the script to varying degrees without receiving an onscreen credit, including Suso Cecchi D'Amico, Nate Monaster and Ernesto Gastaldi. Ponti's lack of interest in the science fiction genre led to his mandating of more comedic elements in the story against Petri's wishes, including altering its original, pessimistic ending. Backed by financial support from Joseph E. Levine's Embassy Pictures, filming took place primarily on location in Rome and New York City from June to September 1964; produced at the height of the pop art movement in Italy, Petri sought to create a vision of the future that juxtaposes that style's imagery with Rome's ancient and modern architectural structures, such as the Colosseum and the EUR district. Upon release, "The 10th Victim" performed below Ponti's expectations in Italy and received mixed reviews from critics.
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[ "Bomb at 10:10 Bomb at 10:10 is a 1967 Yugoslavian war film directed by Caslav Damjanovic and starring George Montgomery. An American P.O.W. works with Yugoslav partisans to assassinate an SS Colonel and concentration camp Commandant. The film was shot in Yugoslavia in 1966.", "Girl in the Bunker Girl in the Bunker is a 2018 TV film that aired on Lifetime that told about the kidnapping of Elizabeth Shoaf at the hands of Vinson Filyaw. The film stars Julia Lalonde, Henry Thomas, and Moira Kelly. After exiting her school bus, Elizabeth Shoaf (Julia Lalonde) is approached by Vinson Filyaw (Henry Thomas) disguised as a police officer who pretends to arrest her for marijuana farming where he herds her into his underground bunker where he raped her every day. Her parents Madeline and Don (Moira Kelly and Stephen Park) are unaware that their missing daughter is closer than they think.", "Atomic Lobster Atomic Lobster is the tenth novel by Tim Dorsey. It was released January 27, 2008. It follows overly zealous serial killer Serge A. Storms.", "Beans (2020 film) Beans is a 2020 Canadian drama film directed by Mohawk-Canadian filmmaker Tracey Deer. It explores the 1990 Oka Crisis at Kanesatake, which Deer lived through as a child, through the eyes of Tekehentahkhwa (nicknamed \"Beans\"), a young Mohawk girl whose perspective on life is radically changed by these events. The film premiered at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival, where it was second runner up for the People's Choice Award. It was also featured at the 2021 New York International Children's Film Festival, among others. The film won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Picture at the 9th Canadian Screen Awards in 2021, along with the John Dunning Best First Feature Film Award. Tekehentahkhwa, who goes by the nickname \"Beans\", is a preteen who lives on a reservation in Kahnawake; she is encouraged by her mother, Lily, to try to apply for a prestigious school in Montreal, something her father opposes. After seeing their cousin Karahwen'hawi on TV protesting the expansion of a golf course into Kahnawake territory, the entire family drives down to support the protestors. Beans and her little sister are quickly caught up in a police raid, which strengthens her parents' resolve to stay and help during the protest. Tensions grow fast. Barricades are built and the Kahnawake territory is isolated. Food runs short and women and children are given the possibility to evacuate. Outside, protesters throw rocks at the evacuating cars. In the meantime, Beans befriends April, an older girl she seeks to emulate. April teaches Beans to toughen up, in a hard way. The semi-autobiographical story is based on historic events that Deer lived through as a child. While she includes harsh events, she has said she wanted to avoid having the film be traumatic for viewers. It is recommended for viewers of 14+ in age. Filming took place in Kahnawake and Montreal in 2019. Deer began writing the script in 2012, in collaboration with Meredith Vuchnich. It was a long, seven-year process, partly because revisiting the Oka Crisis brought up difficult memories. She sought therapy to help her deal with them. \"Beans\" had its world premiere at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival in September 2020.", "Anthrax War Anthrax War is a 2009 documentary film about the 2001 anthrax attacks and the rise of today's biomilitary industrial complex that was co-produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and Arte-France. Broadcast internationally, it was nominated for the 2009 Prix Europa for Outstanding Current Affairs Broadcast. It also screened at the Frontline Club in London, the IDFA Festival in Amsterdam, the Tri-Continental Film Fest in Johannesburg, and the 9/11 Film Festival in Oakland, California, among other venues. Filmmakers Bob Coen and Eric Nadler also wrote the accompanying book \"Dead Silence\" that discusses, in greater detail, the investigation that the documentary examines. Shortly after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, anthrax-laced letters were mailed to offices of media outlets in New York City and Florida, and to the U. S. Senate in Washington DC, creating an atmosphere of fear across the United States and beyond. The filmmakers question the official story surrounding the FBI investigation of this instance of biological terrorism.", "Bunker 6 Bunker 6 is a Canadian psychological thriller film set in an alternate timeline in which a nuclear holocaust takes place during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Most of the film's action is set a decade later, inside a very large fallout shelter, in which a group of survivors are faced with the dilemma of continuing life in the shelter or facing the uncertainty of life in a world contaminated by radiation. Theatrically released, the film was also destined for television and \"direct-to-video\" release. Directed by Canadian writer and director Greg Jackson, in his first feature film, it stars Andrea Lee Norwood and Molly Dunsworth. The supporting cast includes Jim Fowler, Glen Matthews and Shelley Thompson. The film was shot in an actual fallout shelter in Nova Scotia. On October 30, 1962, young Grace (Sophie Elliott) knows her father (Glenn Lefchak), who is a high-ranking military officer, is afraid that the United States and the Soviet Union are about to unleash nuclear attacks on each other's homeland. He takes her and her mother (Geneviève Steele) to a fallout shelter. A tragic accident, however, separates the girl from her parents, and she is trapped in Bunker #6 where Lewis (Daniel Lillford), a kind technician at the shelter, looks after her. Ten years later, the nuclear fallout shelter Bunker #6 is still the home for Grace (Andrea Lee Norwood). When Lewis, her mentor and father figure, dies, she is left to take charge of a small group of survivors in a deteriorating underground shelter. The group is unaware of any other survivors of the nuclear holocaust that has enveloped the Earth. Grace's daily task is to monitor the communications room and try to establish contact with others who have survived the war. One day, she hears a scratchy message from Bunker #8, but her efforts to tell the others about the discovery is met with dismayed reactions as the radio sets remain dead. Alice (Molly Dunsworth), Grace's arch rival for control of the bunker, is upset and demands that the radio monitoring be stopped. Grace receives motherly advice from Mary (Shelley Thompson) but events begin to take a strange turn with Eric (Jim Fowler) and Joe (Glen Matthews) at odds over Eric's attempts to leave the shelter. Grace seemingly sees her friends murdered as she starts to hallucinate.", "The Tenth Circle (film) The Tenth Circle is a 2008 Canadian drama/mystery television film directed by Peter Markle and starring Kelly Preston, Ron Eldard, Jamie Johnston, Britt Robertson, and Haley Beauchamp. It is based on a Jodi Picoult novel of the same name. The film premiered on June 28, 2008, on Lifetime. When freshman Trixie Stone (Brittany Robertson) accuses her ex-boyfriend Jason Underhill (Jamie Johnston) of raping her, everyone is quick to take his side when he claims their intercourse was consensual. Trixie's parents, Daniel (Ron Eldard), a mild mannered comic book artist from a harsh background, and Laura (Kelly Preston), a college professor of literature sleeping with one of her students, become involved. After questioning Trixie and conducting a blood test it is revealed that Trixie was drugged, and people begin to believe that she was really raped. Jason, whose life is supposedly ruined, leaps from a bridge. Although first presumed to be suicide, Trixie and her father are later suspected of pushing him off the bridge. After the police call Daniel requesting blood samples from him and Trixie to compare to blood found under Jason's fingernails, he attempts to flee with her in his car but is soon stopped by the police, and he then tells Trixie that he was the one who pushed Jason off the bridge. Daniel is brought in to the police station and confesses to pushing Jason, but is then brought to another room with Laura inside. Laura confesses to Daniel that she was there when Jason died. Jason (who was drunk) and Laura get into an argument as he is standing outside the bridge rails and in the struggle he loses his balance and falls off the bridge. Laura tries to grab him but is unable to pull him up and he falls down leaving scratches on Laura's hands. The police decide not to press charges against Laura and the whole family is released. The title of the film is based on the notion in Dante's \"Divine Comedy\" that hell is divided into nine circles. In one of the final scenes of the movie, Laura, who is teaching the \"Divine Comedy\" in college, says that there must be a tenth circle in hell, kept for those who hurt their beloved ones and kept acting as if everything was as usual. The film was shot in Windsor, Nova Scotia.", "Ten Dead Men Ten Dead Men is a 2008 thriller film directed by Ross Boyask, produced by Phil Hobden, and starring Brendan Carr, Terry Stone, Doug Bradley, Pooja Shah, Ben Shockley, Lee Latchford-Evans, JC Mac, and Tom Gerald. It is the follow-up to the cult independent film \"Left for Dead\". Produced by the same company, (Modern Life?) \"Ten Dead Men\" features many of the same actors as its predecessor. \"Ten Dead Men\" was The film released in UK, France, Indonesia and Japan. As the film begins, Ryan has spent years putting his brutal past behind him—a different man now to the stone cold killer he was a lifetime ago. But when an old face from the past arrives on his doorstep, Ryan is called upon to repay a blood debt from years ago. But the price is too high. Betrayed, and with his life falling apart around him, Ryan goes on a murderous, bloody revenge spree against the Ten Men who took his life away from him. It took 18 months from production starting to finishing filming. The film's action was handled by Hong Kong fight director/stunt man Jude Poyer who has worked alongside actors such as Jet Li and Jean-Claude Van Damme on a host of US and Asian action films. The film stars actor/martial artist Brendan Carr, Terry Stone, Pooja Shah, Ben Shockley, Lee Latchford-Evans, JC Mac, Tom Gerald, and Phil Hobden. Doug Bradley provides the film's voiceover narration. The film also features cameos from actor/musician/entertainer Chico, MMA fighter Kimo, Dave Legeno, Cage Rage promoter Dave O'Donnell, Silvio Simac, Cecily Fay and Glenn Salvage. The production of \"Ten Dead Men\" was tracked in regular articles in \"Impact Magazine\", written by the film's producer Phil Hobden. \"Impact Magazine\" was given the first review of the film.", "The Blacks (film) The Blacks () is a 2009 Croatian drama film directed by Goran Dević and Zvonimir Jurić. The film was selected as the Croatian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 83rd Academy Awards, but it did not make the final shortlist. The main title of the film refers to a fictional paramilitary formation, which uses the nickname of the unit of the army of the fascist Independent State of Croatia during World War II. The plot takes place in the post-war Osijek. The soldiers were given the task of retrieving the bodies of fallen comrades from the minefield. The plot includes real events related to the \"Garage\" case, a war crime in which Serb prisoners of war were tortured.", "Bunker Tragedy The Bunker Tragedy or the Bunkerdrama was an atrocity committed by the staff at the Herzogenbusch concentration camp (also known as \"Kamp Vught\") in the Netherlands, in January 1944 during World War II. When one woman from barrack 23B was locked up in the camp prison (the 'bunker'), other women protested against it. Commander Adam Grünewald, as a punishment, had as many women as possible incarcerated in one cell. Eventually, 74 women were pressed together in cell 115, which had a floor area of 9m and hardly any ventilation. After 14 hours of confinement, the inmates were released from the cell. Ten women did not survive the night. The incident soon became known outside the camp and was written about in resistance newspapers. The occupying power was not pleased with the fact that the news had leaked. The commander was demoted to the ranks and was sent to the Eastern front, where he was killed in combat. , one of the bunker victims, wrote: 'When the lights went off, a great panic rose among the women. It was a strange swelling sound, which sometimes would diminish, but soon swell up again. It was caused by praying, screaming and yelling women. Some tried to yell over it to calm the women down, so they could save oxygen. Sometimes it would help a bit, but then it would start again. It would not stop, it continued the whole night. It diminished, though, because the heat was suffocating.' This event is being remembered annually in closed circle." ]
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[ "no" ]
Does Terry Stembridge have the same nationality as Grace English?
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Grace English Grace Geraldine English (1891-4 December 1956) was a British painter and etcher. English was born in London and as a teenager spent time in Paris and Germany. In Germany she met I. A. R. Wylie and produced illustrations for her book on the Black Forest. Returning to London in 1912 she studied at the Slade School of Art in the city until 1914. At the Slade she won a painting prize. During World War I, English worked in a munitions factory and also produced machine drawings. After the war she studied etching at the Royal College of Art during 1921. Throughout her career English painted portraits, flowers and ballet dancers. She was a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy and at the New English Art Club and with the Royal Society of British Artists and the Royal Society of Portrait Painters. Leeds City Art Gallery holds examples of her work.
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[ "Grace Taylor Grace Taylor may refer to:", "Topher Grace Christopher John Grace ( ; born July 12, 1978) is an American actor. He is known for portraying Eric Forman in the Fox sitcom \"That '70s Show\", Eddie Brock / Venom in Sam Raimi's film \"Spider-Man 3\", Pete Monash in \"Win a Date with Tad Hamilton!\", Carter Duryea in \"In Good Company\", Edwin in \"Predators\", Getty in \"Interstellar\", Adrian Yates in \"American Ultra\", and David Duke in Spike Lee's film \"BlacKkKlansman\". His other film roles include \"Traffic\", \"Mona Lisa Smile\", \"Valentine's Day\", \"Take Me Home Tonight\", \"The Big Wedding\", \"War Machine\", \"Breakthrough\", and \"Irresistible\". He currently stars as Tom Hayworth in the comedy series \"Home Economics\". Grace was born in New York City, the son of Pat, an assistant to the schoolmaster of the New Canaan Country School, and John Grace, a Madison Avenue executive. He has a sister, Jenny. His paternal grandmother was from a German-Jewish family, whereas his mother is of Irish descent. Grace grew up in Darien, Connecticut, where actress Kate Bosworth was a middle-school friend, and actress Chloë Sevigny—who later appeared with him in high school stage plays—was sometimes his babysitter. Grace was cast as Eric Forman on Fox's \"That '70s Show\", which debuted in 1998. He played the role until the show's 8th and final season. His character was written out and replaced with a new character named Randy Pearson (Josh Meyers). Grace made a brief guest appearance in the final episode. Grace played a prep school student who used marijuana and introduced his girlfriend to freebasing in director Steven Soderbergh's 2000 film \"Traffic\", as well as having uncredited cameos as himself in Soderbergh's \"Ocean's Eleven\" and its 2004 sequel, \"Ocean's Twelve\". \"The joke is that you're supposed to play the worst version of yourself and I don't think too many people are comfortable with that. I never thought for a second that people were really going to think that's what I was like. I think that people will know that I was faking it in those movies\", he told \"Flaunt\" magazine in 2007. He planned to cameo in \"Ocean's Thirteen\".", "Thomas English Thomas English may refer to:", "Yorke (musician) Grace Hughes, known as Yorke, is an Australian musician, singer and songwriter from Byron Bay, Australia. Grace supported Ruel on his 2019 'Painkiller' tour. Her song \"Wake the City\" was featured on the show 9-1-1 (TV series).", "Grace Abbey Grace Abbey (born 21 January 1999) is an English-born Australian footballer who currently plays for Adelaide United and the Australia women's national under-20 soccer team.", "Grace Arnold Grace Arnold (19 September 1894 – 26 February 1979) was an English actress.", "Grace King (badminton) Grace King (born 21 June 2000) is an English badminton player. She trained in her hometown in Derbyshire under coach James Boxall and Steve Butler. She made her international debut in 2013 at the Danish Junior Cup. King represented Great Britain at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics. \"Women's doubles\" \"Girls' singles\"", "Tommy English Tommy English may refer to:", "Grace Perry Dr. Grace Perry (3 February 1927 — 3 July 1987) was an Australian poet, playwright, and founder and editor of the South Head Press and \"Poetry Australia\" magazine. Her press and magazine provided launching pads for many noted Australian poets such as Bruce Beaver, Les Murray, John Tranter and John Millett. She was born in Melbourne and educated in Queensland and Sydney. She graduated in medicine from the University of Sydney in 1951. She split her time between pediatrics and literary affairs as poet, editor, publisher. She was a member of the Australian Society of Authors. She organised poetry workshops and writing schools in Sydney. At Berrima, where she lived in her last years, she ran a 2000-acre property and maintained an interest in stud breeding. Perry controlled her magazine, \"Poetry Australia\", and was committed to publishing diverse styles and subjects. Perry aimed for international significance while maintaining a strong Australian presence. The work of many international writers, including translations, appeared in Poetry Australia. Unusually, most issues did not identify the contributors' nationalities. International contributors included Ezra Pound, Ted Hughes, Seamus Heaney, Louis Simpson, Robert Peters and Margaret Atwood. Translations included early Russian poets (by Rosemary Dobson and David Campbell), Laurence Springarn's translations from Portuguese and Mark Scrivener's translations of German classics. Poetry Australia published special issues of New Zealand, Canadian, Italian, Japanese, Dutch and Flemish, American, Gaelic, French, Austrian, Swedish and Papua New Guinean poetry. In 1985 Perry won the NSW Premier's Special Literary Award for services to literature. In 1986 she was made Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for \"service to Australian literature, particularly as editor of \"Poetry Australia\"\". Australia Fund. This fund was instrumental in the establishment in 2002 of the magazine Blue Dog: Australian Poetry, which editor Ron Pretty declared was in \"direct line of succession from \"Poetry Australia\"\". The Grace Perry Memorial Award recognises achievements by Australian poets. Dorothy Jensen, \"The Remarkable Grace Perry: Poet and Publisher of Poetry Australia Paediatrician and breeder of Simmental Bulls\" (2020).", "Bill English (musician) William English (August 27, 1925 - March 4, 2007, New York City) was an American jazz drummer. English played early in his career with rhythm and blues musicians in the 1950s, including Sonny Thompson and Amos Milburn. He then worked with Julian Dash, Bennie Green, and Erskine Hawkins in the mid-1950s before becoming a house drummer at New York's Apollo Theatre. Late in the 1950s he worked with his own ensemble, and in the 1960s played with Earl Hines, Prestige Blues Swingers, Gene Ammons, Quincy Jones, Joe Newman, Stanley Turrentine, Kenny Burrell, and Eddie Jefferson. He remained active into the 1970s, working with Eric Dixon among others." ]
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[ "no" ]
Are Ekaterina Voronina and Beatriz Villacañas of the same nationality?
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Ekaterina Vasilieva Ekaterina Vasilieva may refer to:
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[ "Valeria Vatkina Valeria Vatkina (born 28 March 1981) is an Individual rhythmic gymnast. She started competitive rhythmic gymnastics in 1986. Born in Minsk, Belarus, Vatkina was the 1995 European Junior All-around Champion and took part with the senior Belarusian team at the 2000 European Championships in Zaragoza, Spain. Vatkina was twice silver medalist with the Belarusian Team at the World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships in 1997 Berlin, Germany and 1999 in Osaka, Japan. She placed a podium at the 1997 Grand Prix Final in Deventer, Netherlands after winning the all-around silver medal for Belarus behind Russia's Natalia Lipkovskaya. Vatkina competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney where she qualified in the rhythmic gymnastics All-around finals finishing in 8th place ahead of Spain's Almudena Cid.", "Evelina Vorontsova Evelina Vorontsova (Russian: Эвелина Воронцова; born 19 April 1972, in Moscow) is a Russian/Dutch concert pianist and pedagogue. Evelina Vorontsova studied under Rudolf Kehrer, Mikhail Voskresensky, Elena Kuznetsova at the Moscow Conservatory and graduated with a Gold Medal (1993). After she received the 2nd prize at the International Franz Liszt Piano Competition, her studies were continued under Jan Wijn. Having made her orchestral debut at the age of 11 with J.S. Bach's Concerto IV in A major, BWV 1055. she has played in various countries as Japan, Germany and France. Aside from her concert career, she leads the foundation ArtiMusica, which initiates projects that merge different artistic disciplines.", "Elena Voronkina Elena Voronkina (born ) is a retired Ukrainian female volleyball player. She was part of the Ukraine women's national volleyball team. She participated in the 1994 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship. On club level she played with Orbita Zaporizhya.", "Ekaterina Voronina (film) Ekaterina Voronina () is a 1957 Soviet drama film directed by Isidor Annensky. Katya Voronina, devoid of maternal upbringing, grew into an uncompromising girl. At the beginning of the war, she voluntarily went to work at the hospital. After the war, she received an education and became an engineer and the head of the river port, but she did not have a relationship with the head of the shipping company. And so, he is fired, and Katya realizes that he was her closest person. Isidor Annensky's film was watched by 27.8 million Soviet viewers, which is 473 results for the entire history of Soviet cinematography.", "Beatriz Monteiro Beatriz Gonçalves Monteiro (born February 23, 1999) is a Portuguese actress. She gained prominence when interpreting Lua and Vitória in the series Chiquititas and Floribella. Among several projects, she rose to national fame by participating in Pai à Força for almost 4 years. She is currently studding Theatre Arts in London. She started to work as an actress in 2006 and is also very successful at a theatrical level.", "Olena Voronina Olena Oleksandrivna Voronina (; born 5 May 1990) is a Ukrainian sabre fencer. She is the 2013 World team champion, 2015 European individual bronze medalist, and 2016 Olympic team silver medalist. Voronina won a gold medal in the women's team sabre at the 2013 World Fencing Championships. She and the Ukrainian team won bronze in 2014 and silver in 2015. At the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio, Voronina won the silver medal with team members Olha Kharlan, Alina Komashchuk, and Olena Kravatska. Voronina lives in Kharkiv, Ukraine. She is a student at the Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute.", "Evelina Borroto Evelina Borroto (born 23 December 1949) is a Cuban volleyball player. She competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics and the 1976 Summer Olympics.", "Berta Vázquez Birtukan Tibebe (born March 28, 1992), better known as Berta Vázquez, is a Ukrainian-Spanish actress, model, and singer. Her career began in dance, and later transitioned to acting and music. Vázquez first appeared in \"Palm Trees in the Snow\" (2015). She played Estefanía Kabila \"Rizos\" in \"Vis a vis.\" Birtukan Tibebe was born in Kyiv, Ukraine in 1992 to an Ethiopian father and a Ukrainian mother. At just three years old, she was adopted by a family in Elche, Spain. She began her artistic training with dance in the Paula Yeray school in Elche, although finally the opportunities have come through acting, and to a lesser extent, music. At age 18, she moved from Elche to Madrid. In 2013, she sent a music video for the casting of \"The Voice Spain\", but was not selected. In 2014, she was cast in her first role in the film \"Palmeras en la nieve\" (2015), based on the novel by Luz Gabás. She played Bisila, who falls in love with Kilian, played by Mario Casas. Vázquez begin dating her costar and lead actor Mario Casas in 2014 before film production of \"Palmeras en la Nieve\". In 2018 New Years Eve Casas wrote on his social media plateforms that he and Vázquez had officially broken up. Also in 2015 Vázquez played her most important role as Estefanía Kabila \"Rizos\" in \"Vis a vis\", sentenced to for 3 years. Through out her career, she has used various stage names, including Cleo Brian, Mila Russo and currently, Berta Vázquez.", "Beatriz Martín Beatriz Martín (born 24 September 1974) is a Spanish judoka. She competed in the women's heavyweight event at the 2000 Summer Olympics.", "Ekaterina Valkova Ekaterina Igorevna Valkova (, born 17 May 1991) is a Russian judoka who competes in the 63 kg division. In 2016, she won a bronze medal at the European championships, but was eliminated in the first round at the Rio Olympics." ]
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[ "no" ]
Which country the composer of song Silver Bells is from?
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Silver Bell Silver Bell may refer to:
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[ "Evening Bell (song) Evening Bell (Вечерний звон) is a popular Russian song written in 1828 by Ivan Kozlov and Alexander Alyabyev. The lyrics are adapted from a Russian-themed verse by Thomas Moore. In 1818 Thomas Moore published his first collection of \"National Airs\", a collection of songs which included his verses and musical scores by John Andrew Stevenson. The title of one verse from the \"Russian airs\" was \"Those Evening Bells\" with the subtitle \"Air: The bells of St.Petersburg\". It starts with: <poem>Those evening bells! Those evening bells! How many a tale their music tells, Of youth, and home, and those sweet time, When last I heard their soothing chime. </poem> Moore mentioned that the verse was based on a Russian original, but all attempts to find the original failed. One hypothesis put forward in 1885 traced the source of the song to George the Hagiorite, an Orthodox monk and writer of the 11th century from the Iviron monastery on Mount Athos). Soviet researchers tried to prove the link, but found no traces of such a song. The most likely conclusion is that the verse is Thomas Moore's original creation loosely based on Russian-related themes. The verse was quite well known in the English-speaking world, e.g., it was satirised by Thomas Hood (\"Those Evening Bells, those Evening Bells, How many a tale their music tells, Of Yorkshire cakes and crumpets prime, And letters only just in time!\". It was listed in the dictionary of familiar quotations from 1919. Kozlov was a Russian poet in his own right, but also a prolific translator of contemporary English poetry (translating Byron, Charles Wolfe and Thomas Moore). His Russian text published in 1828 is more like an adaptation of the English original, as Kozlov used six-line stanzas instead of quatrains of the original, while being still faithful to the general mood and the rhythmic structure of the source (iambic tetrameter). His adaptation is credited with greater elaboration of the context, grounding the abstractness of the original with specific examples. When Kozlov published this verse, the original text was not mentioned. Combined with the fact that Moore's text claimed to be based on a Russian original, this brought some erroneous attributions (as early as in 1831) that Moore's verse is a translation of Kozlov's.", "Vincenzo Bellini Vincenzo Salvatore Carmelo Francesco Bellini (; 3 November 1801 – 23 September 1835) was an Italian opera composer, who was known for his long-flowing melodic lines for which he was named \"the Swan of Catania\". Many years later, in 1898, Giuseppe Verdi \"praised the broad curves of Bellini's melody: 'there are extremely long melodies as no-one else had ever made before'.\" A large amount of what is known about Bellini's life and his activities comes from surviving letters—except for a short period—which were written over his lifetime to his friend Francesco Florimo, whom he had met as a fellow student in Naples and with whom he maintained a lifelong friendship. Other sources of information come from correspondence saved by other friends and business acquaintances. Bellini was the quintessential composer of the Italian \"bel canto\" era of the early 19th century, and his work has been summed up by the London critic Tim Ashley as: ... also hugely influential, as much admired by other composers as he was by the public. Verdi raved about his \"long, long, long melodies such as no one before had written.\" Wagner, who rarely liked anyone but himself, was spellbound by Bellini's almost uncanny ability to match music with text and psychology. Liszt and Chopin professed themselves fans. Of the 19th-century giants, only Berlioz demurred. Those musicologists who consider Bellini to be merely a melancholic tunesmith are now in the minority. In considering which of his operas can be seen to be his greatest successes over the almost two hundred years since his death, \"Il pirata\" laid much of the groundwork in 1827, achieving very early recognition in comparison to Donizetti's having written thirty operas before his major 1830 triumph with \"Anna Bolena\". Both \"I Capuleti e i Montecchi\" at La Fenice in 1830 and \"La sonnambula\" in Milan in 1831 reached new triumphal heights, although initially \"Norma\", given at La Scala in 1831 did not fare as well until later performances elsewhere. \"The genuine triumph\" of \"I puritani\" in January 1835 in Paris capped a significant career. Certainly, \"Il pirata\", \"Capuleti\", \"La sonnambula\", \"Norma\", and \"I puritani\" are regularly performed today.", "Benito Cabrera Benito Cabrera Hernández (born 1963 in Venezuela) is a Canarian timple composer and virtuoso. He was born in Venezuela. Although he moved to Lanzarote at a young age, he has spent most of his life in Tenerife. He moved to Tenerife to study psychology in University of La Laguna. Hernández is the author of the official hymn of the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands. Benito Cabrera is the author of the song Nube de Hielo \"\"Ice Cloud\"\", one of the most deeply rooted songs between canaries. Partial List:", "Silver Bells Public School The Silver Bells Public School is an English medium educational school located in, Nahan, India. The school caters for students from Class 1 to Class 8, Pre-Nursery and Nursery classes for children starting from age 3 years. The school was established in 1980s by its founder Smt. Santosh Chauhan. The School offers a range of extra-curricular activities like chess, dramatics, football and music.", "Douglas Furber Douglas Furber (13 May 1885 – 20 February 1961) was a British lyricist and playwright. Furber is best known for the lyrics to the 1937 song \"The Lambeth Walk\" and the libretto to the musical \"Me and My Girl\", composed by Noel Gay, from which it came. This show made broadcasting history when in 1939 it became the first full length musical to be broadcast on television. A 1986 revival went on to achieve great acclaim, and was nominated for Tony Awards for both Best Score and Best Book. Furber made his first entry into songwriting with the Australian born composer A. Emmett Adams. Following a visit to St. Mary's Church, Southampton, England in 1914, the two wrote \"The Bells of St. Mary's\". The song was published in 1917. This became a major hit in the United States despite having been originally rejected by the publishers. In 1945, Bing Crosby had a hit with \"The Bells of St. Mary's\" after it was used as the title song to the film of the same name. Other hits included \"Limehouse Blues\" from 1924, written with composer Philip Braham. Furber also made a few appearances on stage.", "Mike Silver (musician) Mike Silver (born 12 September 1945) is a British singer-songwriter, who has been active in the UK contemporary and folk music circuits since the late 1960s. Silver was born in Uffington, Oxfordshire (then Berkshire) in 1945 and commenced playing guitar at the age of 15, joining a number of locally-known \"beat\" groups in the Croydon area from around 1964 onwards. He was inspired to move to a more fingerstyle folk/blues approach after witnessing Gerry Lockran at a Canterbury folk club, and commenced a performing himself in the folk clubs of London and Cornwall from the late 1960s onwards. In 1971, he formed the trio, Daylight, together with Chrissie Quayle and Steve Hayton, an American then resident in the UK, which produced one album for RCA in 1971, but fell somewhat between the folk and rock camps and eventually foundered. Following this, Silver signed as the first solo artist other than John to Elton John's Rocket Record Company and released the album \"Troubadour\" in 1973, also touring in the US as support to Dory Previn and Ashford and Simpson. From 1976 onwards, Silver concentrated his activities as an acoustic performer and singer-songwriter on the UK folk scene, with frequent performing trips also to Denmark and Germany, and has released more than 12 further solo albums (on some he is billed as Michael Silver); his song \"Maybe It's Just Love\" was also picked up by Moody Blues frontman Justin Hayward, and included on the latter's 1980 album, \"Night Flight\". Currently based in Camelford, Cornwall, Silver continues to perform around the UK folk circuit and has also collaborated with fellow performer and songwriter Johnny Coppin, including the release of a joint album, \"Breaking the Silence\" (2007). Writing in the \"West Briton\" in 2003, reviewer John Newman has stated: \"Mike Silver has a unique style, drawing from many influences including folk, rock, country and blues, all of which are evident, with an end result that is magical and should be a source of inspiration to songwriters everywhere.\"", "The Bells (symphony) The Bells (, \"Kolokola\"), Op. 35, is a choral symphony by Sergei Rachmaninoff, written in 1913 and premiered in St Petersburg on 30 November that year under the composer's baton. The words are from the poem \"The Bells\" by Edgar Allan Poe, very freely translated into Russian by the symbolist poet Konstantin Balmont. The traditional Gregorian melody \"Dies Irae\" is used frequently throughout the work. It was one of Rachmaninoff's two favorite compositions, along with his \"All-Night Vigil\", and is considered by some to be his secular choral masterpiece. Rachmaninoff called the work both a choral symphony and (unofficially) his Third Symphony shortly after writing it; however, he would later write a purely instrumental Third Symphony at his new villa in Switzerland. Rachmaninoff dedicated \"The Bells\" to Dutch conductor Willem Mengelberg and the Concertgebouw Orchestra. The US Premiere of the work was given by Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra and Chorus on 6 February 1920 and the UK Premiere by Sir Henry Wood and the Liverpool Philharmonic and Chorus on 15 March 1921. Rachmaninoff wrote to his friend Nikita Morozov in December 1906, asking whether he could think of a suitable subject for a choral piece to follow his cantata \"Spring\". Nothing came of this request. However, while on a holiday in Rome, Italy early in 1907, Rachmaninoff received an anonymous letter containing a copy of Balmont's translation of \"The Bells\". The sender asked him to read the verses, suggesting they were suitable for musical setting and would especially appeal to him. This suggestion was both extremely sensitive and opportune. It was only after the composer's death that the identity of the sender was found to have been Maria Danilova, who was then a young cello student at the Moscow Conservatory.", "Rusty Bells \"Rusty Bells\" is a song written by Eddie Snyder and Richard Ahlert and performed by Brenda Lee. The song reached #3 on the adult contemporary chart and #33 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 in 1965. It was featured on her 1966 album, \"Bye Bye Blues\". The song was arranged by Bill McElhiney and Cam Mullins.", "When They Ring Those Golden Bells When They Ring Those Golden Bells (also known as There's a Land Beyond the River or When They Ring the Golden Bells) is a prominent American gospel and bluegrass song written in 1887 by Daniel de Marbelle, a European immigrant, veteran of the American Civil War and Mexican War, and circus leader. The song describes heaven as \"beyond the river,\" a phrase found in the Bible in Ezra 4:11 and \"golden bells\" a reference found in Exodus 39:25. Marbelle was purportedly cheated out of the copyright to the song and died penniless. The copyright was acquired by the John Church Company, and the song was first known to be recorded in 1915 by the Imperial Quartet. The song has been covered by many notable artists including Dolly Parton, Natalie Merchant, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Alfred Karnes at the 1927 Bristol sessions.", "Song bells Song bells are a musical instrument in the keyboard percussion family. They are a mallet percussion instrument that is essentially a cross between the vibraphone, glockenspiel, and celesta. They sound one octave down from the glockenspiel, or one octave above written pitch. Song bells have been made by various makers at different times but were first introduced by the J.C. Deagan Company in 1918 and were manufactured until 1924." ]
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[ "American" ]
What is the date of death of the director of film Party Girl (1958 Film)?
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Party Girl (1958 film) Party Girl is a 1958 American film noir directed by Nicholas Ray and starring Robert Taylor, Cyd Charisse and Lee J. Cobb. Filmed in CinemaScope, it was the last film Charisse did for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and the next-to-last film Taylor did for the studio; they were MGM's last two contract stars. Slick lawyer Thomas Farrell has made a career of defending Chicago mobsters in court. At a party for mob boss Rico Angelo, he meets chorus girl Vicki Gaye, who accepted $100 to attend the party and another $400 from another gangster, Louis Canetto, from his gambling winnings. Farrell gives her a ride home, each expressing disapproval at the way the other makes money. Vicki finds her roommate Joy dead by suicide, pregnant by a married criminal. After a long night of questioning by police, Farrell asks that Vicki be given a raise and featured number on stage at the Golden Rooster club, which Rico owns. The lawyer and Vicki begin a romance. She's struck by the way Farrell, who is lame, uses his disability to manipulate jurors while getting Canetto off on a murder charge. A surgeon is found who might be able to properly mend Farrell's hip, so he goes to Stockholm for the operation. A cold-blooded killer, Cookie La Motte, is coming up for trial, but Farrell's frame of mind has changed and he would rather not defend such a man. Rico threatens violence against Vicki if the lawyer doesn't do his job. Cookie jumps bail, tired of the long wait in court, and plans to eliminate prosecuting attorney Stewart while at-large. Cookie and his men are gunned down by other racketeers, however, at an Indiana diner. Stewart decides to pressure the mob by going after anyone connected to it. He begins by placing Farrell under arrest. Canetto goes to Vicki offering to protect her, but takes her prisoner instead. The district attorney releases Farrell, hoping to smoke out the mobsters who employ him. Canetto, caught in a crossfire, is killed. Farrell then confronts Rico, but the gangster picks up a bottle of acid that he intends to disfigure Vicki with if the lawyer refuses to do what he says. A fight erupts, with the bottle smashing into Rico's face. Eyes and face burning, he plunges from a window to his death.
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[ "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.", "The Priest and the Girl (1958 film) The Priest and the Girl (German: Der Priester und das Mädchen) is a 1958 Austrian drama film directed by Gustav Ucicky and starring Rudolf Prack, Willy Birgel and Marianne Hold. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Isabella Schlichting and Werner Schlichting.", "Money, Women and Guns Money, Women and Guns is a 1958 American Western film directed by Richard Bartlett and written by Montgomery Pittman. The film stars Jock Mahoney, Kim Hunter, Tim Hovey, Gene Evans, Tom Drake, Lon Chaney Jr., William Campbell, Jeffrey Stone, James Gleason, Judi Meredith, and Phillip Terry. The film was released in October 1958, by Universal Pictures. After a gold prospector is killed by masked robbers, a detective is hired to find the surviving killer as well as the prospector's legal inheritors. According to the AFI Catalog, although it was filmed in September 1957, its release was delayed for over a year. The song, \"Lonely Is The Hunter,\" written and performed during the opening credits by Jimmy Wakely, suggests that it may have been a working title, and the final one a last-minute change—and a somewhat inaccurate one, as there are only two women in the film and neither has a significant role. The following year, Pittman and Horwitz were reunited on the television series \"77 Sunset Strip\". The film is noteworthy as Chaney's last film for the studio that helped make him a star 17 years earlier.", "Party Girl (2014 film) Party Girl is a 2014 French drama film written and directed by Marie Amachoukeli, Claire Burger and Samuel Theis. It won the Un Certain Regard Ensemble Prize and the Camera d'Or award at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival. The story is inspired by the life of Angélique Litzenburger, who played herself in the film, it also stars the co-director Samuel Theis and his siblings Mario, Séverine and Cynthia. The title of the film is derived from the song of the same name by Michelle Gurevich.", "19th Venice International Film Festival The 19th annual Venice International Film Festival was held from 24 August to 7 September 1958.", "The Man Who Died Twice (film) The Man Who Died Twice is a 1958 American crime film drama, directed by Joseph Kane and written by Richard C. Sarafian. The film stars Rod Cameron, Vera Ralston (in her last film role before retiring), Mike Mazurki, Gerald Milton, Richard Karlan and Louis Jean Heydt. The film was released on June 6, 1958, by Republic Pictures. Lynn Brennon learns that her husband of three months, nightclub owner T.J. Brennon, has been killed in a car crash. When she returns to their apartment, she finds three men fighting on her balcony. One is thrown off, another shot. The third flees down a fire escape. A pair of Chicago hit men, Hart and Santoni, turn up while narcotics lawmen Hampton and Sloane begin to investigate. Bill Brennon turns up, having received a telegram from his brother T.J. asking for help. He finds sister-in-law Lynn in shock. A suspicious Hampton and Sloane discover that Bill works with the Kansas City police. Minelli, a gangster, is suspected of running a drug ring. Bill tries to get information out of Lynn, who is unaware that a doll in her apartment has heroin hidden inside it. A bartender from the nightclub, Rak, drives her home, then searches for the heroin while she is asleep. While the hit men get a contract to murder Minelli, they also deal with an old lady, Sally, who has been spying on them. Minelli and Rak are both killed, but just when Lynn feels safe, husband T.J. turns up alive. He's been behind the killings and drug deals all along. Bill Brennon arrives just in time to help the cops stop his corrupt brother.", "Aïché Nana Kiash Nanah (1935/1936 – 29 January 2014), better known by her stage name Aïché (Ayşe) Nana, was a Lebanese-born dancer and stripper. Born in Beirut, Lebanon to Armenian parents, she began her career in 1954, before moving to France then Italy and becoming a belly dancer. She was married to Italian film director and producer and screenwriter Sergio Pastore. She became a celebrity in Italy, following a famous striptease on 5 November 1958 during a private party at the Rugantino restaurant and nightclub on the Viale di Trastevere in Rome, which caused a national scandal and went on to provide the inspiration for the 'orgy' scene in Federico Fellini's film \"La dolce vita\". Nana died from cancer on 29 January 2014 at the Aurelia Hospital in Rome, Italy. She was 78.", "Lost Lagoon (film) Lost Lagoon is a 1958 American drama film directed by John Rawlins and written by Milton Subotsky, John Rawlins and Jeffrey Lynn. The film stars Jeffrey Lynn, Lelia Barry, Peter Donat, Don Gibson, Roger Clark and Jane Hartley. The film was released on February 1, 1958 by United Artists.", "Macabre (1958 film) Macabre is a 1958 American horror film directed by William Castle, written by Robb White, and starring William Prince and Jim Backus. The film falls into both the horror and suspense genres. It involved one of Castle's first forays into using the that later made him famous. A certificate for a $1,000 life insurance policy from Lloyd's of London was given to each customer in case they should die of fright during the film. The film is set in the small town of Thornton, California. The plot consists of a frame story set in the present (c. 1958), an extended flashback to 1955, and an extended flashback set months before the present story. Below the events are given in chronological order. Before 1955, Jode Wetherby is the wealthiest man in town. His two daughters, Alice and Nancy Wetherby, are the heiresses to his large fortune. Alice dates police chief Jim Tyloe, but fatefully marries Rodney Barrett. This starts an enmity between Tyloe and Barrett. Meanwhile Nancy, although blind, is enjoying a life consisting of casual sexual relationships, fast cars, and voyages abroad. In 1955, Alice Barrett has a difficult pregnancy. Her husband keeps her isolated at their home, while he spends time with his mistress, the young widow Sylvia Stevenson. When Alice is about to give birth, Barrett is out drinking with Sylvia and does not answer a phone call for help. Alice dies in childbirth, while giving birth to their daughter Marge Barrett. Tyloe later meets with Barrett to inform him of both the birth and the death. He then beats up Barrett, swearing that he will pay for Alice's death. Months before the present, Nancy returns to town. She has a secret affair with her new chauffeur Nick, and a casual fling with Tyloe. She turns down a marriage proposal by Tyloe. Shortly after, Nancy learns that she is pregnant. She does not want to be a mother or a wife, and begs her brother-in-law Barrett for an abortion. He declines. Days before the present, Nancy dies in either a suicide or a botched abortion. Barrett is not available to get her proper medical treatment. Present. Barrett lives with his 3-year-old daughter Marge, and her nanny, Miss Kushins. The town has lost trust in him, and only a single patient remains loyal to him.", "Mogli pericolose Mogli pericolose (\"Dangerous wives\") is a 1958 Italian comedy film written and directed by Luigi Comencini." ]
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[ "June 16, 1979" ]
Are the bands Chateaux (Band) and Stormy Six, from the same country?
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Chateaux (band) Chateaux were a new wave of British heavy metal band formed in 1981 in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom. They released three albums during the 1980s through Ebony Records, then home to the likes of Grim Reaper and Savage. The band is notable for launching the career of Steve Grimmett, later of Grim Reaper and Onslaught. The band were originally formed under the name of Stealer circa 1981 by guitarist Tim Broughton, bassist Alex Houston and drummer Andre Baylis. They were selected by the newly started Ebony Records for inclusion on their 1982 "Metal Maniaxe" compilation, changing their name to Chateaux and contributing the track "Young Blood"; at the time, bassist Alex Houston was providing vocals, and the song was later released as a single by Ebony, backed with "Fight to the Last". 1983 saw the release of the band's debut album, "Chained and Desperate", again on Ebony Records, produced by Daryl Johnson, and featuring vocals by ex-Medusa and then-Grim Reaper man Steve Grimmett. For reasons unknown, the band insisted that Grimmett's appearance was simply that of a guest, allowing him to remain focussed on Grim Reaper. The cover art was provided by MusicMight's Garry Sharpe-Young, Martin Popoff, in his "Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal", described the album as "riding the same mysterious mood as Reaper's first, Diamond Head, Savage, and Witchfinder General, "Chained and Desperate" combines integrity, songcraft, and grime in way rarely seen outside the confines of these early Brit masters. A swirling cauldron of glorious noise. 9/10." Only guitarist and chief songwriter Broughton remained by the release of Chateaux's second LP, "Fire Power" (Ebony, 1984). Replacing Baylis and Houston were bassist/vocalist Krys Mason (ex-Confessor) and drummer Chris Dadson (ex-Wolfbane, Sam Thunder and Aragorn). The second record was less well received than the debut, with Eduardo Rivadavia of Allmusic remarking that, "the second [record was] surprisingly plain and unremarkable by comparison" and Popoff commenting that "songwriting focus is lost, the singular garage din of the debut heaving forth to both OTT excursions and flirtation with AOR rock structures.
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[ "Stormy Atmosphere Stormy Atmosphere is a progressive metal band from Israel. Founded as a school rock-band in 1999 by Edi Krakov (keyboards, composing) and Teddy Shvets (vocals, lyrics), Stormy Atmosphere stepped into the progressive genre in 2002. Since then it has been self-promoted by the band members, setting shows and festivals with other local bands and several booking agencies. In 2009, the band released their debut album \"Colorblind\". In 2012, Stormy Atmosphere made it to the finals of the Israeli \"Metal Battle\" contest; the winning band went on to represent Israel that year at the annual Wacken Open Air festival. Later the same year, the band took part in the \"ProgStage\" festival in Israel, featuring Pain of Salvation and The Flower Kings, among other progressive bands. In December 2014, Stormy Atmosphere went on tour across Slovakia and Poland, with Mike Terrana and his band as the headliners. The concerts were in Nitra, Warsaw, Domecko and Krosno. In April 2015, the band was invited to Georgia, to perform at Tbilisi JAM! Fest 2015, where they performed alongside Slot, Diary of Dreams, Vader, and many other bands. Stormy Atmosphere members were also asked to be a jury for the local \"Metal Battle 2015\" contest. In May 2015, Stormy Atmosphere signed up with . The band's sophomore album \"Pent Letters\" was released worldwide under the label on September 14, 2015. As a part of a promotion of the new album, Stormy Atmosphere made a tour across Ukraine between September 9 and October 4. They played in five cities: Kiev, Kharkiv, Odessa, Kirovograd and Kryvyi Rih. During the tour Stormy Atmosphere was supported by several local bands and a Greek band \"Sunlight\". In October 2015, Stormy Atmosphere participated in the \"Melodic Alliance\" festival, in Tel Aviv, along with fellow Israeli metal acts Desert and Scardust, as well as international artists Airborn, Switchblade, Winter's Verge, and headliner Elvenking.", "Sixwire Sixwire is an American country music band from Nashville, Tennessee, United States. The group consists of Andy Childs (lead vocals, guitar), Steve Hornbeak (keyboards, vocals), John Howard (bass guitar), Steve Mandile (guitar, vocals), and Chuck Tilley (drums, percussion). The band's name references the six strings on a guitar. Sixwire recorded one album for Warner Bros. Records in 2002, and charted two singles on the \"Billboard\" country charts, including the No. 30 hit \"Look at Me Now\". Five years later, they placed second on the talent show \"The Next Great American Band\", and served as the house band on \"Can You Duet\", another talent show. Before the band's formation, Andy Childs recorded for RCA Nashville from 1993 to 1994, releasing a self-titled debut album and charting three singles on the country charts. In addition, Steve Mandile co-wrote singles for Phil Vassar, Tim McGraw, and Shane McAnally, and previously played lead guitar in Pam Tillis' road band, the Mystic Biscuits. Drummer Chuck Tilley has a jazz background. He graduated from the University of Alabama with a degree in percussion, where he studied with noted jazz educators Steve Sample, Sr and Ray Reach. Following graduation, he worked in Birmingham, Alabama as a member of a jazz group led by Count Basie bassist Cleveland Eaton. Later, he moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he worked with Lee Greenwood and Dolly Parton. Childs had initially declined to join the band, but later reconsidered after Brett James had also declined. Formed in 2000, the band was signed to Warner Bros. Records in 2002. Their debut single, \"Look at Me Now\", peaked at number 30 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) chart. It was included on Sixwire's self-titled debut album, which peaked at 38 on the \"Billboard\" Top Country Albums chart in 2002. The album's only other single, \"Way Too Deep\", peaked at number 55. Also in 2002, Sixwire appeared on the track \"It Goes Like This\" from then-labelmate John Michael Montgomery's album \"Pictures\".", "Six Ft Hick SixFtHick is an Australian swamp rock band formed in Brisbane, Queensland in 1995, noted for the unpredictable antics of its two singers, brothers Geoff and Ben Corbett. Formed in 1995, the band have released four albums to date, relentlessly touring Australia and supporting artists such as The Jesus Lizard, Fugazi, The White Stripes, Beasts of Bourbon, TISM and Jon Spencer Blues Explosion. On 5 November 2010, premiered as part of the Brisbane International Film Festival, the documentary centers around the band's third tour of Europe for which they performed fifteen shows in just eighteen days. It was first screened on Australian TV on the ABC 2 channel 16 February 2011 and has been shown internationally as part of various European film festivals.", "On the Wings of Inferno On the Wings of Inferno is the sixth album by Asphyx. It was released in 2000 by Century Media Records. Short after its release, Asphyx disbanded again, and \"On the Wings of Inferno\" would be their final studio album until they reunited in 2007 and released the seventh album, \"Death...The Brutal Way\", in 2009. This album was re-released on 13 November 2009 as a remastered version.", "Discopolis Discopolis is the sixth studio album by the Finnish rock group CMX. With \"Discopolis\", CMX took a different approach on recording with the goal of making the first entirely Pro Tools -based album in Finland. The basic concept was to build the songs from small pieces, emphasizing editing and production over playing and recording. The result was successful in sales, but received some negative critique in reviews. \"All songs written by CMX with lyrics by A. W. Yrjänä.\"", "Storm (Theatre of Tragedy album) Storm is the sixth studio album by the Norwegian gothic metal band Theatre of Tragedy, released in March 2006. It is the band's first album with a new lead singer Nell Sigland. The song \"Storm\" was released as the album's only single. The album shows something of a return to gothic metal, although its sound is much lighter and more upbeat than that of earlier albums and it still uses modern English lyrics. The band embarked on a European tour to support the release. The cover art was designed by Thomas Ewerhard, who also made the covers for \"Assembly\" and \"Forever Is the World\". The song \"Senseless\" was originally titled \"Seven\", as it is written in septuple meter and is the seventh track on the album.", "Los Sírex Los Sírex is a Spanish rock band started in 1959 in Barcelona and was active until 1972. In 1977 they got together again and were active until 2012. It was initially formed by three musicians: Guillermo Rodríguez Holgado, Antonio Miers and Manuel Madruga (Manolo), then briefly joined by the vocalist Santi Carulla in 1960. By the end of 1960, the band consisted of Antoni Miquel Cerveró (\"Leslie\" or \"L'Anxoveta\") as lead vocalist, Lluís Gomis (Lluís Gomis de Prunera, 1944-2012, RIP) on the drums, Josep Fontseré Portolés (Pepe or Pep, Barcelona, 1945) on the rhythm guitar, Guillermo Rodríguez Holgado on the bass and Manolo Madruga (RIP 2012) on the lead guitar. They named the band after a component of eyeglasses: Guillermo worked at his father's glasses factory, where they used a filament called Sírex to adjust the lenses to the frames of the glasses. They became identified with a pure rock and roll style with daring lyrics that caused them trouble with the Spanish censorship of the time. They sang in Spanish. Their training began in June 1959 in Barcelona, when three friends and neighbors living on the street called Gran Via (Guillermo Rodríguez Holgado, Antonio Miers and Manolo Madruga, 15–17 years old at the time) decided to play music under the influence of Elvis Presley. To complete their apprenticeship, they would listen to other bands at the Spanish University Union (Sindicato Español Universitario) on Carrer Canuda or the CAPSA theatre on Aragon Street, where other groups like \"Estrellas Fugaces\" or \"Los Cocodrilos\" played. In 1960, Santi Carulla, a classmate of Guillermo, briefly joined the band before moving on to be the lead singer of the rival band Los Mustang: both bands participated in a contest for young talent on Ràdio Barcelona, after which the rival band asked Carulla to be their singer. The first performance of Los Sirex was at a Barça football fan club (Penya barcelonista) at Casp Street. That would be followed by concerts at the \"Tropical\" in Castelldefels.", "Vaux (band) Vaux was an American six-piece alternative rock band from Denver, Colorado, United States. Vaux was formed in 1997 in Denver, Colorado, under the original name Eiffel. They released a 7\" single themselves, \"To Write A Symphony\", in 1998. Indie label Undecided Records signed the band after they had toured the East Coast extensively for two years, and the band's debut album \"Audiblenarcotic\" was released in 2000. The album was a minor success on college radio, and the band earned a spot on the 2001 Warped Tour. In July 2002, for legal reasons, the band had to change its name, deciding on Vaux. In 2002, Vaux moved to Orange County independent label Volcom Entertainment and released the EP \"On Life; Living\", and the following year, second full-length \"There Must Be Some Way to Stop Them\". The album received widespread critical acclaim, prompting \"Alternative Press\" magazine to include Vaux in their \"100 Bands to Watch\" feature. During this time, the band embarked upon successful tours supporting Thrice, My Chemical Romance, Coheed and Cambria and The Used. In January 2004 Vaux signed to major label Atlantic Records's then subsidiary imprint \"Lava Records\" . Shortly after, the band released a 5-song EP, \"Plague Music\", on Equal Vision Records. The band's major label debut, \"Beyond Virtue, Beyond Vice\" was due for release on November 8, 2005. However, \"Lava Records\" broke away from Atlantic, thus ending the scheduled release of the band's album. Vaux severed ties with Atlantic, eventually regaining control of the album masters. The band then released the album themselves via Outlook Records, which was also available to purchase on their last headlining tour and was available on their webstore in limited quantities. On Tuesday, 22 August 2006, the song \"Are You With Me\" was released as the Single of the Week in the iTunes Music Store. It also featured in the 2010 film \"From Paris With Love\". Citing \"lost momentum\" the band announced their split in 2007. Their final show was on July 28, 2007 at the Bluebird Theater in Denver, CO.", "Clear Blue in Stormy Skies Clear Blue in Stormy Skies is the sixth studio album by New Zealand singer Jenny Morris. It was released 24 June 2006, by Liberation Blue Records. It is a collection of Morris' remodelled radio hits of the 1980s and 1990s, including a retake of \"You I Know\", rewritten by its original songwriter, Neil Finn, an instrumental arrangement of her most requested song, \"Little Little\", and a cover of INXS' song, \"This Time\", in tribute to her friend Michael Hutchence. The one new song, \"This Time\", contains the album's title as a lyric. \"Clear Blue in Stormy Skies\" was recorded in February 2006 with members of her backing band, Steve Balbi (Noiseworks, Electric Hippies) who co-produced; Paul Searles (Skunkhour) and Josh Quong Tart. Morris' vocals were recorded on a vintage valve microphone once used by Frank Sinatra.", "Chateau (Angus & Julia Stone song) \"Chateau\" is a song by Australian singer songwriters Angus & Julia Stone. It was released in August 2017 as the second single from the duo's fourth studio album \"Snow\". At the ARIA Music Awards of 2018, the song was nominated for ARIA Award for Song of the Year. At the APRA Music Awards of 2019, the song won Blues & Roots Work of the Year. The music video was directed by Jessie Hill and released on 23 August 2017. The cinematic clip follows two young rebels as they embark on a journey through Mexico City. The main characters are played by actors Dacre Montgomery and Courtney Eaton, who explore the capital by boat, visit a club and hit a wedding where everyone's glass is charged." ]
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[ "no" ]
Where was the father of Minnie Smythe born?
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Minnie Smythe Minnie Smythe (1872–1955) was a British landscape watercolourist. She was trained by her father, Lionel Percy Smythe. Her work "A Cottage Girl" was included in the book "Women Painters of the World". She showed works from 1896 until 1939 and is known for landscapes in the style of her father.
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[ "George Chichester Smythe George Chichester Smythe (1843–1902) was an Irish Anglican priest in the second half of the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th. Smythe was born in County Antrim and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. Smythe began his ecclesiastical career with a curacythen Vicar of Carnmoney from 1853 to 1893; and Archdeacon of Connor from then until his death.", "Henry Smythe Henry Smythe may refer to:", "Robert Smyth Robert Smyth (or Smythe) may refer to:", "Ethel Smyth Dame Ethel Mary Smyth (; 22 April 18588 May 1944) was an English composer and a member of the women's suffrage movement. Her compositions include songs, works for piano, chamber music, orchestral works, choral works and operas. Smyth tended to be marginalised as a ‘woman composer’, as though her work could not be accepted as mainstream. Yet when she produced more delicate compositions, they were criticised for not measuring up to the standard of her male competitors. Nevertheless, she was granted a damehood, the first female composer to be so honoured. Ethel Smyth was the fourth of eight children. The youngest was Robert (\"Bob\") Napier Smyth (1868–1947), who rose to become a Brigadier in the British Army. She was the aunt of Lieutenant General Sir Ralph Eastwood. She was born in Sidcup, Kent, which is now in the London Borough of Bexley. While 22 April is the actual day of her birth, Smyth habitually stated it was 23 April, the day that was celebrated by her family, as they enjoyed the coincidence with William Shakespeare's. Her father, John Hall Smyth, who was a major general in the Royal Artillery, was very much opposed to her making a career in music. She lived at Frimhurst, near Frimley Green for many years, before moving to Hook Heath on the outskirts of Woking. She first studied with Alexander Ewing when she was seventeen. He introduced her to the music of Wagner and Berlioz. After a major battle with her father about her plans to devote her life to music, Smyth was allowed to advance her musical education at the Leipzig Conservatory, where she studied composition with Carl Reinecke. She left after a year, however, disillusioned with the low standard of teaching, and continued her music studies privately with Heinrich von Herzogenberg. While she was at the Leipzig Conservatory, she met Dvořák, Grieg and Tchaikovsky. Through Herzogenberg, she also met Clara Schumann and Brahms. Upon her return to England, she formed a supportive friendship with Arthur Sullivan in the last years of his life, who respected her and encouraged her work. Smyth's extensive body of work includes the Concerto for Violin, Horn and Orchestra and the Mass in D.", "Charles Smythies Charles Alan Smythies (6 August 18447 May 1894) was a British colonial bishop in the 19th century. Smythies was born in Colchester, the son of the Rev. Charles Norfolk Smythies, vicar of St-Mary-at-the-Walls there, and his wife Isabella Travers, daughter of Eaton Travers RN. He was educated at Felsted School and Trinity College, Cambridge, and ordained in 1869. His first post was a curacy in Great Marlow, after which he was Vicar of Roath in Cardiff. Smythies was the fourth Bishop of the Universities' Mission to Central Africa, and was consecrated on 30 November 1883, serving as Bishop in Central Africa until that diocese was split (by his initiative) in 1892, and then of one of the parts, Zanzibar, until his death.", "Henry Augustus Smyth General Sir Henry Augustus Smyth (25 November 1825 – 19 September 1906) was a senior British Army officer. He was the son of Admiral William Henry Smyth and the brother of astronomer Charles Piazzi Smyth and geologist Sir Warington Wilkinson Smyth. Of his sisters, Henrietta married the theologian Baden Powell and Georgiana the anatomist Sir William Henry Flower. Born on 25 November 1825 in Westminster and educated at Bedford School, Smyth was commissioned as second lieutenant in the Royal Artillery in 1843. He served in the Crimean War and was present at the Siege of Sevastopol. He became commandant of Woolwich garrison and military district in 1882 and General Officer Commanding the troops in South Africa in 1886. In 1888 Smyth mustered an army of 2,000 troops and left for Zululand to put down a rebellion there. Smyth became acting Governor of Cape Colony as well as acting High Commissioner for Southern Africa in 1889. He became Governor of Malta in 1890 before retiring in 1893. On 14 April 1874 at Lillington, Warwickshire he married Helen Constance Greaves (1845–1932), daughter of John Whitehead Greaves and sister of John Ernest Greaves. They had no children. Smyth died on 18 September 1906 at Stone, Buckinghamshire, and was buried there.", "Sir John Smythe, 8th Baronet Sir John Walter Smythe, 8th Baronet (7 November 1827 – 5 March 1919) was an English first-class cricketer and British Army officer. The son of Sir Edward Joseph Smythe, he was born in November 1827 at the Smythe family home, Acton Burnell Castle in Shropshire. He was educated at Downside School. Smythe served as an officer in the Louth Rifles. He was promoted to captain in November 1845. A latecomer to first-class cricket, Smythe made his first-class debut for the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) against Oxford University at the age of 50 in June 1878. He played first-class matches for the MCC until 1885, making five appearances. He scored 122 runs in his five matches, with a highest score of 35, while as a bowler he took 2 wickets. He succeeded to the Smyth baronetcy as the 8th Baronet upon the death of his brother, Sir Charles Smythe in November 1897. He was nominated for High Sheriff of Shropshire in 1904, but was not chosen. Smythe died at Acton Burnell in March 1919. He was succeeded as the 9th Baronet by Sir Edward Smythe.", "Henry A. Smythe Henry Augustus Smythe (1817 – May 19, 1884) was an American politician who served as a Collector of Customs from 1866 to 1869. Smythe was born in 1817 in Hobart, Delaware County, New York. His father, a prominent lawyer, was one of the earliest settlers of the area and his grandfather, Anthony Marvine, also a lawyer, was a member of the New York State Assembly from Delaware County, 1804-1806. After receiving his education, Smythe came to New York in 1836 and clerked in one of the \"large jobbing and importing houses\" that was formed in 1839, later becoming a partner and then joining the Boston commission house of F. Skinner & Co. in 1846, remaining until 1857. In 1856, while traveling in a carriage from Bern to Basel in Switzerland, Smythe met and befriended novelist Herman Melville, who he later secured a job for as an inspector of customs when Smythe was the Collector of the Port of New York. In 1857, he established the house of Smythe, Sprague & Cooper, along with Marvelle Wilson Cooper, where he was the managing partner until 1864 when he retired upon his election as president of the Central National Bank, which he also helped establish. Smythe remained a leader of Central National Bank into 1866, and a director of the Bank of Commerce, when he was appointed Collector of the Port of New York by President Andrew Johnson on May 16, 1866. At the time of his appointment, he was referred to by \"The New York Times\" as \"a man of much energy of character, excellent business capacity, and will prove eminently efficient in the discharge of his duties. He was originally a Whig in politics, then a Republican, and is a thorough Union Man\". He is most well known for his impeachment in March 1867, which accused him of corruption and, with a resolution for his removal of office from the House, was ultimately ignored by President Andrew Johnson. Smythe left office in 1869, after a change of administration. In 1869, Smythe was tabled by the Senate for the position of United States Ambassador to Russia and did not receive his commission and Andrew Gregg Curtin was appointed by President Grant instead.", "Frederick Smyth Frederick Smyth may refer to:", "Harry Smythe William Henry Smythe (October 24, 1904 – August 28, 1980) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball. He pitched from 1929 to 1934. He later managed the Montreal Royals in the International League for part of the 1936 season." ]
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[ "London" ]
Who is the maternal grandfather of Countess Johanna Magdalene Of Hanau-Lichtenberg?
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Countess Johanna Magdalene of Hanau-Lichtenberg Countess Johanna Magdalene of Hanau-Lichtenberg (18 December 1660, Bischofsheim am Hohen Steg – 21 August 1715, Hanau) was a daughter of Johann Reinhard II of Hanau-Lichtenberg (1628–1666) and the Countess Palatine Anna Magdalena of Birkenfeld-Bischweiler (1640–1693). She died on 21 August 1715 and is said to have been buried in the St. Mary's Church in Hanau. On 5 December 1685 Johanna Magdalena married Count John Charles August of Leiningen-Dagsburg (born: 17 March 1662; died: 3 November 1698). They had the following children:
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[ "Johanna Sibylla of Hanau-Lichtenberg Johanna Sibylla of Hanau-Lichtenberg (6 July 1564 at Château de Lichtenberg – 24 March 1636 in Runkel) was the first child of Philipp V, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg from his first marriage with Countess Ludowika Margaretha of Zweibrücken-Bitsch (1540-1569). On 1 February 1582, Johanna Sibylla married Count Wilhelm IV of Wied-Runkel and Isenburg (1581 – 13 September 1612), the son of Count Johann IV of Wied-Runkel and Isenburg (d. 15 June 1581) and Katharina of Hanau, Countess of Wied (1525-1581). William succeeded his father in 1581 as Count of Upper Wied (Runkel and Dierdorf) and in the rest of Wied in 1595.", "Countess Palatine Anna Magdalena of Birkenfeld-Bischweiler Countess Palatine Anna Magdalena of Birkenfeld-Bischweiler (14 February 1640 – 12 December 1693) was a daughter of Christian I, Count Palatine of Birkenfeld-Bischweiler (1598–1654) and his first wife, Countess Palatine Magdalene Catherine of Zweibrücken (1606–1648). Anna Magdalena was born in Strasbourg. She married, on 18 October 1659, Johann Reinhard II of Hanau-Lichtenberg (1628–1666), a posthumous member of the House of Hanau, who never came to the throne. The marriage produced five children: Anna Magdalena's widow seat was Babenhausen Castle in Babenhausen. Anna Magdalena died on 12 December 1693 at Babenhausen and was buried on 6 February 1694 in the family vault of the St. John's Church in Hanau. This tomb, including Anna Magdalena's grave, was in completely destroyed by bombing during the Second World War. On the occasion of her funeral, several funeral sermons appeared in print:", "Johanna Magdalena of Saxe-Altenburg Johanna Magdalena of Saxe-Altenburg (14 January 1656 in Altenburg – 22 January 1686 in Weißenfels) was a member of the House of Wettin. She was a Duchess of Saxe-Altenburg by birth and by marriage a Duchess of Saxe-Weissenfels-Querfurt. Johanna Magdalena was the only daughter of Duke Frederick William II of Saxe-Altenburg and his wife Magdalene Sibylle of Saxony, the daughter of Elector John George I of Saxony. She became an orphan at an early age when her parents died in 1668 and 1669. She quickly became a pawn in the hands of her family. In 1671, her uncles John George II and Maurice, in whose residences she frequently stayed, decided that for dynastic reasons, she would marry her cousin, Duke John Adolph I of Saxe-Weissenfels. At the time, this marriage was politically sensitive, because her elder brother, Hereditary Prince Christian of Saxe-Altenburg, had already died young and her younger brother, Frederick William III, who had succeeded her father as Duke, was still under the guardianship of her uncles and did not have children yet. The two uncles, members of the Albertine branch of the House of Wettin, speculated that the Altenburg line (part of the Ernestine branch of the House) would die out and via Johanna Magdalena's marriage, Altenburg would fall to the Weissenfels line, which was also part of the Albertine branch. Duke Augustus of Saxe-Weissenfels was in favour of such an inheritance. If the Saxe-Weisenfels were to die out in turn, then their possessions would fall to the other Albertine lines, who were the closest relatives. Duke Frederick William III died of smallpox, only six months after Johanna Magdalena married. The rival Albertine and Ernestine lines of the House of Wettin both claimed the inheritance. After length discussions, two Ernestine Dukes prevailed: Ernest I of Saxe-Gotha and John Ernest II of Saxe-Weimar. They successfully argued that their dynastic marriages with the Saxe-Altenburg line in the 1630s gave them the older claims. Johanna Magdalena had been educated by the theologicians Johann Stiel and Johann Christfried Sagittarius (1617–1689).", "Margarethe von Hanau-Lichtenberg Countess Margarethe von Hanau-Lichtenberg, known upon her marriage as Margarethe, Countess of Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein (15 May 1463 – 26 May 1504) was a German noblewoman who, as the wife of Adolf III of Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein, was the Countess of Nassau-Wiesbaden and Nassau-Idstein. Margarethe was the daughter of Philipp I, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg and Anna von Lichtenberg. Her father ruled over the county of Hanau-Lichtenberg and, after the death of her maternal grandfather, the Lordship of Lichtenberg. She was a younger sister of Philipp II, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg. On 20 June 1484 she married Adolf III, Count of Nassau-Wiesbaden. They had four children: In 1509 her husband succeeded his childless brother, Philip, Count of Nassau-Idstein, as the Count of Nassau-Idenstein, therefore making Margarethe a countess of Idenstein. She died on 26 May 1504.", "Magdalena Elisabeth of Hanau Countess Magdalena Elisabeth of Hanau-Münzenberg (28 March 1611 – 26 February 1687) was a German noblewoman. She was a daughter of Count Albert of Hanau-Münzenberg-Schwarzenfels (1579-1635) and his wife, Countess Ehrengard of Isenburg (1577-1637). On 28 March 1636, she married the Imperial Cupbearer, George Frederick Schenk of Limpurg-Speckfeld (27 June 1596 – 5 December 1651). He was a son of Eberhard Schenk of Limpurg-Speckfeld (1560-1622) and Countess Catherine of Hanau-Lichtenberg. During the Thirty Years' War, George Frederick served in the armies of Ernst von Mansfeld and King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden. Magdalena Elisabeth and George Frederick had at least three children:", "Katharina of Hanau, Countess of Wied Katharina of Hanau (26 March 1525 – 20 August 1581) was the eldest daughter of Philipp II, Count of Hanau-Münzenberg and Countess Juliana of Stolberg. Katharina married in 1543 to Count Johann IV of Wied-Runkel and Isenburg (d. 15 June 1581). In 1525, he was mentioned as a canon in Cologne; he later reverted to the lay state. They had the following children:", "Magdalene of Jülich-Cleves-Berg Duchess Magdalene of Jülich-Cleves-Berg (2 November 1553 – 30 August 1633) was the fifth child of Duke William \"the rich\" of Jülich-Cleves-Berg and Maria of Austria, a daughter of Emperor Ferdinand I. She married in 1579 with Count Palatine John I \"the lame\" of Zweibrücken. Emperor Charles V had in 1546 granted the Duchy of Jülich-Cleves-Berg the right of female succession. So, when her brother, Duke John William, died in 1609 without a male heir of his own, both she and William's daughters could play a vital role in the question of who would inherit the important northwest German territory. Magdalene's husband John claimed the inheritance for Palatinate-Zweibrücken, as did the Elector of Brandenburg, John Sigismund, who was married to Anna, a daughter of Magdalena's sister Marie Eleonore (John Sigismund claimed his marriage contract from 1573 gave him the best claim). The third claimant was Count Palatine Philip Louis of Neuburg, the husband of Magdalen's other sister Anna. Finally, the Duchy of Saxony claimed Jülich-Cleves-Berg, based on an agreement to that effect with the Emperor. Since all claimants were members of comprehensive European coalitions and so the Habsburgs and France were indirectly involved, an international conflict threatened: the War of the Jülich succession. However, after King Henry IV of France died, the conflict could be settled provisionally by the Treaty of Xanten. The duchy was divided between Brandenburg and Palatinate-Neuburg. In the meantime, Magdalena's husband had died in 1604 and his claim had been inherited by her eldest son John II (1584–1635), who did not receive a share under the Treaty of Xanten. Magdalene's daughter Elisabeth (1581–1637) married Georg Gustav, Count Palatine of Pfalz-Veldenz. She also had two younger sons: Frederick Casimir (1585–1645) and John Casimir (1589–1652). She died in 1633 and was buried in the Reformed Church of Meisenheim.", "Magdalene Sibylle of Prussia Magdalene Sibylle of Prussia (31 December 1586 – 12 February 1659) was an Electress of Saxony as the spouse of John George I, Elector of Saxony. She is a 6th times matrilineal great grandmother to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. She was born in Königsberg, the daughter of Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia and Marie Eleonore of Cleves. She married John George on 19 July 1607 in Torgau. She was a great-granddaughter of Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor. She is also in three ways an ancestor of Augusta of Saxe-Gotha, mother of George III of the United Kingdom. In that way, she connected the ancestry of the British monarchs to the Catholic Monarchs. She was a friend of the Swedish queen Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg, her niece, and was interested in painting, poetry and gardening. She used Swedish prisoners of war to work on the \"Dresdner Festungsbau\" (\"Dresden fortress\"). As a widow in 1656, she retired to the \"Dresdner Frau Kurfürstin-Haus\" and died in Dresden in 1659. She had ten children:", "Countess Palatine Magdalena Claudia of Zweibrücken-Birkenfeld-Bischweiler Countess Palatine Claudia Magdalena of Zweibrücken-Birkenfeld-Bischweiler (also known as \"Magdalena Claudine\"; 16 September 1668 – 28 November 1704 in Hanau), was the daughter of the Count Palatine Christian II of Palatinate-Birkenfeld-Bischweiler (born: 22 June 1637; died: 26 April 1717). She married on in Hanau her cousin Count Philip Reinhard of Hanau-Münzenberg (1664–1712). The dowry was . From her marriage with Philip Reinhard, she had the following children: Claudia Magdalena died on 28 November 1704 and on was also buried in the crypt of the Lutheran Church in Hanau, on 18 December 1704. During the mourning, the biggest bell in St. John's Church broke. This was a bell she had donated. The burial site of the Lutheran branch of the House of Hanau - and thus the burial of Countess Claudia Magdalena - was destroyed during the Second World War.", "Katharina Ursula of Hohenzollern-Hechingen Princess Katharina Ursula of Hohenzollern-Hechingen (also Catherine Ursula of Hohenzollern-Hechingen) (1610 – 2 June 1640 in Baden-Baden) was the first wife of Margrave William of Baden-Baden. She married him on 13 October 1624. She was the daughter of Johann Georg, Prince of Hohenzollern-Hechingen and his wife, Countess Franziska von Salm-Dhaun. From her marriage, she had the following children:" ]
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[ "Christian I" ]
Are both villages, Vukpalaj and Ano Lechonia, located in the same country?
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Ano Lechonia Ano Lechonia () is a town in the Magnesia regional unit, Greece. Ano Lechonia was the seat of the former municipality of Artemida. The population of the village in 2011 was 1,068, the population of the community (including the coastal village Platinidia) was 1,429. Ano Lechonia is situated in the northwestern part of the Pelion peninsula, 1.5 km from the Pagasetic Gulf coast, 3 km southwest of Agios Georgios Nileias, 4 km southeast of Agria and southeast of Volos. The name Lechonia may come from the Slavic word "lech" meaning "field". Historians say it was the ancient city Methone. At the hill named Nevestiki the ruins of an ancient wall have been found. The residents of Methone supported the Argonauts with ships. After four centuries of Ottoman rule, Ano Lechonia became part of Greece in 1881, as a consequence of the transfer of Thessaly to Greece following the Treaty of Berlin (1878). It was connected by a railway to Volos in 1895.
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[ "Ano Simi Ano Simi is a village on Crete in the prefecture of Lasithi. It is part of Ierapetra municipality and borders Viannos municipality. It lies about 900 meters above sea level, south of Mount Dikti in what is probably the most wooded area of Crete. It is about 1 kilometer from Kato Simi, and 32 kilometers from Ierapetra.", "Ano Panta Ano Panta () is one of the two regions of Othoni island, near Corfu, Greece. It includes the western villages of the island (Chorio, Dafni, Stavros etc.) while Kato Panta () covers the central and eastern part of Othoni.", "Ano Kalliniki Ano Kalliniki (, before 1926: Άνω Κάλενικ – \"Ano Kalenik\") is a village in Florina Regional Unit, Macedonia, Greece. Ano Kalliniki had 333 inhabitants in 1981. In fieldwork done by Riki Van Boeschoten in late 1993, Ano Kalliniki was populated by Slavophones. The Macedonian language was used by people of all ages, both in public and private settings, and as the main language for interpersonal relationships. Some elderly villagers had little knowledge of Greek.", "Āņi Āņi is a village in Ādaži Municipality in the historical region of Vidzeme, and the Riga Planning Region in Latvia.", "Anemotia Anemotia is a village on the Greek Island of Lesbos. It belongs to the municipal unit of Kalloni and is in the mountains, roughly halfway between Kalloni and Eresos. Anemotia's cobbled streets, stone houses and panoramic vistas make it picturesque. The fertile but rocky terrain of the mountains is covered with olive trees. The local farmers claim that the olives grown on these trees produce the most fragrant olive oil in the country.", "Anđelije Andelije () is a village in the municipality of Foča, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "Ankova Ankova is a genus of moths in the subfamily Lymantriinae.", "Ano Pedina Ano Pedina (, before 1928: Άνω Σουδενά - Ano Soudena) is one of the villages in Central Zagori in the Ioannina regional unit, northwestern Greece. It is located on the western slopes of Mt Tymfi. The village is mentioned in a Golden Bulle of emperor Symeon Paleologos of Serbia from 1362. There are two monasteries, the monastery of Evangelistria and the monastery of Agia Paraskevi. The first is the oldest, restored in 1786, while the second was founded in 1750.", "Lecithocera ankasokella Lecithocera ankasokella is a moth in the family Lecithoceridae. It was described by Viette in 1968. It is found in Madagascar.", "Lejno Lejno is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sosnowica, within Parczew County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately south of Sosnowica, south-east of Parczew, and north-east of the regional capital Lublin. The village has a population of 250. " ]
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[ "no" ]
Are both Ingur Railway Station and Colo Vale Railway Station, New South Wales located in the same country?
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Colo Parish The Parish of Colo is a parish of the County of Camden in the Southern Highlands region of New South Wales. It is centred on the town of Colo Vale, and includes Aylmerton, Willow Vale, Alpine and Yerrinbool. It also includes the northern parts of Mittagong that are north of the Old Hume Highway. The new Hume Highway runs through the parish from south-west to north-east. Its western boundary is the Nattai River and part of Gibbergunyah (Gibraltar) creek. The southern boundary for a large portion is the Old Hume Highway. The northern boundary is near, but not including Hill Top. The eastern boundary is the Nepean River. Part of the boundary in the north-east is Forest Creek and the Bargo River. The Picton Loop railway line runs through the parish from north to south, including the station at Colo Vale. The Southern Highlands section of the Main Southern railway line also passes through the parish, including Yerrinbool station.
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[ "Inglewood railway station Inglewood is a closed railway station on the Robinvale railway line in Victoria, Australia. Currently freight trains go past the station on freight duties up to Boort and Quambatook.", "Central Colo, New South Wales Central Colo is a locality of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is located in the City of Hawkesbury west of Colo and to the south of the Colo River near its confluence with the Hawkesbury River. Central Colo was counted as part of Mountain Lagoon at the , which had a population of 327.", "Ingham railway station, Queensland Ingham railway station is located on the North Coast line in Queensland, Australia. It serves the town of Ingham. The station has one platform. Opposite the platform lies a passing loop. Ingham is served by Traveltrain's \"Spirit of Queensland\" service.", "Colo Shire Colo Shire was a local government area in the Sydney Basin region of New South Wales, Australia. Colo Shire was proclaimed on 7 March 1906, one of 134 shires created after the passing of the \"Local Government (Shires) Act 1905\". The shire offices were in Wilberforce. Other towns in the shire included North Richmond, Sackville, Glossodia, Kurrajong, St Albans and Ebenezer. Colo Shire was amalgamated with the Municipality of Windsor to form Hawkesbury Shire on 1 January 1981 per the \"Local Government Areas Amalgamation Act 1980\".", "Malu, Queensland Malu is a rural locality in the Toowoomba Region, Queensland, Australia. In the Malu had a population of 18 people. The Western railway line forms the south-west boundary of the locality. Malu railway station is on the boundary of the localities of Malu and Jondaryan (). The land use is a mixture of cropping and grazing on native vegetation. In the Malu had a population of 18 people.", "Giru railway station Giru railway station is located on the North Coast line in Queensland, Australia. It serves the town of Giru. The station has one platform. Opposite the platform lies a passing loop. Giru is served by Traveltrain's \"Spirit of Queensland\" service.", "Mellong, New South Wales Mellong is a locality in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Mellong is located about 110 km NNW of Sydney. It is a scattered village located in the City of Hawkesbury south of Putty and north of Colo Heights. Most of the area of the locality of Mellong is within the Wollemi National Park.", "Collie, New South Wales Collie is a village and parish in central New South Wales, Australia. The town is located in Warren Shire and on the Oxley Highway, north west of the state capital, Sydney. At the 2016 census, Collie and the surrounding area had a population of 194. The name, \"Collie\", could have derived from an Aboriginal word meaning \"water\".", "Moorangoorang, New South Wales Moorangoorang is a rural locality and a civil parish of County of Napier in the central western part of New South Wales, Australia. The parish has three railway stations, Mooren, Borah and Pimbra.", "Maryvale, New South Wales Maryvale is a locality in Dubbo Regional Council, New South Wales, Australia. Maryvale once had a station on the Main Western line and a railway was proposed between Maryvale Triangular Junction (located at , north of Maryvale station) and Sandy Hollow on the Merriwa Branch Railway Line as part of a railway linking Dubbo and western New South Wales to Newcastle. Only the Sandy Hollow–Gulgong section has been completed as part of Ulan Mine Rail Link to Newcastle, although most of the earthworks, culverts, bridge abutments and so on and Tunnel No 5 of 5 on the Sandy Hollow to Maryvale Triangular or Y Junction section(located at ) were built on the section between Gulgong and Maryvale between 1937 and 1951." ]
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[ "no" ]
Where did the director of film Dakshayagnam (1962 Film) die?
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A. Jagannathan A. Jagannathan (26 November 19357 October 2012) was an Indian film director who worked in the Tamil, Telugu, Kannada an Hindi film industry. He directed nearly 50 films in Tamil. He made his debut as director in "Manipayal" in 1973 after working as an assistant to T. Prakash Rao and P. Neelakantan for almost 15 films, most of them being MGR movies. He directed the MGR film "Idhayakkani", and some television serials. He directed Sivaji Ganesan's "Vellai Roja" which won awards including the Filmfare Award. Another successful venture in his career was "Moondru Mugam". He suffered from breathing ailments and was hospitalized in Coimbatore for a fortnight. He died on 7 October 2012, and was cremated at Tiruppur. He was survived by his wife Rajamani, daughters Usha Devi and Pavithra Devi and son Arun Kumar.
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[ "K. Shankar Kannan Shankar (17 March 1926 - 5 March 2006) was an Indian film editor, screenwriter and director. He directed more than 80 films in South Indian languages including Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu and Kannada as well as in Hindi. Shankar started his film career as an editor Assistant at Central Studios, Coimbatore in 1939 and later moved to Pakshiraja Studios. He later became a successful editor at AVM Studios, before moving into film direction. He gave blockbuster film Alaya mani (1962) for Sivaji Ganesan highest grosser of that year.He went on to direct 7 Sivaji Ganesan films .He gave superhits like Rajkumar(1964) and Sachaai(1969) with Shammi kapoor and Sadhana in lead roles. Next to P. Neelakantan, Shankar was also credited with creating M. G. Ramachandran's (MGR) movie persona, in 8 movies he had directed MGR. It was to Shankar's credit that MGR chose Shankar to direct his own production, \"\"Adimai Penn\"\". Shankar died due to heart attack at his residence on 5 March 2006 at the age of 79.", "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.", "Dakshayagnam (1962 film) Dakshayagnam is a 1962 Indian Telugu-language Hindu mythological film, produced and directed by Kadaru Nagabhushanam under the Varalakshmi Pictures banner. It stars S. V. Ranga Rao, Devika, and N. T. Rama Rao, with music composed by Saluri Hanumantha Rao. This was N. T. Rama Rao's 100th film which was also dubbed in Tamil with the same title. The film begins with Daksha Prajapathi (S. V. Ranga Rao) becoming the king of the Prajapathis, all the gods give him the most effective powers and an oath that no one will cross his words. After that, he is blessed with 2 sons and also adopts 27 girls. Soon after, Adi Parashakti was born as his daughter Sathi (Devika), who is the greatest devotee of Lord Shiva (N. T. Rama Rao). Daksha performs his 27 daughters' marriage with Lord Chandra (Rama Krishna). After the marriage, Chandra spends most of his time with Rohini (Rajasri) and ignores the others when it was brought to Daksha's notice he curses Chandra to die out of T.B. disease. Here Chandra prays to Lord Shiva, then he gives a boon to protect him. Enraged Daksha clashes with Shiva and the war erupts. Lord Vishnu intervenes and makes a compromise by making Chandra into two. Daksha, however, maintains his grudge against Lord Shiva; when he learns his daughter Sathi is in love with Shiva. To prevent, eventually, he seeks alliance for his daughter. But Sathi marries Shiva against her father's wish, so, Daksha decides to insult Shiva by performing a sacrifice without inviting Shiva. Sathi wants to attend the sacrifice and visits uninvitedly ignoring the advice of her husband where she has to endure many insults. At last, when Daksha started insulting her husband, she could not bear and immolated herself in the sacrificial fire. Hearing it, Lord Shiva makes a ferocious dance called \"Rudra Thandava\" and wakes up \"Veerabhadra\" from his hair, who destroys sacrifice and decapitates Daksha.", "K. G. Rajasekharan K. G. Rajasekharan (February 14, 1947 - March 21, 2019) was an Indian film director in Malayalam movies. He had directed 20 Malayalam movies. He directed his debut movie \"Padmatheertham\" in 1978. He was born to Edava Kurunilakode Kadakathuveettil Govinda Kuruppu and J Kamalaksiyamma on 12 February 1947. He completed B.Sc. from Kollam S.N. College. He started his movie career as an assistant director in the movie \"Midumidukki\" in 1968.", "B. Kannan Bhimsingh Kannan (10 January 1951 – 13 June 2020) was an Indian cinematographer who worked in Tamil and Malayalam films. He was known for his association with Director Bharathiraja and was referred to as \"Bharathirajvin Kangal\" (Bharathirajas's Eyes). Kannan was the son of film-maker A. Bhimsingh and the younger brother of editor B. Lenin. He was married to Kanchana and has two daughters namely MadhuMathi Kannan and Janani Kannan. Kannan was known for his recurrent association with Bharathiraja. He won the Shantaram Award for Best Cinematography for his work in \"Kadal Pookkal\" in 2001. He was also a recipient of the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Cinematographer twice for \"Alaigal Oivathillai\" (1981) and \"Kangalal Kaidhu Sei\" (2004). Kannan died on 13 June 2020 at the age of 69 due to heart complications.", "Snehadeepam Snehadeepam is a 1962 Malayalam language film, directed and produced by P. Subramaniam. Written by novelist Muttathu Varkey, it stars Thikkurissi Sukumaran Nair, Kottarakkara Sreedharan Nair, S. P. Pillai, Miss Kumari, Ambika, Santhi, Baby Vinodini, Adoor Pankajam, T. K. Balachandran and Aranmula Ponnamma. The music was composed by M. B. Sreenivasan and lyrics were written by P. Bhaskaran.", "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.", "K. R. Gangadharan K R Gangadharan (1936–2012) who popularly referred to as KRG, was a Tamil film producer. He produced over 60 films in Tamil and Malayalam under the banner ‘KRG Productions’, 'KRG Art Productions', 'KRG Enterprises' and 'KRG Movies International'. He founded the Tamil Film Producer's Council and had a stint as president of the South Indian Film Chamber of Commerce. He was elected as the president of the South India Film Chamber, unanimously by the producers of Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada film's, distributors, studio owners, theatre owners are members of the association. KRG died on 19 June 2012, aged 76. He was admitted to a private hospital at T. Nagar in Chennai, and had been responding well to treatment. He was about to be discharged on the day he died, but as he was about to step out, he collapsed and was declared dead soon after, the sources said. He is survived by his wife and daughter.", "Sashadhar Mukherjee Sashadhar Mukherjee (29 September 1909 – 3 November 1990) was an Indian filmmaker in Hindi cinema. He started his career with Bombay Talkies in the 1930s, and later established Filmistan Studio with Rai Bahadur Chunilal (father of music director Madan Mohan), Ashok Kumar and Gyan Mukherjee in 1943. In the 1950s, he went on to start his independent studio, Filmalaya. He is noted for films like \"Dil Deke Dekho\" (1959), \"Love in Simla\" (1960), \"Ek Musafir Ek Hasina\" (1962) and \"Leader\" (1964). He is part of the distinguished Mukherjee clan of Bollywood. He won the Filmfare Award for Best Film in 1956 for \"Jagriti\". In 1967, he was awarded the Padma Shri, India's fourth highest civilian honour by the Government of India. Mukherjee was born on 29 September 1909 in Jhansi into an educated, middle-class Bengali Hindu family, the second of four brothers. His father, who belonged to minor gentry, had received an English education and was in government service. The family, at that time, had nothing to do with the entertainment business or any other trade; however, not only Sasadhar but also two of his three brothers were to make a name for themselves in the film industry. Mukherjee's younger brothers were film director Subodh Mukherjee and film producer Prabodh Mukherjee. His elder brother was Ravindramohan Mukherjee, who had little contact with the film industry, but whose grand-daughter is the successful actress Rani Mukerji. Mukherjee was married when he was a teenager to Sati Devi Mukherjee (nee Ganguli), a teenage girl of his own Bengali Hindu community and similar family background, in a match arranged by their parents in the usual Indian way. Sati Devi's father was also in government service, and that family was also settled in the Hindi-speaking provinces; resultantly, both families spoke Hindi with native-level fluency. This proved important because, mostly due to Mukherjee's influence, all three of Sati Devi's brothers were to become actors and big names in the Hindi film industry.", "A. T. Krishnaswamy A. T. Krishnaswamy (1905–1987) was an Indian director best known for the film \"Sabapathy\". Krishnaswamy joined the A. V. Meiyappan unit as an assistant during the mid-1930s and worked on all AVM projects. He made his directorial debut with \"Sabapathy\" (1941) and later left AVM for personal reasons. Krishnasami made films such as \"Vidyapathi\" and \"Manam Oru Kurangu\". His most successful film was \"Arivaali\", but his own success was shortlived. His later days were spent in obscurity, and he died on the same day as M. G. Ramachandran in 1987." ]
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[ "Madras" ]
Which country the director of film Sleepless In New York is from?
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Sleepless in New York Sleepless in New York is a 2014 documentary film about heartbreak and how to overcome it by director and producer Christian Frei. The documentary film deals with lovesickness, often laughed off as nothing more than an affliction of adolescence. Oscar-nominated director Christian Frei and award-winning cinematographer Peter Indergand dive into the frenzied nights of three people who have recently been rejected: nights full of pain and tears, yet also of wakefulness and creativity. Anthropologist Dr. Helen Fisher reveals the processes that unfold in the brain of the lovesick. She says: "The game of love matters. It matters big time." Exploring the difficult path out of self-destructive, obsessive behavior, toward a new self, "Sleepless in New York" was promoted as "a film for those in love, out of love or looking for love." Festivals:
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[ "Vincenzo Natali Vincenzo Natali (born 1969) is an American-born Canadian film director and screenwriter, known for writing and directing science fiction and horror films such as \"Cube\", \"Cypher\", \"Nothing\", and \"Splice\". Natali was born in Detroit, to a nursery school teacher/painter mother and a photographer father. He is of Italian and English descent. He moved to Toronto, along with his family, at the age of one. During his time at Royal St. George's College, Natali befriended British-born Canadian actor David Hewlett, who has appeared in the majority of films that Natali has directed. Natali also attended the film programme at Ryerson University. He was eventually hired as a storyboard artist at the Nelvana Animation Studios. His cinematic influences included Samuel Beckett, David Cronenberg, and Terry Gilliam. Natali's directing debut came in 1997, when he directed \"Cube\" which he also co-wrote. The film became a success worldwide, especially in Japan and France, grossing $15 million in the latter country, and breaking box office records for a Canadian film. At the 19th Genie Awards, the film received five nominations, and also won the award for Best Canadian First Feature at the Toronto International Film Festival. After this success, Natali went on to direct \"Cypher\" (2002) and \"Nothing\" (2003). Following the June 2010 release of \"Splice\" (2009), Natali's next efforts were expected to be an adaptation of J. G. Ballard's 1975 novel \"High Rise\" and a 3D adaptation of the Len Wein/Berni Wrightson comic book character Swamp Thing, for producer Joel Silver. A May 2010 item in \"The Hollywood Reporter\", however, announced that Natali was to replace Joseph Kahn as director of the highly anticipated adaptation of cyberpunk author William Gibson's 1984 novel \"Neuromancer\". Natali was nominated for the 4th Annual Splatcademy Awards under the category \"Best Director\" presented by Cadaver Lab for his work \"Splice\". In 2013 his series \"Darknet\", an adaptation of the Japanese series \"Tori Hada\", began airing on Super Channel in Canada.", "Sleepless Nights (2003 film) Sleepless Nights () is a 2003 Egyptian drama film directed by Hani Khalifa.", "Antonio Padovan Antonio Padovan is an Italian-born film director, producer, screenwriter, and video artist who lives in New York City, known for his short films \"Socks and Cakes\" (2010), \"Jack Attack\" (2013), \"Eveless\" (2016), and his first feature, \"The Last Prosecco\" (2017). His video \"Japan, Beyond\" (2012) won the first prize at the Stand for Japan Awards, while \"Jack Attack\" was selected by more than fifty international film festivals and won dozens of awards and other honors. He was born and raised in the Veneto region, near Venice, but has called New York's West Village home since 2007, and is the co-founder of the Greenwich Village Film Festival. Antonio Padovan was born in 1987, in Conegliano, where he also grew up. From a very young age, Padovan had a love for the cinema. He was a teenager on September 11, 2001, which left a very deep impression on him, ultimately precipitating his move to New York City, though he was not conscious of the connection at the time. Padovan obtained a surveyor's diploma before attending a three-year course at the Italian School of Design in Padua. During the last months of the course he sent his portfolio to a number of studios in Italy and abroad, but responded only to Bam Design, an architectural firm in SoHo, New York, who offered him an internship, requiring him to leave immediately for New York. Padovan moved to New York without any real plan, driven only by a desire to live there, which years later he realized was connected to the impression made on him in his youth. In 2007, at the age of twenty, Padovan arrived in Manhattan, and the city of New York, which had once been a distant, ill-defined place now became real to him, and his home. The internship led to a paid employment contract: \"Originally I wanted to try to work here for a couple of months, but my studio ended up hiring and sponsoring me.\" Padovan mainly worked on interior design and restorations, in Diesel stores as well as their headquarters on West 19th Street, and Domenico Dolce's penthouse in Chelsea (acquired by the fashion designer in 2009 for $29 million).", "Sleepless Nights (novel) Sleepless Nights is a 1979 novel by American novelist and critic Elizabeth Hardwick. Writing for the \"New York Times\", Lauren Groff referred to the book as \"[...] brilliant, brittle and strange\". The novel contains autobiographical elements. Sigrid Nunez drew inspiration from the book while writing her novel \"The Friend\".", "Desiree Akhavan Desiree Akhavan (born December 27, 1984) is an American film director, producer, screenwriter and actress based in New York. She was born in New York City. She is best known for her 2014 feature film debut \"Appropriate Behavior\", and her 2018 film \"The Miseducation of Cameron Post\". Akhavan was born in New York City in 1984. Both of Akhavan's parents fled to the United States following the Iranian Revolution in 1979; Akhavan has stated in interviews that they now identify as American. Her father has not returned to Iran since the 1980s, though Akhavan occasionally visited family overseas as a child. As a child, Akhavan lived in New Jersey before her family moved to Rockland County, New York. As a commuting student, Akhavan attended the Horace Mann School, an independent prep school in The Bronx, for her high school years. During this period of time, Akhavan struggled with feelings of loneliness: \"My life was in New York City but I would sleep in the suburbs and I didn’t know anyone there. I didn’t have friends and I didn’t have a life, other than watching television and movies.\" Akhavan has attributed her first experiences with American culture through watching TV shows and films. She began writing plays when she was 10 years old and began acting in plays at 13 years old. Akhavan struggled to fit in at school, with negative body images and standards leading her to face eating disorders such as bulimia. \"There was one aesthetic, and it was: very thin, very petite, straight hair, straight nose, Petit Bateau T-shirt, 7 For All Mankind jeans, North Face fleece” – but these things take their toll. “I know those girls who fit in at that age, and it was through a sexual power that they couldn’t handle. Power is a really tricky thing, it’s overwhelming. If men had paid attention to me at that age, I would have gotten in trouble.” Akhavan studied Film and Theatre at Smith College, a women's college in Northampton, Massachusetts, where she was \"a bit of a loner\". After graduating in 2007, she studied film directing as a graduate student at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. She also spent a year studying abroad at Queen Mary, University of London.", "Sleep (2013 film) Sleep is a 2013 film directed by Juha Lilja consisting of approximately 1 hour long takes about Lilja himself sleeping naked. Multiple camera angles are used, and film also contains dream sequences, which are shot on a drone and a motorcycle. The Film premiered at International Film Festival Rotterdam in 2015 as a part of its Signals 24/7 theme, which was focusing on how the attention economy and technological improvements have changed society. Other films from the director have been screened in festivals in Asia and USA. The film was released 50 years after the release of Sleep from American artist and filmmaker Andy Warhol. The 2013 remake explores how modern technology has made it easier for anyone to produce such monumental length films. Warhol had originally planned Sleep to be an 8-hour film. According to his memoirs, he had said to Gerard Malanga: \"Wouldn't it be fabulous to film Brigitte Bardot sleeping for eight hours\" Because of technical difficulties it was not possible at the time. Lilja's version was made to reach the 8 hour goal.", "Robert Van Lierop Robert F. Van Lierop (born 1939) is a United States and ni-Vanuatu lawyer, diplomat, political activist, filmmaker, writer and photojournalist. Van Lierop was born in Harlem to a father from Suriname and a mother from the Virgin Islands. His paternal grandfather was from The Netherlands. He attended Stuyvesant High School, graduated from Hofstra University in 1964 and from New York University Law School in 1967. Van Lierop began his career as a lawyer, and became a member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Van Lierop was the director of \"A Luta Continua\" (1971) and \"O Povo Organizado\" (1975). Both films were produced in the United States, in the Portuguese language, with English subtitles. Set in Mozambique, they portray the struggles of freedom fighters against Portuguese colonial authorities, as well as the building of a new nation and the construction of schools and social facilities in the early independence era. Josh Plaut and Patricia Blanchet of New York University have described them as \"landmark films [...] which are characterized by the most progressive ideas of human and personal liberation [and which] have deeply impacted an era of Black independent cinema.\" In addition to producing his own films about Mozambique, Van Lierop arranged the screening of Mozambican films in the United States in 1981, with the proceeds serving to build a hospital in Mozambique. In 1980, when the newly independent Vanuatu joined the United Nations, its Prime Minister, Walter Lini, asked Van Lierop to be its Permanent Representative at the United Nations. The two men had met when Vanuatu had been a topic of discussion at the U.N. just prior to its independence. Van Lierop accepted, and represented Vanuatu for over a decade. He was, throughout the 1980s, Vanuatu's only diplomat stationed permanently in New York City, and he visited Vanuatu twice a year on average. As Vanuatu's ambassador, and following instructions from the ni-Vanuatu government, he campaigned within the U.N. against apartheid in South Africa, and in favour of decolonisation for East Timor, Western Sahara, West Papua and New Caledonia, among others.", "Elnura Osmonalieva Osmonalieva, Elnura (born January 12, 1981 in Osh, Kyrgyzstan) is a Kyrgyzstani film director She attended a Soviet school and later studied in the US just a few years following the disintegration of the Soviet Union. She is an advocate for art and education. Her works explore human experiences in the circumstances of poverty and strong societal pressures. Currently she is based in New York where she is a graduate film student at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. She is a mother of three and made her recent short \"Seide\" while having her new baby.", "Emanuele Crialese Emanuele Crialese (born 26 July 1965) is an Italian screenwriter and film director. He is a native of Rome and studied filmmaking in New York City. Emanuele Crialese was born on 26 July 1965 in Rome to Sicilian parents. He studied filmmaking at the Tisch School of the Arts, New York University from where he graduated in 1995. During this time he made several short films including Heartless (1994). His first feature film, Once We Were Strangers (1997), was an Italian-American co-production, funded by a producer who had noticed Crialese during his apprenticeship in the United States. Between 1998 and 2000, Crialese worked in theater and on a drafting of a cinematic treatment of Ellis Island along with producer Robert Chartoff, the producer of Raging Bull and Rocky. This was followed by the feature \"Respiro\" (2002) starring Valeria Golino. The film recounts an old Sicilian legend about the island of Lampedusa. Crialese won the Critics Week Grand Prize and the Young Critics Award at the Cannes Film Festival for the film. The film was nominated for the Best European Union Film at the César Awards and Best Film, David di Donatello Awards. \"Nuovomondo\" (2006) premiered at the Venice Film Festival on 8 September 2006 to critical praise and seven nominations at the festival. The film won six awards at the Venice Film Festival, including two awards for Best Film (the CinemAvvenire and Pasinetti Awards), along with the FEDIC, SIGNIS, Silver Lion, and UNICEF awards. It was nominated for eleven David di Donatello Awards of which it won three. It was also nominated for a Golden Lion award and the European Film Award, for the Film of the Year. The film was Italy's submission for the 79th Academy Awards. His fourth feature, \"Terraferma\" (2011), premiered at the 68th Venice International Film Festival. The film was selected as the Italian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 84th Academy Awards, but it did not make the final shortlist. It won the Special Jury Prize at the Venice Film Festival the equivalent of third place. In 2012 he won the Mario Monicelli for Best Director at the Bari International Film Festival (BIF&St), Bari for the film.", "New York City Independent Film Festival The New York City Independent Film Festival (a.k.a. NYC Independent Film Festival, NYCIndieFF) is an annual film festival held in New York City. It was founded in 2009 by Dennis Cieri and Bonnie Rush. The festival has screened over 1,800 movies from 81 different countries since it began in 2010. Official website https://www.nycindieff.com/" ]
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[ "Swiss" ]
Do both directors of films The Mouth of the Wolf (2009 film) and Town Without Pity share the same nationality?
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Town Without Pity Town Without Pity (German: Stadt ohne Mitleid) is a 1961 American/Swiss/West German international co-production drama film directed by Gottfried Reinhardt. Produced by The Mirisch Corporation, the film stars Kirk Douglas, Barbara Rütting, Christine Kaufmann, and E.G. Marshall. The film was based on the 1960 novel "Das Urteil" ("The Verdict") by German writer Gregor Dorfmeister, who wrote under the pen name Manfred Gregor. At Kirk Douglas' suggestion, the film was rewritten without credit by Dalton Trumbo. In occupied Germany in 1960, four somewhat drunk American soldiers leave Florida Bar, where "Town Without Pity" is playing on the jukebox, and head to a river in the nearby countryside. Meanwhile, sixteen-year-old local Fräulein Karin Steinhof (Christine Kaufmann) has a quarrel with her 19-year-old boyfriend, Frank Borgmann (Gerhart Lippert), on the banks of the same river. She swims back to her starting point, lights up a cigarette and strips out of her wet bikini when she is confronted by Sergeant Chuck Snyder (Frank Sutton) and gang-raped by him, Corporal Birdwell Scott (Richard Jaeckel), Private Joey Haines (Mal Sondock), and Corporal Jim Larkin (Robert Blake). (A blatant production error can be seen in the film during the rape scene when a body double substitutes for Kaufmann; the "victim" has short, fluffy dry hair in contrast to Kaufmann's long, straight, wet hair.) Borgmann hears her screams for help and swims across the river to help her, but he is knocked out by Snyder. After three of the men start to leave the scene, the guilt-ridden Larkin lingers behind; he covers Steinhof with his shirt before he finally flees with the other three men. The men are quickly apprehended. To appease the anger and outrage of the Germans, Major General Stafford, the division commanding general, orders that their court martial be held in public in the local high school gymnasium. The prosecutor, Lieutenant Colonel Jerome Pakenham (E.G. Marshall), seeks the death penalty. Major Steve Garrett (Kirk Douglas) is assigned to defend the accused rapists. After interviewing his clients, Garrett tries to plea bargain for long sentences at hard labor, but Pakenham feels he has a strong case.
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[ "Without Pity (1948 film) Without Pity () is a 1948 Italian film directed by Alberto Lattuada from a script by the director himself, Federico Fellini and Tullio Pinelli, from an original story by Ettore Margadonna. As World War II ends, African-American army sergeant Jerry Jackson is stationed in Italy. Local gangsters want to use him as a conduit to obtain supplies that the military has access to which can then be sold on the black market, but Jerry remains honest and refuses their attempts to bribe him. Soon however, he falls in love with Angela, an Italian woman who had earlier helped save his life and who now finds herself stranded in the area in a fruitless attempt to find her brother. Realizing that Angela is perilously close to having to turn to prostitution, Jerry relents and makes a deal with the gangsters, hoping to make enough money to support Angela. After he is caught and jailed, Jerry escapes from his prison camp and deserts, searching for a way that he and Angela can run away to be together. \"Without Pity\" was banned in the United States and British occupation zones in Germany, but was a success at the box-office in Italy. Notes", "Without Pity (2014 film) Without Pity () is a 2014 Italian crime-thriller film co-written and directed by Michele Alhaique. It was screened in the Horizons section at the 71st Venice International Film Festival. Rome. Mimmo is the adopted son of the crime family led by Santili, the patriarch. Mimmo and his cousin Manuel, the legitimate son of the boss, act in a ruthless and arrogant way for the whole city, now terrified by their power. Despite everything, however, Mimmo, even if loyal to his family, would like to get out and live a quiet and peaceful life. He receives the task of bringing an escort, Tania, to his cousin's house in view of a party but, in love with her, he manages to take her away after hitting Manuel with a skateboard.", "Patch Town Patch Town is a 2014 Canadian dark fantasy comedy holiday film written by Christopher Bond and Jessie Gabe, and directed by Craig Goodwill. Originally a short film that inspired a much larger project, \"Patch Town\" stars actors Rob Ramsay, Julian Richings, Zoie Palmer, Suresh John, Stephanie Pitsiladis and Ken Hall in a quasi-musical about a fictional Soviet-style factory producing children's toys, run by a bitter and lonely executive officer named Yuri (Richings). When a factory employee named Jon (Ramsay) discovers a hidden secret about his past, he goes on a quest of trying to establish a real family for himself. Completed in 2014 and released in 2015, \"Patch Town\" received mixed reviews, but was praised for the cast's acting and the story's satirically grim take on United States 1980s consumer culture, and Soviet communism. Jon, an overweight factory worker, and his timid but strong-willed wife, Mary, live together as employees in a structured housing bloc in \"Patch Town\", a workers' village situated outside a toy factory known as Patch Enterprises. No employee has children, nor do they remember anything about their own childhoods. One night, as Jon prepares a baby doll for shipment (a process that actually involves removing the sentient, living dolls from magical cabbages grown on the factory grounds), he witnesses his co-worker being beaten by guards after getting caught stealing one of the cabbages. Jon notices Yuri, the shady factory owner, watching from nearby. He hurries home to meet Mary, revealing that he himself got away with successfully stealing one of the cabbages, in which came an infant baby that he and Mary have lovingly named \"Daisy\". They both watch from across the street as another married couple, who also stole a cabbage baby, have Yuri and his dwarf henchman Kenny dispose of the baby in a garbage dumpster, after which the couple is dragged away and imprisoned. Jon plans to flee Patch Town with Mary and Daisy, and meets with Darryl, a black-market smuggler, who reveals a file containing information on Jon's \"mother\", Bethany, the young child who purchased him from a shopping mall in the 1980s. Jon realizes that he, Mary and all the other employees of Patch Town are living human-sized adults of their former doll selves.", "Laurent Touil-Tartour Laurent Touil-Tartour (born November 23, 1971) is a French film director, screenwriter, producer. He is known for writing, directing and producing the web series \"Urban Wolf\" (2010). His works have been described by the American Film Institute, Wired Magazine, The Wall Street Journal and others as \"original and visionary\". In 2010 Touil-Tartour licensed the worldwide distribution rights of Urban Wolf to Sony Pictures Entertainment. In 2011 Touil-Tartour has signed with film director/producer Michael Bay's production company The to direct feature films, commercials, video games, web content and/or TV shows. Urban Wolf is an online non-verbal drama series, with 15 webisodes of 4 minutes long each. The world premiere and first public screening of the show took place at Comic-Con 2009, in San Diego. In 2009, at the 4th Annual Los Angeles Independent Television Festival \"Urban Wolf\" won the Award for Best Drama. And in 2011, during the 15th Annual Webby Awards \"Urban Wolf\" won the People's Voice Award for Best Drama. It also has been selected for the 2009 AFI DigiFest by the American Film Institute as \"one of the most compelling example of new media storytelling\". On March 31, 2010, Sony Pictures Entertainment officially announces a groundbreaking worldwide distribution deal for the series. The show premiered on Sony Pictures Entertainment owned Crackle on May 13, 2010. Then Sony Pictures syndicated the series in a multi-platform footprint including: YouTube, hulu, the PlayStation Network, Google TV, the Bravia Network, Animax, AXN, AT&T, Sprint. On October 19, 2012, Apple releases an exclusive and innovative mobile app edition of Urban Wolf available on its 172 iTunes App Stores worldwide for iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad. The Urban Wolf app edition features the entire 15 episodes of the series in HD and also offers an outstanding wealth of exclusive bonus feature to the next-gen format with in-depth background information. These extra materials function similarly to the extras section on a DVD box set. Laurent Touil-Tartour has received overwhelmingly enthusiastic critical reception upon the release of \"Urban Wolf\".", "World Without Shame World Without Shame is a 1962 British naturist film directed by Donovan Winter and starring Yvonne Martell.", "The Town (2010 film) The Town is a 2010 American crime thriller film co-written, directed by, and starring Ben Affleck, adapted from Chuck Hogan's 2004 novel \"Prince of Thieves\". It also stars Rebecca Hall, Jon Hamm, Jeremy Renner, Blake Lively, Titus Welliver, Pete Postlethwaite, Chris Cooper and Slaine, and follows a group of Boston bank robbers who set out to get one final score by robbing Fenway Park. The film premiered on September 8, 2010, at the Venice Film Festival before being released in the United States on September 17, 2010. Based on actual events, it received praise from critics for its direction, screenplay, editing and the performances of the cast (particularly Renner) and grossed $154 million worldwide. The film was chosen by the National Board of Review as one of the top ten films of 2010, while Renner was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and Postlethwaite was posthumously nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor. Four lifelong friends from the neighborhood of Charlestown, Boston, Douglas \"Doug\" MacRay, James \"Jem\" Coughlin, Albert \"Gloansy\" MacGloan, and Desmond \"Dez\" Elden, rob a bank. Assistant manager, Claire Keesey, is a hostage who is released unharmed. Finding out Claire lives in their neighborhood, Doug follows her to find out how much she has told the police, and to ensure that hot-headed Jem does not eliminate her as a witness. Soon a romance grows between them, which Doug hides from the gang. As they grow closer, he tells Claire of his search for his long-lost mother, who he believes went to live with his aunt in Tangerine, Florida. He also almost became a professional hockey player which he threw away to follow in his father's footsteps. She tells Doug she saw a tattoo on one of the robbers, and he realizes that she can identify Jem, sending them all to prison. Jem will kill her if he knows, so to dissuade her, Doug tells her if she tells the police they will then put her in witness protection and send her to live in another state. His plan works, and she doesn't talk.", "Time Without Pity Time Without Pity is a 1957 British film noir thriller film about a father trying to save his son from execution for murder. The film was directed by expatriate American Joseph Losey after he was blacklisted in the U.S. during the (McCarthy / McCarthyism) era. \"Time Without Pity\" was Losey's second film in Britain and his first under his own name. The film stars Michael Redgrave, Ann Todd, Leo McKern, Paul Daneman, Peter Cushing, Alec McCowen Renee Houston. It was the second film for which British cinematographer Freddie Francis was credited in that craft (the British credit is simply for \"photography\"). Joan Plowright appears briefly as a feisty chorus girl and Lois Maxwell, the first Miss Moneypenny in the James Bond films, also has a standout scene as a girl who can be bought. The screenplay was written by fellow blacklisted writer Ben Barzman and adapted from the play \"Someone Waiting\" by Emlyn Williams. David Graham, a recovering alcoholic, returns to England with only one day within which to save his son Alec from hanging for the murder of Alec's girlfriend, Jenny Cole. Graham has been a neglectful, absentee father who missed the entire trial while he was in a sanatorium in Canada. At first, Alec refuses to see Graham, and when they do meet, Alec is without any hope for reprieve and cannot show any affection for his father. His sobriety in constant jeopardy, Graham believes that his son is innocent and begins a frantic last-minute effort to find the evidence that will save his son's life, if not redeem himself as a father. With the help of his son's steadfast solicitor, Graham desperately, and often ineffectively, investigates the circumstances surrounding the girl's murder, visiting first her furious sister and then the home of wealthy car magnate Robert Stanford, where the girlfriend was killed. Stanford and his family have provided the only real support that Alec has ever known. Graham ricochets between potential allies, foes and new leads in order to learn who the real murderer could be, with suspects including Stanford's beautiful wife Honor, his even younger secretary Vickie Harker and his adopted son who's Alec's best friend, Brian, who allows Graham to see what his own misspent life looked like through his son's eyes.", "Man About Town (1932 film) Man About Town is a 1932 American drama film directed by John Francis Dillon and written by Leon Gordon. The film stars Warner Baxter, Karen Morley, Conway Tearle, Alan Mowbray, Leni Stengel and Lilian Bond. The film was released on May 22, 1932, by Fox Film Corporation.", "Wolf (1994 film) Wolf is a 1994 American romantic horror film directed by Mike Nichols and starring Jack Nicholson, Michelle Pfeiffer, James Spader, Kate Nelligan, Richard Jenkins, Christopher Plummer, Eileen Atkins, David Hyde Pierce, and Om Puri. It was written by Jim Harrison and Wesley Strick, and an uncredited Elaine May. The music was composed by Ennio Morricone and the cinematography was done by Giuseppe Rotunno. Will Randall is bitten by a black wolf he accidentally struck while driving home in Vermont. Afterwards, he gets demoted from editor-in-chief of a publishing house when it gets taken over by tycoon Raymond Alden, who replaces him with Will's protégé Stewart Swinton. Will discovers that Stewart had begged Raymond for the job behind Will's back and suspects that Stewart is having an affair with his wife Charlotte, after he smells Stewart's scent on her clothes. Will bites Stewart on the hand while entering his apartment and rushes to the room to find Charlotte half-naked. His worst fears are confirmed, and he leaves without saying a word. Will becomes more aggressive as he starts taking on the characteristics of a wolf. With the help of Raymond's headstrong daughter Laura, Will sets out for his new life. His first werewolf transformation takes place at Laura's estate, where he wakes up at night and hunts down a deer. In the morning, Will finds himself on the bank of a stream, with blood all over his face and hands. He visits Dr. Vijav Alezais, who gives him an amulet to protect him from turning completely into a wolf. However, he cannot persuade Will to infect him. That night, Will transforms into a werewolf again: he breaks into the zoo and steals handcuffs from a policeman. Muggers want his wallet, but Will attacks and bites the fingers off one of them. He wakes up in his hotel, with no memory of what happened. Will organizes a mutiny of writers, who threaten to leave the publishing house unless he is retained as editor-in-chief. Raymond agrees, and Will's first act is to fire Stewart, urinating on his shoes in a bathroom and claiming he is \"marking his territory\". While washing his hands, Will finds the fingers in his handkerchief and realizes he has wounded someone. He cuffs himself to a radiator in his hotel room, but Laura arrives and downplays his belief that he is werewolf.", "Ghost Town Anthology Ghost Town Anthology () is a 2019 French-language Canadian supernatural drama film directed by Denis Côté. It was selected to compete for the Golden Bear at the 69th Berlin International Film Festival. The film is an adaptation of the 2015 novel by Quebec writer Laurence Oliver. Set in the small town of Sainte-Irénée-les-Neiges, Quebec, the film centres on the inhabitants of the town who are struggling to cope after Simon Dubé, the teenage son of an area family, is killed in a car accident. As the family and town grieve, however, the residents begin to report a number of ghost sightings." ]
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[ "no" ]
What is the date of death of Veronique Peck's husband?
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Veronique Peck Veronique Peck ("née" Passani; February 5, 1932 – August 17, 2012) was a French-American arts patron, philanthropist, and journalist. She was married to actor, political activist, and philanthropist Gregory Peck from 1955 until his death in 2003. Veronique Passani was born in Paris, France; her mother was an artist and writer, while her father was an architect. She began her career as a journalist for "France Soir", a French daily newspaper, and met Gregory Peck while conducting an interview for "France Soir" in 1953. The couple married on December 31, 1955, shortly after Peck's divorce from his first wife, Greta Kukkonen. Peck became a well-known philanthropist in Greater Los Angeles. She and her husband raised approximately $50 million for the American Cancer Society during the 1960s. The "Los Angeles Times" named her "Woman of the Year" in 1967. She also co-founded the Inner City Cultural Center, a theater group composed of members from different ethnic backgrounds, and the Los Angeles Music Center. Peck became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1976. Shortly after Gregory Peck's death in 2003, Peck took control of the Gregory Peck Reading Series. The series raises money on behalf of the Los Angeles Public Library through the collaboration of celebrities. She had become friends with author Harper Lee while her husband was filming "To Kill a Mockingbird". In 2005, Peck convinced the normally reclusive Lee to accept the Los Angeles Public Library Literary Award in person. Peck and her family attended a private White House screening of "To Kill a Mockingbird" in 2012 with President Barack Obama to mark what would have been her late husband's 96th birthday. Veronique Peck died of a heart ailment at her home in Los Angeles, California on August 17, 2012, at the age of 80. She was survived by her daughter filmmaker Cecilia Peck Voll, son Anthony Peck, three grandchildren, and her brother, Dr. Cornelius Passani.
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[ " He also guest-starred on dozens of television series including \"The Untouchables\", \"Perry Mason\", \"The Fugitive\", \"Kentucky Jones\", \"Get Smart\", \"\" (\"Tomorrow Is Yesterday\", 1967), \"Cannon\", and \"Bonanza\", as well as films such as \"Heaven Can Wait\", \"Bullitt\", \"Cheech and Chong's Next Movie\", and \"The Prisoner of Second Avenue\". He played the Governor's director of security, Captain McDermott, on several episodes of \"Benson\". He played a rabbi in an episode of \"The Dick Van Dyke Show\". On January 20, 1952, Peck married advertising copywriter Phyllis Houston in New York. Peck died of a heart attack on September 12, 1992, in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 75. His remains were donated to medical science.", "John Peck John Peck may refer to:", "Cecilia Peck Cecilia Peck (born May 1, 1958) is an American film producer, director and actress. She is the only daughter of actor Gregory Peck and his second wife Veronique Passani. As an actress, Peck was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for \"The Portrait\", in which she played the daughter of her father's character. She played the leading role in \"Torn Apart\", and appeared in \"My Best Friend Is a Vampire\". Peck produced \"A Conversation with Gregory Peck\", about her father, which premiered as a Special Selection in the 2000 Cannes Film Festival, and aired on TCM and PBS American Masters. She directed and produced the documentary short \"Justice For All\", an examination of capital punishment, which was awarded the Silver Gavel Award. She was an associate producer on \"Defending Our Daughters\", a non-fiction film about women's human rights for Lifetime Television, which was awarded the Voices of Courage Award by the Women's Refugee Committee. Since 2008, Peck and her family have been presenting the Gregory Peck Award for Cinematic Excellence to actors and directors at the Dingle International Film Festival and; starting in 2014; at the San Diego International Film Festival. Peck has presented the award to Patrick Stewart, Keith Carradine and Laurence Fishburne. Peck directed and produced \"Shut Up & Sing\", about the backlash against the Dixie Chicks for opposing the Iraq War. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, won a Special Jury Prize at the Chicago Film Festival, Best Documentary at the Sydney, Aspen, and Woodstock Film Festivals, and was shortlisted for the 2007 Academy Awards. Peck directed and produced the feature documentary \"Brave Miss World\" (Netflix), following Linor Abargil's fight for justice and mission to break the silence around rape. The film was nominated for the Emmy Award for Exceptional Merit In Documentary Filmmaking in 2014. Peck's company, \"Rocket Girl Productions\", produces independent feature films and documentaries. In 2018, Peck joined the Board of Directors of the San Diego International Film Festival. In 2020, Peck directed \"\" which follows India Oxenberg among other women sharing their experiences in NXIVM, a self-help organization located in Albany, New York. Prior to working on the documentary, Peck was targeted for recruitment by NXIVM. A previous co-worker previously reached out to Peck informing her of an incredible women's group suggesting she meet with Allison Mack.", " His troops were ambushed day by day, and Peck personally was pinned down by enemy fire while he was en route to the headquarters of the China Theater Commander in Chinwangtao, General Albert C. Wedemeyer. He remained in China until the beginning of June 1946, when he was succeeded by General Keller E. Rockey and returned to the United States. For his service there, he was decorated with his second Legion of Merit and also received the Chinese Order of the Cloud and Banner, 2nd Class by Chiang Kai-shek. After a few months of medical leave in the United States, Peck finally retired from the Marine Corps on November 5, 1946, with the rank of major general. He resided in New York City and during 1953 served for a brief period as deputy director of manpower utilization in the Department of Defense. Peck died on January 13, 1973, in Andrews Air Force Base Hospital, Maryland, and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery together with his wife Elizabeth Davis Peck (1889–1967). They had together one son, William Hubbard Peck (1922–1998), who also served with the Marines and retired with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Major General Peck's ribbon bar:", "Robert Peck Robert Peck may refer to:", " He said, \"Ironically, it was my students who taught me to be a writer, though I was hired to teach them.\" He left teaching in 1971 to write his first novel, \"Don't Look and It Won't Hurt\", published by Holt, Rinehart and Winston in 1972, in which \"A teenage girl struggles to understand her place within her family and in the world.\" He wrote a book each year since then 41 books in 41 years. Peck was an adjunct professor with Louisiana State University's School of Library and Information Sciences. In a 2001 profile, family friend Marc Talbert described Peck as a person \"who is fastidious about what he allows others to know about himself. He knew, respected, and honored personal boundaries in ways that are refreshing for someone who grew up in the sixties and seventies, when every little personal thing was fair game.\" However, when \"The Best Man\" was published in 2016, Peck spoke about marriage equality in the United States from his perspective as a gay man who had grown up in a time when homosexuality was punishable by law. He lived in New York and divided his time between writing and traveling. Peck died in New York City in May 2018 at age 84. \"The only way you can write is by the light of the bridges burning behind you.\" — Richard Peck, at a PEN panel in New York City, February 8, 2010 \"Ironically, it was my students who taught me to be a writer, though I had been hired to teach them,\" Peck said in a speech published in \"Arkansas Libraries\". \"They taught me that a novel must entertain first before it can be anything else. I learned that there is no such thing as a 'grade reading level'; a young person's 'reading level' and attention span will rise and fall according to his degree of interest. I learned that if you do not have a happy ending for the young, you had better do some fast talking.\" \"You never write about yourself; you just always wind up having written about yourself.\" — October 10, 2013, to a library full of 4th graders in Pleasanton, California \"Nobody but a reader ever became a writer.\" Peck wrote exclusively on a typewriter, described here in 'Publishers Weekly': When the author is not traveling, he works at an L-shaped desk, which affords a sunny window.", " In 2004, just a year before his death, Peck divorced Lily and married Kathleen Kline Yates. Peck died at his home in Connecticut on September 25, 2005, after suffering from Parkinson's disease and pancreatic and liver duct cancer. Fuller Theological Seminary houses the archives of his publications, awards, and correspondence. \"The Road Less Traveled\", published in 1978, is Peck's best-known work, and the one that made his reputation. It is, in short, a description of the attributes that make for a fulfilled human being, based largely on his experiences as a psychiatrist and a person. The book consists of four parts. In the first part Peck examines the notion of discipline, which he considers essential for emotional, spiritual, and psychological health, and which he describes as \"the means of spiritual evolution\". The elements of discipline that make for such health include the ability to delay gratification, accepting responsibility for oneself and one's actions, a dedication to truth, and \"balancing\". \"Balancing\" refers to the problem of reconciling multiple, complex, possibly conflicting factors that impact on an important decision—on one's own behalf or on behalf of another. In the second part, Peck addresses the nature of love, which he considers the driving force behind spiritual growth. He contrasts his own views on the nature of love against a number of common misconceptions about love, including: Peck argues that \"true\" love is rather an \"action\" that one undertakes \"consciously\" to extend one's ego boundaries by including others or humanity, and is therefore the spiritual nurturing—which can be directed toward oneself, as well as toward one's beloved. In the third part Peck deals with religion, and the commonly accepted views and misconceptions concerning religion. He recounts experiences from several patient case histories, and the evolution of the patients' notion of God, religion, atheism—especially of their own \"religiosity\" or atheism—as their therapy with Peck progressed. The fourth and final part concerns \"grace\", the powerful force originating outside human consciousness that nurtures spiritual growth in human beings.", "Edward Peck Edward Peck may refer to:", "William Peck William Peck may refer to:", "James Peck James Peck may refer to:" ]
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[ "June 12, 2003" ]
Which film has the director who died first, Sos Pacific or Amores De Ayer?
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SOS Pacific SOS Pacific is a 1959 British adventure drama film directed by Guy Green and starring Richard Attenborough, Pier Angeli, John Gregson, Eva Bartok and Eddie Constantine. The film was shot in black and white, but later underwent colourisation. A flying boat is forced to ditch in the Pacific during a thunderstorm. Aboard are the owner-pilot Jack Bennett (John Gregson), the navigator Willy (Cec Linder), the flight attendant Teresa (Pier Angeli) and six passengers: a policeman, Petersen (Clifford Evans); his prisoner Mark (Eddie Constantine); Whitey Mullen (Richard Attenborough), a witness against Mark; Dr Strauss, a German scientist (Gunnar Möller); Miss Shaw, a middle-aged Englishwoman (Jean Anderson) and Maria, a young European woman (Eva Bartok). The plane comes down near an island. The navigator has been killed by toxic gas produced when the wrong kind of extinguisher is used on an electrical fire aboard the plane but the others make it to land in two rubber dinghies. Just offshore a fleet of derelict ships is anchored. On the island are two concrete bunkers. In one, a number of goats are tethered. The other, which is lead-lined, contains cameras and measuring instruments. The cameras are trained on a device standing on a smaller island some distance away. The castaways realise that they are in the middle of an H-Bomb testing range and that a bomb is to be detonated in a few hours.
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[ "Juan Amores Juan Amores (25 October 1963 – 28 August 2015) was a Costa Rican long-distance runner. He competed in the men's marathon at the 1988 Summer Olympics.", "Amores, querer con alevosía Amores, querer con alevosía is a Mexican telenovela that originally aired on Azteca Trece from January 15, 2001 to June 22, 2001. The telenovela was created by Bernardo Romero Pereiro and Jimena Romero for the company TV Azteca. It stars by Bárbara Mori and Christian Meier. This is a love story in which there are different ways of feeling it. Carolina belongs to a middle-class family. She lives with her parents and her two sisters and she has a boyfriend named Mario. In college, he accidentally meets Pablo, a young man who appears in an affair with his girlfriend. Their encounter is not so kind and ends with a battle, but in spite of this, there is certainly a great attraction between them, which seems to be the love of the first glance. Guillermo, father of Pablo, has a problem with the magazines that publishes his publishing house, so they decide to make a contract with the young people and publish a magazine for them. Among them, he meets with Carolina, who during his return to see Pablo initiates a powerful war without realizing that in fact they are in love.", "The Mouth of the Wolf (1988 film) The Mouth of the Wolf () is a 1988 Peruvian drama film directed by Francisco José Lombardi. The film was selected as the Peruvian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 61st Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.", "A Son of Man A Son of Man is a 2018 Ecuadorian adventure film directed by Jamaicanoproblem and co- directed by Pablo Agüero. It was selected as the Ecuadorian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards, but it was not nominated. A circumspect American teenager from Minneapolis joins his mysterious father in Ecuador, where they embark on a treasure hunt for Incan gold.", "Así O De Otra Manera Así o de otra manera (English (roughly): \"One Way or Another\") is a 1964 Argentine drama film directed and written by David José Kohon based on a story by Carlos Latorre.", "The Odyssey (film) The Odyssey (French title: L'Odyssée) is a 2016 French-Belgian biographical adventure film directed by Jérôme Salle and written by Salle and Laurent Turner, based on the non-fiction book \"Capitaine de La Calypso\" by Albert Falco and Yves Paccalet. The film stars Lambert Wilson, Pierre Niney, and Audrey Tautou. The film follows Jacques-Yves Cousteau, a French ocean-going adventurer, biologist, and filmmaker. It sticks to historical events, and was based on documentation and interviews with people who worked with Cousteau. In 1949, Cousteau was an eccentric naval officer in France, with a beautiful oceanside house, who wanted to be a pilot. But he quits the Navy to explore and document the ocean. His boat, Calypso, was a 1941 minesweeper. The film is a biopic covering aquatic adventures over thirty years. Cousteau is revealed to be an adventurer but also an inventor. He designed the autonomous regulator, but also had romantic views of colonising the sea. The film documents the decline of his finances and fortunes and banks pull out as the era of 'robotics' and automation begins as a more plausible financial investment than Cousteau's ideas of civilizations living under the sea. While he was influential and ambitious, he is revealed to be disloyal to his wife Simone, who remains on the Calypso year-round while Cousteau travels extensively. He conflicts with and is reconciled with his environmentalist son, Philippe, who is also a filmmaker. A major trip to Antarctica sees him working with his son and loyal crew, to make films he has promised to his investors and producing essential revenue as his business was failing. Cousteau is then showing gathering fame and travelling the world in the late 1970s. The death of Philippe on 28 June 1979, in a PBY Catalina flying boat crash in the Tagus river near Lisbon is the low point in Cousteau's life. Cousteau is shown to be a popularizer of the hidden wonders of the sea, and the person who raised the most awareness of the ocean and the need for environmental protection for many decades. His role in brokering the moratorium on resource exploitation in Antarctica is mentioned in the closing credits.", "Rodrigo Moreno Rodrigo Moreno (born October 1972 in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine film director and screenplay writer. He works mainly in the cinema of Argentina. According to Joel Poblete, who writes for \"Mabuse,\" a cinema magazine, Rodrigo Moreno is one of the members of the so-called \"New Argentina Cinema\" which began c. 1998. Moreno studied cinema and graduated from the directing program at the \"Universidad del Cine\", Buenos Aires, Argentina, where he has been teaching directing and screenplay writing since 1996. Many of his films have been critically hailed at various international film festivals. In 1993, he wrote and directed his first short film, \"Nosotros,\" which won best film at the Bilbao International Festival of Documentary and Short Films. His 2006 film, his first film feature he directs alone, is \"The Minder\" (). His 2011 film \"A Mysterious World\" premiered In Competition at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival and was nominated for the Golden Bear. Wins Nominations", "Sobre las olas (film) Sobre las olas (English: Over the Waves) is a 1950 Mexican musical biographical film directed by Ismael Rodríguez and starring Pedro Infante, Beatriz Aguirre and Andrés Soler. It portrays the life of the composer Juventino Rosas.", "Don Segundo Sombra (film) Don Segundo Sombra is a 1969 Argentine drama film directed by Manuel Antín, based on the novel of the same name. Winner of the Silver Condor Award for Best Film, it was entered into the 1970 Cannes Film Festival. The story takes place in San Antonio de Areco, in the Argentine pampas. Fabio Cáceres remembers his childhood as an orphan and his youth working in the fields, alongside his godfather, Don Segundo Sombra, a lonely gaucho whom he admires and from whom he will learn to be a gaucho, following him in all his adventures. Don Segundo will be Fabio's role model.", "Josué Méndez Josué Méndez (born September 18, 1976, in Lima, Peru) is a Peruvian director of films including \"Dias de Santiago\" (Days of Santiago) and \"Dioses\" (Gods). \"Dias de Santiago\" is about a cab driver in Lima, Peru. It was Peru's official nomination into the 2006 Academy Awards." ]
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[ "Amores De Ayer" ]
What is the date of death of the director of film 813 (Film)?
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813 (film) 813 is a 1920 American mystery film directed by Charles Christie and Scott Sidney, written by Scott Darling from the 1910 story by Maurice Leblanc, produced by Al Christie, released by the Christie Film Company and the Robertson-Cole Pictures Corporation, and starring Wedgwood Nowell as jewel thief Arsene Lupin with a supporting cast featuring Ralph Lewis, Wallace Beery, and Laura La Plante. It is not known whether the film currently survives, and it may be a lost film. As summarized in a film publication, Robert Castleback (Lewis) has plans for worldwide power through a mysterious secret that he possesses. Arsene Lupin (Nowell), master thief but loyal Frenchman, knows of the secret and is attempting to obtain state papers held by Castleback. Two other persons in the employ of the Kaiser are attempting the same thing. Castleback is murdered and some suspect Lupin, who announces his intention to catch the real killer. Disguised as the chief of police, he works fearlessly alongside the police. Soon he comes into contact with another master criminal, Ribeira (Beery), who is masquerading as Maj. Parbury, and Lupin suspects that he is complicit in the crime. Lupin falls in love with Dolores Castleback (Adams), widow of the murdered man. When Ribeira, to get rid of Lupin, steals his daughter and informs Lupin that he will have to go alone to a deserted house to get her back, Lupin goes, foils the plot to kill him, and escapes through a tunnel that comes out in the home of Delores. As he turns from the mantelpiece where he has discovered the hiding place of the state papers, he sees a mysterious man that he has been trailing. To Lupin's horror he finds that the man is really Delores, who is in reality a German criminal. She kills herself and Lupin escapes.
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[ "Krzysztof Krauze Krzysztof Krauze (2 April 1953 – 24 December 2014) was a Polish film director, cinematographer and actor, best known for his thriller \"The Debt\" (1999). Krauze was born in Warsaw and completed his cinematography studies at the National Film School in Łódź in the 1970s. He left Poland in 1980, but returned in 1983. In the 1980s and early 1990s he worked for various production studios in Poland. In 1997 he was named \"Man of the Year\" by the Polish magazine \"Życie\". He also acted in several films by other Polish directors. Krauze was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2006, and died on 24 December 2014, aged 61.", "Frank Tidy Frank Tidy (17 May 1932 – 27 January 2017) was an English cinematographer. Born in Liverpool, Tidy initially worked in stop motion animation before beginning working as a cinematographer. Along with Roger Woodburn and Peter Biziou, he founded the company Valley Films, and would work on hundreds of commercials, many of which directed by eventual film director Ridley Scott and his brother Tony Scott. In 1977, he would serve as cinematographer on Scott's directorial debut \"The Duellists\", for which he received a nomination for the BAFTA Award for Best Cinematography. Tidy's filmography would eventually include \"Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot\", \"Under Siege\" and \"Chain Reaction\". He was a Genie Award nominee for Best Cinematography in 1986 for the film \"One Magic Christmas\". Tidy died on 27 January 2017, aged 84, at a Kent nursing home following a battle with dementia.", "Nadav Levitan Nadav Levitan (; 21 April 1945 – 9 January 2010) was an Israeli film director, screenwriter, writer, and songwriter. He directed nine films between 1981 and 1999. His film \"Stalin's Disciples\" (in Hebrew \"Stalin's Children\", ילדי סטאלין), was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival. He was married to Israeli musician Chava Alberstein, who recorded many of his songs. Levitan died on 10 January 2010 of an undisclosed lung ailment.", "Ryszard Bugajski Ryszard Bugajski (27 April 1943 – 7 June 2019) was a Polish film director and screenwriter. He directed 23 films and television shows since 1972. His 1982 film \"Interrogation\" starring Krystyna Janda and Adam Ferency, described as \"the most anti-Communist film in the history of Polish People's Republic\" was entered into the 1990 Cannes Film Festival after being suppressed by the Polish communist authorities for several years. He was born on 27 April 1943 in German-occupied Poland. His father was Edward Bugajski, a member of the pre-war Polish Socialist Party (PPS). He studied philosophy at the University of Warsaw and directing at the National Film School in Łódź, which he graduated from in 1973. In 1976, he joined the X Film Unit managed by Andrzej Wajda, where he directed the films \"A Woman and a Woman\" and \"Classes\". In 1981, he made the full-length feature film \"Interrogation\", which was banned by the communist censorship because of the film's message being incompatible with the political line of the Polish authorities after the imposition of martial law. As a result of this, the X Unit was officially dissolved. In 1985, Bugajski decided to emigrate to Canada where he became a director of popular television series. The official premiere of \"Interrogation\" took place in December 1989, after the collapse of communism in Poland. He was a recipient of numerous film awards including the Golden Grape Award, Special Award at the Gdynia Film Festival and Silver Hugo Award at the Chicago International Film Festival. In June 2008, he was awarded the Officer's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta for \"his outstanding contributions to the democratic transformations in Poland as well as for achievements for the country in his professional and social work\". In October 2008, he received the Golden Medal for Merit to Culture - Gloria Artis from the-then Minister of Culture and National Heritage Bogdan Zdrojewski. He died on 7 June 2019 in Warsaw after a long illness.", "Iskra Babich Iskra Leonidovna Babich (; 10 January 1932 – 5 August 2001) was a Soviet film director and screenwriter. Her 1981 film \"Muzhiki!\" was entered into the 32nd Berlin International Film Festival, where it won an Honourable Mention. She was married to actor Afanasi Kochetkov. She died of cancer.", "Michel Vuillermet Michel Vuillermet (13 March 1950 – 16 February 2021) was a French film director. After studying modern humanities and history, Vuillermet joined the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques. Originally a cameraman, he first directed a film in 1980 with \"\". It won best screenplay at the Festival du Livre de Nice and was presented at the Cannes Film Festival. He would also direct several documentaries for television. Michel Vuillermet died on 16 February 2021, at the age of 70, twenty five days short from his 71st birthday.", "81 81 may refer to:", "Michael Glawogger Michael Glawogger (3 December 1959 – 23 April 2014) was an Austrian film director, screenwriter and cinematographer. From 1981 to 1982, Glawogger studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, and from 1983 to 1989 at the Vienna Film Academy. Like fellow Austrian director Ulrich Seidl, with whom he collaborated several times, he was mainly known for his documentary films, such as \"Megacities\" (1998), \"Workingman's Death\" (2005) and \"Whores' Glory\" (2011). In 2008 he was a member of the jury at the 30th Moscow International Film Festival. In 2013, Glawogger contributed one chapter to \"Cathedrals of Culture\", a 3-D film on architecture produced by Wim Wenders. Four days after incorrectly being diagnosed with typhus, he died from malaria on 22 April 2014 shortly before midnight in Monrovia, Liberia during a movie production. In February 2015, a book of stories entitled \"69 Hotel Zimmer\" was released. The stories used hotel rooms Glawogger had visited (or in some cases only heard about in passing) as a departure for stories that reflect the visual richness for which his films are celebrated.", "Giorgos Katakouzinos Giorgos Katakouzinos () was a Greek film director and screenwriter. He was born in Alexandria, Egypt on January 1, 1943 and died in Athens on August 13, 2013. He is mostly known for his film \"Angelos\", a film shot in 1982, which dealt with the topic of homosexuality. The film was inspired by a real event that happened a few years earlier. The film is considered pretty daring for the early 1980s, because homosexuality was social stigma in conservative Greek society of those times. The film won three awards in Thessaloniki film festival among them the best film award. The second film \"Apousies (Absences)\" deals with a Greek bourgeois family in the early 20th century and won accolades in Valencia International Film Festival. His third film \"Zoe\" was also inspired by a real crime that had shocked Greek society in the late 1980s. He had also worked in Greek television.", "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." ]
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[ "October 1, 1955" ]
Which song came out earlier, Apocalypse Please or Skelewu?
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Skelewu "Skelewu" is a song by Nigerian singer Davido. It was released as the third single from his upcoming album. The song was produced by Shizzi, HKN Music's in-house producer. It peaked at number 1 on Afribiz's Top 100 chart. The song was ranked 5th on "Premium Times" list of the Top 10 songs of 2013. It gained popularity in Nigeria after Davido announced the Skelewu dance competition. The song was endorsed by African footballers Emmanuel Adebayor and Samuel Eto'o. To promote the song, Davido uploaded an instructional dance video of "Skelewu" onto YouTube on 18 August 2013. The video was directed by Jassy Generation. The release of the instructional video accompany the announcement of the Skelewu dance competitionIn. In order to win the competition, participants were told to watch the instructional dance video and upload videos of themselves dancing to the song. According to "Pulse", the number of dance videos uploaded to YouTube by fans aggregated to over 100,000 views. On 10 October 2013, Davido declared Bello Moshood Abiola the winner of the competition, tweeting: "Congrats my lil bro kiddy!! Won the 3k dollars skelewu competition .. I’m gonna change this kids life!! More things to come kiddy!!" Abiola received a sum of $3,000 from Davido. There were two music videos released after Davido released the instructional dance video of Skelewu. The first music video, directed by Sesan, was released on 15 October 2013. It was uploaded onto YouTube under "DAVID-O HKNMUSIC", a parody account. Shortly after the release of the music video, fans of Davido took to Twitter to belittle the video. They claimed that it wasn't up to par. Davido told fans to disregard the unauthorized release of the video. Moreover, he told fans that the official music video for "Skelewu" would be shot and directed by Moe Musa. Sesan broke his silence in a statement released by his team. He said: "My attention is drawn toward the chaos surrounding the release of the Skelewu video. I and my team shot the video for Davido in Nigeria and to the best of my knowledge, my client and his team were very happy with the result, when they watched and approved the video.
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[ "Apocalypse (Thundercat album) Apocalypse is the second studio album by American musician Thundercat. It was released in July 2013 under the label Brainfeeder. In February 2014, Thundercat released a double video on the MySpace website for the 10th and 11th tracks from the album, respectively titled \"Evangelion\" and \"We'll Die\", which were both directed by the photographer B+ (Brian Cross), who also shot the album art.", "Apocalypse Soon Apocalypse Soon is an extended play (EP) by American electronic dance music band Major Lazer. It was released in 2014 after the success of their 2013 studio album \"Free the Universe\". The EP includes 5 tracks featuring collaborations with a number of artists, notably Sean Paul and Pharrell Williams in addition to Machel Montano, RDX, Moska and Mr. Fox. The song \"Come On to Me\" featuring Sean Paul charted in France and the Netherlands, whereas the track \"Aerosol Can\" featuring Pharrell Williams charted in Australia and Belgium. The EP itself charted in France and New Zealand.", "Apocalypse (Primal Fear album) Apocalypse is the twelfth studio album by German heavy metal band Primal Fear. The album was released on 10 August 2018 via Frontiers Records. It is also the second and last album with drummer Francesco Jovino.", "Please... Die! Please ... Die! is the third full-length album by the death metal band, Carnal Forge. It was released in 2001.", "Apocalyptic Revelation Apocalyptic Revelation is the second album by Brazilian death metal band Krisiun.", "Skeleton Repelent Skeleton Repelent is the fourth solo album by American indie hip hop artist Doseone. It was released in 2007. The album features contributions from Dan Boeckner of Wolf Parade.", "Aesop Rock Ian Matthias Bavitz (born June 5, 1976), better known by his stage name Aesop Rock, is an American rapper and producer residing in Portland, Oregon. He was at the forefront of the new wave of underground and alternative hip hop acts that emerged during the late 1990s and early 2000s. He was signed to El-P's Definitive Jux label until it went on hiatus in 2010. In a 2010 retrospective, betterPropaganda ranked him at number 19 at the \"Top 100 Artists of the Decade\". He released his first album, \"Music for Earthworms\", in 1997, with \"Float\" following 3 years later. \"Labor Days\", his third studio album, was released on September 18, 2001. His next release came two years later, titled \"Bazooka Tooth\", released on September 23, 2003. His fourth studio album, \"None Shall Pass\", was released on August 28, 2007. Its titular song became one of Ian's most popular and well-known songs. His seventh record, \"Skelethon\", was released on July 10, 2012. His seventh release, \"The Impossible Kid\", came out on April 29, 2016. His eighth and most recent album, \"Spirit World Field Guide\", came out on November 13, 2020. He is a member of the groups The Weathermen, Hail Mary Mallon (with Rob Sonic & DJ Big Wiz), The Uncluded (with Kimya Dawson) and Malibu Ken (with Tobacco). Regarding his name, he said: \"I acquired the name Aesop from a movie I had acted in with some friends. It was my character's name and it sort of stuck. The rock part came later just from throwing it in rhymes.\" Bavitz was born at Syosset Hospital in Syosset, New York, and raised in Northport, Long Island, New York to his father Paul and mother Jameija. Ian has two brothers: Christopher T. Bavitz (born 1973), a clinical professor at Harvard Law School and director of Cyberlaw Clinic at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, and Graham J. Bavitz (born 1978). Along with his siblings, Ian was raised Catholic, but he later became agnostic.", "Apocalypse (video game) Apocalypse is a third-person shooter video game released for the PlayStation, developed by Neversoft and published by Activision. It features actor Bruce Willis, who provides the main character's likeness and voice. A brilliant evil scientist named \"The Reverend\" has created a powerful theocracy based on the idea of a rapidly approaching apocalypse. He uses his expertise to create four powerful \"Horsemen of the Apocalypse\", War, Plague, Beast and Death, in order to ensure this comes to pass. His former colleague, Trey Kincaid (voiced by Bruce Willis), is the only man with the know-how to stop the Reverend, but is locked up in jail and must escape in order to save the world. \"Apocalypse\" is a 3D multidirectional shooter. The character is moved using the DualShock controller's left analog stick, and shooting is handled independently by pressing the right stick in a given direction, which automatically fires the current weapon in said direction. Alternately, movement may be controlled through the directional pad and shooting performed by using the four face buttons on a typical PlayStation controller (which lack analog sticks), where the buttons' placement on the controller correspond with the fire direction. Using the shoulder buttons it is also possible to duck or jump, and a selection of different weapons are available. The game engine for \"Apocalypse\" was completed in January 1996. Initially, the player character was a mercenary accompanied by an AI-controlled partner, Trey Kincaid, in an effort to create the video game equivalent of a buddy film. Activision later signed a multi-million-dollar deal for Bruce Willis to provide Trey Kincaid's voice and likeness, using \"cyber-scanning\" and motion capture. Trey Kincaid's role was eventually changed to that of the main playable character, thus reducing the necessity for him to have as much spoken dialogue as was originally intended as the scope of Bruce Willis' involvement decreased as development went on. In the finished game, Willis' vocal contributions are limited mostly to the occasional one-liner and a few brief lines of dialogue in story sequences. Willis' face was photo-mapped onto Trey Kincaid's character model. His motion capture performance was recorded at House of Moves, a film studio in Venice, CA. The sessions were held in mid-January 1997 and took two days. During voice recording, Willis made a number of suggestions of changes to the dialogue, which the developers agreed to.", "The Great Stone War The Great Stone War is the second studio album by American deathcore band Winds of Plague. It was released on August 11, 2009 through Century Media Records. The album also marks the recording debut of drummer Art Cruz and keyboardist Kristen Randall. \"The Great Stone War\" sold 6,300 copies in its first week of release to debut at No. 73 on The Billboard 200 chart. A cover of \"Halloween\" by Misfits appears as a bonus track on iTunes. Winds of Plague described the record as a concept album. Vocalist Johnny Plague states, \"The idea of \"The Great Stone War\" is that civilization as a whole will digress and in time inevitably end with one final battle. This battle will not be fought with technology but with stone. Over the course of eleven tracks the listener hears about a journey foreseen through the eyes of a heathen in a religious world apocalypse. Even in the world’s darkest times you always have to take a step back and see life for what it is and not lose sight of what is most important.”", "I Wish (Skee-Lo album) I Wish is the debut studio album by American rapper Skee-Lo. It was released on June 27, 1995 via Sunshine/Scotti Bros. Records. The album was recorded and edited at Sunshine Studios in Hollywood, California. Production was handled by Walter \"Kandor\" Kahn and Skee-Lo, recorded and engineered by Todd Tracy. It features the guest appearances from Funky & Trend. The album peaked at number 53 on the \"Billboard\" 200 and number 37 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums, eventually achieving gold status by the Recording Industry Association of America on November 16, 1995 for sales of 500,000 copies in the United States. It was also nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Rap Album at the 38th Annual Grammy Awards. Three months prior to the album's release, Skee-Lo's debut single, also titled \"I Wish\", was released independently on Sunshine Records. The song quickly became a hit, peaking at No. 13 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 and also receiving a gold certification by the RIAA and Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance nomination. The album's second single, \"Top of the Stairs\", released on October 30, 1995, was also a success, reaching #38 in the UK, #59 in Sweden and #112 in the US. The song later featured in Joseph Ruben's 1995 film \"Money Train\" soundtrack. Music videos for both \"I Wish\" and \"Top of the Stairs\" were directed by Marty Thomas. The third single off of the album was \"Superman\", released on February 27, 1996 went non-charted." ]
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[ "Apocalypse Please" ]
Where did the director of film Alex Holeh Ahavah graduate from?
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Batoul Arafa Batoul Arafa () (born November 16, 1981) is an Egyptian film director She graduated from the Mir de Dieu School in Alexandria, then joined the Higher Institute of Dramatic Arts and graduated from the Drama Department in 2005. Batoul directed a wide range of Television Drama and Theatre pieces of huge success, also directed many festivals both inside and outside of Egypt.
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[ "Youssef Hesham Youssef Hesham (, ; born 27 July 1985) is an Egyptian film director. Hesham is a graduate of Misr University for Science and Technology, where he studied broadcasting he also studied film directing in cooperation with the American University in Cairo. He began his career as an editor, freelance director and few times as an assistant director in Egyptian and foreign films and some advertisements. He began directing independently in 2003 with short films and documentaries which drew attention to him as a director and also won him some awards and posts at international festivals. He directed his first full-length feature in 2009 at the age of 24 making him the youngest director in Egyptian cinematic history.", "Reha Erdem Reha Erdem (born 1960 in Istanbul) is a Turkish film director and screenwriter. He attended Galatasaray High School and studied history at Boğaziçi University before leaving to study film in 1983. He obtained a B.A. in Cinema Studies and an M.A. in Plastic Arts from the University of Paris VIII. Erdem's critical approach to masculinity gives him a unique place among the directors of new Turkish cinema.", "Ramin Farahani Ramin Farahani is an Iranian-Dutch filmmaker. Born in 1969 in Tehran, Farahani started with photography short films in 1987, and studied film directing at the Cinema and Theater department of the Tehran University of Art between 1989 and 1993. In 1994, he moved to the Netherlands where he studied at the Dutch Film and Television Academy of Amsterdam from 1997 to 1999. After 12 years in the Netherlands as a minority, he returned to Iran to document the Jewish communities there, spending three months in 2002 working within the main Jewish communities of Iran to document their lives. His documentary film \"Jews of Iran\" was released in 2005. He is now translating books and working on new film projects.", "Ali Nassar Ali Nassar (, ; born 1954) is an Arab-Israeli film director. Nassar was born in the Galilee village of Arraba, and graduated from the University of Moscow in 1981 with a degree in film. Returning to Haifa, he started a theatre group and also worked as a photographer for a daily newspaper.", "Liaquat Ahamed Liaquat Ahamed (born 14 November 1952 in Kenya) is an American author. Liaquat Ahamed was born in Kenya, where his grandfather had emigrated to from Gujarat by way of Zanzibar in the late 19th century. He was educated at Rugby School in England, at Trinity College, Cambridge, and at Harvard University. Ahamed has worked at the World Bank in Washington D.C., where he headed the bank's investment division, and at the New York-based partnership of Fischer, Francis Trees and Watts, a fixed-income business and subsidiary of BNP Paribas, where he served as Chief Investment Officer and from 2001–2004 as Chief Executive. From October 2007 he has been a director of Aspen Insurance Holdings and in addition advises several hedge funds, including Rock Creek Group and The Rohatyn Group. He is a member of Board of Trustees at the Brookings Institution and is involved with the New America Foundation. Through his production company, Red Wine Pictures, Ahamed was a producer on the 2006 film \"The Situation\", set in Iraq. Ahamed is the author of \"Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World\" (2009). The book was awarded the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for History, the 2010 Spear's Book Award (Financial History Book of the Year), the 2010 Arthur Ross Book Award Gold Medal, the 2009 Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. For 2009 it was recognized as one of \"Time\" magazine's \"Best Books of the Year\", \"New York Times\" \"Best Books of the Year\" and Amazon.com's \"Best Books of the Year\". It was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize. It is published by Penguin Books (USA) Inc. . The book narrates the events preceding the Black Tuesday stock market crash of 1929 and the disastrous response of the world's major central banks. It follows the life and actions of the then chiefs of the central banks: Benjamin Strong Jr. of the New York Federal Reserve, Montagu Norman of the Bank of England, Émile Moreau of the Banque de France, and Hjalmar Schacht of the Reichsbank. John Maynard Keynes, a British well-known economist of the time appears on many occasions in the book in a role opposing the central bankers.", "Mohammad Ali Bashe Ahangar Mohammad Ali Bashe Ahangar (; also Romanized as \"Mohammad-Ali Bashe Ahangar\") (b. 1962) is an Iranian director and screenwriter.", "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.", "Margo Haddad Margo Haddad is a director, actress and writer from Jordan, she received a Bachelor of Fine Arts (Drama) from Yarmouk University and an MA in Mass media - Women's Studies from University of Jordan, she continued her studies in Egypt, in which she got her PhD in Academy of Arts in Art Criticism - Film Criticism, and received an honorary doctorate, from Cambridge international college. Creativity in the top of the issuance of her first book of its kind in the Arab world, holds the title of \"The image of women and men in the video clip\". She participated in several Arab and local soap operas with many prominent directors like Hatem Ali, Mohammad Aziziyeh, Basil Al-Khatib and Chawki El Mejri.", "Yehonatan Indursky Yehonatan Indursky (; born 1984) is an Israeli filmmaker. Yehonatan Indursky was born in Jerusalem, to an ultra-Orthodox Jewish (Haredi Jewish) family and studied at the Ultra Orthodox Yeshiva Ponevezh in Bnei Brak, Israel, and later at the Sam Spiegel Film and Television School, Jerusalem, Israel.", "Seyed Hadi Mohaghegh Seyed Hadi Mohaghegh (born 1979) is an Iranian film director and screenwriter. Born in Dehdasht, Iran, in 1979, Mohaghegh studied Automobile Mechanics. He began his artistic career in 1990 as a theatre actor and director, and in 2000 for television as an actor, designer and assistant director. In 2010, he started making films for television. In 2013, he made his first feature film \"Bardou\" which won Best Film, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay at the 2013 Isfahan IFF for Children and Young Adults. His second feature \"Immortal\" (2015), based on a story about an old woman but was adapted to that of an old man as showing of the female body is not permitted in Iran, won numerous awards at film festivals." ]
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[ "London Film School" ]
What is the date of birth of the performer of song Irma Jackson?
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Irma Jackson "Irma Jackson" is a song by Bakersfield, California-based outlaw country artist Merle Haggard, released on his 1972 album "Let Me Tell You About a Song". The song, which was about the then-controversial topic of an interracial romance, was actually written several years prior to the 1972, but not released at first because Capitol Records thought it would hurt Haggard's image at the time. Fellow country singer Tony Booth recorded a cover version of "Irma Jackson" in 1970, which was released as his first single for MGM Records. Booth's version of the song charted at #67 on the Hot Country Songs chart. "Irma Jackson" is in the key of C major and features an AABAB musical structure, with the first two verses played back-to-back, then a chorus, then the third verse, and finally another chorus. The song's running time is 2 minutes and 56 seconds. The song's guitar chords are C-G-C in the verses, and F-G-C in the choruses. In the song, the narrator expresses his love for his sweetheart Irma Jackson, but also acknowledges that she "can't be mine" because "there's no way the world will understand that love is colorblind". He also points out that no one cared when the two of them were childhood friends, but now that they are grown up, the world "draws a line" and won't let them be together because they are of different races. Eventually, Irma herself decides to leave the narrator, but he proclaims that he will always love her "'till I die". According to American Songwriter, "some conservatives who had flocked to 'Okie' were shocked by 'Irma Jackson', Haggard's pro-tolerance take on interracial romance", but Haggard was "unfazed" by this. Haggard said that he and Johnny Cash both believed strongly in freedom of speech. Haggard had earlier recorded a cover of "Go Home", a song by Tommy Collins with a similar theme.
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[ "Willis Jackson (saxophonist) Willis \"Gator\" Jackson (April 25, 1928 – October 25, 1987) was an American jazz tenor saxophonist. Born in Miami, Florida, and educated at the University of Miami, Jackson joined Cootie Williams's band in 1948 as a teenager, and was part of it on and off until 1955. Under his own name (Willis Jackson and His Orchestra) he recorded various rhythm-and-blues instrumentals for Atlantic Records. His most famous record for Atlantic is \"Gator's Groove\" (1952), with \"Estrellita\" as the B-side. Jackson toured as leader of the backing band for singer Ruth Brown. Publicly they were married, but privately they never married but lived together from 1950 to 1955. Jackson joined Prestige Records in 1959, making a string of albums. Jackson died in New York City one week after heart surgery, in October 1987, at the age of 55.", "Irma Vila Armida Rojo Gamboa (14 September 1916 – 22 May 1993), known by her stage name Irma Vila, was a Mexican singer and actress. She became famous in the 1940s and was one of the first female performers of ranchera music. Her extraordinary falsetto (\"falsete\" in Spanish) earned her the nickname \"La Reina del Falsete\" (The Queen of Falsetto). She made several successful tours of Spain, France, and North Africa. Upon her return to Mexico, she starred the film \"Canta y no llores...\" (1949) and sang songs in \"Canasta uruguaya\" (1951).", "Jim Jackson (musician) Jim Jackson (June 1876 – December 18, 1933) was an American blues and hokum singer, songster, and guitarist, whose recordings in the late 1920s were popular and influential on later musicians. Jackson was born in Hernando, Mississippi. The researchers Bob Eagle and Eric LeBlanc date his birth as 1876, but other sources give 1884 or 1890. He was raised on a farm, where he learned to play guitar. Around 1905 he started working as a singer, dancer, and musician in medicine shows and played at dances and parties, often with other local musicians, such as Gus Cannon, Frank Stokes and Robert Wilkins. He soon began travelling with the Rabbit Foot Minstrels, featuring Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith, and other minstrel shows. He also played in clubs on Beale Street in Memphis, Tennessee. His popularity and proficiency secured him a residency at the prestigious Peabody Hotel in Memphis in 1919. Like Lead Belly, Jackson knew hundreds of songs, including blues, ballads, vaudeville numbers, and traditional tunes, and became a popular attraction. In 1927 the talent scout H. C. Speir obtained for him a recording contract with Vocalion Records. On October 10, 1927, he recorded \"Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues\", which became a best-seller. Its melody and lyrics can be traced in many later blues and rock and roll songs, including \"Rock Around the Clock\" and \"Kansas City\". Following this hit Jackson recorded a series of \"Kansas City\" follow-ups and soundalikes. Other artists recorded cover versions of the song (including William Harris in 1928) and reworked it (as Charlie Patton did, changing it to \"Gonna Move to Alabama.\") Jackson moved to Memphis in 1928 and made a series of further recordings, including the comic medicine show song \"I Heard the Voice of a Pork Chop\". He also appeared in King Vidor's all-black 1929 film \"Hallelujah!\"; it is unclear what role he played. Jackson ran the Red Rose Minstrels, a travelling medicine show which toured Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama. As a talent scout for Brunswick Records, he discovered Rufus \"Speckled Red\" Perryman, gaining him his first recording session. Shortly afterwards, in February 1930, Jackson recorded his last session.", "Irma Schultz Irma Schultz (born 1 October 1965) is a Swedish actress and pop singer who has appeared in many movies and television series in Sweden. She has acted in American productions such as the horror movie \"The Resurrection of Michael Myers Part 2\" and the miniseries \"Xerxes\". She graduated from the Swedish National Academy of Mime and Acting in 1999. Irma Schultz was married to Nino Keller, drummer in Swedish rock band Ceasars Palace for fifteen years. During that period she also performed under the name \"Irma Schultz Keller\". The couple divorced in 2015 and had two common kids. On 3 March 2007 Irma Schultz and Uno Svenningsson performed the song God morgon in Melodifestivalen 2007 and made it as Uno & Irma to the Second Chance Round. But the duo lost to Sonja Alden in the first voting and were eliminated from the contest.", "Irma Pane Irma Pane is an Indonesian American pop singer. Irma Pane was born to Maj. Gen.TNI Timoer Pane and Nurlina Lubis in Bandung, Indonesia. She graduated from SMA 3 Bandung and studied classic voice/technique at Radio Republic Indonesia. She has resided in Potomac, Maryland since 1996. Her 1979 album, \"Irma Pane Volume II\", made Top 10 lists.", "Mahalia Jackson Mahalia Jackson ( ; born Mahala Jackson; October 26, 1911 – January 27, 1972) was an American gospel singer, widely considered one of the most influential vocalists of the 20th century. With a career spanning 40 years, Jackson was integral to the development and spread of gospel blues in black churches throughout the U.S. During a time when racial segregation was pervasive in American society, she met considerable and unexpected success in a recording career, selling an estimated 22 million records and performing in front of integrated and secular audiences in concert halls around the world. The granddaughter of enslaved people, Jackson was born and raised in poverty in New Orleans. She found a home in her church, leading to a lifelong dedication and singular purpose to deliver God's word through song. She moved to Chicago as an adolescent and joined the Johnson Singers, one of the earliest gospel groups. Jackson was heavily influenced by musician-composer Thomas Dorsey, and by blues singer Bessie Smith, adapting Smith's style to traditional Protestant hymns and contemporary songs. After making an impression in Chicago churches, she was hired to sing at funerals, political rallies, and revivals. For 15 years she functioned as what she termed a \"fish and bread singer\", working odd jobs between performances to make a living. Nationwide recognition came for Jackson in 1947 with the release of \"Move On Up a Little Higher\", selling two million copies and hitting the number two spot on \"Billboard\" charts, both firsts for gospel music. Jackson's recordings captured the attention of jazz fans in the U.S. and France, and she became the first gospel recording artist to tour Europe. She regularly appeared on television and radio, and performed for many presidents and heads of state, including singing the national anthem at John F. Kennedy's Inaugural Ball in 1961. Motivated by her experiences living and touring in the South and integrating a Chicago neighborhood, she participated in the civil rights movement, singing for fundraisers and at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963. She was a vocal and loyal supporter of Martin Luther King, Jr. and a personal friend of his family. Throughout her career Jackson faced intense pressure to record secular music, but turned down high paying opportunities to concentrate on gospel. Completely self-taught, Jackson had a keen sense of instinct for music, her delivery marked by extensive improvisation with melody and rhythm.", "Ray Jackson Ray Jackson may refer to:", "Irka Mateo Irka Mateo is a Dominican singer songwriter and world music artist. Her artistic career has been one of breaking boundaries and embracing people's deepest humanity especially through their music. Her artistic sensibility incubated in Spain, France, Brazil, Canada, the United States and her native Dominican Republic. In the late 1970s and early 1980s she lived in Europe (Spain and France) where she immersed herself in the emerging world music scene. In the late 1980s she moved to Canada, where she worked with the best artists in that country performing to enthusiastic audiences regularly at the Montreal Jazz Festival and numerous other events and venues. It was also in Montreal that she recorded the Spanish-language version of Sucre Amer, a song in defense of Haitian sugar cane workers – the recording that led to her opening for the Fugees when they played in Haiti in 1996. In 1998 she returned to Quisqueya (Hispaniola). Along with performing in the country and the wider Caribbean she spent the next 10 years immersing herself in the islands its folk music; founded on popular religious celebrations and Taino culture. The result is music much more infused with Afro and Taíno traditions. This work also lead Mateo to co-founding Guabancex, Wind and Water Society dedicated to the popularization and preservation of native culture. A key moment in any Irka Mateo performance is when she dons a native headdress during the singing of Anacaona—a song that is essentially a passion play of the Taino queen hanged by the Spanish Conquistadors. It was during this period she also collaborated with Luis Días (composer) on his recording EL TERROR EN VIVO (with Transporte Urbano) Along with this field work in the DR, Mateo has toured widely performing in concerts and festivals in the Caribbean and Latin America; including a performance in front of 100,000 people in Mexico City. In 2008, Grammy Award-winning producer, Daniel Blumenfield, of GoodandEvil, Inc. (Sex Mob's Sexotica; The Klezmatics' Wonder Wheel) discovered Mateo music and brought her to New York. She followed up with the release of the album Anacaona in 2009. On November 16, 2017, Irka & La Tirindanga released Vamo a Gozá, an album with 9 tracks.", "Rebbie Jackson Maureen Reillette \"Rebbie\" Jackson-Brown (; born May 29, 1950) is an American singer. She is the eldest child of the Jackson family of musicians. She first performed on stage with her siblings during shows in Las Vegas, Nevada, at the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino in 1974, before subsequently appearing in the television series \"The Jacksons\". Her sister La Toya was born on her sixth birthday. At age 34, Jackson released her debut album \"Centipede\" (1984). The album featured songs written by Smokey Robinson, Prince, and Jackson's younger brother Michael, whose contribution (the title track \"Centipede\") became Rebbie's most successful single release. By the end of the 1980s, the singer had released two more albums in quick succession: \"Reaction\" (1986) and \"R U Tuff Enuff\" (1988). Following a 7-year hiatus in her musical career, Jackson returned with a cover of \"Forever Young\" for the \"\" soundtrack before the release of the 1998 album \"Yours Faithfully\" three years later. The production of the album, her last to date, was a collaboration with artists and producers such as Men of Vizion's Spanky Williams, Keith Thomas, and Eliot Kennedy. It also featured contributions from her children. In 2011, Rebbie embarked on the Pick Up the Phone Tour, which is dedicated to teens from all over the U.S. who have committed suicide. Maureen Reillette \"Rebbie\" Jackson was born at 2300 Jackson Street in Gary, Indiana from a working-class family on May 29, 1950. She is first daughter of Joseph Walter \"Joe\" (July 26, 1928 - June 27, 2018), and Katherine Esther (née Scruse, May 4, 1930), she is the eldest of their 10 children. Her siblings are Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, La Toya, Marlon, Brandon (d. March 12, 1957), Michael (d. June 25, 2009), Randy, and Janet. Joseph was a steel mill employee who often performed in a rhythm and blues (R&B) band called the Falcons with his brother, Luther. His wife, Katherine, is a Jehovah's Witness and raised her children to follow the religion.", "Ruby Johnson Ruby Johnson (April 19, 1936 – July 4, 1999) was an American soul singer, best known for her recordings on the Volt label in the late 1960s. She was born in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, and was raised in the Jewish faith. She sang, with her eight brothers and sisters, in the Temple Beth-El choir. After completing high school, she moved to Virginia Beach where she worked as a waitress and began singing rhythm and blues with local bands, before spending two years with Samuel Latham and the Rhythm Makers. She then moved to Washington, D.C. in the late 1950s, and joined Ambrose and the Showstoppers, the house band at the Spa nightclub. Local entrepreneur Never Duncan Jnr. became her manager, and placed her with record producer Dicky Williams. Her first single, \"Calling All Boys\", was issued in 1960 on the V-Tone label, before Duncan established his own recording company, NEBS. She released a succession of singles on NEBS, including \"Here I Go Again\", \"Worried Mind\", and \"Nobody Cares\", some of which became local hits. When her local supporter, disc jockey Al Bell, began working for Stax Records in Memphis in 1965, he won her a contract with the label. There, she recorded a handful of classic soul records with the writing and production team of Isaac Hayes and David Porter, and backing musicians including Steve Cropper, \"Duck\" Dunn and Al Jackson. These were issued on the Stax subsidiary label, Volt. They included \"I'll Run Your Hurt Away\", which reached No. 31 on the \"Billboard\" R&B chart in 1966, and \"If I Ever Needed Love\", both tracks which became staples of subsequent soul compilations, such as those by Dave Godin. Despite the quality of her records, they met with little success, and after a few more years singing in clubs, she gave up her singing career in 1974. She worked in government posts, and eventually became the director of Foster Grandparents, a federal programme helping handicapped children relate to older generations. She also returned to worship and sing at the Temple Beth-El near her home in Lanham, Maryland. A compilation CD, including many previously unissued tracks, was issued in 1993. She died in 1999, aged 63." ]
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[ "April 6, 1937" ]
Which film was released first, Such Great Foolishness or Film Geek?
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Such Great Foolishness Such Great Foolishness (German: Die ganz großen Torheiten) is a 1937 German drama film directed by Carl Froelich and starring Paula Wessely, Rudolf Forster and Hilde Wagener. The film was set in Vienna, unusually for a German film of the time which had increasingly cut back on films set in Austria since the Nazi takeover of 1933. The film was based on a novel by Marianne von Angern. It was shot at the Sievering Studios in Vienna and the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin.
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[ "Foolish (soundtrack) Foolish is the soundtrack to the film of the same name. It was released on March 23, 1999 by No Limit Records and was mainly produced by Beats By the Pound. The soundtrack proved to be fairly successful, peaking at #32 on the \"Billboard\" 200 and #10 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. It was certified gold by the RIAA on April 27, 1999 for shipment of over 500,000 copies. The soundtrack was led by two singles: Nothing Stays The Same and Foolish.", "How Wonderful! How Wonderful! is a 1989 TV movie about a journalist who falls pregnant.", "The Foolish Age The Foolish Age is a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by William A. Seiter and starring Doris May, Hallam Cooley and Otis Harlan.", "Foolish (film) Foolish is a 1999 comedy drama film directed by Dave Meyers and starring Master P and Eddie Griffin. It was No Limit Films second theatrical release after \"I Got the Hook-Up\". Quentin \"Fifty Dollah\" Waise (Master P) is involved in a crime ring that earns him good money but worries his grandmother Odetta (Marla Gibbs), who dotes on him and encourages him to follow a more righteous path. Fifty Dollah's brother Miles \"Foolish\" Waise (Eddie Griffin), who got his nickname from Odetta, is an aspiring comedian, but his inability to get his career going convinces his older sibling he's wasting his talents. The movie pays homage to several of Griffin's idols, such as Redd Foxx, Robin Harris and Sammy Davis, Jr. who appear as feet under restroom stalls while he prepares to perform. His idols inspire Foolish to do well in his shows, which are widely attended and scheduled last to keep the bar customers drinking, but he has home trouble with his girlfriend and their son, and after the death of his grandmother, seems unable either to keep a gig or to move on. Fifty Dollah tries to give him the push he needs and tries to get his own life in order, but is distracted both by problems with criminal leader Eldorado Ron (Andrew Dice Clay) and by a painful love triangle with his brother and the girl they both like (Amie) (Amy Petersen). A soundtrack containing hip hop music was released on March 23, 1999 by No Limit Records. It peaked at #32 on the \"Billboard\" 200 and #10 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums.", "Henry Fool Henry Fool is a 1997 American black comedy-drama film written, produced and directed by Hal Hartley, featuring Thomas Jay Ryan, James Urbaniak, and Parker Posey. Set like previous Hartley films in less affluent parts of Long Island, it recounts how the lives of a fatherless family are overturned by a mysterious outsider and how, as in \"The Unbelievable Truth\", expectation and reality again conflict. The film won the best screenplay award at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival. A sequel, titled \"Fay Grim\", was released in 2006. Another sequel, titled \"Ned Rifle\", was released in 2014. Socially inept garbage-man Simon Grim is befriended by Henry Fool, a witty rogue and untalented novelist just released from seven years in jail for attempting sex with an underage girl. Henry opens the world of literature to Simon, and inspires him to write \"the great American poem.\" Simon struggles to get his work recognized, and it is often dismissed as pornographic and scatological, but Henry continues to push and inspire Simon to get the poem published. Henry carries around a bundle of notebooks that he refers to as his \"Confession,\" a work that details aspects of his mysterious past that he one day hopes to publish, when he and the world is ready for them. Henry's hedonistic antics cause all manner of turns in the lives of Simon's family, not least of which is impregnating Fay, Simon's sister. As Simon begins an ascent to the dizzying heights of Nobel Prize-winning poet, Henry sinks to a life of drinking in low-life bars as his own attempts at fame result in rejection, even by Simon's publisher in whose firm Henry once worked as the janitor. The friends part ways until Henry, trying to save an underage girl abused by her stepfather, kills the man and, helped by Simon, tries to flee the country. Based on 28 reviews collected by the film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, 89% of critics gave \"Henry Fool\" a positive review, with an average rating of 7.42/10. Leonard Maltin gives the film two and a half stars, saying Hartley \"just misses the mark\".", "A Futile and Stupid Gesture (film) A Futile and Stupid Gesture is a 2018 American biographical comedy-drama film, based on Josh Karp's book of the same name, directed by David Wain, and written by Michael Colton and John Aboud. The film stars Will Forte as comedy writer Douglas Kenney, during the rise and fall of \"National Lampoon\". The film had its world premiere at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival on January 24, and was released on Netflix on January 26, 2018. The film's timeline stretches from 1964 to 1980. The film opens with Douglas Kenney and his classmate Henry Beard celebrating the release of their book, \"Bored of the Rings\", with the \"Harvard Lampoon\" staff. They graduate from Harvard and Kenney convinces Beard not to go to law school but instead publish a monthly magazine: the \"National Lampoon\". Though Kenney is the magazine's main creative voice, there would be no magazine without the guidance of Beard. Kenney becomes the comedy writer and Beard the business manager, while the magazine also has a thriving art department. They get financing from Matty Simmons. All of the writers work hard to be funny and meet deadlines. Work is a party atmosphere and illicit drug use is prevalent. The magazine is not initially a success until lawsuits are threatened by Disney, Volkswagen, Mormons, and many other established names. The comedy world is changed, and the magazine pushes the acceptance of satire and parody with each edition. Kenney, due to burnout, suddenly leaves for nine months with a one-line note to Beard. The magazine stays successful under Beard. After five years Simmons agrees to a buyout and they each collect $3.5 million, a request demanded by Beard and Kenney. Beard, being unhappy and greatly stressed, takes his check and immediately exits the magazine. \"National Lampoon\" expands to an hour radio show attracting more great comedians like Chevy Chase, Bill Murray, and Gilda Radner. But Lorne Michaels buys them all out and signs them over to \"Saturday Night Live\". Special editions of the magazine are published such as one mocking high school yearbooks. Kenney then moves to movies and writes \"Animal House\" in 1978. With the success of the film, cocaine takes over Kenney's life. As ongoing disputes with studio executives continue, Kenney writes \"Caddyshack\".", "A Foolish Girl A Foolish Girl (Czech: Bláhové devce) is a 1938 Czech romance film directed by Václav Binovec and starring Hana Vítová, Vladimír Borský and Zita Kabátová. The film's sets were designed by the art director Alois Mecera.", "The Foolish Heart The Foolish Heart (German: Das törichte Herz) is a 1919 German silent film directed by Erik Lund.", "Foolish Things Foolish Things is a rock/alternative rock/Christian rock band previously signed with Inpop Records. The band took their name from 1 Corinthians 1:27–29 \"God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise\". The band won the coveted Music in the Rockies competition for unknown Christian artists in 2000. They had been putting out demo CDs and EPs for many years when they released a much anticipated full-length album titled \"Let's Not Forget the Story\" on July 18, 2006. After 10 years of working together, during their tour, they announced that they would be disbanding. Upon releasing their second full-length album in early 2008, the band played their last show in Denver on May 15, 2008 at the Gothic Theatre. Mark Labriola, the group's lead singer, made an appearance on Fox's American Idol in 2010. He was dismissed in the coveted \"Hollywood Week.\"", "Fools (film) Fools is a 1970 drama film directed by Tom Gries. It stars Katharine Ross and Jason Robards. Aging actor Matthew South falls in love with a much younger married woman, the wife of his attorney." ]
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[ "Such Great Foolishness" ]
Does Bill Wallace (Writer) have the same nationality as P.O?
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Bill Wallace Bill Wallace may refer to:
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[ "Peter Leslie Wallace Peter Leslie Wallace is an Australian-born Filipino businessman and business columnist who started his professional career as an electrical engineer. He built a factory manufacturing maintenance products in the Philippines in 1975 for an American multi-national company. Subsequently, he accepted the position of Chairman of a conglomerate, \"Columbian Philippines, Inc.\", and later was CEO of \"Getz Corporation\", the largest trading company at the time. In 1982, he founded his own company, the \"Wallace Business Forum\". He became a Filipino citizen in 2015. He is a regular opinion columnist for the Philippine Daily Inquirer since 2012. In 2019, Wallace was appointed by President Rodrigo Duterte as member of the Ease of Doing Business and Anti-Red Tape Council of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).", "Steve Wallace Steve Wallace may refer to:", "Edgar Wallace Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace (1 April 1875 – 10 February 1932) was a British writer. Born into poverty as an illegitimate London child, Wallace left school at the age of 12. He joined the army at age 21 and was a war correspondent during the Second Boer War, for Reuters and the \"Daily Mail\". Struggling with debt, he left South Africa, returned to London and began writing thrillers to raise income, publishing books including \"The Four Just Men\" (1905). Drawing on his time as a reporter in the Congo, covering the Belgian atrocities, Wallace serialised short stories in magazines such as \"The Windsor Magazine\" and later published collections such as \"Sanders of the River\" (1911). He signed with Hodder and Stoughton in 1921 and became an internationally recognised author. After an unsuccessful bid to stand as Liberal MP for Blackpool (as one of David Lloyd George's Independent Liberals) in the 1931 general election, Wallace moved to Hollywood, where he worked as a script writer for RKO. He died suddenly from undiagnosed diabetes, during the initial drafting of \"King Kong\" (1933). Wallace was such a prolific writer that one of his publishers claimed that a quarter of all books in England were written by him. As well as journalism, Wallace wrote screen plays, poetry, historical non-fiction, 18 stage plays, 957 short stories and over 170 novels, 12 in 1929 alone. More than 160 films have been made of Wallace's work. In addition to his work on \"King Kong\", he is remembered as a writer of \"the colonial imagination\", for the J. G. Reeder detective stories, and for \"The Green Archer\" serial. He sold over 50 million copies of his combined works in various editions and \"The Economist\" describes him as \"one of the most prolific thriller writers of [the 20th] century\", although the great majority of his books are out of print in the UK, but are still read in Germany. A 50-minute German TV documentary was made in 1963 called \"The Edgar Wallace Story\", which featured his son Bryan Edgar Wallace. Wallace's great-grandfather was entertainer James Henry Marriott, and his grandmother was actress Alice Marriott.", "George Wallace (poet) George Wallace (born March 22, 1949 in Hempstead, New York) is an American poet and poetry promoter. Working from a base of operations in downtown New York City's poetry scene, from his family roots in Brooklyn and Long Island, and from his experiences living and working in Northern California, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Oregon and the United Kingdom, Wallace has created an international grassroots network of venues for poetry. His own poetry, in particular his performance-oriented work, is imagination-based in its creation, emerging from a process of wordplay, surrealist deconstruction and bricolage into a final form that is typically characterized by accessible narrative and forceful rhythmic impetus. It is built on a foundation of a musical talent that emerged at the age of four, when he began reading and performing music, and shaped by his extensive readings in the literature of European Surrealism, the Whitman/Sandburg vortex, and the Beats. His work also bears the mark of 1960s concerns, particularly the social witness and aesthetic consciousness of that time. His organizational efforts on behalf of poetry are based on professional training and disposition to community service developed through graduate studies with Guy Stuart and others at UNC-Chapel Hill in the mid '70s. Wallace was born into a New York family with associations to both popular entertainment and high culture - his grandfather was a muralist for vaudeville theaters, his father a 'Kiddie Troupe' dancer; and his maternal uncle a world-traveling figure in the Fifth Avenue fashion world. Musically precocious (he was reading music at the age of 4), in the 1960s he was part of the Long Island music scene which produced such artists as The Young Rascals, Billy Joel and the Shangri-Las. He attended Syracuse University 1967–71, met Allen Ginsberg and studied with W. D. Snodgrass, and then began a twenty-year career exploring the US, Europe and Asia. Occasional work, pursuit of community service, and cross-cultural curiosity resulted in extended stays in Boston (1972–73), India and the Middle East (1973), the San Francisco Bay area (1974–75), Korea (US Peace Corps, 1975–77), North Carolina (1977–1980), Sacramento (1981–83), East Anglia, UK (1983–85), before returning to his native New York.", "Stephen Wallace Stephen Henry Wallace A.M. (born 23 December 1943) is an Australian film and television director, screenwriter, producer, published author and acting coach. He has directed eight feature films, nine telemovies, numerous short films, worked on multiple television series and has a small theatre company. Known for his eye for talent and passion for working with young artists, many now established actors can attribute their first feature film, or on-screen debut to working with Wallace; from Bryan Brown to Russell Crowe, Naomi Watts and many others. Over the course of his career, Wallace's films have been recognised with over 38 nominations at local and international film festivals. In 2005, Wallace was awarded an Order of Australia in the Queen's Birthday Honours List for his contributions to the Australian film and television industry as both a director, and to the Australian Screen Directors' Association. In 2012, the ADG awarded Wallace the prestigious Cecil Holmes Award, presented in recognition of advocacy for, and services to directing. A founding signatory, Wallace was President of the Australian Directors Guild between 1991 and 2000 and remains on the Board today as Treasurer. He currently sits as Chair of The Australian Screen Directors Collecting Society (ASDACS). Early in his career, Wallace worked at Film Australia as a production assistant and director of documentaries. Wallace then made several short 16mm fiction films, including: \"The Look\", \"Brittle Weather Journey\" (screened at Ann Arbor Film Festival and at the Sydney Filmmakers' Co-op, 1974), \"Break Up\" (a finalist in the \"Greater Union Awards\" at the 1976 Sydney Film Festival) and \"Con Man Harry\" (winner of the \"Experimental\" section of the Chicago Film Festival, 1980). Wallace then transitioned into making a series of one hour telemovies and documentaries for Australian television networks. These included: the award winning \"Women of the Sun\" for SBS (1982); \"Quest Beyond Time\" for the Children's Television Foundation (1984); an ABC feature film \"Hunger\" (1987) for Jan Chapman; \"Gordon Bennett,\" a one hour drama for The Nine Network, as well as several documentaries for Seven Network. \"The Love Letters from Teralba Road\" (1977) His first short feature film was \"The Love Letters from Teralba Road\" (1977).", "Lois Wallace Lois Kahn Wallace (May 25, 1940 - April 4, 2014) was a prominent American literary agent, known for her representation of numerous successful authors. Born in Manhattan, she graduated from the Brearley School and Vassar College before taking a secretarial job for G.P. Putnam Sons in 1961. She went to work for agent Harold Ober in 1963, then joined the William Morris Agency literary department in 1967, where she became co-director before establishing her own agency in 1974. While at William Morris, Wallace convinced Erich Segal, then known mainly as a Harvard classics professor, to write a novel based on a screenplay he had written. The book was published as \"Love Story\" in 1970 and became a gigantic bestseller, both as a novel and as a film. Other clients included William F. Buckley, Stacy Schiff, Joan Didion, Don DeLillo, and Ben Stein. She became known for her particularly tenacious representation of her clients. A 1986 \"Washington Post\" profile noted that her clients \"talk gratefully of her ferocity in terms normally reserved for pit bulls\"—one client nicknamed her \"Sluggo\". She married book editor Tom Wallace in 1962; they divorced in 1999. She died of lung cancer in Manhattan at age 73, survived by a son. In a eulogy, Stein described her as \"a small, elegant woman with an intense look\" and \"an extremely fancy Manhattan accent\" who was \"fanatical in her determination to get things sold\" and who \"smoked incessantly. Nonstop.\"", "Barry Wallace Barry Wallace may refer to:", "F. L. Wallace F. L. Wallace (February 16, 1915 – November 26, 2004), sometimes credited as Floyd Wallace, was a noted science fiction and mystery writer. He was born in Rock Island, Illinois, in 1915, and died in Tustin, California, in 2004. Wallace spent most of his life in California as a writer and mechanical engineer after attending the University of Iowa. He also attended UCLA. His first published story, \"Hideaway\", appeared in the magazine \"Astounding\". \"Galaxy Science Fiction\" and other science fiction magazines published his subsequent stories, including \"Student Body\", \"Delay in Transit\", \"Bolden's Pets\", and \"Tangle Hold\". His mystery works include \"Driving Lesson\", a second-prize winner in the twelfth annual short-story contest held by \"Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine\". His novel \"\" was published by Gnome Press in 1955. His works have been translated into numerous languages, and his stories are available today around the world in anthologies.", "Martin Wallace Martin Wallace may refer to:", "Frederick William Wallace Frederick William Wallace (December 11, 1886 – July 15, 1958) was a journalist, photographer, historian and novelist. He was the author of \"Wooden Ships and Iron Men\", a now-classic 1924 book about the last days of the Age of Sail in Maritime Canada. Born in Glasgow, Scotland, he initially worked as a clerk but turned to the sea as a journalist of the fishing industry which later led to historical work. Wallace served in World War I as commander of a Q-Ship. He died in Montreal on July 15, 1958. About forty years later than he preferred to, he said, he published \"Wooden Ships and Iron Men\" as a testament to the spirit of the Age of Sail. He followed this book with \"In the Wake of the Windships\" and \"Record of Canadian Shipping\". These three historical works became standard references to the deepwater sailing era in Canada. Wallace also wrote the novels \"Blue Water\" and \"Captain Salvation\" and several other works. \"Blue Water\" was made into a film in Canada directed by David Hartford, but it never had a theatrical release. \"Captain Salvation\" was purchased the Hearst Corporation and released as a film in 1927, directed by John S. Robertson. Both films were from the silent era. He edited the monthly journal \"Canadian Fisherman\" for forty years. This publication, which ran from 1917 to 1970, remains an important source of information for researchers today. He also wrote short stories for such pulp magazines as \"Adventure\" between 1912 and 1922 and in 1929 he wrote \"Bound for the Rio Grande\", an operetta based on English shanties, performed at the 1929 CPR Festival in Vancouver. His epic poem about his time aboard the \"Effie M. Morrissey,\" \"The Log of the Record Run,\" was widely read and adopted by east coast fishermen with such authentic results that it was mistaken as a very old traditional song by folklorist Helen Creighton. An accomplished photographer, in 2006 he was the subject of a book by Nova Scotia writer M. Brook Taylor entitled \"A Camera on the Banks\", which documents seven voyages to the Newfoundland Grand Banks where he toiled alongside other fishermen, at the same time documenting their condition in photographs and words." ]
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[ "no" ]
When did the director of film Trouble With Trixie die?
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Trouble with Trixie Trouble with Trixie () is a 1972 West German comedy film directed by Franz Josef Gottlieb and starring Uschi Glas, Peter Weck, and Fritz Eckhardt. A young woman is sent by an American company as a spy on a German toy manufacturer.
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[ "Trouble (2019 film) Trouble, also known as Dog Gone Trouble, is a 2019 American computer-animated comedy family film, directed by Kevin Johnson, and starring Sean \"Big Sean\" Anderson, Pamela Adlon, and Lucy Hale. It was the final film role of Betty White before her death in 2021. The film was distributed by Lantern Entertainment internationally, while Lionsgate holds the French and Spanish distribution rights. Netflix acquired American distribution rights to the film. It was released on May 28, 2021 on the streaming service. Trouble is a pampered dog, living the good life in a mansion with his wealthy, elderly owner, Mrs. Sarah Vanderwhoozie, under the care of her loyal butler, James, and famed animal trainer Cesar Millan. One day, after his owner dies due to natural causes, he is left alone and unaware in her mansion. Claire and Norbert, Mrs. Vanderwhoozie's niece and nephew, arrive to claim their inheritance. While discarding of her belongings and planning to sell other items that are priceless, they accidentally and unknowingly get rid of Trouble, whom they show instant dislike and apathy towards. Nevertheless, in order to rightfully inherit their aunt's fortune, Claire and Norbert must first be willing and able to bond and take care of Trouble within three days, until they can sign the contract entrusted by their aunt's lawyer, Mr. Macbain, much to their reluctance. Realizing that Trouble is missing, they hire Thurman Sanchez, an expert animal tracker, to find him in time before the deadline. Having made it out of the truck carrying away his owner's belongings, and after learning the truth about her death, Trouble accidentally messes up a group of squirrels' nut storage in their tree. As payback, the squirrels steal his collar and run off, leaving Trouble lost, alone, and looking like a stray. In the city, Trouble meets a stray dog named Rousey while trying to get a meal from a meat truck, which results in a chase through a restaurant owned by famed chef Ludo Lefebvre; a wannabe-singer pizza delivery girl named Zoe Bell also loses one of her pizzas.", "Richard Baskin Aaron Richard Baskin (born December 1, 1948) is an American film composer and producer, best known as the writer of several songs for the Robert Altman film \"Nashville\", and other creative film scores in the 1970s and 1980s. He eventually became a film director, directing music videos with Barbra Streisand, Rod Stewart, Elton John, and many others, as well as feature films. Baskin was born to a Jewish family in Pasadena, California, to the Baskin-Robbins co-founder Burt Baskin and his wife Shirley Robbins (sister of co-founder Irv Robbins). His mother remarried to Isadore Familian. His sister Edie Baskin was a photographer for \"Saturday Night Live\" during the 1970s. Baskin was in a relationship with Barbra Streisand from November 1983 to October 1987. Two years after \"Nashville\" was released, Baskin was the musical guest on the March 12, 1977, episode during the second season of \"Saturday Night Live\" with host Sissy Spacek. In 1985, Baskin produced and arranged two tracks on Barbra Streisand's \"The Broadway Album\". Baskin also wrote music for \"Welcome to L.A.\", \"Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson\", \"James at 16\" and \"UFOria\".", "Marc Breaux Marc Breaux (November 3, 1924 – November 19, 2013) was an American choreographer and occasional film director best known for his work on musical films of the 1960s and 1970s. Most of his well-known work was in collaboration with Dee Dee Wood to whom he was married for many years. Much of Breaux's best recognized work was also in collaboration with the songwriting Sherman Brothers. In 1948 he appeared on Broadway in the original cast of \"Kiss Me, Kate\" at the New Century Theatre in New York City and in 1958 he appeared in \"Li'l Abner\" at the St. James Theatre, also in New York City. Marc Breaux with Dee Dee Wood, choreographed the Broadway musical \"Do-Re-Mi,\" from 1960 through 1962. Following some health issues in the late 1970s, Breaux went to work for ex-producer Nick Vanoff at Vanoff's Hollywood post-production company Complete Post. Breaux was videotape operator for the company for nearly 20 years until his retirement in the mid-1990s.", "Trixie True, Teen Detective Trixie True, Teen Detective is an Off-Broadway musical with book, music and lyrics by American playwright and composer Kelly Hamilton. It was the first musical to employ the post-modern comedic style then being explored on television by such shows as Saturday Night Live and SCTV. Set in New York City in 1944, the musical centers on hack writer Joe Sneed, who is employed to write a series of books similar to the Nancy Drew mysteries. Under the watchful eye of his iron willed boss Miss Snood, Joe cranks out \"The Secret of the Tapping Shoes,\" which comes to life on stage. The show within the show features teenage sleuth Trixie True and her chums, who sing and dance their way through soda shops, tap studios, a Big Broadcast, and a mystery involving German spies, World War II and a submerged submarine. The musical opened on December 4, 1980 at The Lucille Lortel Theater, then known as The Theater De Lys, in New York City. Producers of the show were Doug Cole, Joe Novak, Joseph Butt and Spencer Tandy. It was directed by Bill Gile, musical staging and choreography by Arthur Faria, and designed by Michael J. Hotopp and Paul De Passe. Costumes were by David Toser and orchestrations by Eddie Sauter. The opening night cast for \"Trixie True, Teen Detective\" featured Marilyn Sokol in the role of Miss Snood, who also doubles in the role of leggy, smoldering Madame Olga, a sexy spy. Gene Lindsey played hack writer Joe Sneed, and Jay Loman portrayed his sidekick Al. Kathy Andrini was pretty, perky and permanently 18 Trixie True, and Keith Rice played opposite her as boyfriend and captain of the football team, Dick Dickerson. Trixie's chums Maxine and Laverne were played by Alison Bevan and Marianna Allen, and Keith Caldwell played their chum Bobby. Jay Sharbett of the Associated Press called it \"a fine night of sly craziness,\" Stewart Klein of WNBC judged it to be \"giddy fun,\" and Rex Reed in The \"New York Post\" declared it \"clever, novel and nifty.", "Tony Geiss Nicholas Anthony \"Tony\" Geiss (November 16, 1924 – January 21, 2011) was an American producer, screenwriter, songwriter and author, known principally for his children's work. Geiss was born in The Bronx to Alexander Geiss and Marjore Thirer. Geiss was a staff writer and songwriter for \"Sesame Street\" - he wrote \"Don't Eat the Pictures (1983)\" - and was a writer for \"The Land Before Time\" (1988) and the associated book. He was also a producer and writer for the Don Bluth film \"An American Tail\" (1986). Geiss died at the age of 86 on January 21, 2011 from complications after a fall at his home in Manhattan, New York.", "Chasing Trouble Chasing Trouble is a 1940 American comedy-drama film directed by Howard Bretherton, from Monogram Pictures. Frankie \"Mr. Cupid\" O’Brien (Frankie Darro) and Thomas H. Jefferson (Mantan Moreland) are making deliveries for the local florist and manage to get a job for their unemployed friend, Susie Carey (Marjorie Reynolds). They are unaware that the proprietor, Mr. Morgan (Alex Callam), is part of a spy and saboteur ring which is using the florist shop as a front for delivering coded messages and bombs. Using lesson two of his correspondence course on graphology, Frankie learns the truth but it might be too late for intrepid investigative reporter Callahan (Milburn Stone) and the police to help them before the bomb they are supposed to deliver goes off at an airplane factory.", "Elizabeth McBride Elizabeth McBride (May 17, 1955 – June 16, 1997) was an American costume designer. She was nominated for Best Costumes for the film \"Driving Miss Daisy\" at the 62nd Academy Awards. She died at age 42 of cancer.", "Lynn O'Donnell Lynn O'Donnell (died 1996) was an independent film producer, whose works included the award-winning \"Crumb\", \"Living on Tokyo Time\", and a number of specials made for America public television, including films on Nobel Laureate Czesław Miłosz and Argentinian tango superstar Carlos Gardel. O'Donnell collaborated primarily with filmmakers Terry Zwigoff and Steven Okazaki, but worked as well with others, including Irving Saraf and Allie Light. Films on which she worked won two Academy Awards, and most other major cinema awards and honors, and were featured at film festivals around the world. O'Donnell died in 1996 of ovarian cancer. She was married to Lawrence Wilkinson, and they had one daughter, Nora Wilkinson.", "Joseph Vásquez Joseph B. \"Joe\" Vasquez (June 8, 1962 – December 16, 1995) was an American independent filmmaker. Vasquez was born in the South Bronx, the son of two heroin addicts. His father was Puerto Rican and his mother was African-American. He began making his own films at the age of 12, and was awarded a filmmaking degree in 1983 from the City College of New York. In 1989, he released \"The Bronx War\", a film which he wrote, directed, and starred. In 1991, he released \"Hangin' with the Homeboys\" with New Line Cinema, the film which earned him critical acclaim. Having been arrested for running naked through an apartment building, he was later diagnosed as manic-depressive. On December 16, 1995, Vasquez died as a result of AIDS-related complications in Chula Vista, California, aged 33. One of his stories was posthumously used as a segment in the 1997 film \"Riot\".", "Hollywood Chaos Hollywood Chaos is American film that was released in 1989. The film starred Tricia Leigh Fisher and Timothy Williams and was directed by Sean McNamara, marking his directorial debut. A farm girl from Iowa moves to Hollywood to pursue her dreams in show business. She joins a major production chorus line, but chaos ensues when all the major actors drop out and are replaced by look-alikes." ]
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[ "23 July 2006" ]
Where did the director of film Detective (1954 Film) die?
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Detective (1954 film) Detective is a 1954 Argentine film directed by Carlos Schlieper.
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[ "The Detective (1968 film) The Detective is a 1968 American neo-noir crime film directed by Gordon Douglas, produced by Aaron Rosenberg, and starring Frank Sinatra, based on the 1966 novel of the same name by Roderick Thorp. Co-stars include Lee Remick, Jacqueline Bisset, Jack Klugman, William Windom, and Robert Duvall, with a script by Academy Award-winning screenwriter Abby Mann. The book's rights were owned by Robert Evans, who was to produce the film but never got a chance to when Evans was hired by Gulf and Western to run Paramount Pictures. \"The Detective\" marked a move towards — and was billed as — a more \"adult\" approach to depicting the life and work of a police detective while confronting, for one of the first times in mainstream cinema, previously taboo subjects such as homosexuality. Here, the detective in question is Joe Leland, who is trying to juggle marital issues with a murder case that seemed to be open-and-shut at first but runs much deeper than he could have imagined. \"The Detective\" was Sinatra's fourth collaboration with director Douglas, having worked together on \"Young at Heart\" (1954), \"Robin and the 7 Hoods\" (1964), \"Tony Rome\" (1967), and then later \"Lady in Cement\" (1968). New York City police detective Joe Leland is called to the home of a murder victim who has been beaten to death, head crushed, and has had his genitals removed. Puzzled and disgusted, the police on call are left bemused, and Leland holds things together with his direct, no-nonsense approach. Few leads are found, other than the fact that a housemate of the victim remains conspicuous by his absence. All the while notions about the victim's sexuality and personal interests warp the ideals of the officers assigned to the task. Leland tries to remain focused on the case while dealing with the breakdown of his marriage to wife Karen). Eventually, the victim's housemate is identified as Felix Tesla, and he is soon tracked down by Leland and another detective. Leland makes a psychologically disturbed Tesla crack and coaxes a confession out of him. This results in extensive publicity, a promotion for Leland, and the electric chair for Tesla, which distresses Leland because it is clear to him that Tesla is insane.", "The Teckman Mystery The Teckman Mystery is a 1954 British mystery film directed by Wendy Toye and starring Margaret Leighton, John Justin, Roland Culver and Michael Medwin. A biographer researching a book on a pilot who died during the test flight of a new plane falls in love with the pilot's sister. As he uncovers more about the test flight, people connected with the case begin to die. The author naturally becomes nervous, until two Scotland Yard inspectors take on the case. \"The New York Times\" wrote, \"an obvious fly-by-night, with a pretty good cast headed by the gifted Margaret Leighton and John Justin, this Associated Artists release is a slow, contrived and exasperatingly arch puzzler that sets some sort of record for meandering banality\". The \"Radio Times\" called the film a \"passable thriller\" with \"more than a hint of \"The Third Man\".\"", "Art Deco Detective Art Deco Detective is a 1994 film directed by Philippe Mora. In the film, while investigating the murder of a movie star, a detective finds that he himself is being set up for the crime. The detective's full name is Arthur Decowitz, but he is known to all as \"Art Deco\" - hence the title. While investigating the murder of a movie star, a detective finds that he himself is being set up for the crime.", "Fred Kelsey Frederick Alvin \"Fred\" Kelsey (August 20, 1884 – September 2, 1961) was an American actor, film director, and screenwriter. Kelsey directed one- and two-reel films for Universal Film Manufacturing Company. He appeared in more than 400 films between 1911 and 1958, often playing policemen or detectives. He also directed 37 films between 1914 and 1920. Kelsey was caricatured as the detective in the 1943 MGM cartoon \"Who Killed Who?\" directed by Tex Avery. He was born in Sandusky, Ohio and died at the Motion Picture Country Home in Hollywood, California, aged 77.", "Mr. Wong, Detective Mr. Wong, Detective is a 1938 American crime film directed by William Nigh and starring Boris Karloff in his first appearance as Mr. Wong. Simon Dayton is in fear for his life and seeks the help of Mr. Wong to protect him. Just prior to meeting Mr. Wong, Dayton is found dead in his office in San Francisco without a mark on him. Several witnesses testify Dayton was alone in his office that was locked from the inside. Though the police view Dayton's death as due to a heart attack, Mr. Wong discovers a broken glass ball that contained poison gas. Among the suspects are agents of a foreign power wishing to stop Dayton's chemicals being sent to use on the foreign power in the form of the same poison gas that killed Dayton, Dayton's business partners who will have Dayton's share of the business come to them after Dayton's death and the actual inventor of the chemical who has been cheated out of profits and recognition by Dayton.", "The Armchair Detective The Armchair Detective is a 1952 British mystery film directed by Brendan J. Stafford and starring Ernest Dudley, Hartley Power, and Sally Newton. It was made at Viking Studios. According to Stephen Chibnall \"critics thought it better heard than seen.\"", "Operation Manhunt Operation Manhunt is a 1954 American drama film directed by Jack Alexander and written by Paul Monash. The film stars Harry Townes, Irja Jensen, Jacques Aubuchon, Robert Goodier, Albert Miller and Caren Shaffer. It is a fictionalized story about the aftermath of the defection of Igor Gouzenko, a former Soviet cipher clerk who revealed the operations of Soviet agents on Canadian soil. The film was released on October 4, 1954, by United Artists. In September 1945, Igor Gouzenko, a cryptography clerk at the Soviet embassy in Ottawa, has defected with top secret documents regarding an extensive Soviet espionage network in Canada, in exchange for asylum with new identities for himself and his family (his wife Katya, and his children Jean and Stephen). However, the Gouzenkos - now living in Quebec under the assumed name Mielick - live in constant fear of retaliation from their former countrymen. Gouzenko has been writing a novel about his work for the Soviets, with Victor Collier of the Montreal publishing house \"Collier & Grant\" willing to publicize the manuscript despite Soviet spies (one of them being Collier's own secretary) attempting to follow his trail back to Gouzenko. About nine years later, Soviet embassy agent Chertok receives Volov, a KGB agent using the guise of an assistant clerk. The embassy's chief military attaché, Colonel Rostovich, tasks Volov with liquidating Gouzenko to quell further defections by Soviet officials to the West. Volov poses as a potential defector and sends a letter to Gouzenko via \"Collier & Grant\" to ask for a meeting with him. Gouzenko meets with Collier at the Mt. Royal Hotel to discuss this, but as Collier leaves his office, he is followed by Soviet agents to the hotel, where they lose his trail due to Gouzenko having coded his suite number in his call with Collier. Upon seeing the message, Gouzenko decides to respond, but suspecting a trap, he consults Inspector Boucher of the Canadian police in the matter. Upon getting the answer, the Soviets prepare their trap, at the same time cancelling any further attempts to track Gouzenko in order to lull him into a false sense of security.", "The Golden Link The Golden Link is a 1954 British police drama film directed by Charles Saunders, starring André Morell, Patrick Holt, Thea Gregory and Jack Watling. It was produced by Guido Coen under his Kenilworth Film Productions, featuring a screenplay by Allan MacKinnon and soundtrack by Eric Spear. The story concerns the death of a young woman, having fallen to her demise inside an apartment building. A policeman neighbour, Superintendent Blake, conducts an unofficial investigation, which initially seems to implicate his own daughter in a murder plot. Filmed at Riverside Film Studios in London, the picture was one of several second feature thrillers made in partnership by Saunders and Coen. Restricted by a meagre budget and minor distributors in Archway, production of \"The Golden Link\" still stood out for its rich cast and cinematography by Harry Waxman. The film was generally well received after its release on 24 August 1954. Contemporary reviews broadly characterised it as an interesting and suspenseful whodunit, in spite of the absence of international cast members. More modern assessments have been equally critical regarding a perceived lack of action, although this too has been matched by recent reviews' approval of the plot, particularly toward its beginning. In London, a young woman plummets four floors to her death into the hallway of an apartment building also occupied by Superintendent Blake, a police officer. Initially deemed a suicide, Blake suspects foul play but soon finds himself removed from the case. Notwithstanding, he calmly continues to investigate in an unofficial capacity, searching for clues and interviewing persons of interest. Blake eventually narrows his search to two suspects: the victim's husband, Terry Maguire, and his own daughter, Joan, whom happens to be in love with the former. Learning that she had tried to convince Maguire of divorcing the victim, he deduces both to have had ample motive and opportunity to commit murder. Despite his suspicions, Blake finally discovers neither to have been responsible for the crime, Joan having been framed by another neighbour, the true killer. The film's cast comprises: \"The Golden Link\" was produced by Guido Coen, who under his Kenilworth Film Productions made \"about a dozen\" second feature thrillers with Charles Saunders between 1954 and 1961. Of these pictures, typically made on a £13,000 budget, Coen stated \"style was of secondary consideration\", viewing them solely as a means to make a living.", "Detective (1979 film) Detective () is a 1979 Soviet action film directed by . Yevgeny Kulik, returning from the army, went to work in the militia. He wanted to fight big criminals and one day his dream came true.", "The Dying Detective (film) The Dying Detective is a 1921 British short film directed by Maurice Elvey. The film is the first in the Stoll Pictures' short film series \"The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes\". The great detective Sherlock Holmes, near death after having contracted a rare and usually fatal Asiatic disease, is determined to solve one last murder case before he passes on." ]
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[ "Buenos Aires" ]
What is the date of death of the director of film Akalangalil?
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Akalangalil Akalangalil is a 1986 Indian Malayalam film, directed by J. Sasikumar and produced by Sasikumar. The film stars Nedumudi Venu and Seema in the lead roles. The film has musical score by Johnson. The music was composed by Johnson and the lyrics were written by K. Jayakumar.
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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.", "Ameerjan Ameerjan was an Indian film director, who has directed Tamil films. He was primarily active in the 1984-1991 and is most noted for his work on films featuring actors Murali and Karthik. Ameerjan began his career as a protégé to director K. Balachander and then won critical acclaim for his directorial debut in 1984 with \"Poovilangu\", which starred actors Murali and Kuyili in the lead roles. He went on to direct more than 20 feature films, both in Tamil and Telugu, often collaborating with actors Murali and Karthik. Ameerjan also worked on a high-budget action film \"Siva\" (1989) featuring Rajinikanth as well as on socially relevant films such as \"Thulasi\" (1987). As opportunities declined, he began assisting K. Balachander when he started making television shows and also directed his own shows. In 2006, he also held the position of secretary in the Directors' Association of Tamil film makers. He suffered a cardiac arrest and died on 17 March 2015 in Saligramam, leaving behind his wife Son and a daughter.", "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.", "Karvannan Karvannan (died 13 February 2015) was an Indian film director, producer and screenwriter who worked on Tamil films. Karvannan associated three times with actor Murali, during his five film career, working on \"Paalam\" (1990), \"Pudhiya Katru\" (1990) and \"Thondan\" (1995). After a break in the late 1990s, he returned to make another feature film titled \"Remote\" (2004) with Napolean in the lead role. The impact and aftermath of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami meant that the film had a brief run in theatres. Karvannan died in February 2015, aged 55, following a heart attack.", "Gokula Krishnan Gokula Krishnan was an Indian film director, who has directed Tamil films. He was primarily active in the 1980s and early 1990s and is most noted for his work on films featuring actor Karthik. He also extensively worked with Malayalam director Fazil and other Malayalam directors, when they made Tamil films, helping write dialogues. Gokula Krishnan made his directorial debut in the early 1980s, before choosing to prioritise his work as a script-writer to Malayalam director Fazil, when he made Tamil films. In the mid 1990s, Gokula Krishnan made three consecutive films with actor Karthik. \"Muthu Kaalai\" (1995), \"Poovarasan\" (1996) and \"Udhavikku Varalaamaa\" (1998) all fared poorly at the box office. He died after a brief illness on 28 October 2008, leaving behind his wife, Kavitha.", "S. P. Jananathan S. P. Jananathan (7 May 1959 – 14 March 2021) was an Indian film director and screenwriter. His debut film as director - \"Iyarkai\" (2003) though failed to deliver the expectations in the box office but went onto win the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil in 2004. He worked as an assistant to directors like B. Lenin, Bharathan, Vincent Selva and Keyaar. lm Directors’ Union. ion Pictures. Apart from directing, he also served as visual effects director for films like \"Dharma\" and \"Kumbakonam Gopalu\" directed by Keyaar. He made his debut as producer with the film \"Purampokku Engira Podhuvudamai\" (2015). He died on 14 March 2021 at the age of 61 after being unconscious for two days following a cardiac arrest. Prior to his death, he underwent treatment at a private hospital in Chennai and was under ventilator support. He was admitted in the ICU on 11 March 2021 by his assistants who found him unstable and unconscious at his residence in Chennai.", "Ayaal Ayaal is a 2013 Malayalam film directed by Suresh Unnithan. Lal, Lena, Ineya and Lakshmi Sharma play the lead roles. The story, screenplay and dialogue of the film is written by Dr. K. Ampady. The film is produced by Madhusoodanan Mavelikara (Seashell Movies) and M. T. Dileep Kumar (Elements Vision). The cinematography is by Sujith Vasudev. \"Ayaal\" was earlier titled \"Nagabandham\". The film released on 28 June 2013. \"Ayaal\" is a story of intense human relations. It’s a story of a man who effortlessly floated along the estuaries of time, the back waters of Vembanad. If love is the flowering of one’s own heart, can it have a direction? Is it Scalar (direction less). This is an uncomfortable question raised by him, the protagonist, Guru Dasan. The film problematizes the conventional fabric of human relations, its rules and its sanctity. Set in late 1950s, the film uses the symbols of Serpentine Worship and socio-political rebellions during that period of time to create an ambience for storytelling. The protagonist Dasan is a practicing Pulluvan, who has an aura of ascribed divinity around him. He has two wives, Janaki and Chakara. Janaki’s love with Dasan is platonic, but Chakara true to her name is possessive. Dasan along the course of time becomes passionate with Devaki Antharjanam, the wife of the village landlord as well. Be it wine, women or smoke, Dasan has no restrictions. His mastery over the profession was unparalleled. Due to the ascribed divinity around him, he is unquestioned. But not for too long. Something happens which makes his life topsy-turvy! The event also brings out the tenacity and quality of relations he had. The film depicts the various shades of love and problematizes the conventional concepts around it. It is also an attempt to transcend the definitions of love and to explore the flowering of bonds which are more deep rooted than love. What do we call it? The music was done by Mohan Sitara, Somashekharan Unnitan and MG Anil. The songs are sung by Jayachandran, Shweta Mohan, Vijay Yesudas and Anuradha Sriram.", "S. Siddalingaiah Siddalingaiah (15 December 1936 – 12 March 2015) was an Indian film director and writer in the Kannada film industry. He made his directorial debut in 1969 with \"Mayor Muthanna\". He directed films including \"Bangaarada Manushya\" (1972) and \"Bhootayyana Maga Ayyu\" (1974). He frequently starred actor Rajkumar. In 1993–94, he was awarded the Puttanna Kanagal Award for his contribution to the Kannada film industry as a director. Siddalingaiah joined the film industry as both a floor and a spot boy for Navajyothi studios. He became an assistant for director Shanker Singh and later worked as junior actor and assistant as the protégé of B. Vittalacharya. Siddalingaiah's son Murali was an actor in Tamil films. Murali died on the morning of 8 September 2010 in Chennai due to a massive heart attack. His grandson Atharvaa started his acting career in \"Baana Kaathadi\" in 2010. Siddalingaiah directed \"Mayor Muthanna\" in 1969 starring Rajkumar, Bharathi and Dwarakish in his film debut. He cast the same lead pair in \"Baalu Belagithu\", \"Namma Samsara\", \"Thayi Devaru\" and \"Bangaarada Manushya\". After \"Bangaarda Manushya\", he worked with other actors including Vishnuvardhan, Ananth Nag, Lokesh and Srinivasa Murthy. He introduced his son Murali in the 1983 romantic drama \"Prema Parva\". He also directed a Tamil film \"Puthir\" in 1986 with Murali as the lead actor. His last film, \"Prema Prema Prema\", was released in 1999 after which he retired from directing. Siddalingaiah died on 14 March 2015 in Bangalore where he had been hospitalized for treatment of H1N1 influenza.", "Bala Kailasam Bala Kailasam (26 October 1960 – 15 August 2014) was an Indian documentary filmmaker and playwright who worked mainly in the Tamil film industry. He was the son of Tamil filmmaker Kailasam Balachander. Bala Kailasam graduated in Electronics and Communication Engineering from the University of Madras in 1983 and trained in Film and Video Production at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. Bala Kailasam was the Creative and Business Head of Min Bimbangal Productions Private Limited, which has produced TV programs in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada and Hindi. He was also the Creative Head of Puthiya Thalaimurai TV, 24-hour news channel in Tamil from 2011 to 2013. 1993 - Raghuvamsam, Sun TV, Tamil 1994 - Marmadesam, Sun TV, Tamil 1995 - Ramany Vs Ramany (Tamil Sitcom), Sun TV, Tamil Nayyandi Durbar Veetukku Veedu Looty Kathai Alla Nijam The Bala Kailasam Memorial Award for excellence in documentary film-making was established by Cinema Rendezvous Trust to honor Bala Kailasam.", "Kalaignanam Kalaignanam (born K. M. Balakrishnan), is an Indian writer, actor, producer and director who works in Tamil films. Kalaignanam was born in Elumalai Village. Rajinikanth essayed first independent lead role in the movie Bairavi produced by Kalaignanam. Bairavai movie was produced under the production company name \"Valli Velan movies\". After the success of the movie later Kalaignanam produced his movies under the production company name \"Bhairavi productions\". He has written his cinema experiences as four volume of books named \"Cinema secret\". Kalaignanam's elder son Murugan died in September 2017." ]
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[ "17 July 2014" ]
Do director of film The Haunting of Morella and director of film The Young Girl share the same nationality?
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The Haunting of Morella The Haunting of Morella is a 1990 horror film directed by Jim Wynorski. The film began shooting on September 13, 1989 in Los Angeles. It was released sporadically across the midwest United States in February 1990 where it performed poorly at the box office. A witch named Morella is put to death in Colonial America, leaving behind her husband and infant daughter, Lenora. Seventeen years later, Lenora has grown up and stands to inherit money arranged by her mother, Morella's family. With the stage set, Morella wants to return to life by taking over her daughter, Lenora's body. Principal photography on "The Haunting of Morella" began on September 13, 1989 in Los Angeles, under the title "The Haunting of Maurella". Although director Jim Wynorski is not credited in the credits as the screenwriter, several sources (such as "Variety") stated he was a screenwriter during production. The character Miles Archer was invented for the film. "The Haunting of Morella" was released on February 9, 1990 in Detroit. In February 1990, "Daily Variety" noted the film opened "timidly" in only sixty theaters through the Midwest, where ticket sales were described as "weak," "tepid," and "dismal." Kyle Leonard wrote in the 1991 "Motion Picture Guide" that the film was "nothing more than an excuse for its female characters to take off their clothes and kill each other." The review went on to note that "Eggert shows some depth in her portrayal of the wholly innocent Lenora and the equally wicked Morella [...] one wonders how she got herself into this softcore horror film." A critic credited as "Advo." wrote in "Variety" declared "Nudity, lesbianism, softcore sex, beer barrel-breasted babes: "The Haunting of Morella" has it all. But that's still not enough to give this predictable dull rendering of an Edgar Allan Poe tale much life at the boxoffice."
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[ "Lucrecia Martel Lucrecia Martel (born December 14, 1966) is an Argentine film director, screenwriter and producer whose feature films have frequented Cannes, Venice, Berlin, Toronto, and many other international film festivals. Film scholar Paul Julian Smith wrote in 2015 that she is \"arguably the most critically acclaimed auteur in Spanish-language art cinema outside Latin America\" and that her \"transnational auteurism and demanding features have earned her a hard-won reputation in the world art cinema festival circuit\". Similarly, film scholar Haden Guest has called her \"one of the most prodigiously talented filmmakers in contemporary world cinema\", and film scholar has called her body of work a \"rare perfection\". In April 2018, \"Vogue\" called her \"one of the greatest directors in the world right now\". Her 2001 debut feature film \"La Ciénaga\" (\"The Swamp\"), about an indulgent bourgeois extended family spending the summertime in a decrepit vacation home in provincial Salta, Argentina, was internationally highly acclaimed upon release and introduced a new and vital voice to Argentine cinema. David Oubiña called it \"one of the highest achievements\" of the New Argentine Cinema, a wave of contemporary filmmaking that began in the mid-1990s in reaction to decades of political and economic crises in the country. The film, Oubiña wrote, is \"a rare expression of an extremely troubled moment in the nation's recent history. It is a masterpiece of singular maturity\". Martel's succeeding three feature films received further international acclaim: the adolescent drama \"The Holy Girl\" (\"La niña santa\") (2004), the psychological thriller \"The Headless Woman\" (\"La mujer sin cabeza\") (2008), and the period drama \"Zama\" (2017). The second of seven children, Martel was born and raised in Salta. Her father Ferdi owned and operated a paint shop, while her mother Bochi dedicated herself to the family. Her parents met in university (where Ferdi studied science and Bochi studied philosophy) and got married at 24 years old. Eventually they left their careers and settled in Salta. In primary school, Martel's uncle helped her develop interests in mythology, Greek, and Latin languages.", "Jennifer Young Jennifer Young (born August 21, 1969) is an American film producer and photographer. As a producer, Young's first feature film, \"Loving Annabelle\", stars Erin Kelly, Diane Gaidry and Kevin McCarthy, debuted at the prestigious Cinequest Film Festival in 2006; the film won the Audience Award and Best Actress Award at Outfest. In addition, \"Loving Annabelle\" won Best Feature Film at Melbourne Film Festival (2006), Barcelona Film Festival (2006) and Atlanta Film Festival (2006), and the Jury Award at Paris Cinema Festival (2006); the film picked up six audience awards and four Jury Awards over the course of the six-month festival run. \"Loving Annabelle\" is the controversial story of a Catholic boarding school teacher, Simone Bradley (Diane Gaidry), who has an affair with her female student, Annabelle (Erin Kelly). The film was summed up by \"Variety magazine\" as a \"Guilty Pleasure\", and has won numerous awards on the festival circuit, including the Outfest Award for Best Actress, and the Outfest Award for the Audience Choice. The film sat in the top five list of videos rented by lesbians according to Wolfe Video's web site (see www.wolfevideo.com). It is recommended by 100% of readers on scene-OUT.com, and is ranked on the bestseller’s list in its category on Amazon. “Sara is going to visit her high school friend Emily. On her journey there, she recalls her last experience with her teenage crush, remembering a letter that she wrote Emily—a letter confessing her love for her. Following a painful flashback to Emily’s mocking of Sara after she reads the note, and recalling the hurt that Emily had caused her, as Sara finally reaches her destination at the finale of this short film, she decides to keep on driving.” Produced by Jennifer Young, “Dear Emily” was funded by EVEO.com after Young and Katherine Brooks won a pitch contest for their feature film, \"Loving Annabelle\". Despite being given only 6 weeks from conception to completion, and just $1,000 to make it, the film, to date, has made back over 500% of its profit. Young is an activist for equality. She lives in Los Angeles with her partner, Bryant McGill.", "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\".", "The Haunting (1999 film) The Haunting is a 1999 American horror film directed by Jan de Bont, and starring Liam Neeson, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Owen Wilson, and Lili Taylor, with Marian Seldes, Bruce Dern, Todd Field, and Virginia Madsen appearing in supporting roles. Its plot follows a group of people who gather at a sprawling estate in western Massachusetts for an apparent volunteer study on insomnia, only to find themselves plagued by paranormal events connected to the home's grim history. Based on the 1959 novel \"The Haunting of Hill House\" by Shirley Jackson, it is the second feature film adaptation of the source material after Robert Wise's 1963 film adaptation of the same name. Development for \"The Haunting\" originally began as a collaboration between filmmaker Steven Spielberg and writer Stephen King, who together began writing a new adaptation of Jackson's novel, largely inspired by Wise's 1963 film version. After creative differences, the project was aborted, with King retooling his screenplay to form the 2002 miniseries \"Rose Red\". Spielberg meanwhile commissioned a new screenplay for the project, written by David Self, to be produced under Spielberg's studio, DreamWorks Pictures. Filming of \"The Haunting\" began in the fall of 1998, with some location shoots occurring in England at Harlaxton Manor and Belvoir Castle, though the majority of the film was shot in specially-crafted sets in Los Angeles by esteemed Argentine production designer Eugenio Zanetti. \"The Haunting\" premiered theatrically in North America in July 1999. Though met by largely negative reviews from film critics, it was a financial success, grossing $180 million worldwide. Eleanor \"Nell\" Vance, an insomniac, has cared for her invalid mother for 11 years, sharing a Boston apartment with her. After her mother dies, Nell's sister Jane and her husband Lou inherit the residence. They eject Nell to prepare for a sale. As she faces homelessness, Nell accepts an invitation to participate in an insomnia study by Dr. David Marrow at Hill House, a secluded manor house in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts. At the house, she meets Mr. and Mrs. Dudley, an eccentric pair of caretakers. Two other participants arrive: Luke Sanderson and the glamorous Theodora (\"Theo\"), along with Dr. Marrow and his two research assistants. Unknown to the participants, Dr.", "Marya Cohn Marya Cohn is an American screenwriter and director. In 1994, Cohn directed the student short film \"Developing\". The film starred a then unknown Natalie Portman in her first film role. In 2013, Cohn began filming her feature film debut, \"The Girl in the Book\" starring Emily Vancamp in a semi-autobiographical film about a young book editor who is forced to work with a man who abused her as a teenager. Post-production for the film was completed via kickstarter The film premiered at the 2015 Los Angeles Film Festival. It was acquired by Myriad Pictures and given a limited release in December 2015. Cohn is the daughter of talent agent Sam Cohn. She is of Jewish descent. In 1994, she married director Fraser Bresnahan. In 2011, she married Dutch director Tjebbo Penning.", "Daddy's Little Girl (film) Daddy's Little Girl is a 2012 Australian horror thriller film written and directed by Chris Sun. It stars Billi Baker, Michael Thomson, Allira Jaques, Holly Phillips, Rebecca Plint and Sean Gannon. Derek Riley decides to take the law into his own hands when his six-year-old daughter Georgia vanishes and gets killed.", "Maurizio Zaccaro Maurizio Zaccaro (born May 8, 1952, in Milan, Italy), is an Italian film director, cinematographer, film editor, and screenwriter. Maurizio Zaccaro was born in Milan. After ending his study at the Milan Film School (1977) he took on work in Ermanno Olmi Film Factory and at the same time developed several short movies. But with the debut of his movie \"Where the night begins – Dove comincia la notte\" (1990), a horror film, he received the David di Donatello Award for Best New Director and stepped into the business of film-making. This first movie, entirely shot in United States, is also one of the few that he didn't write himself. Two years later his second movie \"Kalkstein – The valley of stone\" (1992) followed, though not released abroad. This film was the cinematographic adaptation of a novel of the Austrian writer Adalbert Stifter. the Another couple of years later the outstanding \"Article 2 – l'Articolo 2\" (1994), a movie in a style reminiscent of the movies of Italian Neorealism with an almost poetic-like atmosphere. \"L' Articolo 2\" won the Solinas award for best screenplay. In 1996, Zaccaro made the war movie \"The game bag – il Carniere\", which also won David di Donatello for best supporting actor, Leo Gullotta, award. Later he directed another important movie as \"A Respectable Man\" (\"Un uomo perbene\") (1999) a legal thriller on Enzo Tortora, a well known anchorman of Italian television. \"A respectable man\" won the Pasinetti award in Venice Film Festival 1999, another David di Donatello for best supporting actor award and a Silver Ribbon for best screenplay. Zaccaro then showed his ability to direct TV movies as well. It resulted in many successful fictions as \"La missione\" (\"The Mission\") (1997), \"Un dono semplice – A simple gift\" (2000), \"Cuore – Heart\" (2001), and \"I ragazzi della via Pal\" (\"The boys of St. Paul street\") (2003).", "The Little Girl Who Fell from the Tree The Little Girl Who Fell From the Tree () is a 1998 German thriller film written and directed by Michael Bartlett. Bartlett directed the film in Berlin's Babelsberg Studio for Rialto Film Berlin. The film made its debut at the AFI/Los Angeles International Film Festival on October 25, 1998 and won the Best Editing Award.", "Jonathan Young (psychologist) Jonathan Young (born September 29, 1944) is a psychologist who became the founding curator of the Joseph Campbell Archives. Young developed an interest in the teaching functions of stories through early exposure to folklore. He was one of six children in a much-traveled family. His parents read and discussed the lore of each place they visited, such as the Little Mermaid in Copenhagen, the Pied Piper in Hamelin, the Arabian Nights in Baghdad, and the Buddha in India and Japan. His graduate studies focused on the psychology of stories, and included work with Viktor Frankl, Rollo May, Abraham Maslow, and Carl Rogers. He earned his PhD in Clinical Psychology from Alliant International University. Young is best known for his series of books, \"Saga: Best New Writings on Mythology.\" He assisted mythologist Joseph Campbell for several years at seminars. In addition to the Campbell archives, he organized the collections of psychologist James Hillman, and archeologist Marija Gimbutas. As a professor, Young created and chaired the Mythological Studies Department at the Pacifica Graduate Institute, working with Jungian theorists such as Robert Bly, Marion Woodman, Robert A. Johnson, Jean Houston, and Thomas Moore. In 1995, Dr. Young launched the Center for Story and Symbol in Santa Barbara, California to continue the work of Joseph Campbell. Through the center's programs, he presents seminars internationally on the uses of mythic stories for therapists, writers, clergy, and teachers. He also teaches the hero's journey in screenwriting programs. He lectures occasionally at universities, such as UCLA, Notre Dame, and Oxford, as well as ongoing courses in Mythopoetics at Pacifica Graduate Institute. He is featured in the History Channel documentary \"\". He also frequently appears on the History Channel and H2 television series Ancient Aliens.", "Mimi Leder Miriam Leder (; born January 26, 1952) is an American film and television director and producer noted for her action films and use of special effects. She was the first female graduate of the AFI Conservatory, in 1973. Leder was born in New York City in 1952, the daughter of Etyl, a classical pianist, and Paul Leder, a director, producer, actor, writer, and editor of such films as \"My Friends Need Killing, Attack of the Giant Horny Gorilla,\" and \"Dismember Mama\". Leder was raised in Los Angeles in a Jewish household. Her mother is a Holocaust survivor from Brussels, Belgium, who was interned at Auschwitz. During childhood, her father, a low-budget independent filmmaker, introduced Mimi and her siblings to film production. Her father often dropped her off at the cinema to watch the latest films. Leder states that one of the early films that had an impact on her was Federico Fellini's \"8½\". She was the first woman accepted into the AFI Conservatory, where she studied cinematography. Leder began her career as a script supervisor on a string of films, including \"Spawn of the Slithis\" (1978), \"Dummy\" (1979), \"The Boy Who Drank Too Much\" (1980), and \"A Long Way Home\" (1980), and then moved to the TV series \"Hill Street Blues\" (1981). After making the short film \"Short Order Dreams\", written and funded by her father Paul, she screened it for Steven Bochco, creator of \"Hill Street Blues\", and his friend Gregory Hoblit who hired her to direct an episode of \"L.A. Law\". In 1988, Leder directed episodes of \"Crime Story\", \"The Bronx Zoo\", \"Midnight Caller\", then directed several episodes of \"China Beach\" (1988–91) for which she was nominated for four Emmys. She made the made-for-TV films \"Woman with a Past\" (1992), \"House of Secrets\" (1993), and \"Baby Brokers\" (1994), then became one of the core directors for \"ER\" (1994–2009). The show earned her Emmy Awards for Outstanding Drama Series in 1995 and 1996. She returned to direct an episode of the series during its final season in 2009." ]
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[ "no" ]
What is the date of death of the director of film Angela (1955 Film)?
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Angela (1955 film) Angela is a 1955 American-Italian film noir, written and directed by Dennis O'Keefe, who stars in the film as well. The drama also features Mara Lane, Rossano Brazzi, Arnoldo Foà and others. The film has a voice-over narration that tells the story in flashback, and the film noir type of "Angela" has been described as femme fatale with elements of betrayal and obsession. O’Keefe (Steve Catlett) stars as an American G.I. who remained in Italy after the war to manage a car dealership. He falls in love with a secretary (Mara Lane), and after only one date with her, she asks him to dispose of her boss’ body, who has died of a heart attack in her apartment. O'Keefe places the body in the trunk of the wrong car and watches helplessly as Lane drives away with it. O’Keefe then goes about trying to fix the situation, but a police inspector (Arnoldo Foà) and Lane’s sadistic husband (Rossano Brazzi) have ulterior motives in store for him. A review in The New York Times was critical of the film, stating that "Mr. O'Keefe has himself a near-dud" and "the camera seems to be waiting for the picture to catch up with it". However, the reviewer praises the performance of Arnoldo Foà as being "ahead of it" [the camera]. Hal Erickson reviewed the film for AllMovie and opined that it "lacks the pacing and punch necessary to sustain audience empathy", but O'Keefe still "knows how to frame a scene and get the most out of his largely unknown cast". The Internet Movie Database rates the film a 5.4/10, based on user reviews. Michael Keaney wrote in his book, "Film noir guide", that "O’Keefe is okay as the American patsy, as is Italian romantic lead Brazzi as Lane’s sadistic husband, but the all-too-familiar plot doesn’t make the grade".
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[ "Andrea Bianchi Andrea Bianchi (March 31, 1925 – November 14, 2013) was an Italian film director and writer.", "Georges Baal Georges Baal (born György Balassa; 17 May 1938 – 6 December 2013) was a Hungarian writer, theatrologist, actor, director and psychologist. Georges Baal died of a heart attack on 6 December 2013, aged 75, in Saint-Mandé, Paris, France, where he had lived since 1956.", "Yannick Andréi Yannick Andréi (18 February 1927 – 28 December 1987) was the alias of French film director and screenwriter Jean Antione Andréi. Andréi was born in Bordeaux, France and died in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. Andréi began to work in film in 1953 as an assistant director for Jean-Pierre Melville's film \"Quand tu liras cette lettre\". In 1959 he began to work as a screenwriter on \"Bonjour la chance\" the French adaptation of Edgar Neville's \"La ironía del dinero\". Andréi's first film as director and screenwriter was \"Samedi soir\" in 1961. During his career he worked most often as a television director. Toward the end of his career he held an acting role in \"Paris-minuit\", a film directed by his son Frédéric Andréi. Yannick Andréi is the father of actor and director Frédéric Andréi.", "Shadow of a Man Shadow of a Man is a 1955 British crime film directed by Michael McCarthy and starring Paul Carpenter, Rona Anderson and Jane Griffiths. After a brawl in a nightclub a man is found dead at his home the following morning. American hero an old friend of the deceased finds his old chum wasn't quite what he thought. Ends up being a typical 50s romp which turns out well in the end.", "Michel Constantin Michel Constantin (born Constantin Hokhloff, 13 July 1924 – 29 August 2003) was a French film actor. Born to a Russian father and a Polish mother in Billancourt (near Paris), Constantin made his first film appearance in 1956. His first credited role was in the prison breakout drama \"Le Trou\" (aka \"The Hole\") in 1960.", "Philippe Lioret Philippe Lioret (born 10 October 1955) is a French film director, screenwriter and producer.", "Alfred Hitchcock Sir Alfred Joseph Hitchcock (13 August 1899 – 29 April 1980) was an English filmmaker widely regarded as one of the most influential figures in the history of cinema. In a career spanning six decades, he directed over 50 feature films, many of which are still widely watched and studied today. Known as the \"Master of Suspense\", he became as well known as any of his actors thanks to his many interviews, his cameo roles in most of his films, and his hosting and producing the television anthology \"Alfred Hitchcock Presents\" (1955–65). His films garnered 46 Academy Award nominations, including six wins, although he never won the award for Best Director despite five nominations. Hitchcock initially trained as a technical clerk and copy writer before entering the film industry in 1919 as a title card designer. His directorial debut was the British-German silent film \"The Pleasure Garden\" (1925). His first successful film, \"\" (1927), helped to shape the thriller genre, and \"Blackmail\" (1929) was the first British \"\". His thrillers \"The 39 Steps\" (1935) and \"The Lady Vanishes\" (1938) are ranked among the greatest British films of the 20th century. By 1939, he had international recognition and producer David O. Selznick persuaded him to move to Hollywood. A string of successful films followed, including \"Rebecca\" (1940), \"Foreign Correspondent\" (1940), \"Suspicion\" (1941), \"Shadow of a Doubt\" (1943), and \"Notorious\" (1946). \"Rebecca\" won the Academy Award for Best Picture, with Hitchcock nominated as Best Director; he was also nominated for \"Lifeboat\" (1944) and \"Spellbound\" (1945). After a brief commercial lull, he returned to form with \"Strangers on a Train\" (1951) and \"Dial M for Murder\" (1954); he then went on to direct four films often ranked among the greatest of all time: \"Rear Window\" (1954), \"Vertigo\" (1958), \"North by Northwest\" (1959) and \"Psycho\" (1960), the first and last of these garnering him Best Director nominations. \"The Birds\" (1963) and \"Marnie\" (1964) were also financially successful and are highly regarded by film historians.", "Tonino Valerii Tonino Valerii (20 May 1934 – 13 October 2016) was an Italian film director, most known for his Spaghetti Westerns. Tonino (Antonio) Valerii started his film career as an assistant director on Sergio Leone's \"A Fistful of Dollars\", before moving on to direct by himself. Among his best-known films are \"Day of Anger\" (1967) \"The Price of Power\" (1969), \"A Reason to Live, a Reason to Die\" (1972) and \"My Name Is Nobody\" (1973), starring Henry Fonda and Terence Hill. In 1970, he directed \"A Girl Called Jules\", which was entered into the 20th Berlin International Film Festival. He died on 13 October 2016 in a clinic in Rome at the age of 82.", "Don Napy Don Napy (1909–1962) was an Argentinian screenwriter and film director. He was born in Argentina as Luis Napoleón Duclout. After working as a journalist, he moved into the film industry. He made his directorial debut in 1950 and made five films over the following three years including \"The Path to Crime\" (1951).", "Dimitar Petrov Dimitar Petrov (, 22 October 1924 – 16 October 2018) was a Bulgarian film director. He directed 12 films between 1955 and 1991." ]
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[ "August 31, 1968" ]
Do both films Country (film) and Raid in St. Pauli have the directors that share the same nationality?
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Raid in St. Pauli Raid in St. Pauli (German: Razzia in St. Pauli) is a 1932 German drama film directed by Werner Hochbaum and starring Gina Falckenberg, Friedrich Gnaß and Wolfgang Zilzer. The film's sets were designed by the art director Willy Schiller. It was made at the end of the Weimar Republic era. It illustrates both the powerlessness of the ordinary worker as well as an intimate portrait of the joys and sorrows of a small group of people in the harbor section of Hamburg. A social drama plays out in the harbor area of Hamburg: Ballhaus-Else, a prostitute, lives together with her boyfriend Leo, a peaceful bar musician, in St. Pauli. One day, Matrosen-Karl, a thief on the run, finds a hideout at Else's. She is fascinated by the man, who promises her a more exciting and better life. Together they want to leave Hamburg. Leo – who feels inferior to Karl – lets them go with a heavy heart. But then Karl gets arrested after a fight between the underworld and the police in the Kongo-Bar, and Else returns to Leo – and her hopeless everyday life. The most important characteristic of this film is the use of local people, including those of somewhat gritty character, as extras playing parts that they actually lived at that time. Orbis-Film GmbH, Berlin. Vera-Filmatelier Hamburg. Exterior location: Hamburg. Runtime and film length: 74 min, 2016 m. Format: 35mm, s/w, 1:1.33, Celluloid sound film. Official Certification: 11 April 1932, B.31364, Jv. / DP: 7 December 1933, O.31364, First Official showing: 20 May 1932, Berlin (U.T. Kurfürstendamm). Banned on 7 December 1933 by the Nazi Film Review Office.
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[ "Street Acquaintances of St. Pauli Street Acquaintances of St. Pauli (German: Straßenbekanntschaften auf St. Pauli) is a 1968 West German crime drama film directed by Werner Klingler and starring Günther Stoll, Rainer Brandt and Dagmar Lassander. It was shot at the Wandsbek Studios in Hamburg and on location around St. Pauli. A nightclub owner who runs a major prostitution ring in the red light district of Hamburg kidnaps the daughter of an official in order to get him to stop investigating his business.", "Paul May Paul May (8 May 1909 – 25 February 1976) was a German film director and editor. He directed 40 films between 1935 and 1972. He was the son of Peter Ostermayr, a film producer with Universum Film AG, and his wife Olga, \"née\" Wernhard. After secondary school in Feldkirch, he entered to film industry and trained in film laboratory work. He became a film editor in 1930 and assistant director in 1935. His first film as director was \"Edelweißkönig\", in 1938. After the Second World War, he adopted the pseudonym Paul May. His greatest successes were \"08/15\" (1954), \"The Forests Sing Forever\" (1959), \"Via Mala\" (1961) from the book by John Knittel, and \"Scotland Yard Hunts Dr. Mabuse\" (1963) with Peter van Eyck. He also directed for television. He directed more than forty films between 1935 and 1972. Film Television", "Kaarin Raid Kaarin Raid (22 October 1942 Rakvere – 29 July 2014 Viljandi) was an Estonian director, theatre pedagogue and actor. In 1967 she graduated from GITIS in director speciality. 1967–1974 she was a director at Endla Theatre, 1974–1977 at Estonian Youth Theatre, 1977–1983 at Vanemuine Theatre, and 1983–1995 and 2000–2005 at Ugala Theatre. 1994–2001 he taught at Viljandi Culture Academy. Besides theatre roles she has played also in several films.", "Jochen Hick Jochen Hick (born April 2, 1960 in Darmstadt) is a German film director and producer of mainly independent feature and documentary films, also specialising in LGBT subjects. In 1994 he founded the film and TV production company GALERIA ALASKA PRODUCTIONS, based in Hamburg and Berlin. He worked and produced for several production companies and TV channels and contributed to TV documentary programs such as ARD-Exclusiv or SPIEGEL TV Reportage. 2007-2010 he is as well editor-in-chief, head of program acquisitions and co-programming director of TIMM, the first TV channel for gay male audiences in German speaking countries, which has been on the air since November 1, 2008. His 2008 documentary \"East/West – Sex & Politics\" concerns Nikolai Alekseev's attempts to organise the 2007 Moscow Pride event. His most recent project, the 2017 documentary \"Mein wunderbares West-Berlin\" (\"My Wonderful West Berlin\"), covers gay experiences in West Berlin between the mid-1940s and the late 1980s and beyond. The film premiered in February 2017 at the 67th Berlin International Film Festival (aka Berlinale).", "Harri Nykänen Harri Kalervo Nykänen (born 1953) is a Finnish crime writer. The film Raid is based on his work.", "Northland (film) Northland is a brief (approximately 20 minutes running time) 1942 Canadian documentary film on the life of miners, which was directed by the expatriate German crime writer, jazz critic, jazz musician, and sexologist Ernest Borneman. It is a production of the National Film Board of Canada.", "How to Steal a Country How to Steal a Country (theatrically as Att stjäla ett land), is a 2019 South African documentary film directed by Rehad Desai and co-produced by director himself with Anita Khanna and Zivia Desai Keiper. The film revolves around the revealing of the alleged corruption scandal surrounding former President Jacob Zuma and the Gupta family uncovered by investigative journalists. The film made its premier on 26 November 2019 in the Netherlands. The film received mixed reviews from critics.", "Johan Raid Johan Raid (born Johan Reinhold; 22 June 1885 – 4 July 1964) was an Estonian politician and civil servant. Raid was born in Ranna Parish (now Peipsiääre Parish), Kreis Dorpat, in the Governorate of Livonia. From 1931 until 1932, he was Minister of Justice and Internal Affairs. During the German occupation of Estonia, from 1941 until 1944, Laid served as a department chief in the Directorate for Internal Affairs of the Estonian Self-Administration of Generalbezirk Estland. In 1944, as the Red Army was approaching, Laid fled to Sweden. He died in Uppsala in 1964, aged 79.", "Shadow Country (film) Shadow Country () is a 2020 Czech historical drama film directed by Bohdan Sláma. It is inspired by massacre from May 1945. It chronicles life of a small village from 1930s to 1950s. The film premiered at the 2020 Summer Film School Uherské Hradiště and is set to release to theatres on 10 September 2020. The film won six Czech Lion Awards including Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress, and Best Screenplay.", "Kai Lehtinen Kai Lehtinen (born Kai Antero; 31 July 1958, in Kerava, Finland) is a Finnish actor best known for his work in the Finnish TV-series \"Raid\". Lehtinen originally began as an athlete and competed in the decathlon with a personal best of 6,265 points in 1981. He then became interested in acting in the 1980s and began his career in 1989 appearing on a mini TV series. He appeared in 6 episodes of the 1993 television series \"Viimeiset siemenperunat\" and in 1994, he appeared in the Finnish film \"Aapo\" alongside actors Taisto Reimaluoto and Ulla Koivuranta. In 1996, he appeared in the short TV movie \"Aatamin poika\". Lehtinen is also credited with directing and writing several films. He is perhaps best known for his role in highly successful \"Raid\" TV series (2001) where he played the title role. Lehtinen married Pirjo Viheriäkoski on 27 July 2002. His 18-year-old son died in a fire in 2007." ]
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[ "no" ]
Who is the spouse of the director of film Struggle For Eagle Peak?
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Struggle for Eagle Peak Struggle for Eagle Peak () is a 1960 Norwegian crime film directed by Tancred Ibsen. It was entered into the 10th Berlin International Film Festival.
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[ "Melissa Arnot Melissa Arnot Reid (born December 18, 1983) is an American mountaineer. She has climbed to the summit of Mount Everest six times. Arnot was raised just outside Glacier National Park in Whitefish, Montana. After college, she began living out of her car to save money and climb mountains. She first climbed Mount Rainier in 2001 and called it a \"watershed moment\". Arnot began teaching wilderness medicine in 2002 and began guiding on Mount Rainier with Rainier Mountaineering, Inc. in 2004. By 2006 she was a lead guide. Since 2001, she has summited Rainier more than 90 times. She is a certified Wilderness EMT and teaches Wilderness EMT courses for Remote Medical International. In 2008, she joined Jeff Dossett and David Morton on the Everest Team Inspi(RED) to promote HIV/AIDS awareness and Microsoft and Dell products supporting Product Red. In 2010, she led a celebrity climb up Mount Kilimanjaro to raise awareness for clean water access. The effort, \"Summit on the Summit\", included actors Emile Hirsch, Jessica Biel and Isabel Lucas, musicians Kenna, Lupe Fiasco and Santigold, as well as various scientists and activists, and aired as an MTV special. In 2013, she helped defuse an assault between three European climbers and a group of a hundred Sherpas; see Mount Everest in 2013. Her Everest summit attempts in 2014 and 2015 were disrupted by avalanches on Mount Everest. In 2016, she became the second American woman to summit Mount Everest without supplementary oxygen and the first that survived the descent having summited without supplementary oxygen; another American woman Francys Arsentiev reached the summit without supplementary oxygen in 1998 but died during the descent. She is currently sponsored by Eddie Bauer and was one of the original six mountain guides, also including Peter Whittaker, Ed Viesturs, Dave Hahn, Seth Waterfall and Chad Peele, who developed products for the 'First Ascent' brand and continues to participate in product development and testing. She is also sponsored by Whittaker Mountaineering, a retail store based in Ashford, Washington. Arnot’s notable big mountain ascents include:", "Robert Nixon (filmmaker) Robert Henry Nixon (born 1954) is an American film director, writer and conservationist. His films, often focused on the battles of tribal peoples and field biologists, include \"Amazon Diary\", \"America The Beautiful\", \"The End of the Game\", \"Fossey's War\", \"Gorillas in the Mist\", \"Endangered Species\", \"The Last Rivermen\", \"American Heroes\", \"Mission Blue\", \"Great White Highway\", \"The Lord God Bird\", \"Peter Beard's Africa: Last Word From Paradise\", \"The Flight Of Double Eagle II\", \"So Long Lady\" and \"The Falconer.\" Nixon was born in 1954. His father, Robert, was an executive with Chrysler; his mother, Agnes Nixon, the creator of \"One Life to Live\" and \"All My Children\", is regarded as a pioneer in bringing social consciousness to daytime television. Raised in a Philadelphia suburb, Nixon aspired to be a field biologist but academic challenges at Episcopal Academy led him to England, where he was an apprentice falconer to Master Falconer Phillip Glasier. He subsequently searched the rainforest of Guyana to study and photograph the little-known ornate hawk eagle and the harpy eagle. Returning to America, Nixon established a Raptor education program at The Wildlife Preserve under the guidance of master falconer Jim Fowler, the co-host of \"Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom\". Often hired to \"fly\" raptors for feature films and television commercials, Nixon began his career in film as a professional falconer in the mid-70s. In 1976, he began producing adventure and environmental documentaries for ABC's \"American Sportsman\" series. In 1979, Nixon led a film crew to Rwanda to produce a documentary about famed zoologist Dian Fossey. Nixon pressed Fossey to allow him to make a dramatic film about her life; she agreed to grant him the rights to her story, for free, provided that he spend a year dedicated to hands-on conservation. Film studios became interested in Fossey's life after she was murdered in 1985, and her story was told in the feature film, \"Gorillas in the Mist,\" which Nixon co-produced. The film, which starred Sigourney Weaver, was a critical and commercial success. Nixon next wrote, produced and directed the dramatic film \"Amazon Diary\", which was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film in 1990.", "Nina Cook Silitch Nina Cook Silitch (born December 5, 1972) is an American ski mountaineer, is married to Michael Silitch, has 2 children; Birken and Anders Silitch.", "Barry Blanchard Barry Blanchard (born March 29, 1959) is one of North America's top alpinists, noted for pushing the standards of highly technical, high-risk alpine climbing in the Canadian Rockies and the Himalayas. Blanchard was born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He first came to note in 1983 with the first ascent of Andromeda Strain on Mount Andromeda in Alberta, Canada with David Cheesmond and Tim Friesen. In 1984, he climbed the North Spur of Rakaposhi, Pakistan with Dave Cheesmond and Kevin Doyle. With David Cheesmond, he climbed the North Pillar of North Twin, Alberta in 1985. Rather than resting on his laurels, he has continued to push the limits of alpinism since, including eight trips to Asia to climb in the Himalayas and Karakoram. Blanchard has been involved with Yamnuska Mountain Adventures since its inception in the late 1970s. Blanchard is an internationally certified UIAGM mountain guide. He helped in the making of Hollywood climbing movies including \"K2\", \"Cliffhanger\" and \"Vertical Limit\". He lives in Canmore, Alberta, with his wife Catherine Mulvihill whom he met on a Mount Everest expedition in 1994, and their family.", "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.", "Jodie Evans Jodie Evans (born September 22, 1954) is an American political activist, author, and documentary film producer. She characterizes her activism as working for peace and justice, environmental causes and women's rights. She has traveled extensively promoting what she terms the conflict resolution by peaceful means—including leading \"citizen diplomacy\" delegations to Iran, the Gaza Strip, and Afghanistan. Evans served in the cabinet of California Governor Jerry Brown and managed his 1992 campaign for the presidency. Evans was a co-founder of the women's anti-war activist organization Code Pink with Medea Benjamin and others. She serves as the board chair of the Rainforest Action Network, an organization whose mission is to preserve forests, protect the climate and uphold human rights by challenging corporate power and systemic injustice through frontline partnerships and strategic campaigns. She was married to Max Palevsky until his death on May 5, 2010 and currently lives in Venice, California. Evans was born and raised in Las Vegas, Nevada. She first became interested in social justice activism when she worked as a maid in a major Las Vegas hotel as a teenager—as her coworkers organized, she marched in favor of a living wage. Her CODEPINK protest actions include disrupting Sarah Palin's speech at the 2008 Republican National Convention, and, in 2009, leading a protest in Santa Monica against Israeli cosmetics company Ahava. Upon returning from Afghanistan, she delivered signatures from women in that country and the US to President Barack Obama asking him to send no new troops into the conflict there. In March, 2010, during a book signing by Karl Rove, she and other Code Pink members caused disruptions. At one point, Evans charged the stage towards Rove with a pair of handcuffs, declaring that she was making a citizen's arrest. On January 30, 2011, Evans was arrested for disruptive behavior at a Rancho Mirage hotel where she was leading a protest against David H. Koch and Charles G. Koch over their financial support of part of the Tea Party Movement. She is the co-founder and president of the People’s Support Foundation, a non-profit which aims to empower people through education, research and community, which was established in 2017 with support of former staff of software company ThoughtWorks.", "Struggle (2013 film) Struggle is a 2013 Chinese teen film directed and written by Guan Xiaojie, starring Zhao Yihuan, Wen Zhuo, Hu Yue, Wen Mengyang, You Yitian, and Ruo Qi. Within a month the film grossed ¥200 million in China. This film was shot in Beijing Xingmei Jinchen Studios.", "Bernadette McDonald Bernadette McDonald (born 1951) is a Canadian-born author of several non-fiction books, primarily on mountain culture topics. Her books include \"Brotherhood of the Rope\", \"Tomaž Humar\", \"Freedom Climbers\", \"Alpine Warriors\", \"Art Of Freedom\" and \"Winter 8000\". McDonald was born in 1951, in Biggar, Saskatchewan, the daughter of Lester and Erna Kelly. She grew up on a prairie farm. Her childhood and most of her education was focused on music, with a special emphasis on the performance of contemporary classical chamber music. She studied at Pacific Lutheran University, the University of Western Ontario and The Banff Centre. She moved to the Canadian Rockies in the early 1970s. She volunteered for the Banff Mountain Film Festival and she worked at The Banff Centre for twenty years, directing various Banff Mountain festivals and starting the Mountain Culture division. She resigned from her position of vice president, Mountain Culture in 2006 to concentrate on writing. She lectures on a variety of mountain topics for universities, festivals, and alpine clubs; she consults on mountain cultural issues with start-up festivals and mountain institutes, and curates mountain-related exhibitions. She has a number of honors, including the Alberta Order of Excellence, the Summit of Excellence Award, the King Albert Award and several mountain literary prizes such as the 2011 and the 2017 Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature. She was Canada's representative at the United Nations to launch the International Year of Mountains. She lives with her husband Alan McDonald in Banff, Alberta and in Naramata, British Columbia.", "Heather Rae Heather Rae is an American film and television producer and director. She has worked on documentary and narrative film projects, and is best known for \"Frozen River\", \"Trudell\", and \"Tallulah\". Rae has worked as a producer for more than 20 years, being recognized as one of \"Variety\"'s Ten Producers to Watch in 2008, and receiving the Piaget Producers Award and the Cinereach Producers Award. For five years, Rae was an adjunct professor at Boise State University, teaching film studies. She co-founded the True West Cinema Film Festival and sat on the board of directors for True West. She established a production center in Boise where independent filmmakers such as Gregory Bayne, Randy Redroad and Blackhorse Lowe worked. It produced four feature films before being shuttered. Rae is a current and founding board member of the Sun Valley Film Festival. From 1996 to 2001, Rae worked for the Sundance Institute. After leaving Sundance, Rae worked for one year as senior vice president of production for Winter Films. From 2012 to 2015, Rae served as an artist trustee for the Sundance Institute's Board of Trustees. Throughout her career, Rae has been an advocate for marginalized voices. She has mentored filmmakers for many years for organizations such as The Sundance Institute, Film Independent, and other media and entertainment organizations. Rae has worked with filmmakers in several countries, including the Sami and British Film Institutes in Europe, New Zealand's Script to Screen and Power of Inclusion Summit, and in Egypt with Film Independent's Global Media Makers partnership with the Cairo International Film Festival. \"Trudell\" (2005) was the culmination of more than a decade of Rae’s work as a filmmaker and activist. It has played in more than 100 film festivals worldwide, receiving honors such as Best Documentary Feature at the 30th Annual American Indian Film Festival and a Special Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the Seattle International Film Festival. In 2006, \"Trudell\" was nationally broadcast on PBS in the documentary series Independent Lens. \"Frozen River\" (2008) received seven nominations and won two Independent Spirit Awards, including Rae winning the Piaget Producers Award. It won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, and received two Academy Award nominations for the Best Actress (Melissa Leo) and the Best Original Screenplay (Courtney Hunt).", "Lindsey Grayzel Lindsey Grayzel (also credited as Lindsey Goodwin-Grayzel) is a documentary filmmaker from Portland, Oregon. She started as an editor in 1994 then became producer and director in 1999. While filming for her documentary \"The Reluctant Radical\", she was arrested and charged with criminal sabotage and other felonies while filming a protest break-in at the Trans Mountain Pipeline in Skagit County, Washington in October 2016, the same day as another filmmaker was arrested at a Keystone Pipeline site in Pembina County, North Dakota. According to \"The Guardian\" and \"Filmmaker\" magazine, Grayzel was outside a fenced area filming the protest inside a no-trespassing area. \"Filmmaker\" also reported that Grayzel was subjected to a strip search before being jailed. Charges against Grayzel were dropped the next month. Abraham and Lindsey Grayzel (\"nee\" Goodwin) married in 1996. Their son is also a filmmaker. He produced \"Northwest Trees\" in 2015 while a student at Cleveland High School in Portland." ]
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[ "Lillebil Ibsen" ]
Where was the director of film Santos Vega (1936 Film) born?
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Santos Vega (1936 film) Santos Vega is a 1936 Argentine historical film directed by Luis Moglia Barth. It is based on the story of Santos Vega.
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[ "Luis Ignacio de la Vega Luis Ignacio \"El Tallarín\" de la Vega Leija (June 23, 1914 – September 19, 1974) was a Mexican basketball player who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics. Born in San Luis Potosí, he was part of the Mexican basketball team, which won the bronze medal. He played five matches.", "Alberto Seixas Santos Alberto Jorge Seixas dos Santos (20 March 1936 – 10 December 2016) was a Portuguese film director. Seixas Santos was born on 20 March 1936 in Lisbon, Portugal. Studied Historical-philosophical Sciences in the Faculty of Letters of the University of Lisbon. In 1958, he started to work as a film critic. Studied in Paris, at the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques (IDHEC) in 1962 and, in the next year, at the London Film School. Seixas Santos, who belongs to a generation of film club lovers, is part of the cinematic movement called Novo Cinema (New Cinema) and started to shoot documentaries - \"A Arte e o Ofício de Ourives\" and \"Indústria Cervejeira em Portugal\" (1968). In 1970, he was one of the founders of the Portuguese Cinema Center. \"Brandos Costumes\", his first feature-film, shot between 1972 and 1975 and written together with the writers Luísa Neto Jorge and Nuno Júdice, draws a line between everyday life of a medium bourgeoisie family and the path of the regime of the military coup of the 28 May 1926. This film was selected to the official competition of the Berlin International Film Festival. Seixas Santos was one of the directors of \"As Armas e o Povo\" (1975), directed by a group of film-makers, which portraits the week between the 25 April and the 1 May, 1974. Following the same political line, sign another collective film \"A Lei da Terra\" (1976), shown in the Leipzig Film Festival. During the same year, was nominated the president of the Portuguese Film Institute. He was one of the founders of \"Grupo Zero\", an organization which had illustrious members such as João César Monteiro, Jorge Silva Melo, Ricardo Costa, Margarida Gil, Solveig Nordlund and the cinematographer Acácio de Almeida. \"Gestos e Fragmentos\" (1982), approaches the relation between the military forces and power in Portugal, based in the experiences of Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho, in the point of view of the philosopher and writer Eduardo Lourenço and the American director Robert Kramer. This feature-film participated in the Venice Film Festival in the same year.", "Pastor Vega Pastor Vega (12 February 1940 – 2 June 2005) was a Cuban film director and screenwriter. He directed nine films between 1964 and 2003. His 1979 film \"Portrait of Teresa\" was entered into the 11th Moscow International Film Festival.", "Rafael Romero Marchent Rafael Romero Marchent (3 May 1926 – 13 February 2020) was a Spanish director, screenwriter and actor. Born in Madrid, the son of the author Joaquín Romero Marchent Gómez de Avellaneda, he started his career as an actor, mainly cast in character roles. In 1959 he became assistant director, and in 1965 he made his directorial debut with \"Hands of a Gunfighter\". Specialized in the Spaghetti Western genre, from the late 1970s he was also active on television. His brother Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent was also a director and screenwriter. In the 2000s he taught film and interpretation classes. He was awarded in 1947 by the Medalla del Círculo de Escritores Cinematográficos for his role in the film \"La mies es mucha\". He married Maruja Tamayo. He died on 13 February 2020 at the age of 93.", "Judas (1936 film) Judas is a 1936 Mexican drama film directed by Manuel R. Ojeda and starring Josefina Escobedo, Carlos Villatoro and Víctor Urruchúa. The film's sets were designed by the art director José Rodríguez Granada.", "Juan Carlos Thorry Juan Carlos Thorry (June 28, 1908 in Coronel Pringles – February 12, 2000 in San Antonio de Padua), born José Antonio Torrontegui, was an Argentine film actor, tango musician and director. Best known for his work in tango films in the Cinema of Argentina, he entered the industry in 1935 in \"El caballo del pueblo\", followed by \"Radio Bar\" in 1936 and made nearly 60 film appearances between then and his retirement in 1969. He died in San Antonio de Padua on February 12, 2000 of heart failure.", "María Santos María Santos was an Argentine actress. In 1943, she starred in Benito Perojo's \"Stella\". Other notable roles include: \"Maestro Levita\" (1938), \"La fuga\" (1937) and \"La serpiente de cascabel\" (1948).", "Tito Davison Tito Davison (14 November 1912 – 21 March 1985) was a Chilean-born Mexican film director and screenwriter. He directed 60 films between 1937 and 1982.", "Goal (1936 film) Goal (Spanish:¡Goal!) is a 1936 Argentine sports film directed by Luis Moglia Barth. The film's sets were designed by Raúl Soldi.", "Ya tiene comisario el pueblo (1936 film) Ya tiene comisario el pueblo is a Argentine film directed and written by Claudio Martínez Payva." ]
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[ "Buenos Aires" ]
Which film was released earlier, Lake Placid Serenade or Odd Couple (Film)?
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Lake Placid Serenade Lake Placid Serenade is a 1944 American musical romance film directed by Steve Sekely and starring Vera Ralston, Eugene Pallette and Barbara Jo Allen. Following the German invasion of Czechoslovakia a Czech ice-skating champion goes to stay with her Uncle in the United States. It was made by Republic Pictures as a slightly higher-budget production than most of the studios' B Movies. The film's sets were designed by the art director Russell Kimball. Vera Haschek (Vera Ralston), training for the Czechoslovak national figure skating championship, is given a pair of hand-made skates by her Grandfather (Lloyd Corrigan). She wins the contest, impressing the Countess (Barbara Jo Allen), an ice show impresario. She tries to sign Vera to a long-term contract, but Vera resists. The Countess puts Vera in a show at the Ice Carnival in Lake Placid, New York, and Vera becomes an audience favourite. When Vera learns that Nazi Germany has invaded Czechoslovakia, she is worried about her grandfather. She learns she has a rich uncle, Carl Cermak (Eugene Pallette), living in the United States. She seeks him out at his Long Island home, and is welcomed into his family. Her cousin Susan (Ruth Terry) is happy to see her, but her cousin Irene (Stephanie Bachelor) snubs her. Vera meets Paul Jordan (obert Livingston), her uncle's business partner. The two fall in love, but Paul leaves the next day for a business meeting—neither having told the other their name. Meanwhile, Irene, who is infatuated with Paul, gives him a pipe for Christmas. When Paul meets Vera again a week later, she sees the pipe and believes she is stealing Paul from Irene. She flees the Cermak home and returns to Lake Placid. Susan, realizing that Paul and Vera are in love, arranges for Paul to go to Lake Placid and tricks him into meeting Vera. She again flees the meeting, leaving one of her special skates behind. Vera now agrees to sign the contract with the Countess; her one condition is that her real name never be used. She goes on tour, and is a huge hit. Meanwhile, Uncle Carl has located Vera's grandfather and brought him to the United States.
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[ "Strange Wives Strange Wives is a 1934 American comedy film directed by Richard Thorpe, written by James Mulhauser, Barry Trivers, and Gladys Buchanan Unger, and starring Roger Pryor, June Clayworth, Esther Ralston, Hugh O'Connell, Ralph Forbes and Cesar Romero. It was released on December 10, 1934, by Universal Pictures. Against his better judgment, stockbroker Jimmy King proposes marriage to a Russian refugee called Nadja, promptly complicating his life. He ends up supporting Nadja and all of her family, then must come up with a clever way of getting them all to be self-reliant and out of his house.", "The Serenade (film) The Serenade is a 1916 American silent comedy film featuring Oliver Hardy. This film survives at the Library of Congress cataloged as \"Jim The Serenade\".", "I Married a Strange Person! I Married a Strange Person! is a 1997 American adult animated comedy film by Bill Plympton. A newlywed wakes up to find he can transform people and objects using the power of his mind. An American media conglomerate wishes to harness this power.", "Serenade (1927 film) Serenade is a lost 1927 American drama silent film directed by Harry d'Abbadie d'Arrast and written by Herman J. Mankiewicz and Ernest Vajda. The film stars Adolphe Menjou, Kathryn Carver, Lawrence Grant, Lina Basquette and Martha Franklin. The film was released on December 24, 1927, by Paramount Pictures.", "Strictly Unconventional Strictly Unconventional is a 1930 American drama film directed by David Burton, written by Sylvia Thalberg and Frank Butler, and starring Catherine Dale Owen, Paul Cavanagh, Tyrell Davis, Lewis Stone and Ernest Torrence. It was released on May 3, 1930, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It is based upon the 1921 play \"The Circle\" by W. Somerset Maugham. A young woman married into an aristocratic English family finds life with her husband dull and decides to elope with a Canadian. However her mother-in-law, who did something similar thirty years before, tries to prevent her.", "The Odd Couple (play) The Odd Couple is a play by Neil Simon. Following its premiere on Broadway in 1965, the characters were revived in a successful 1968 film and 1970s television series, as well as several other derivative works and spin-offs. The plot concerns two mismatched roommates: the neat, uptight Felix Ungar and the slovenly, easygoing Oscar Madison. Simon adapted the play in 1985 to feature a pair of female roommates (Florence Ungar and Olive Madison) in The Female Odd Couple. An updated version of the 1965 show appeared in 2002 with the title Oscar and Felix: A New Look at the Odd Couple. Sources vary as to the origins of the play. In \"The Washington Post\"s obituary of Simon's brother Danny, a television writer, Adam Bernstein wrote that the idea for the play came from his divorce. \"Mr. Simon had moved in with a newly single theatrical agent named Roy Gerber in Hollywood, and they invited friends over one night. Mr. Simon botched the pot roast. The next day, Gerber told him: \"Sweetheart, that was a lovely dinner last night. What are we going to have tonight?\" Mr. Simon replied: \"What do you mean, cook you dinner? You never take me out to dinner. You never bring me flowers.\" Danny Simon wrote a partial first draft of the play, but then handed over the idea to Neil. However, in the Mel Brooks biography \"It's Good to Be the King\", author James Robert Parish claims that the play came about after Simon observed Brooks, in a separation from his first wife, living with writer Speed Vogel for three months. Vogel later wrote that Brooks had insomnia, \"a brushstroke of paranoia\", and \"a blood-sugar problem that kept us a scintilla away from insanity\". Simon credited Boston critic Elliot Norton with helping him develop the final act of the play. Norton practiced drama criticism when the relationship between the regional critic and playwrights whose shows were undergoing tryouts in their towns were not as adversarial as they were to become. Appearing on the public television show \"Elliot Norton Reviews\", during Simon's conversation with the critic, Norton said that the play went \"flat\" in its final act. As it appeared originally at Boston's Colonial Theatre, the characters the Pigeon Sisters did not appear in the final act. Simon told \"The Boston Globe\": He invited one of the stars and the writer.", "Odd Couple (film) Odd Couple () is a 1979 Hong Kong martial arts comedy film directed by Lau Kar-wing, who also stars, alongside Sammo Hung. It was the first film to be released by Gar Bo Motion Picture Company (aka. Gar-Bo Film Company), an independent production company set up by Hung, Lau and producer Karl Maka. The fight scenes are mainly weapon-based, with particular emphasis on the contrast between the dao (sword) and qiang (spear). The film is sometimes listed as \"The Odd Couple\" or \"Dance of Death\". the film sets in the Manchu era. Two aging martial artists get together once a year for a timed duel. One is master of the short sword, King of Sabres (Sammo Hung), and the other is King of Spears (Lau Kar-wing). Every year the fight ends in a draw, and as the masters are getting old, they decide the best course of action is to each take on a student to determine who is the better teacher. They agree to meet up again 10 years later, with their students and let the next generation carry on the duel. A previously upright martial artist known as Old Yellow Dog (Bryan Leung) kidnaps the students (also played by Lau and Hung) before their duel can begin. It transpires in a flashback that the master was defeated in separate battles with the King of Sabres and the King of Spears, and was forced to retire from fighting. Now, after years of training in the long bladed staff and with a new name, Laughing Bandit, he wants to lure the old masters out to exact his revenge. The old masters arrive, first taking on the Laughing Bandit's four disciples and killing them. However, this was a ploy to tire them out, and individually they are unable to defeat Laughing Bandit and his new techniques. The evil master suggests the old men both attack at once, but because of their pride and belief in their own superiority, they refuse. The students are released, while each master is fighting, and are instructed to escape. After some protestation they do, and the old masters are killed. Fuelled by revenge, the students agree to join forces to defeat the evil master. Hung's character (the new King of Spears) comes up with a plan us to use magnets that can pull the Laughing Bandit's weapon from him.", "Strange Affair (1944 film) Strange Affair is a 1944 mystery-comedy film starring Allyn Joslyn, Evelyn Keyes, Marguerite Chapman, and Edgar Buchanan. Directed by Alfred E. Green, it was based on Oscar Saul's short story \"Stalk the Hunter\". A comic strip creator and his wife investigate a murder at a charity benefit.", "Carole Shelley Carole Augusta Shelley (16 August 1939 – 31 August 2018) was a British actress who made her career in the United States. Her many stage roles included Gwendolyn Pigeon in \"The Odd Couple\", the character of Madame Morrible in the original Broadway cast of the musical \"Wicked\". She won the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for her performance in \"The Elephant Man\" in 1979. Shelley was born in London, England, the daughter of Deborah (\"\" Bloomstein), an opera singer of Russian Jewish descent, and Curtis Shelley, a composer of German Jewish origin. Her father had emigrated to London before World War II. Shelley made her Broadway debut as Gwendolyn Pigeon in the original 1965 production of \"The Odd Couple\" (starring Art Carney and Walter Matthau). She reprised the role for the 1968 film version (with Jack Lemmon replacing Carney), and the first season of the subsequent television series (starring Tony Randall and Jack Klugman). She and Monica Evans, who co-starred as her sister Cecily Pigeon, were the only two performers to appear in the original play \"The Odd Couple\" and both the film and original television adaptation—and in the same roles. In the 1970s, Shelley wanted to extend her range, feeling she was not using all her capabilities as an actor. She told \"The New York Times\" in a 1979 interview that she had \"months of the most intensive deep-water swimming — more than I’d ever been called upon to do in my life\" when she played Rosalind in \"As You Like It\" at the 1972 Stratford Festival in Ontario. She received her first Tony Award nomination in 1975 for her performance as \"Jane\" in \"Absurd Person Singular\". Shelley won the 1979 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for her role as Mrs. Kendal in \"The Elephant Man\", and was nominated for the Tony Award as Featured Actress in a Play in 1987 for her performance in \"Stepping Out\" as \"Maxine\". In 1982 she won an Obie Award for her performance \"Twelve Dreams\". Shelley also began appearing in musicals in the late 1990s, with the revivals of \"Show Boat\" as Parthy and \"Cabaret\" as Fraulein Schneider in 1999.", "Strange Frame Strange Frame: Love & Sax (often referred to as simply Strange Frame) is a 2012 American romantic science fiction comedy-drama film directed by G. B. Hajim and written by Hajim and Shelley Doty. Created using cutout animation, the film was slated as the world's first animated lesbian-themed sci-fi film. It stars an ensemble voice cast, led by Claudia Black, Tara Strong and Tim Curry, and features \"Firefly\" alums Ron Glass (In his final film role) and Alan Tudyk. Clips debuted at the Los Angeles Bent-Con on December 3, 2011 and the completed film premiered in London on May 3, 2012. Set at the end of the 28th century, the human race has long since abandoned a desolate earth, colonizing Jupiter's moons, particularly Ganymede. Most of the refugees fleeing earth did so in exchange for an agreement of indentured servitude, projected to last \"at most\" one or two generations. However, this proved untrue, and by the 28th century a large portion of the population are in permanent debt bondage from birth. Naia (Tara Strong) is one such debt slave, genetically modified to have enhanced lung capacity in order to survive harsher work environments. During a protest riot, Naia is freed with many other debt slaves from a holding cell on Ganymede. As she flees she encounters Parker (Claudia Black), a street saxophone performer being set upon by city police who incorrectly believe she is part of the riots. Naia saves Parker from a beating, with Parker later returning the favor. The two ultimately escape and quickly find themselves becoming attracted to each other, and soon after are in a romantic relationship and are living together. Both musicians, Naia and Parker begin composing music together, Parker's saxophone complementing Naia's guitar and singing. The two join with friends Chat (Alan Tudyk) and Atem (Khary Payton) and form a band, quickly rising in popularity and notoriety owing to Naia's passionate, anti-debt slavery lyrics. This soon attracts the attention of Ganymede \"starmaker\" Dorlan Mig (Tim Curry), who invites Parker and Naia to a party at a high-class club where he can discuss signing the band to his company. At the party both Naia and Parker indulge in several exotic treats, culminating in a rare vintage alcohol which renders both of them unconscious." ]
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[ "Lake Placid Serenade" ]
When did Lady Mary Fox's father die?
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Mary Fox Mary Fox may refer to
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[ " He was given the exotic garden developed by his Uncle Robert, at Rosehill, Falmouth, in 1872. Along with many other members of the Fox family, he was a Quaker, and engaged with them in various philanthropic projects. He was a founder of Falmouth County School for Girls. In 1878, he seconded a motion at a public meeting of Falmouth Chamber of Commerce, urging the Government \"to maintain in the present crisis [The Russo-Turkish War] the principles of strict neutrality\". He was born on 10 December 1836 at Wodehouse Place, Falmouth, the third son of the twelve children of Alfred Fox (1794–1874) and his wife, Sarah Lloyd (1804–1890). He married Olivia Blanche Orme (1844–1930) in 1864. They had four children, two boys and two girls. His son, Charles Masson Fox, was a timber merchant and a director of the family Shipping Broking company, G. C. Fox. His son, Howard Orme Fox (17 August 1865 – 7 June 1921) was an Imperial Civil Servant. His daughters, Olivia Lloyd Fox (born 1868) and Stella (Born 1876), gave Rosehill Garden to Falmouth Town Council. He died 15 November 1922 at Rosehill, Falmouth.", " His friendship with his mentor, Burke, and his parliamentary credibility were both casualties of Fox's support for France during the French Revolutionary Wars, but Fox went on to attack Pitt's wartime legislation and to defend the liberty of religious minorities and political radicals. After Pitt's death in January 1806, Fox served briefly as Foreign Secretary in the 'Ministry of All the Talents' of William Grenville before he died on 13 September 1806, aged 57. Fox was born at 9 Conduit Street, London, the second surviving son of Henry Fox, 1st Baron Holland, and Lady Caroline Lennox, a daughter of Charles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond. Henry Fox (1705–1774) was an ally of Robert Walpole and rival of Pitt the Elder, and had amassed a considerable fortune by exploiting his position as Paymaster General of the forces. Charles James Fox's elder brother Stephen (1745–1774) became the 2nd Baron Holland, and his younger brother Henry (1755–1811) had a distinguished military career. Fox was the darling of his father, who found Charles \"infinitely engaging & clever & pretty\" and, from the time that his son was three years old, apparently preferred his company at meals to that of anyone else. The stories of Charles's over-indulgence by his doting father are legendary. It was said that Charles once expressed a great desire to break his father's watch and was not restrained or punished when he duly smashed it on the floor. On another occasion, when Henry had promised his son that he could watch the demolition of a wall on his estate and found that it had already been destroyed, he ordered the workmen to rebuild the wall and demolish it again, with Charles watching. Given \"carte blanche\" to choose his own education, Fox in 1758 attended a fashionable Wandsworth school run by a Monsieur Pampellonne, followed by Eton College, where he began to develop his lifelong love of classical literature. In later life he was said to have always carried a copy of Horace in his coat pocket. He was taken out of school by his father in 1761 to attend the coronation of George III, who would become one of his most bitter enemies, and once more in 1763 to travel to the Continent (where he visited Paris and Spa).", "Michael Fox (judge) Sir Michael John Fox (8 October 1921 – 9 April 2007) was a British barrister and judge. He was a High Court judge from 1975 to 1981 and a Lord Justice of Appeal from 1981 until 1992. Fox was born to Irish parents and raised in the Roman Catholic faith. the youngest of four children. His father had worked in the Irish Civil Service. Fox was educated at Drayton Manor School in Hanwell. His father died in 1930 in a shooting accident, and his mother remarried. He went to the London School of Economics to read law, but his studies were interrupted by the war. His poor eyesight prevented him joining the armed forces during the Second World War, and worked in intelligence in the Admiralty from 1942–1945. Instead of continuing at the London School of Economics he applied to read jurisprudence at Magdalen College, Oxford, after the war, gaining a second-class degree in 1947 and then the Bachelor of Civil Law in 1948. He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1949. He joined the chambers of Cyril Radcliffe at 3 New Square, as a pupil of John Sparrow (later Warden of All Souls College, Oxford). He practised as a Chancery barrister, dealing with tax, trusts, wills and real estate. He became a Queen's Counsel in 1968, and became head of his chambers in 1972. He married fellow barrister Hazel Stuart, stepdaughter of Lord Denning, in 1954; later, as Lady Hazel Fox QC, she was director of the British Institute of International and Comparative Law from 1982 to 1989. They had three sons and a daughter together. He took early retirement in 1992 as a result of his failing eyesight, and he spent much time at Nuthanger Farm, near Watership Down, Hampshire. Diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in his later years, he died in 2007, and was survived by his wife and their four children. He was appointed as a High Court judge in 1975, receiving the customary knighthood and becoming a Bencher at Lincoln's Inn. He was allocated to the Chancery Division, where he was involved in various high-profile cases.", "Mary Montagu, Countess of Cardigan Mary Montagu, Duchess of Montagu (c.1711 – 2 May 1775), known as Countess of Cardigan between 1730 and 1749, was the wife of George Brudenell, 4th Earl of Cardigan. She was the daughter of John Montagu, 2nd Duke of Montagu, on whose death in 1749 her husband inherited the family estates and took the surname \"Montagu\". Her mother was Lady Mary Churchill, daughter of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough. In 1766, her husband the earl was made a duke, reviving the titles that had become extinct as a result of his father-in-law's death without a male heir. Lady Mary married the earl on 7 July 1730 at St Giles-in-the-Fields. They had two children: Other children died in infancy. The duchess died at the age of about 63, and was buried at St Edmund's Church, Warkton, Northamptonshire. Her memorial was sculpted by Peter Mathias van Gelder to a design by Robert Adam, and was completed in 1781.", "William Fox William Fox may refer to:", "Francis Fox (divine) Francis Fox (1675–1738) was an English divine who became vicar of Reading. Fox, son of Francis Fox, was born at Brentford in 1675. He entered St Edmund Hall, Oxford, as a commoner in April 1698, after having, according to Hearne, served six and a half years of his time as apprentice to a glover in London. He took the degree of B.A. in 1701, and that of M.A. in 1704. In 1705 he was chaplain to the lord mayor, Sir Owen Buckingham, and apparently about this time was 'commonly known as Father Fox'. Bishop Burnet appointed him rector of Boscombe, Wiltshire, in 1708, and promoted him to the vicarage of Potterne in 1711. He was chaplain to Lord Cadogan, and, from 1713 till his death, prebendary of Salisbury. In 1726 the Lord Chancellor presented him to the vicarage of St Mary's, Reading. There he died in July 1738. He was, at any rate for most of his life, a strong Whig, and in 1727 he preached at what was called the Reading lecture a sermon which gave great offence to a number of the clergy who formed the audience. After being repeated as an assize sermon at Abingdon, it was published under the title of \"Judgment, Mercy, and Fidelity, the Weightier Matters or Duties of the Law\" (Matt. xxiii. 23). It was considered to undervalue the efficacy of the sacraments, and to depreciate unduly the usefulness of preaching against dissenters. Angry letters about it were exchanged between Fox and the Rev. Joseph Slade of St Laurence's, Reading, who eventually published a sermon in reply to it, with the letters prefixed. This in its turn was attacked by the Rev. Lancelot Carleton in 'A Letter to the Rev. Jos. Slade'. Besides the sermon, 'Judgment, Mercy, and Fidelity', Fox published:", "William Foxe William Foxe (1479/80 – 1554), of Stoke by Greet and St. John's Hospital, Ludlow, Shropshire, was an English politician. Foxe was the eldest son of Edmund Foxe of Stoke by Greet and his wife Catherine Pickenham, the daughter and coheiress of John Pickenham of Pickenham, Norfolk. Foxe married Jane Downe, a daughter of Richard Downe of Ludlow, Shropshire. They had four daughters and six sons, including MP, Charles and Edmund Foxe. His son-in-law, William Hopton, was made overseer of Foxe's will, alongside his son Charles Foxe and his wife Jane, who died in 1566, was his only excetrix. Foxe was buried in Ludford Church. He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Ludlow in 1523, 1529 and 1536.", "Thomas Fox (priest) Thomas Fox was an English priest. Fox was educated at Christ Church, Oxford. He held the living at Bromyard, herefordshire Fox was appointed Archdeacon of Hereford in 1698 and held the office until his death in 1728.", "John Charles Fox Sir John Charles Fox (1855 – 1943), eldest son of John Fox, solicitor, was born on 29 May 1855. In 1880, he married Mary Louisa, second daughter of John Sutherland Valentine, C. E. Fox had three sons and three daughters. He liked to play golf. He was educated at Kensington Grammar School. He was admitted a solicitor in 1876 and was a member of the firm Hare and Co., agents for the Treasury Solicitor, from 1881 to 1891. He became a Chief Clerk in the Chancery Division in 1891, the title of this office being changed to Master in 1897. He became Senior Master in 1917 and retired in 1921. He was knighted in the New Year Honours of 1921. He was one of the editors of the Yearly Supreme Court Practice. He is the author of \"Handbook of English Law Reports\" (1913). It is a \"detailed monograph\". Fox was also author of \"The History of Contempt of Court\" (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1927; reprinted by Professional Books, London, 1972).", "Charles Richard Fox General Charles Richard Fox (6 November 1796 – 13 April 1873) was a British army general, and later a politician. Fox was born at Brompton, the illegitimate son of Henry Richard Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland, through a liaison with Lady Webster, whom Lord Holland would later marry. After some service in the Royal Navy, Fox entered the Grenadiers, and was known in later life as a collector of Greek coins. His collection was bought for the royal museum of Berlin when he died in 1873. He was present around the time of Napoleon's incarceration on St Helena and subsequently removed a key to the bedroom where Napoleon was lodged. This was given to his mother - Lady Holland - due to her Napoleonphile attitudes and auctioned in 2021. He married in St. George's, Hanover Square, London, on 19 June 1824 Lady Mary FitzClarence, a daughter of William IV by his mistress Dorothy Jordan. The couple had no issue. Fox was a politician. He represented the Whig interest and sat for Calne 1831–32, then Tavistock 1832–35. He briefly represented Stroud in 1835, but resigned that seat so Lord John Russell could contest it. He was elected as a Member of Parliament for the east London constituency of Tower Hamlets in 1841 and served until 1847. Fox was Surveyor-General of the Ordnance in 1841 and 1846–52. He was promoted Major-General on 9 November 1846, Lieutenant-General on 20 June 1854, and General on 6 March 1863." ]
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[ "20 June 1837" ]
Who was born first, Eupremio Carruezzo or Bruno Millienne?
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Bruno Millienne Bruno Millienne (born 28 November 1959) is a French politician representing the Democratic Movement. He was elected to the French National Assembly on 18 June 2017, representing the department of Yvelines. Millienne worked for M6 and was also a councilor for Jumeauville.
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[ "Bruno Valencony Bruno Valencony (born 16 June 1968) is a French former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper.", "Bruno Vicino Bruno Vicino (born 7 September 1952) is former Italian cyclist, now a directeur sportif with the Lampre cycling team. He was a professional from 1982 to 1987. He won the UCI Motor-paced World Championships three times.", "Bruno Kernen Bruno Kernen may refer to:", "Bruno Toledo Bruno Toledo may refer to:", "Bruno Oliveira Bruno Oliveira may refer to:", "Bruno Pires Bruno Pires may refer to:", "Bruno (footballer, born 2001) Bruno Conceição de Oliveira (born 10 June 2001), commonly known as Bruno, is a Brazilian footballer who currently plays for Al Jazira.", "Bruno Gonçalves Bruno Gonçalves may refer to:", "Luciano Bruno Luciano Bruno (born May 23, 1963 in Foggia) is a retired Italian boxer, who won a Welterweight Bronze medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics. Bruno turned pro in 1984, winning his first nine fights, and retiring unbeaten in 1987 with a career record of 9–0–0. Bruno is now working as a boxing coach in Foggia.", "Bruno Tiago Bruno Tiago may refer to:" ]
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[ "Bruno Millienne" ]
Which country the composer of song A Dreamer'S Holiday is from?
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A Dreamer's Holiday "A Dreamer's Holiday" is a popular song. The music was written by Mabel Wayne, the lyrics by Kim Gannon. The song was published in 1949. Hit versions of the song were recorded by Perry Como and Buddy Clark.
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[ "Sad Sweet Dreamer \"Sad Sweet Dreamer\" is a song by Sweet Sensation which was a number-one single on the UK Singles Chart for one week in October 1974. The second single from the British soul group, a soaring soul ballad heavily influenced by the Stylistics (and led by lead vocalist Marcel King's falsetto), \"Sad Sweet Dreamer\" became their first hit. It was written by David Parton and co-produced by Tony Hatch and Parton. The song reached No. 14 on the U.S. \"Billboard\" Hot 100 the following spring. It charted similarly in Canada. Both Tony Hatch and Jackie Trent sang on the track to augment Sweet Sensation. Hatch wanted to work with them after they were discovered on \"New Faces\" whilst he was on the judging panel. The song was covered by French singer Joe Dassin as \"Carolina (Sad Sweet Dreamer)\" in 1975. The song can be heard in the 2009 UK television series \"Red Riding\". It was also featured in the 2013 film \"Rush\".", "Dreamer (Axwell & Ingrosso song) \"Dreamer\" is a song by Swedish dance music duo Axwell & Ingrosso featuring Canadian singer-songwriter Trevor Guthrie. The song was released on 8 December 2017. A progressive house remix was released by Russian dance music duo Matisse and Sadko on February 2, 2018.", "Dream a Dream Dream a Dream is the third album by Welsh soprano Charlotte Church, released in 2000. The album is principally a collection of Christmas carols but also includes the non-Christmas title track \"Dream a Dream\", Church's first foray into a more pop-influenced genre, composed by James Shearman and Simon Greenaway based on the melody from Fauré's \"Pavane\" with lyrics by Sam Babenia. \"Dream a Dream\" was also the biggest-selling holiday album of 2000 in the United States with sales of 1,077,000 according to Nielsen/SoundScan. On 6 December 2000, \"Dream a Dream\" was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America for shipments of one million copies in the U.S. By 5 December 2008, the album had accumulated total sales of 1,630,000 copies in the U.S. according to SoundScan. The version released in the United Kingdom. The version released in the United States. (Excluding \"4. The First Noel\" from the UK version.) The version exclusively available in Target discount stores.", "Francisco Céspedes Francisco Fabián Céspedes Rodríguez, also known as Pancho Céspedes (born 28 February 1957) is a Grammy-nominated Latin American singer, musician, and songwriter born in Santa Clara, Cuba. Céspedes is currently a naturalized Mexican. He is most known for his 1998 song, \"Vida Loca\". Cuban-born singer/songwriter Francisco Céspedes left his physician career to get involved in romantic music movement called \"feeling\" ( bolero and jazz mixed in Cuba ). After his arrival in Mexico, 1993, Luis Miguel included one of Francisco's authored title \"Pensar en ti\" in the album \"Aries\", that was the international debut on Francisco composer career. Luis Miguel selected again in 1996 the title \"Qué tú te vas\" from him and included it in the álbum \"Nada es igual\". His debut as soloist singer and writer was in the Festival de Viña del Mar 1997, representing México with the title \"Hablo de ti\", a song written in Cuba years earlier. In this acclaimed Latino-American festival he was awarded with second prize and served Francisco Céspedes to record his first album in 1998 as soloist: \"Vida loca\". This album was well received in México, Spain, US, Perú y Chile as fully loaded with love and sensibility. In 2000 his album \"\"¿Dónde está la vida?\"\", obtained Platinum Disc sales in México internationally famous first as single \"\"¿Dónde está la vida?\"\" when published as the soundtrack for Mexican TV novel \"La casa en la playa\" (2000). Already in 2004, Francisco Céspedes compiles Best Hits, \"\"Dicen que el alma / Grandes Éxitos\"\" including two new titles: \"Dicen que el alma\" and the single \"Lloviendo ausencia\". As bonus tracks the duets \"Remolino\" with Ana Belén and \"Vida loca\" with Milton Nascimento were also included. In the year 2006 Francisco Céspedes offers tribute to Ignacio Villa, \"Bola de Nieve\", in his disc \"Con el permiso de Bola\". Among other titles includes \"Ay Amor\", \"Vete De Mí\", \"No Puedo Ser Feliz\", \"Drume Negrita\", \"Adiós Felicidad\". The album \"Con el permiso de Bola\" was nominated to Grammy in 2007, later the same year his compilation was credited with the \"Latin Pride\" award.", "Hans Ernst Krøyer Hans Ernst (sometimes Ernest) Krøyer (31 January 1798 – 24 March 1879) was a Danish composer. Krøyer was born in Copenhagen and the son of Bernt Anker Krøyer and Johanne Margrethe (\"née\" Schrøder), as well as the brother of Henrik Nikolai Krøyer. He is best remembered as the composer of today's Danish national anthem, \"Der er et yndigt land\" (\"There is a Lovely Country\"), in 1835, after lyrics by Adam Oehlenschläger. He became cantor at the Royal Singers of the Chapel of Christiansborg castle in Copenhagen in 1844. Krøyer died in Copenhagen.", "Vlad Holiday Vlad Holiday (born May 24, 1989) is a New York City–based, Romanian-born singer, songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist. On July 28, 2017, Nylon premiered Holiday's solo project debut \"Quit Playing Cool\". The song was also featured on Spotify's New Indie Mix playlist, as well as All Genres Hot Tracks on iTunes and Apple Music. Holiday was born in Bucharest, Romania on May 24, 1989. Holiday's father was a journalist who spoke out against the regime change in Romania once the country escaped communism in 1989, citing that the new regime was just as corrupt. This resulted in their family receiving death threats, which led to Holiday's father escaping to America with political asylum. It took the rest of the family 9 years to legally move to the US, and in September 1999, Holiday (age 10) moved to Bergen County, New Jersey. He grew up in Mahwah, New Jersey, where he attended Mahwah High School. With a downtown NYC lo-fi sound, writing and recording at his studio in the heart of historic Greenwich Village, Holiday started putting out songs as they are being written, not worrying about the pressures of albums or EP's or any other music industry constructs. On July 28, 2017, Vlad Holiday announced his solo project through Nylon. NYLON premiered his debut track, \"Quit Playing Cool\". The song was also featured on Spotify's \"New Indie Mix\" playlist, \"Fresh Finds: Six Strings\" playlist, as well as featured on All Genres Hot Tracks on iTunes and Apple Music. Quit Playing Cool's music video was released on VEVO's New Alternative playlist on September 1, 2017. The video features model and actress, Yulia Kirillova, and is directed by Polly Pierce. On March 9, 2018, Holiday put out his second single \"Children\". The song was featured on Spotify's New Indie Mix playlist, as well as The Wild Honey Pie's \"Buzzing Daily\" and a Paste Magazine & Daytrotter Live Session. On April 6, 2018, \"Tunnel Vision\" premiered on The 405, where he spoke about the song's lyrics, which questions the idea of extreme escapism.", "Noel Estrada Noel Epinanio Estrada Suárez (June 4, 1918 – December 1, 1979) was a Puerto Rican composer. He was the author of \"En mi Viejo San Juan\", a song \"widely known around the world\". Estrada was born in the town of Isabela, Puerto Rico where he received his primary education. During the Great Depression, many Puerto Ricans either emigrated to the mainland United States (mainly to the northeastern coast area) or joined the armed forces, with the hope of improving their economic situation. At the outbreak of World War II, Estrada joined and served in the United States Army. Being away from his homeland for the first time in his life would in the future serve him as inspiration when composing the bolero \"En mi viejo San Juan\". In his youth, he joined Fi Sigma Alfa fraternity. Estrada became a government employee after being honorably discharged from the Army. He was a protocol official for the State Department. It was during the 1940s and 1950s that he wrote and interpreted his songs in Puerto Rico and in the U.S. Among the many songs which he wrote were the following: \"El Romance del Cafetal\" (Romance of the coffee field); \"Verde Navidad\" (Green Christmas); \"El Amor del Jíbaro\" (The poor farmers Love); \"Pobre Amor\" (Poor Love); \"Pedacito de Borinquen\" (A piece of Puerto Rico); \"Amor del Alma\" (Love of the Soul); \"Lo Nuestro Termino\" (Our love is Finished); \"Llévame a Ver a Jesús\" (Take Me to see Jesus\"); etcetera. However, it was \"En mi Viejo San Juan\" (In my Old San Juan) that would bring Estrada international acclaim. Estrada composed \"En mi Viejo San Juan\" in the 1940s, in New York City. It is Estrada's most popular composition, and is considered a second national anthem by many Puerto Ricans, especially those who live abroad. The City of San Juan honored Estrada as an adopted citizen and would later adopt the song as its official city anthem. Estrada's composition \"Mi romantico San Juan\" (My romantic San Juan) won a first prize in the \"Festival of the Puerto Rican Composer\".", "Wonderful Dream (Holidays Are Coming) \"Wonderful Dream (Holidays are Coming)\" is a song by American recording artist Melanie Thornton. It was written by Thornton, Mitchell Lennox, Julien Nairolf, Ben Naftali, Terry Coffey, Jon Nettlesbey, Rich Airis, and Scott Temper and produced by Lennox and Nairolf. The song was also featured in a Coca-Cola Christmas promotional campaign. It was posthumously released as a single two days after her death in the crash of Crossair Flight 3597. On November 17, 2013, British singer Joe McElderry released a cover of the song as a single. The single was originally intended to be released on November 18, 2013, however, it was released the day before in the UK and on November 15, 2013 in Ireland. Polish singer Margaret recorded Polish-language version of the song titled \"Coraz bliżej święta\", which featured the finalists of the sixth season of \"The Voice of Poland\". It was used in Polish Coca-Cola Christmas commercial, and was released for digital download on 3 November 2015. The song peaked at number 29 in Poland.", "Dreamer (Supertramp song) \"Dreamer\" is a hit single from British band Supertramp's 1974 album \"Crime of the Century\". It peaked at number 13 on the UK singles chart in February 1975. In 1980, it appeared on the band's live album \"Paris\". This live version was also released as a single and hit number 15 on the US charts, number 36 in the Dutch Top 40, and number one on the Canadian Singles Chart. When \"Dreamer\" had been released in 1974, its B-side \"Bloody Well Right\" was more popular in North America leading it to chart instead, at No. 35 in the US and No. 49 in Canada, with \"Dreamer\" only charting in Canada, that being at No. 75. \"Dreamer\" also appeared on Hodgson's album, \"Classics Live\", recorded on tour in 2010. \"Dreamer\" was composed by Roger Hodgson on his Wurlitzer piano at his mother's house when he was 19 years old. At that time he recorded a demo of the song using vocals, Wurlitzer, and banging cardboard boxes for percussion. Hodgson recalled, \"I was excited – it was the first time I laid hands on a Wurlitzer.\" Supertramp cut their own recording of the song in imitation of this early demo. The band performed the song on the BBC's \"Old Grey Whistle Test\" show in 1974, during which John Helliwell can be seen playing the rim of a wine glass on top of his keyboard to achieve a certain sound effect. The song was used in the films \"The Parole Officer\", \"Wild Thing\", and \"The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle\", as well as the trailers for the latter and \"Robots\". \"Cash Box\" called it a \"funny little song\" and said that it \"maintains the group's stance on instrumentation, lyrics and structure while offering a great deal of commercial potential.\" Reviewing the live version in 1980, \"Billboard Magazine\" said that \"Dreamer\" has a \"sweet pop melody, clear vocals and bubbly keyboards.\" Side one Side two Side one Side two Side one Side two", "José Goles José Goles Radnic (March 10, 1917 - June 8, 1993) was a Chilean composer and songwriter active from 1939 to 1987. He was the son of immigrants from Yugoslavia and grew up in Antofagasta. His most famous songs include \"El paso del pollo\", \"Simbad el marino\", “Póngale que póngale”, “Así es el amor”, “Evocacion”, “Sureña linda”, “Paloma torcaza” and “La gallina francolina \". He also organized the Chilean composers union to recognize and enforce the rights of songwriters in their compositions. In 1987, he was the first person to be honored with the designation as fundamental figures of Chilean music." ]
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[ "American" ]
Do the movies 23 (Film) and Omg... We'Re In A Horror Movie!!!, originate from the same country?
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23 (film) 23, original German title: 23 – Nichts ist so wie es scheint ("Nothing is what it seems") is a 1998 German drama thriller film about a young hacker Karl Koch, who died on 23 May 1989, a presumed suicide. It was directed by Hans-Christian Schmid, who also participated in screenwriting. The title derives from the protagonist's obsession with the number 23, a phenomenon often described as apophenia. Although the film was well received by critics and audiences, its accuracy has been vocally disputed by some witnesses to the real-life events on which it was based. Schmid subsequently co-authored a book that tells the story of the making of "23" and also details the differences between the movie and the actual main events. In 1980s Germany at the height of the Cold War, 19-year-old Karl Koch (August Diehl) finds the world around him threatening and chaotic. Inspired by the fictitious character Hagbard Celine (from Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea's 1975 book "Illuminatus! Trilogy"), he starts investigating the backgrounds of political and economic power and discovers signs that make him believe in a worldwide conspiracy. At a meeting of the Chaos Computer Club, Karl gets to know the student David (Fabian Busch). David and Karl are able to hack into the global data network—which is still, at this point, in its early stages—and their belief in social justice propels them into espionage for the KGB. Driven by contacts with a drug dealer—and by increasing KGB pressure to hack successfully into foreign systems—Karl spirals into a cocaine dependency and grows increasingly alienated from David. In a drug-addled state, Karl begins to sit in front of his computer for days at a time. Perpetually sleepless, he also grows increasingly delusional. When David publicly reveals the espionage activity in which the two men have been engaged, Karl is left alone to face the consequences. Collapse soon follows. Karl is taken to a hospital to deal with his drug addiction and mysteriously dies after his supposed hacking of Chernobyl .
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[ "Our Town (2007 film) Our Town is a 2007 South Korean film. A neighbourhood is terrorized by a serial killer who kills and hangs his female victims in a uniquely specific way . When struggling crime fiction novelist Kyung-ju kills his landlady, he stages it to resemble the other murders. Realizing that the crime appears to be a copycat, he sets out to find the killer with the help of his detective friend. \"Our Town\" was released in South Korea on November 29, 2007. It was ranked fourth at the box office on its opening weekend, grossing , and as of December 23 it had grossed a total of . The film received a total of 377,591 admissions nationwide.", "OMG – Oh My God! Oh My God! is a 2012 Indian Hindi language satirical comedy-drama film written and directed by Umesh Shukla, and produced by Viacom 18 Motion Pictures, S Spice Studios, Grazing Goat Pictures and Playtime Creations. The storyline is based on a Gujarati stage-play entitled \"Kanji Virudh Kanji\", which was itself inspired from Australian film The Man Who Sued God. The film is originally written by co-writer Saumya Joshi, with Bhavesh Mandalia as an additional co-writer. The film stars Akshay Kumar and Paresh Rawal, along with Mithun Chakraborty, Om Puri, Govind Namdeo, Poonam Jhawer, Puja Gupta and Mahesh Manjrekar in pivotal roles. Made on a budget of , the film released on 28 September 2012 was praised for its themes and for Rawal's and Kumar's performance. The film was remade in Telugu as \"Gopala Gopala\" in 2015 with Venkatesh, Pawan Kalyan and Shriya Saran. It was also remade in Kannada as \"Mukunda Murari\" in 2016 with Upendra and Sudeep. A second instalment is in development with Akshay Kumar, Pankaj Tripathi, and Yami Gautam. Kanji Lalji Mehta (Paresh Rawal), a middle-class Gujarati atheist, owns a shop of Hindu idols and antiques in Mumbai. He makes fun of religious activities around him and one such day, a low-intensity earthquake hits the city, and Kanji's shop is the only shop that is destroyed. His family and friends blame this on his atheism. At the insurance office, Kanji learns that the disaster claim does not cover any damage caused by natural calamities classified under \"Act of God\". Running out of options, he decides to sue God but fails to find a lawyer for such a lawsuit. Hanif Qureshi (Om Puri), a poor Muslim lawyer, helps him file the case after Kanji decides to fight on his own. Legal notices are sent to the insurance company as well as to religious priests, Siddheshwar Maharaj, Gopi Maiyya, and their group's founder, Leeladhar Swamy (Mithun Chakraborty), summoning them to court as representatives of God.", "We Have Our Moments We Have Our Moments is a 1937 American comedy mystery film directed by Alfred L. Werker and starring Sally Eilers, James Dunn and Mischa Auer.", "Oh La La! Oh La La! (original title: Nouvelle chance) is a 2006 French comedy-drama film directed by Anne Fontaine. It was screened out of competition at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival.", "Us (2019 film) Us is a 2019 American horror film written and directed by Jordan Peele, starring Lupita Nyong'o, Winston Duke, Elisabeth Moss, and Tim Heidecker. The film follows Adelaide Wilson (Nyong'o) and her family, who are attacked by a group of menacing doppelgängers. The project was announced in February 2018, and much of the cast joined in the following months. Peele produced the film alongside Jason Blum and Sean McKittrick (the trio previously having collaborated on \"Get Out\" and \"BlacKkKlansman\"), as well as Ian Cooper. Filming took place in California, mostly in Los Angeles, Pasadena and Santa Cruz, from July to October 2018. \"Us\" had its world premiere at South by Southwest on March 8, 2019, and was theatrically released in the United States on March 22, 2019, by Universal Pictures. It was a critical and commercial success, grossing $255 million worldwide against a budget of $20 million, and received praise for Peele's screenplay and direction, Nyong'o's performance, and Michael Abels' musical score. In 1986, a young girl named Adelaide—\"Addy\" for short—watches a commercial for Hands Across America. At night, at the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, she wanders away from her parents and enters a funhouse, where she encounters a doppelgänger of herself in the house of mirrors. Years later, an adult Adelaide goes on vacation with her husband, Gabriel \"Gabe\" Wilson, and their children Zora and Jason. She's apprehensive about the trip, haunted by memories of the encounter and her recovery, during which she stopped speaking and withdrew from her family. Despite her misgivings, the family meet with their friends Josh and Kitty Tyler and their twin daughters at the beach. On the way there, they witness paramedics taking away a body of an old man, blood on his chest. Jason later sees someone strangely similar to the old man, standing still with his arms outstretched and hands bloody. That night, Adelaide tells Gabe about her childhood accident, but she is stopped by a family of four dressed in red that appears in the driveway of the home before breaking into the house. Cornering the Wilsons in their own living room, the family is revealed as their doppelgängers.", "Are These Our Parents Are These Our Parents? is a 1944 American romantic drama film directed by William Nigh. It stars Helen Vinson, Lyle Talbot, Ivan Lebedeff. A mother's preference for partying, boozing, and running around with an assortment of sleazy characters results in her neglecting her nubile teenage daughter, who subsequently finds herself mixed up with teenage boys, nightclub owners, and murder.", "What Are We Doing Here? (film) What Are We Doing Here? () is a Canadian drama film, directed by Julie Hivon and released in 2014. The film centres on a group of friends in their 20s whose lives are shattered when one of them, Yan (Frédéric Millaire-Zouvi), dies in a car accident. The film stars Charles-Alexandre Dubé as Simon, Joëlle Paré Beaulieu as Roxanne, Maxime Dumontier as Max, Sophie Desmarais as Lily, Marie-Soleil Dion as Rosalie, and Guylaine Tremblay as Roxanne's mother Nicole. The film was shot in 2013, primarily in Saint-Amable and Granby, Quebec. Paré-Beaulieu received a Jutra Award nomination for Best Actress at the 17th Jutra Awards.", "Terrified (film) Terrified () is a 2017 Argentine horror film written and directed by Demián Rugna, concerning a series of supernatural events in a neighbourhood of Buenos Aires. At home in Buenos Aires, Clara hears strange voices coming from the plughole in her kitchen sink. Her husband, Juan, is perplexed when she reports that they were discussing a plan to kill her. That night, awakened by thumping sounds he assumes at first to be coming from the house next-door, Juan is terrified to find Clara's dead body hovering in midair in their bathroom, violently and repeatedly slamming against the wall as if thrown by an invisible force. Walter, who lives next-door, is also experiencing supernatural occurrences. Each night, as he tries to sleep, invisible forces shake and move his furniture, including his bed. When he uses a video camera to film the events, he sees a tall, naked figure emerging beneath the bed, standing over him as he sleeps, and hiding in the wardrobe. Across the road, Alicia is grieving the death of her young son, who has recently been hit by a bus outside Walter's house. Paranormal investigator and former coroner Jano, arrives at the behest of Alicia's ex-boyfriend, police commissioner Funes, who reveals that the corpse of the dead boy is currently sitting at the kitchen table, having apparently returned from the cemetery, leaving a trail of muddy footprints behind it. After deliberating, the two eventually move the now inanimate corpse to an outside freezer. Nearby, Jano bumps into another paranormal investigator, Dr. Mora Albreck, whom he recognizes from the conference circuit. She has arrived to meet Walter, after viewing the video recordings he had sent her, but he now appears to have gone missing, leaving his house standing empty. Together with Rosentock, another supernatural researcher, Jano and Albreck visit Juan, who is now the main suspect in his wife's murder and is being held in a psychiatric facility. Assuring him that they believe his story, they ask permission to investigate his house, which he grants. Soon after, the specialists return to the troubled street, before separating to investigate one property each over the course of one night. Funes accompanies Rosenstock, who is based at Walter's house. As weird phenomena occur and the investigators begin to die in gruesome and inexplicable ways, Funes realizes he has no choice but to flee the scene or risk losing his own life.", "We Never Die We Never Die () is a 1993 Hungarian comedy film written by, directed and starring Róbert Koltai. The film was selected as the Hungarian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 66th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. The story is set in the 1960s and is about a traveling coat hanger salesman who educates his teenage nephew about life through their travels.", "23:59 (film) 23:59 is a 2011 Singaporean-Malaysian horror film directed by Gilbert Chan. In 1983, a platoon of recruits are about to complete basic training on a jungle island (based on Pulau Tekong). They hear a ghost story which says that a mad woman living on the island had died at 23:59 (11:59 PM) and her spirit would return to haunt the camp at the same time. Tan, the platoon outcast, tries to convince his buddy, Jeremy, that he is being haunted by the woman's ghost, but Jeremy does not believe him. When the platoon embarks on a route march in the jungle, Tan goes missing and ends up being found dead. Although the recruits and their sergeant believe that Tan's death was due to supernatural forces, their officer insists that it was an accident. Jeremy has a nightmare about seeing Tan's ghost indicating that Chester, another recruit, will be next to die. The following night, Chester is possessed by a spirit and has to be restrained until a priest is called in to exorcise him. Jeremy later confronts Chester about Tan's death and learns that Chester and Tan had encountered the ghost of a woman on the night they did guard duty together. Jeremy has also seen the same ghost a few times since the night of Tan's death. Jeremy and Chester ask a local and find out that the woman was a medium who had given birth to a deformed girl. The girl grew up being ostracised due to her appearance and because she and her mother were believed to be cursed. That night, Chester and Jeremy hear a strange noise and follow it into the jungle, where Chester is killed by an unseen force. Jeremy injures his leg while trying to flee and unknowingly takes shelter in the medium's house. He finds the medium's skeleton on a rocking chair and encounters her ghost again. She tells him that she was not responsible for the recruits' deaths; it was actually her daughter's ghost who killed them. It turns out that years ago, the medium had poisoned her daughter to death and then committed suicide. Jeremy is possessed by the medium's ghost, who apologises and reconciles with her daughter's ghost. The sergeant and two recruits eventually find Jeremy in the house. He recovers and returns home safely after completing basic training. In the present day, three recruits talk about the same ghost story on the island." ]
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[ "no" ]
Are both lakes, Mary Lake (Ontario) and Lago Di Fimon, located in the same country?
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Lago di Fimon Lago di Fimon is a lake in the Province of Vicenza, Veneto, Italy. Its surface area is 0.51 km².
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[ "Lago del Tafone Lago del Tafone is a lake in the Province of Grosseto, Tuscany, Italy. It is located between the Albegna and Fiora hills and the Maremma, downstream from the Rocca di Montauto and not far from the border with Lazio. Since 1996, it has been partially included in the protected areas of the Montauto nature reserve.", "Colombo Lake Lago Colombo is a lake in the Province of Bergamo, Lombardy, Italy.", "Lago di Coca Lago di Coca is a lake in the Province of Bergamo, Lombardy, Italy.", "Lago di Mognola Lago di Mognola is a lake above Fusio in the canton of Ticino, Switzerland. It is located at an elevation of 2003 m.", "Lago di Recentino Lago di Recentino is a lake in the Province of Terni, Umbria, Italy.", "Salmon Lake Salmon Lake is a lake of Ontario, Canada. It is located between Queen Elizabeth II Wildlands Provincial Park and the Kawartha Highlands Provincial Park.", "Mississagua Lake Mississagua Lake is a lake in the Kawartha Highlands in Ontario, Canada. It borders the western section of the Kawartha Highlands Signature Site Park. The area contains several privately owned cottages and over the last 5–10 years it has become a popular destination for several successful business owners/executives, as well as several professional ice hockey players in the NHL.", "Mary Lake (Clearwater and Hubbard counties, Minnesota) Mary Lake is a lake in Clearwater County and Hubbard County, Minnesota, in the United States. Mary Lake was named for Mary Turnbull, the wife of a government surveyor.", "Lago di Posta Fibreno Lago di Posta Fibreno is an Italian lake located in Posta Fibreno, a municipality of the Province of Frosinone, Lazio. At an elevation of 288 m, its surface area is 0.287 km. The lake is in a karstic terrain and rich in underwater springs. The lake of Posta Fibreno is home of an endemic species of trout, the Fibreno trout (\"Salmo fibreni\"), along with the more widespread Mediterranean trout (\"Salmo cettii\").", "Lago di Muzzano Lago di Muzzano is a lake in Ticino, Switzerland. It is bordered by the municipalities of Sorengo, Muzzano and Collina d'Oro. Its surface area is . It drains into Lake Lugano." ]
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[ "no" ]
Who is the father of the director of film Buckaroo Sheriff Of Texas?
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Buckaroo Sheriff of Texas Buckaroo Sheriff of Texas is a 1951 American Western film directed by Philip Ford and starring Michael Chapin, Eilene Janssen, and James Bell. The film's sets were designed by art director Frank Arrigo.
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[ "The Fighting Buckaroo The Fighting Buckaroo is a 1943 American Western film directed by William Berke and starring Charles Starrett, Kay Harris and Arthur Hunnicutt.", "The Fiddlin' Buckaroo The Fiddlin' Buckaroo is a 1933 American Western film directed by Ken Maynard and written by Nate Gatzert. The film stars Ken Maynard, Gloria Shea, Fred Kohler, Frank Rice, Jack Rockwell and Joseph W. Girard. The film was released on July 20, 1933, by Universal Pictures.", "Eyes of Texas (film) Eyes of Texas is a 1948 American Western film shot in Trucolor directed by William Witney and starring Roy Rogers. Kindly Thad Cameron runs a ranch for boys whose fathers were killed in World War II. The ranch is named in the memory of his nephew and last surviving family member Frank Cameron who was killed in Italy. Thad's attorney Hattie Waters informs Thad that his nephew has been found alive after being cured of amnesia. Unfortunately, the real Frank remains dead as the scheming Hattie recruits a former convict to impersonate Frank. After tricking Thad to create a new will leaving all his fortune to Frank, she sets a pack of trained-to-kill dogs onto Thad with everyone believing Thad was killed by a pack of wolves. U.S. Marshal Roy Rogers with the help of Dr. Cookie Bullfincher and his nurse Penny Thatcher investigate the matter to bring justice where and to whom it is due.", "Joy N. Houck Jr. Joy Newton Houck Jr. (January 26, 1942 – October 1, 2003) was an American actor, screenwriter and film director who is probably best known for \"Creature from Black Lake,\" one of the many Bigfoot horror films of the 1970s. His father, Joy Newton Houck Sr., founded Howco—a production and distribution company for low-budget films.", "The Flyin' Buckaroo The Flyin' Buckaroo is a 1928 American silent Western film directed by Richard Thorpe and starring Hal Taliaferro, Jack D'Oise and J.P. Lockney.", "The Little Buckaroo The Little Buckaroo is a 1928 American silent Western film directed by Louis King and starring Buzz Barton, Milburn Morante and Peggy Shaw.", "Chris Buck Christopher James Buck (born February 24, 1958) is an American film director known for co-directing \"Tarzan\" (1999), \"Surf's Up\" (2007) (which was nominated for the 2007 Oscar for Best Animated Feature), \"Frozen\" (2013), which won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature in 2014, and \"Frozen II\" (2019). He also worked as a supervising animator and story artist on \"Pocahontas\" (1995) and \"Home on the Range\" (2004). He has won for one Academy Award, Annie Award and BAFTA Award, and has been nominated for two Academy, two BAFTA and five Annie Awards. A native of Wichita, Kansas, Buck was inspired to explore animation by the first film he ever saw in a movie theatre as a child: Disney's \"Pinocchio\". His family eventually moved to Placentia, California, where he graduated from El Dorado High School. Buck studied character animation for two years at CalArts, where he also taught from 1988 to 1993. At CalArts, Buck became friends with both John Lasseter and Michael Giaimo, whom he would work with many years later on \"Frozen\". He began his career as an animator with Disney in 1978. Besides his work as a co-director on \"Tarzan\" and \"Frozen\", Buck's other credits at Disney also include the 1995 animated feature \"Pocahontas\", where he oversaw the animation of three central characters: Percy, Grandmother Willow and Wiggins. Buck also helped design characters for the 1989 animated blockbuster \"The Little Mermaid\", performed experimental animation for \"The Rescuers Down Under\" (1990) and \"Who Framed Roger Rabbit\" (1988), and was an animator on \"The Fox and the Hound\" (1981) and \"The Black Cauldron\" (1985). Buck helped develop several films at Hyperion Pictures and served as a directing animator on the feature \"Bebe's Kids\". He storyboarded Tim Burton's live-action featurette \"Frankenweenie\" (1984) and worked with Burton again as directing animator on the Brad Bird-directed \"Family Dog\" episode of Steven Spielberg's \"Amazing Stories\" and as director of the subsequent primetime animated series.", "Jerry Hopper Harold Hankins Hopper (July 29, 1907 – December 17, 1988), known professionally as Jerry Hopper, was an American film and television director, active from the mid-1940s through the early 1970s. Jerry Hopper was born in Oklahoma. He was an editor at Paramount Pictures before moving to the directors' chair for several installments of their Musical Parade series (1946–48). Hopper went on to direct feature films, such as, \"The Atomic City\" (1952), \"Pony Express\" (1953), \"Secret of the Incas\" (1954), and \"The Private War of Major Benson\" (1955), the latter three with actor Charlton Heston. In 1958 he directed Brandon De Wilde and Lee Marvin in \"The Missouri Traveler\". He then moved primarily into episodic television, having appeared in \"Colt .45\", \"Bachelor Father\", \"Wagon Train\", \"Gunsmoke\", \"The Addams Family\", \"Burke's Law\", \"Perry Mason\", \"The Fugitive\", \"Gilligan's Island\", and \"Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea\", among many others. Hopper married actress Marsha Hunt on November 23, 1938. They divorced in 1943. He later was married to actress Dorothy Ellis. Hopper had four sons and two daughters. He died of heart disease on December 17, 1988, in San Clemente, California, at age 81.", "The Obligin' Buckaroo The Obligin' Buckaroo is a 1927 American silent Western film directed by Richard Thorpe and starring Jay Wilsey, Olive Hasbrouck and James Sheridan.", "The Singing Buckaroo The Singing Buckaroo is a 1937 American Western film written and directed by Tom Gibson. The film stars Fred Scott, Victoria Vinton, William Faversham, Cliff Nazarro, Howard Hill and Charles Kaley. The film was released on January 15, 1937, by Spectrum Pictures." ]
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[ "Francis Ford" ]
Do both films, The Gentleman (Film) and Dream Of Love, have the directors who are from the same country?
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The Dream (1985 film) The Dream () is a 1985 Dutch drama film directed by Pieter Verhoeff. The film was selected as the Dutch entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 58th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.
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[ "Gentleman (1989 film) Gentleman is a 1989 Indian Hindi-language action drama film directed by Vinod R. Verma, starring Govinda and Anuradha Patel. Identical twins brothers Hari and Om were separated at birth. They both are shocked to meet each other when they have grown up. Shakti is a robber, who made Hari send him in jail because of his crime, when Om was taking care of his family as Hari. Will Om will able to release his twin brother Hari from jail?", "Let's Make a Dream Let's Make a Dream (French: Faisons un rêve...) is a 1936 French romantic comedy film directed by Sacha Guitry and starring Guitry, Raimu and Jacqueline Delubac. It is an adaptation of the 1916 play of the same title by Guitry. The film's sets were designed by the art director Robert Gys. It was shot at the Epinay Studios on the outskirts of Paris, and distributed by the French subsidiary of Tobis Film.", "The Gentleman of San Francisco The Gentleman of San Francisco is a Tibetan-language film by Tibetan director Tashi Wangchuk which premiered in 2010 in United States. The film is about a Tibetan expatriate writer living in San Francisco Bay Area. This picture also makes for a powerful portrait of life of Tibetan immigrants in USA, and their struggles to keep their identity and values alive.", "The Old Bachelor's Dream The Old Bachelor's Dream () is a 1913 Austro-Hungarian comedy film directed by Josef Kricenský. It was produced in 1910 and released on 7 February 1913.", "Mr. Love Mr. Love is a 1985 British comedy film directed by Roy Battersby and starring Barry Jackson, Maurice Denham and Margaret Tyzack. It was made by Goldcrest Films. Its budget was £486,000. (Another account says £1.1 million.) Goldcrest Films invested the £486,000 and received £330,000, recording a loss of £156,000. A mild-mannered gardener becomes a lovable legend in his town for his talent to romantically please every woman that fancies him. The film was filmed at several notable locations in England, mainly in Southport, Merseyside and at Phoenix Cinema in East Finchley.", "The Dream of Water The Dream of Water (in Persian : Khab-e Ab) is a 2016 Iranian drama film directed by Farhad Mehranfar. It has been shot in the desert areas of Mehriz/Yazd in Iran, and more than half of the film takes place in the underground labyrinth of ancient step wells. It premiered at the Iran International Green Film Festival (IIGFF). After the breakdown of his car in the desert, a young man who works for the water supply organization reaches an abandoned village. With the help of an old man who is also the remaining inhabitant of that region, he goes down the aqueduct. The old man's condition to get him out is finding the spring that he believes is hidden somewhere beneath the ground. It has been nominated for the best film and the best director in 5th Iran International Green Film Festival in May 2016. It was screened in 21st Busan International Film Festival, in the Window on Asian Cinema section.", "Gentleman (1993 film) Gentleman is a 1993 Indian Tamil-language heist action film co-written and directed by S. Shankar in his directorial debut, and produced by K. T. Kunjumon. The film stars Arjun, Madhubala and Subhashri, with M. N. Nambiar, Manorama, Goundamani, Senthil, Charan Raj, Vineeth, and Rajan P. Dev in supporting roles. It revolves around a respected Madras-based businessman who moonlights as a thief who steals from the rich and gives to the poor for their education. \"Gentleman\" was released on 30 July 1993, and distributed by Kunjumon himself as distributors were reluctant. Despite this, the film became a box office success, running for over 175 days in theatres besides winning three South Filmfare Awards (including Best Film – Tamil and Best Director – Tamil), four Tamil Nadu State Film Awards (including Best Actor and Best Director) and five Cinema Express Awards. The film was remade in Hindi as \"The Gentleman\" (1994). In Ooty, Krishnamoorthy alias Kicha and his sidekick Mani perform a swashbuckling heist of money of several crores while being in disguise diverting the attention of police, and escape in Nilgiri Mountain Railway, much to the frustration of a chasing police officer named Ratnam. Kicha is a respected citizen who runs a legitimate papadam business along with Mani in Madras. Susheela, one of Kicha's many female employees, has a crush on him and is constantly demanding his attention. Another thing adding to her woes is the arrival of her jovial cousin Sugandhi. She makes the place so lively and playful with silly fights between Mani and Babloo. Sugandhi later develops a crush on Kicha, especially after being saved by him from some molesting goons. Kicha tells to her that he has no such feelings for her and wants her to find a suitable husband. Before leaving Madras, Sugandhi steals Kicha's ring as a souvenir. After several unsuccessful attempts at nabbing the thief, a disgraced police officer Azhagar Nambi shaves his head and is left with a ring mark on his face, after a scuffle with the thief.", "Dreams (2004 film) Dreams is a 2004 Indian Tamil-language romance film directed by Kasthuri Raja and produced by Saraswathi Srikanth. The film featured Raja's son Dhanush in the lead role with Diya. The music was composed by Bharathwaj with cinematography by Kichas. The film released on 12 November 2004 and opened to negative reviews and became a failure at the box office. Shakti, a young man, is spoilt by his father and leads a wayward life. However, when he falls in love, he works on changing himself for the better but things take a turn for the worse. The project was launched shortly after the success of \"Thulluvadho Ilamai\" in 2002, but as Dhanush's \"Kaadhal Kondein\" became a large success, \"Dreams\" was stalled temporarily as Dhanush's dates became blocked. The film ran into a legal tussle with the makers of his other film, \"Sullan\", with the producers adamant that \"Dreams\" was released first although to no avail. The film's delay meant that Dhanush shot ten straight days for the project to complete it, while the delay also had resulted in failings in continuity. By the time of the release, the producer Srikanth and director Kasthuri Raja were still engaged in a legal tussle. The film upon release in November 2004 gained unanimously poor reviews from critics. A critic described that the \"film is poor pastiche of double meanings, bedroom scenes and a few other vulgar segments\", criticizing all aspects and giving it a verdict as a \"dull and laborious film\". The film opened simultaneously with two successful ventures, Ajith's \"Attahasam\" and Simbu's \"Manmadhan\" and subsequently \"Dreams\" started slowly and eventually became a colossal failure.", "He Dreams of Giants He Dreams of Giants is a 2019 follow-up documentary film to \"Lost in La Mancha\". The film follows director Terry Gilliam's making of \"The Man Who Killed Don Quixote\", which was released in 2018. , of the critical reviews compiled on Rotten Tomatoes are positive, with an average rating of .", "The Woman That Dreamed About a Man The Woman That Dreamed About a Man, also known as The Woman Who Dreamt of a Man (), is a 2010 mostly English language Danish-Polish-French erotic psychological drama film directed by Per Fly and starring Sonja Richter, Marcin Dorociński, and Mikael Nyqvist. Karen (Sonja Richter), a successful Danish fashion photographer is working so constantly that she has little time for her husband (Michael Nyqvist) and daughter. When she spies a handsome man on the street in Paris, she feels an electric attraction that changes her life. Maciek (Marcin Dorociński) is a Warsaw School of Economics professor visiting from Poland, and she pursues him relentlessly, even going so far as to follow him all the way to Warsaw and ensconcing herself in an apartment right across the street from the apartment where he lives with his wife and family. While Maciek initially encourages the romance, he soon tires of Karen and tries to extricate himself from the relationship." ]
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[ "no" ]
When did Juan Torena's wife die?
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Juan Torena Juan de Garchitorena de Carvajal, known in cinema as Juan Torena (1898–1983), was a Spanish footballer and actor. After emigrating to Argentina at a young age, he became a footballer who eventually played for the Spanish club FC Barcelona. Later in his life, he went to North America where he acted in Hollywood films, appearing in both English and Spanish-language versions. He was married to the actress Natalie Moorhead.
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[ "Juanita Reina Juana Reina Castrillo (August 25, 1925 in Seville – March 19, 1999 in Seville) better known as Juanita Reina, was a Spanish actress and copla singer. She was born in the Sevillian district, la Macarena, Seville and studied in Enrique el Cojo's academy. She became popular thanks to songs by famous copla songwriters like León or Quiroga and she debuted in movies with \"La blanca Paloma\" (\"White Pigeon\") (1941). On June 15, 1964, she married the flamenco dancer Federico Casado Algrenti, and she later inaugurated a restaurant in Madrid and a dancing academy in Seville. She died from a respiratory insufficience and she is buried in the cemetery San Fernando in Seville.", "Juan Téllez-Girón, 2nd Count of Ureña Juan Téllez-Girón, 2nd Count of Ureña (in full, ) (c. 1456 – 21 May 1528) was a Spanish nobleman. Juan Téllez-Girón was the third natural son of Pedro Girón, 1st Lord of Osuna and of Inés de las Casas. The children were legitimated by Papal bull on March 1466, confirmed by King Henry IV of Castile. He succeeded to the titles of his older brother in 1469. He married Leonor de la Vega Velasco, daughter of Pedro Fernández de Velasco, 2nd Count of Haro, with whom he had 15 children.", " In 1809 he was at Seville, where one of his uncles was a member of the central Junta. In the following year he was a leader of the party which compelled the Regency to summon the Cortes to which he was elected by Asturias early in 1811 though he was short several months of the legal age of twenty-five. His election was opposed by some of his own relatives who did not share his opinions, but it was ratified by the Cortes. Toreno was conspicuous among the well-meaning men who framed the liberal and republican constitution of 1812. When the authoritarian King Ferdinand VII returned from prison in France in 1814 Toreno foresaw a reaction, and put himself out of reach of the king. He was the more an object of suspicion because his brother-in-law, Juan Díaz Porlier, perished in a wild attempt to support the constitution by force. Toreno remained in exile till the outbreak of the revolution of 1820. Between that year and 1823 he was in Spain serving in the restored Cortes, and experience had abated his radical ardour. When the French intervened in 1823 Toreno had again to go into exile, and remained abroad till the king published the amnesty of October 15, 1832. He returned home in July 1833, but remained on his estates till the king's death on September 29. As hereditary standard bearer of Asturias (Alferez Mayor) it fell to him to proclaim the young queen, Isabella II. In 1834 his now moderate opinions pointed him out to the queen regent, Maria Christina, as a useful man for office. In June 1834 he was minister of finance, and became the 2nd Prime Minister of Spain on June 7. His tenure of the premiership lasted only till September 14 of the same year, when the regents attempt to retain a practically despotic government under a thin constitutional veil broke down. The greater part of the remainder of his life was spent in voluntary exile, and he died in Paris on September 16, 1843. Toreno is chiefly remembered as the author of the \"History of the Rising, War and Revolution of Spain\", which he began between 1823 and 1832 and published in 1836–1838 in Paris.", "Blanca Rodríguez Blanca María Rodríguez de Pérez (January 1, 1926 – August 5, 2020) was the First Lady of Venezuela from 1974 to 1979 and again from 1989 to 1993. Blanca María Rodríguez was born in Rubio, Táchira State, the youngest of eight children to Manuel and Adela Rodríguez. Her grandfather, Eliodoro Rodríguez, was a prominent landowner in Rubio. Her father was also a coffee planter and a veteran of Colombia's Thousand Days War, in which he volunteered to fight on the side of the Liberal forces and acted as lieutenant to General Uribe. As a child, she was aware of her older cousin Carlos Andrés Pérez engaging in long political discussions with her father on topics as varied as the legacy of Simón Bolívar, the French Revolution and the dictatorship of Juan Vicente Gómez in Venezuela. At the age of four, her mother died of cancer and Blanca's rearing was left in the hands of her older sister, Ana Isabel. Four years later, her father would also die. The family was financially ruined by the worldwide economic depression of the 1930s and all of the family haciendas had to be sold. She was educated by nuns at the Our Lady of the Rosary Convent School, where she graduated in 1944. Carlos Andrés Pérez began courting his cousin Blanca in 1944. He was then working and living in Caracas and would travel to Rubio as he could to visit her. They were wed on 8 June 1948. For the first months, they lived in the provincial city of San Cristóbal, Táchira, but, moved to the Venezuelan capital to share a rented house with Julia Pérez, Blanca's mother-in-law. A few months later, in November 1948, the military launched a coup against the democratically elected government of President Rómulo Gallegos and installed a dictatorship. Carlos Andrés Pérez became the target of harassment and persecution as a member of the Acción Democrática party. Blanca had to endure frequent security police searches of their home as well as tend to her young children while her husband was often on the run or in prison. In 1952, she followed him into exile in San José, Costa Rica. The couple had six children, five daughters, Sonia, Thais, Martha, María de los Ángeles and María Carolina, and a son, Carlos Manuel.", "María Dolores de Aycinena María Dolores de Aycinena y Micheo (29 October 1814 – 29 May 1874) was a Guatemalan woman. She was the wife of Acting President Pedro de Aycinena y Piñol, First Lady of Guatemala during his government in 1865. She was daughter of José Aycinena Carrillo and Mariana Micheo Delgado Nájera. She died in 1874, subsequently Aycinena died in 1897.", " Some of her works remain unpublished. One of them is \"Profesión de silencio\" (Profession of silence), in which she tackles injustice and pain from the repression suffered during the 1973-90 military dictatorship of Chile. At 25, she married the poet José Miguel Vicuña, who was on the law faculty of the University of Chile. She was mother of seven children, Ariel Vicuña, poet and musician; Ana María Vicuña, philosopher and teacher of classical languages; Miguel Vicuña, poet and philosopher; Juan Vicuña, a chemist, and a victim of torture during the dictatorship; Leonora Vicuña, photographer; Rodrigo Vicuña, editor; and Pedro Vicuña, poet and actor. Navarro died June 5, 2006, in Santiago, at the age of 75, a victim of cerebral thrombosis.", "Juan Francisco Ruiz de Gaona y Portocarrero, Conde de Valdeparaíso Juan Francisco Ruiz de Gaona y Portocarrero (Almagro, 13 February 1696 - Madrid, 4 February 1760), second \"Count of Valdeparaíso\" (\"Conde de Valdeparaíso\") was a Spanish politician of the 18th century. His father was Juan de Gaona y Abad, who was named \"Count of Valdeparaíso\" in 1705. A knight of the Order of Calatrava, he married in 1734 with María Arias de Porres, Marquesa of Añavate. He served as Minister of the Exchequer under Ferdinand VI of Spain, and under his patronage, the city of Almagro, Ciudad Real became capital of the \"intendencia\" (province) of La Mancha from 1750 to 1761. He also built a palace in this city.", " In 1425, Mariana gave birth to a daughter, Juana, Queen of Aragon. In 1431, he and Alvaro de Luna arrested Commander Diego Sarmiento because the latter did not obey the orders of the king. In the same year, his wife Mariana died. In 1432, he fought alongside Pedro Manrique de Lara against the princes Henry and Peter near Cáceres, Alburquerque and Acagala. On May 9, 1432, Fadrique married his second wife, Teresa Fernández de Quiñones, with whom he had nine children. In 1437, when King John II of Castile had Pedro Manrique arrested, Fadrique came into conflict with the king. In August 1438, Pedro managed to escape from his prison in Fuentedueñas. Fadrique gathered troops in Medina de Rioseco to rebel against the king. John II of Castile also brought together his supporters, including Alvaro de Luna, his son Henry, Pero de Velasco, the Count of Haro, Diego Gómez de Sandoval and others. In 1440, negotiations were held and a temporary truce was agreed on. During this short period of peace, Henry married Blanche II of Navarre, and Fadrique was godfather of the couple. In 1445, Fadrique again participated in an alliance against Alvaro de Luna. The admiral was captured but managed to escape to Medina de Rioseco. In 1448, Fadrique was accused of a conspiracy against the king and a plot to murder Álvaro de Luna. Fadrique fled again, went to Aragon to seek support and thence to Italy, where Alfonso V, king of Aragon was at the time. In 1449, an alliance against Álvaro de Luna was again forged. This time, Fadrique joined forces with John II, king of Navarre. In 1447, John II of Castile had married Isabella of Portugal. The new queen soon made short shrift of the influential nobles at court. Álvaro was arrested on April 4, 1453, and sentenced to death. He was beheaded on June 2, 1453. John II of Castile died in July 1454 and was succeeded by Henry IV. A new series of intrigues at the court of Castile began, and Fadrique again played a role.", "Juan Manuel, lord of Belmonte Juan Manuel de Villena y de la Vega (died 1543) was a Castilian nobleman, third lord of Belmonte, member of the Order of the Golden Fleece, \"Contador mayor\" of Castile, reeve of Burgos, Segovia, Plasencia, Jaén and Atienza. After the death of Philip I of Castile in 1506, a conflict with Ferdinand II of Aragon forced Juan Manuel into exile in Flanders, where he was apprehended and imprisoned. He was freed by Charles V and made ambassador to Pope Leo X, and in 1523 a position as councillor of state. He was married to Catalina de Rojas. In 1536 he restored the Gospel wing of St Paul's abbey in Peñafiel, on the condition that one of the chapels of the abbey church would serve as his family tomb. His own tomb is there, as well as that of his mother, Aldonza de la Vega, and that of his wife. His firstborn and heir was Lorenzo Manuel de Villena y Rojas, commander of the Order of Alcántara and senior butler to Charles V. His younger sons were Juan, bishop of Sigüenza (r. 1574–1579), Pedro, Lorenzo and Rodrigo. Juan Manuel appears as a character in a number of Spanish historical films, including \"Juana la Loca\" (2001), played by Chema de Miguel, \"Isabel\" (2014), played by Jacobo Dicenta, and \"La corona partida\" (2016), again played by Jacobo Dicenta.", " Urdaneta and Dolores had been extremely close and loyal friends to Bolivar so they were forced to flee again, this time to Curazao. In 1832, they were able to return to Caracas through a license granted to the family by the government of Venezuela, but it conditioned her husband to not intervene in the politics of the country. The family moved to Santa Ana de Coro, where a revolt erupted against the government, which opened the doors for her husband to get involved in politics once again. He was eventually able to retain a position as a senator for a few years. After experiencing a period of economic difficulties, Urdaneta was appointed ambassador of Venezuela in Spain on 1845, but was only able to retain that position for a month before dying due to complications from kidney stones. Dolores was able to survive with a pension approved by the Venezuelan congress, and she took care of her children until they were capable of attaining important positions in Venezuelan society. She died in Caracas on October 28, 1878." ]
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[ "October 6, 1992" ]
Do both films, Vivahitha and Silver River (Film), have the directors who are from the same country?
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Vivahitha Vivahitha is a 1970 Indian Malayalam film, directed by M. Krishnan Nair and produced by A. L. Sreenivasan. The film stars Prem Nazir, Sathyan, Padmini and Sukumari in the lead roles. The film had musical score by G. Devarajan. The film was a remake of the Hindi film "Gumrah" (1963).
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[ "Ivan Veramathiri Ivan Veramathiri () is a 2013 Indian Tamil-language action thriller film written and directed by M. Saravanan. The film has been presented by director N. Linguswamy and produced by his brother N. Subash Chandrabose under Thirupathi Brothers, in association with Ronnie Screwvala and Siddharth Roy Kapur under UTV Motion Pictures. The film stars Vikram Prabhu, Surbhi, Ganesh Venkatraman, Vamsi Krishna and Hariraj. The background score and soundtrack were composed by C. Sathya. The film was released on 13 December 2013 to positive reviews. The director adapted the core storyline of this movie in Kannada as \"Chakravyuha\" starring Puneeth Rajkumar and the Kannada version was remade in Odia in 2017 as \"Abhaya\" starring Anubhav Mohanty. Tamil Nadu State law minister Sadasivam asks for his usual-yet-illegal \"minister's allocation quota\" in student admissions in Chennai Government Law College, but the new principal strictly refuses to yield. In order to remove the principal, he plans and instigates violence in the law college campus using his men studying there. Many students die due to this clash, and the college is closed for two months as the law minister and principal blame one another. Gunasekaran, a 27-year-old MBA-graduate, hears the mother of a dead student saying, \"There is no virile man in the state to eliminate these atrocities\". He gets angered and takes the matter seriously . He plans and kidnaps Eeswaran, the paroled-brother of the law minister, and houses him in an abandoned construction site for 14 days with hands, legs, and mouth duct-taped. Eeswaran is forced to drink latrine water to stay alive. At the same time, due to certain coincidences, Guna meets and falls in love with Malini. Their families meet and agree for their wedding. Eeswaran's deadline to return to prison ends, and the law minister tries to find him but to no avail. The law minister is arrested afterwards as he had given legal assurance for his brother's parole, and he is removed from the state cabinet. Guna then releases a fainted Eeswaran, who is promptly arrested.", "Silver River (film) Silver River is a 1948 Western film directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Errol Flynn and Ann Sheridan. The film is based on a Stephen Longstreet story that was turned into a novel. During the American Civil War, soldier Mike McComb is cashiered from the army when he disobeys orders in order to prevent the Confederates from stealing the one million dollars he is guarding by burning the money. After being publicly humiliated by the townspeople, he and his friend 'Pistol' Porter confiscate gambling equipment and set out to Silver City, Nevada to open a saloon and gambling hall. On his way to St. Joseph, Mike meets Georgia Moore, a beautiful, serious woman who runs the Silver River Mine with her husband, Stanley, and is currently hiring all the available wagons to transport necessary mining equipment. McComb wins ownership of the wagons in a poker game, much to Georgia's anger. Although he allows her to travel with him, she is unamused with McComb's playful behavior and soon abandons him. Once in Silver City, McComb, in a short time, builds the most successful saloon of the area. He hires John Plato Beck as his lawyer, an alcoholic but good-hearted man. Meanwhile, Georgia is worried when she finds out Stanley has bought the wagons from McComb in exchange for 6,000 shares in the mine. This is only worsened when it turns out that Stanley does not have the money to finish his smelter and turns to McComb, who demands a one-third interest in the mine. As he builds his empire, McComb opens a town bank, in which the townspeople can accept to pay vouchers in lieu of cash. Georgia is not pleased when McComb usurps a visit by President of the United States, Ulysses S. Grant. Encouraged by the President, McComb plans on extending his empire up to and including Black Rock Range. Although he is aware of the dangerous Shoshone Indians in that area, he assigns the pliable Stanley to realize his plans. When Plato makes him feel guilty, McComb warns Georgia about the danger her husband is in, but it turns out that they are too late: Stanley has been killed by the Indians. After the funeral, Georgia shortly visits San Francisco and is romanced by McComb upon her return.", "Jayanth C. Paranjee Jayanth C. Paranji is an Indian film director known for his works predominantly in Telugu cinema. He introduced Bollywood actresses: Preity Zinta, Aishwarya Rai, Nauheed Cyrusi, Lisa Ray, Anjala Zaveri, and Bipasha Basu to the Telugu screen. He has directed films across multiple genres with the fab four of Telugu Film Industry Chiranjeevi, Nandamuri Balakrishna, Nagarjuna, Venkatesh. He has worked with all the top heroes in the Telugu film industry including Pavan Kalyan and Mahesh Babu. Actor Prabhas was launched into films by Jayanth in the film Eashwar (2002). Paranji was born in Karnataka to a Tamil speaking family. He grew up in Gandhinagar, Bangalore, which is where most of the Kannada film distributors have their offices. He began directing well-known plays in English after he settled in Hyderabad. He started the English theater troupe Muses and was associated with another English theater group, Dramatic Circle Hyderabad. Then he switched over to directing Telugu serials for the television. He shot to fame when his serial \"Tenalirama\" began to be telecast by Doordarshan. Shot in expensive sets, this serial quickly climbed to the number one spot. Paranji also contributed documentaries and advertising films before getting into feature films. His directorial debut was \"Preminchukundam Raa\" with Venkatesh playing the lead role.", "Ullathai Killathe Ullathai Killathe () is a 1999 Indian Tamil-language drama film, written and directed by Vejey Kannan. The film stars Suresh, Karan and Khushbu in the lead roles, while Janagaraj and Senthil portray supporting roles. Music for the film was composed by Deva and the film opened to mixed reviews in March 1999. Soundtrack was composed by Deva. The film had begun production in January 1997 but had a delayed, low-profile release across Tamil Nadu in 1999.", "Balu Mahendra Balanathan Benjamin Mahendran (19 May 1939 13 February 2014), commonly known as Balu Mahendra, was a Sri Lankan born Indian cinematographer, director, screenwriter and film editor who worked predominantly in Tamil cinema. Widely regarded as an auteur, Mahendra usually scripted and edited his films apart from shooting them. He was the recipient of six National Film Awards (including two for Best Cinematography), five Filmfare Awards South and several state government awards. Mahendran developed a passion for photography and literature at a young age. After witnessing the shoot of David Lean's \"The Bridge on the River Kwai\" (1957) during a school trip in Sri Lanka, he was drawn towards filmmaking. He graduated from the London University and started his career as a draughtsman with the Sri Lankan Government. In 1966, he moved to India and gained admission to the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) to pursue a course in motion picture photography. Upon completion of his diploma, he entered Malayalam cinema as a cinematographer in the early 1970s. After working in over 20 films as a cinematographer, Mahendra made his directorial debut in 1977 with the Kannada film \"Kokila\". Since then, he directed over 20 films in a span of 36 years. Along with Bharathiraja and Mahendran, he is regarded as a trendsetter in Tamil cinema. During the tail end of his career, he established a film school in Chennai, which offers courses in cinematography, direction and acting. Following a brief phase of poor health, Mahendra died of cardiac arrest in February 2014. Mahendra was born on 19 May 1939 into a Sri Lankan Tamil family in the village Amirthakali near Batticaloa, Sri Lanka. Born to a professor father, he did his schooling at Methodist Central College and St. Michael's College, Batticaloa. As a teenager, he was drawn towards films by his class teacher. It was during this time he happened to see \"Bicycle Thieves\" (1948) and \"Battleship Potemkin\" (1925). When he was at the sixth grade, he got an opportunity to witness the making of David Lean's \"The Bridge on the River Kwai\" (shot in Sri Lanka) during a school field trip. Inspired by Lean's personality, Mahendra determined to become a film-maker.", "Fourth River Fourth River is a 2020 Indian Malayalam-language political thriller film directed by RK DreamWest, starring Diphul Mathew, Nithu Chandran, Baiju Bala and Rahul Krishna in key roles. Released on 28 June 2020 through Amazon Prime Video, it is the first ever Malayalam language film to have a direct to OTT. The film produced under the banner of Dreamwest Global by executive producers Johnson Thankachan and George Varky is shot in and around Munnar Valley, Ponmudi and Chitranjali Studio, Thiruvananthapuram. \"Fourth River\" tells the life of four Naxalite revolutionaries: Naxalite Stephen, his wife Comrade Sophia, his daughter Naxalite Anitha, and their mentor Naxalite Ravi Master as they lived through a turbulent period of the Naxalite movement in India. Director RK DreamWest had the intention to make a film based on the Communist political movement in India that started in the early 1920s as an anti-colonial struggle when the country was still ruled by Britain. The film progresses through the time after independence in 1947 when the moderate faction of the party joined the democratic process and became the ruling party in several Indian states. In 1967, the dissatisfied extreme left revolutionaries who believed in the Maoist ideology split from the party and launched an armed uprising in the remote tribal village of Naxalbari. Despite several brutal crackdowns, the movement quickly spread to the Southern states. The armed revolutionaries were branded as Naxalites. Since then many of them moved to jungles and remote tribal villages continuing their struggle through guerrilla wars. The film focuses on the struggle of plantations workers in Munnar, a mountain region in South India known for Tea Plantations. Plantation owners had been exploiting workers through bonded slavery and cruel punishments for decades. The exploitation culminated in the '90s. Workers launched union strikes under the leadership of the Communist party. As the strike prolonged to several months, poverty and suicides became a routine thing in the valley. Slowly the Communist party lost interest in the strikes and workers became desperate. Naxalites moved in; several workers joined the Naxalite movement changing the life in the valley forever; for better or worse. As demanded by the screenplay, the film was shot in and around Munnar, Ponmudi, and Chitranjali Studio, Thiruvananthapuram.", "Tulsi Vivah (film) Tulsi Vivah (The Marriage of Tulsi) is a 1971 Bollywood fantasy drama film based on mythology. Directed by Chandrakant, the film stars Jayshree Gadkar and Anita Guha, and narrates the origin of the \"Tulsi Vivah\" ritual.", "Silver River (Grenada) The Silver River is a river of Grenada.", "Siva (director) Siva (born 12 August 1977), known professionally as Siruthai Siva, is an Indian film director and cinematographer who works in Tamil and Telugu cinema. Siva was born to documentary film director M. Jayakumar in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. He is the grandson of producer and writer A. K. Velan. His brother Bala is an actor in Tamil and Malayalam films.N. Panchapakesan, the founder of Chennai Sai Sankara Matrimonials, and carnatic musician Vishaka Hari are relatives of Siva. Although he always wanted to become a filmmaker, he pursued photography. In 1998, Siva became a gold medalist from M.G.R. Government Film and Television Training Institute He went on to work with cinematographer Jayanan Vincent. Siva then came to Hyderabad to work for Venkatesh' film \"Jayam Manade Raa\" (2000) as an operative cameraman. In 2002, he became an independent cinematographer, shortly after his brother Bala, made his acting debut. He has shot for about 15 films since then. In 2008, he narrated a script to actor Gopichand who agree to play the lead role. \"Souryam\", co-starring Gopichand along with Anushka Shetty was Siva's directorial debut. The following year, Siva made his second film, again with Gopichand in the lead. In 2011, Siva made his debut as a director in Tamil cinema with \"Siruthai\", a remake of S. S. Rajamouli's Telugu action masala \"Vikramarkudu\". The film, featuring Karthi in the starring role, went on to become a high commercial success, which led to him being referred to as \"Siruthai\" Siva in Tamil cinema from then on. His fourth directorial, \"Daruvu\", released in May 2012. In December 2011, Siva was signed by Vijaya Productions to direct a film for their centenary year with Ajith Kumar signed on to play the leading role. Ajith Kumar requested Siva to rework the script to make it as a rural story and production began after a brief delay in 2013. he has given film with ajith titled as \"Veeram\" (2014) which was a hit.", "Vivaham Swargathil Vivaham Swargathil is a 1970 Indian Malayalam film, directed by J. D. Thottan and produced by P. A. Muhammad Kasim. The film stars Prem Nazir, Sheela, Thikkurissi Sukumaran Nair and Prema in the lead roles. The film had musical score by M. S. Baburaj. The music was composed by M. S. Baburaj and the lyrics were written by Vayalar Ramavarma." ]
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[ "no" ]
Do both directors of films The Virgin and the Macho Man and Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project have the same nationality?
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The Virgin and the Macho Man The Virgin and the Macho Man () is a 1974 Brazilian sex comedy film directed by José Mojica Marins under the pseudonym J. Avelar. It is also Marins' first film in the "pornochanchada" genre. Two doctors are called to work at a city hospital, and soon attract the attention of all the local women. When their wives discover a sexual bet has been made between their husbands and a stranger, they decide to retaliate and call the macho man for a holiday in a country house. Aurélio Tomassini, Esperança Villanueva, Walter C. Portella, Vosmarline Siqueira, Alex Delamotte, Lisa Negri, Augusto de Cervantes, Gracinda Fernandes, Eddio Smani, Chaguinha
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[ "Cecil Howard Cecil Howard ( 1931 – December 16, 2016) was an adult film director whose aliases have included Howard Winters, Ward Summers, and Umberto Corleone. Prior to beginning his career in pornography, he worked as an art director at book publishing company Lancer Books for several years. He began his career in pornography as a photographer and investor for softcore films made by his childhood friend Armand Weston, then went on to produce for established hardcore directors such as Henri Pachard and Chuck Vincent, before finally going on to direct many of his own films. He died on December 16, 2016, at the age of 85.", "The Myth of the Male Orgasm The Myth of the Male Orgasm is a Canadian romantic comedy film, directed by John Hamilton and released in 1993. The film stars Bruce Dinsmore as Jimmy Rovinski, a man whose lack of success with women leads him to sign up for a feminist study on male attitudes about sex and romance conducted by project leader \"Jane Doe\" (Miranda de Pencier). The cast also includes Mark Camacho and Burke Lawrence as Jimmy's roommates Tim and Sean, Ruth Marshall as his friend Mimi with whom he is in unrequited love, and Macha Grenon as his ex-girlfriend Paula. The film premiered on September 1, 1993, at the Montreal World Film Festival. Ray Bonneville and Brad Hayes received a Genie Award nomination for Best Original Song at the 15th Genie Awards, for the song \"Say Those Things\".", "Cry Macho (film) Cry Macho is a 2021 American neo-Western drama film directed and produced by Clint Eastwood. The screenplay by Nick Schenk and the late N. Richard Nash is based on Nash's 1975 novel of the same name. The plot follows a former rodeo star (Eastwood) who is hired to reunite a young boy (Eduardo Minett) in Mexico with his father (Dwight Yoakam) in the United States. Attempts to adapt the novel into a feature film have featured a variety of actors in negotiations to star. In 2011, Arnold Schwarzenegger was cast in the lead role but production was canceled after a scandal. In 2020, it was announced Eastwood would create an adaptation with Albert S. Ruddy, Tim Moore, and Jessica Meier attached as producers. In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, filming took place for two months in New Mexico with cinematographer Ben Davis. During post-production, the score was composed by Mark Mancina. \"Cry Macho\" was theatrically released in the United States on September 17, 2021, by Warner Bros. Pictures with a simultaneous release on the HBO Max streaming service for 31 days. It underperformed at the box office, grossing $14.7 million against a $33 million production budget, and was met with mixed reviews from critics. It received criticism towards its screenplay and praise for the scenery and score. Eastwood's performance and the film's tone received a polarized response. By 1979, Texan rodeo star Mike Milo has retired due to a severe back injury. The following year, his former boss Howard Polk hires him to travel to Mexico City and bring back Howard's 13-year-old son, Rafo. He agrees and upon entering Mexico, he meets the boy's mother, Leta, who tells him that Rafo has turned to a life of crime, participating in cockfights with a rooster named Macho. Soon after, Mike finds Rafo participating in a cockfight that is interrupted by a police raid. After the police depart, Mike tells Rafo that his father wants to see him. Intrigued, Rafo agrees to go with Mike back to Texas and leaves to pack his stuff. A drunk Leta tells Mike that she wants her son to stay in Mexico and threatens him. After Mike leaves, Leta orders several of her henchmen to follow him.", "I Am Very Macho I Am Very Macho (Spanish: Yo soy muy macho) is a 1953 Mexican comedy film directed by José Díaz Morales and starring Silvia Pinal.", "Greg Shapiro (producer) Gregory Brian Shapiro (born December 16, 1972) is an American producer. He won an Academy Award in the category Best Picture for the film \"The Hurt Locker\".", "Humphry Knipe Victor Humphry Knipe (born 1941) is a sociology and history author, and adult film writer, director, and website administrator. He is a co-author of \"The Dominant Man: The Pecking Order in Human Society\", a sociology book which has been translated into five languages, and the sole author of \"The Nero Prediction\", a historic novel about Emperor Nero and astrology, which won the 2006 Independent Publisher Book Award for \"Best Historical Fiction.\" Humphry Knipe was born in Kimberley, South Africa, on 20 September 1941. He graduated from Rhodes University, and majored in History and English. He moved to England in the 1960s, where he met his future wife, erotic photographer Suze Randall. They immigrated to Los Angeles in 1975, and wrote about their experiences in Hugh Hefner's Playboy Mansion in the book \"Suze\". Mostly in the 1980s, Knipe wrote and directed several Suze Randall produced pornographic films under the \"nom de porn\" Victor Nye. The couple now resides in Malibu, California, where he manages Randall's erotic web sites, and administers much of the business of Suze Randall Productions as Haaren Enterprises, Ltd., using his first name, Victor Knipe. They have three children, including daughter Holly Randall, an erotic photographer who also assists in the business.", "Jean-Pierre Marois Jean-Pierre Marois is a French film director and producer. He is most noted for directing the film \"American Virgin\" (1999) and as co-producer of the film \"Mary\" (2005).", "El Macho El Macho (also known as Macho Killers) is a 1977 Italian-Argentine Spaghetti Western film written and directed by Marcello Andrei and starring Carlos Monzón, George Hilton, Malisa Longo and Susana Giménez. Kid El Macho, an adventurer who is very skilled with cards and his revolver, is instructed by a sheriff to recover a large sum of money, which was stolen after an attack on a stagecoach by the outlaw Hidalgo, a.k.a. \"the Duke\", and his gang. The Kid starts posing as The Vulture, another outlaw who is actually dead, but with whom Kid bears a strong resemblance, and seeks to infiltrate Hidalgo's gang under his assumed identity. El Macho succeeds in his enterprise by unmasking an unsuspecting banker who was the mastermind responsible for the robbery. The Kid hopes to share the bounty with his lover, the beautiful Kelly, but his adventures are not over yet.", "Steven Scarborough Steven Scarborough (born June 23, 1953) is an American gay pornographic film director, the founder of Hot House Entertainment (1993), and he was an Executive Vice-President and director for Falcon Studios from 1987 to 1993. In 1974, Scarborough came to San Francisco. He opened up a health food store on Castro Street opposite Harvey Milk's camera shop. He later met Dick Fisk (a local sales clerk), who was also a porn star in \"The Other Side of Aspen\" (1977), a very successful Falcon Studios gay pornographic film. Then he was introduced to Chuck Holmes, they soon became friends. Scarborough debuted as a director in the summer of 1988 with the Falcon Studios \"Perfect Summer\" at the behest of his life partner Chuck Holmes. Scarborough established that the studio would refrain from condom-less films in support of the safe sex condom-use philosophy. Scarborough was inducted into the GayVN Hall Of Fame in 2002.", "Ron Shelton Ronald Wayne Shelton (born September 15, 1945) is an American film director and screenwriter and former minor league baseball infielder. Shelton is known for the many films he has made about sports. His 1988 film \"Bull Durham\", based in-part on his own baseball experiences, earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay. A former minor league baseball infielder in Baltimore's farm system, Shelton played with the Bluefield Orioles, Stockton Ports, Florida Instructional League Orioles, Dallas–Fort Worth Spurs and Rochester Red Wings from 1967 through 1971. After working on the scripts for a number of films, including co-writing the Nick Nolte and Gene Hackman political drama \"Under Fire\", Shelton made his directorial debut with \"Bull Durham\" in 1988. Set in the world of minor league baseball, the romantic comedy stars Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins. Shelton's screenplay netted him multiple awards, including Best Original Script from the Writer's Guild of America and Best Script from the US National Society of Film Critics. It was also nominated for an Academy Award. In 1990, Ron Shelton had received a three-year first look writing and producing deal with 20th Century Fox. Shelton worked with Costner again on the 1996 golf-themed romantic comedy \"Tin Cup\". Other films as writer and director included the boxing comedy \"Play It to the Bone\", a critical and commercial flop, and acclaimed 1992 comedy \"White Men Can't Jump\", starring Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes as two basketball hustlers. Calling the latter film \"very smart and very funny,\" and \"not simply a basketball movie,\" critic Roger Ebert wrote that Shelton \"knows how his characters talk and sound, and how they get into each other's minds with non-stop talking and boasting.\" Shelton has also written and directed two biopics: \"Cobb\", in which Tommy Lee Jones portrayed record-breaking baseballer Ty Cobb, and \"Blaze\", which starred Paul Newman as colourful Louisiana Governor Earl Long. He wrote or co-wrote other sports-themed films including \"The Best of Times\", starring Robin Williams and Kurt Russell as former football teammates; the basketball drama \"Blue Chips\", starring Nick Nolte, and a boxing comedy, \"The Great White Hype\", starring Samuel L. Jackson." ]
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[ "no" ]
Do both films: Arbitrage (film) and In the Wake of a Stranger have the directors from the same country?
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Stranger (2015 film) Stranger (, translit. "Jat") is a 2015 Kazakhstani drama film written and directed by Ermek Tursunov. The film was selected as the Kazakhstani entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards but it was not nominated. It was screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival.
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[ "The Stranger (2010 film) The Stranger is a 2010 Canadian-American action film written by Quinn Scott, directed by Robert Lieberman, and starring former WWE wrestler Steve Austin. The film was released on direct-to-DVD and Blu-ray in the United States on June 1, 2010. A mysterious stranger (Steve Austin) cannot remember his past or what has brought him to the places he finds himself in. Broken and confused, he will slowly find what happened to his loving family and his promising career. But with the determined FBI Agent Mason Reese (Adam Beach) on his trail, it will not be easy. It is set and filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada in 31 days on January 2 and February 2, 2009. PG 13 Rating. The Stranger Debuted on # 4 on DVD Box office releases and sold 177000 DVD units in a month.", "I'm a Stranger I'm a Stranger is a 1952 British comedy film directed by Brock Williams and starring Greta Gynt, James Hayter and Hector Ross. In the film, various different parties search for a missing will which leaves a fortune to a stranger from Calcutta. \"TV Guide\" called the film \"Amusing at times but unmemorable.\"", "Talk About a Stranger Talk About a Stranger is a 1952 American film noir directed by David Bradley and starring George Murphy, Nancy Davis and Billy Gray. The motion picture was shot by noted cinematographer John Alton, A.S.C. The picture tells the story of Bud Fontaine Jr. (Billy Gray), who takes an instant dislike of Matlock, a strange new neighbor in town (Kurt Kasznar). After his dog turns up dead by poison, Bud blames the stranger and sets off a campaign to smear his name and spread vicious rumors about him. His parents (George Murphy and Nancy Davis) can't seem to handle the boy. After Bud endangers the crops in the valley by his vandalism of the neighbor's oil tank, and is told the dog was killed by eating poisoned meat meant for coyotes, Bud comes to realize that people are not always what they appear to be. According to MGM records the film earned $278,000 in the U.S. and Canada and $97,000 elsewhere resulting in a loss of $276,000 despite its low cost.", "The Stranger (2021 film) The Stranger () is a 2021 Palestinian drama film directed by Ameer Fakher Eldin. It was selected as the Palestinian entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 94th Academy Awards. In occupied Golan Heights, a former doctor experiences an existential crisis before meeting a mysterious soldier.", "Stranger in the City (film) Stranger in the City () is a 1962 Turkish drama film directed by Halit Refiğ. It was entered into the 3rd Moscow International Film Festival.", "The Woman and the Stranger The Woman and the Stranger () is a 1985 East German film directed by Rainer Simon. It is based on Leonhard Frank's novella \"Karl und Anna\" and tells the story of two friends in a POW camp during World War I. One of them escapes and forms a relationship with the other man's wife. After the war her husband returns. The film was entered into the 35th Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Golden Bear. It is a remake of \"Homecoming\" (1928).", "The Stranger (2022 film) The Stranger is an upcoming Australian crime-thriller film directed and written by Thomas M. Wright. The film stars Joel Edgerton, Sean Harris, Steve Mouzakis, Brendan Cooney, Mike Foenander, Alan Dukes, Matthew Sunderland and Jeff Lang. The film was included in the lineup for the 2022 Cannes Film Festival. In April 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, it was announced that the film, under the working title, \"The Unknown Man\", would begin filming in South Australia as soon as enough of the COVID-19 restrictions are lifted. Written and directed by Wright, it will be produced by and star Joel Edgerton. Sean Harris will play the second lead role. The film was originally announced at Berlin’s European Film Market in February, and will be made by Anonymous Content and See-Saw Films, with support from Screen Australia and the South Australian Film Corporation. Principal photography of the film began on October 29, 2020 in Australia.", "Arbitrage (film) Arbitrage is a 2012 American crime drama film directed by Nicholas Jarecki and starring Richard Gere, Susan Sarandon, Tim Roth and Brit Marling. Filming began in April 2011 in New York City. It opened in U.S. theaters in September 2012. The plot follows the personal and professional troubles of a hedge fund manager as he approaches retirement. New York City hedge fund magnate Robert Miller (Richard Gere) manages a fund with his daughter Brooke (Brit Marling) and is about to sell it for a handsome profit. He is having an affair with a much younger woman, gallery owner Julie Cote (Laetitia Casta), whom he has also helped financially. However, unbeknownst to Brooke and most of his other employees, Miller has cooked his company's books and borrowed $412 million from an associate in order to cover an investment loss and avoid being arrested for fraud. The potential buyer, James Mayfield (Graydon Carter), is stalling the process, and Miller's lender wants to call in the loan, but Miller says he needs the money to stay in his account until the audit for the sale is complete. They schedule a meeting at a restaurant during which contracts are to be signed, and it's the same night as Julie's gallery show, which Miller has promised to attend. Julie continually texts and calls Miller throughout the meeting, which drags on as they wait for Mayfield to arrive. When Mayfield doesn't show up, Miller leaves in disgust, but not before Brooke informs him that she has found some financial discrepancies in old ledgers. Miller finally goes to Julie's opening, but she tells him to leave. He comes back and they fight, but he convinces her to go with him on a trip upstate. Miller dozes off at the wheel and crashes the car, resulting in Julie's death. An injured Miller almost calls 9-1-1, then realizes he must cover up his involvement. He flees the scene as the car bursts into flames. Miller calls Jimmy Grant (Nate Parker), the son of his late chauffeur, who feels loyal to Miller for paying his father's medical bills. After Jimmy drives him home, Miller removes security camera DVDs that show his late arrival, burns his bloody clothing, then goes to bed bruised at 4:30 am, arousing wife Ellen's (Susan Sarandon) suspicion.", "Return of a Stranger (1961 film) Return of a Stranger is a 1961 British thriller film directed by Max Varnel and starring John Ireland, Susan Stephen, Cyril Shaps and Timothy Beaton. The quiet suburban world of Pam and John Allen is shattered when a strange man begins stalking them with late night phone calls and sudden disturbing appearances. It emerges that the man, Homer Trent, was a part of Pam's teenage past at an orphanage. He was besotted with her then, and was eventually imprisoned for her rape. Now free, Trent is intent on claiming Pam. \"Britmovie\" called \"Return of a Stranger\" a \"Creepy yet risible Brian Clemens scripted quota-quickie thriller from low-budget specialists the Danziger Brothers\"; while \"TV Guide\" gave it two out of four stars, and called it a \"Creepy, very suspenseful thriller...Taut direction by Varnel and good performances from the principals make this one memorable.\"", "The Wayfaring Stranger The Wayfaring Stranger may refer to:" ]
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[ "no" ]
Do both films Zebrahead (film) and Comedians (1925 film) have the directors from the same country?
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Comedians (1925 film) Comedians (German: Komödianten) is a 1925 German silent film directed by Karl Grune and starring Lya De Putti, Eugen Klöpfer and Hermann Picha.
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[ "Anthony Drazan Anthony Peter Drazan is an American film director and screenwriter. He grew up in Cedarhurst, New York. He is perhaps best known for writing and directing the 1992 film \"Zebrahead\", his film directing debut. Zebrahead was produced by Chuck Mitchell. His other film directing credits include \"Imaginary Crimes\" starring Harvey Keitel and \"Hurlyburly\" starring Sean Penn. He also directed episodes of the television series \"Trinity\" and \"The West Wing\". His last directing credit was the 2003 television film \"E.D.N.Y.\" From November 2012 to January 2013, Drazan performed in the autobiographical one-man show entitled \"The Nod\" on Off-Off-Broadway.", "The Comedians (1941 film) The Comedians () is a 1941 German historical drama film directed by G. W. Pabst and starring Käthe Dorsch, Hilde Krahl and Henny Porten. It is based on the novel \"Philine\" by Olly Boeheim. The film is set in the eighteenth century, and portrays the development of German theatre. The film was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich with sets designed by the art director Julius von Borsody. Karoline Neuber attempts to improve the lot of actors, who are looked down upon as vagabonds. When the Duchess refuses to let her son marry an actress, she defends them with such vehemence that she is driven from the country and finally dies in solitude.", "Comedians (1954 film) Comedians () is a 1954 Spanish drama film directed by Juan Antonio Bardem. It was coproduced with Argentina but it is a Spanish film about Spaniards actors on stage. Bardem confessed to being inspired by \"All About Eve\". The film was entered into the 1954 Cannes Film Festival. Bardem remade \"Cómicos\" as a musical in 1971, \"Variety\" starring Sara Montiel.", "Zebrahead Zebrahead is an American rock band from La Habra, California. Formed in 1996, the band has released thirteen studio albums to date. Zebrahead was formed in La Habra, California in summer 1996 by guitarist Greg Bergdorf and drummer Ed Udhus, (both formerly of the band 409), bassist Ben Osmundson (formerly of 3-Ply) and singer/rhythm guitarist Justin Mauriello (formerly of Once There). All four musicians, whose bands at the time shared the same practice space, became acquainted with one another after experimenting with different music styles together. This led to all four leaving their respective bands and forming their own and naming it Zebrahead. Inspired by bands such as Fugazi and Descendents and uninterested in the local musical trends of the time, Zebrahead began experimenting and incorporating elements of hip-hop into their sound, leading to the inclusion of rapper Ali Tabatabaee as a co-vocalist. The first song ever composed was \"Check\", which was later included on their first demo tape, \"One More Hit\", released shortly after. The band issued their self-titled debut album in April 1998 through indie label Doctor Dream Records, before signing with major label Columbia Records to release their mainstream debut \"Waste of Mind\" later that year. The album contains several re-recorded songs from their demo release alongside new tracks, including the minor radio hit \"Get Back\", which charted at No. 32 on the U.S. Hot Modern Rock Tracks charts. The band's follow-up \"Playmate of the Year\" was released in August 2000 and charted at No.4 on the U.S. Top Heatseekers chart. The extended play \"Stupid Fat Americans\" followed in February 2001 as a Japan-exclusive release. Zebrahead recorded and released their fourth studio album, \"MFZB\", in 2003; this was their last publication under Columbia Records. The album is noted for trading in the hip-hop funk elements of the band's previous releases in favor of a heavier punk rock sound that would eventually carry over and develop in future releases. Zebrahead spent the majority of 2004 promoting the album at various festivals in Japan, including the Summer Sonic Festival. The band's extensive touring earned them a sizeable fanbase in the country, leading \"MFZB\" to chart at No.9 on the Japanese Charts and earn a gold certification.", "The Trousers The Trousers (German: Die Hose) is a 1927 German silent comedy film directed by Hans Behrendt and starring Werner Krauss, Jenny Jugo and Rudolf Forster. It was based on a play by Carl Sternheim. Art direction was by Heinrich Richter and Franz Schroedter. The film is notable for the performance of Veit Harlan, later the director who made the controversial antisemitic \"Jew Suss\", as a Jewish barber in a film made by a director who later died in the holocaust.", "Donkeyhead Donkeyhead is a 2021 Canadian comedy-drama film written and directed by Agam Darshi in her directorial debut. The plot follows Mona, a woman tasked with taking care of her father with the help of her three siblings after he is diagnosed with cancer and his health starts to deteriorate. The film premiered at the Mosaic International South Asian Film Festival in Mississauga, Ontario, on December 1, 2021. It was digitally released on Netflix on January 21, 2022. It received generally positive reviews from critics. Mona is a failed writer who carves out a life of isolation while caring for her ailing Sikh father. When he suffers a debilitating stroke, her three successful siblings show up on her doorstep determined to take control of the situation. Filming began in Regina, Saskatchewan, on January 18, 2021, on a $2 million budget. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the film's crew had to follow various safety measures and protocols, such as getting tested frequently for the virus, practicing social distancing, and wearing facemasks while on set. According to co-producer Kelly Balon, the pandemic resulted in an additional $50,000 in production costs. Filming concluded after a month on February 12, after shooting scenes in various locations around the city, including at the Fat Badger, Hotel Saskatchewan, several funeral homes, and an old house at Victoria Avenue. Marian Wihak was the film's production designer. The film premiered at the Mosaic International South Asian Film Festival in Mississauga, Ontario, on December 1, 2021. It is scheduled to be theatrically released in Canada by Level Film and digitally by Super Channel. In the United States, the film was released by ARRAY and Netflix on January 21, 2022. Writing for the \"Los Angeles Times\", Carlos Aguilar praised Darshi's performance and compared it to Anne Hathaway's role in \"Rachel Getting Married\" (2008). Beatrice Loayza from \"The New York Times\" criticized the screenplay and called the lead character \"a stereotypically troubled woman whose eventual awakening merits a shrug at most.\" Aparita Bhandari of \"The Globe and Mail\" said, \"Even if Darshi hasn't written Mona from personal experience, she clearly knows the character intimately, and gives Mona a kind of stubborn vulnerability that's totally relatable.\"", "Funny People (1977 film) Funny People () is a 1977 Soviet comedy film directed by Mikhail Shveitser. The film takes place at a rehearsal of an unusual choir. The film tells the stories of funny singers.", "George LeMaire George LeMaire, born Meyer Goldstick, was a vaudeville comedian who appears in several films and worked as a director and producer for Pathé before his death in 1930. He was a \"veteran straght man\" who worked in comedy duos. His comedy partners included Eddie Cantor, Joe Phillips, and Louis Simon. Rufus LeMaire was his brother. On January 20, 1930 he died from a heart attack.", "The Saphead The Saphead is a 1920 American comedy film featuring Buster Keaton. It was the actor's first starring role in a full-length feature and the film that launched his career as a leading man. Keaton was cast on the recommendation of Douglas Fairbanks. The plot was a merging of two stories, Bronson Howard's 1887 play \"The Henrietta\" and the 1913 play based on Howard's comedy, \"The New Henrietta\" by Victor Mapes and Winchell Smith, which was meant to be an adaption of Howard's play. Nicholas Van Alstyne is the richest man in New York, but he is very disappointed in the behavior of his son, Bertie, who stays out all night gambling and partying, and who seems to show no talent or interest in work. In fact, Bertie is feigning this behavior because he believes it will help to impress the girl of his dreams, his adopted sister Agnes. Unfortunately, it helps him to do nothing more than get disowned by his father. Bertie's sister, Rose, is married to an unsuccessful lawyer named Mark Turner, who is admired by Van Alstyne but in fact is a troublemaker. He has a mistress named Henrietta and an illegitimate child with her. When Henrietta dies after a long illness, a letter is sent to him informing him about the present circumstances. Mark claims the letter is actually Bertie's, who goes along with the lie to protect his sister, breaking Agnes' heart and ensuring Van Alstyne never wants to speak to his son again. Soon after, when Van Alstyne goes away on business, he leaves Mark in charge of running the family's finances, but Mark plots to claim the family fortunes himself by selling off all their shares of stock. Bertie inadvertently saves the day by buying back all of the stock without realizing what he is doing. When Van Alstyne sees what has happened he forgives Bertie and allows him to marry Agnes. Mark, meanwhile, conveniently dies of a heart attack when he realizes that his scheme has failed. The film ends a year later, with the birth of Bertie and Agnes' twin children. Douglas Fairbanks had played the role of Bertie in the original stage production, but was already committed to his own film project when he was approached about the film adaptation. Instead, Fairbanks recommended Keaton for the role instead with his confident reassurances that the comedian would be appropriate.", "Tapeheads Tapeheads is a 1988 comedy film directed by Bill Fishman and starring John Cusack, Tim Robbins, Sam Moore and Junior Walker. The film was produced by Michael Nesmith, who briefly appears as a bottled water delivery man. After losing their jobs as security guards, best friends Ivan (John Cusack) and Josh (Tim Robbins) start a music video production company called \"Video Aces\". When they meet their childhood heroes, 1970s soul duo \"Swanky Modes\" (Sam Moore and Junior Walker), Ivan and Josh concoct a scheme to give them a new audience by hijacking a Menudo concert, getting them to perform in Menudo's place, and broadcasting it live across the country on a television satellite hook-up. The movie also features a fake ad spot for a real Los Angeles restaurant, Roscoe's House of Chicken 'n Waffles. Notable appearances in the film include: Mary Crosby, of the soap opera \"Dallas\"; character actors Clu Gulager and Doug McClure; footballer Lyle Alzado; 1960s actress Connie Stevens; \"Soul Train\" host Don Cornelius; singer Courtney Love; Navasota singer King Cotton; original \"Human Beat-Box\" Doug E. Fresh; ska-punk band Fishbone (who also perform the incidental score) as \"Ranchbone\"; The Dead Boys and The Lords of the New Church singer Stiv Bators; Ted Nugent; \"Weird Al\" Yankovic; and Dead Kennedys singer Jello Biafra, in a cameo as an FBI agent. The music supervisor for the film was Nigel Harrison. The soundtrack album was released on Island Records. The film's soundtrack (but not the soundtrack album) includes the song \"Repave America\" written and performed by Tim Robbins, credited as Bob Roberts four years before that movie was released. \"Repave America\" also appeared in the \"Bob Roberts\" soundtrack with the lyrics slightly altered to become \"Retake America\"." ]
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[ "no" ]
When was the director of film Jiraiya The Hero born?
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Jiraiya the Hero Jiraiya the Hero is a 1921 Japanese silent short film directed by Shōzō Makino. The film is also known as .
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[ "Hideo Jojo Hideo Jōjō (城定秀夫) (born September 2, 1975) is a Japanese film director and scriptwriter.", "Tsuyoshi Ihara Ihara is a Japanese person of Korean descent, born on November 6, 1963, in Kitakyūshū as Yun Yu-gu (윤유구/尹惟久) and who grew up in Ikuno-ku, Osaka. He is a graduate of Imamiya Senior High School, Naniwa-ku, Osaka. Ihara joined the Japan Action Enterprise, a theater troupe founded by Sonny Chiba, after leaving high school. Soon after, he began to work in numerous feature films and television dramas, including the 1996 NHK series \"Futarikko\". In 2006, Ihara appeared as the Baron Takeichi Nishi in Clint Eastwood's critically acclaimed Academy Award-winning film \"Letters from Iwo Jima\", introducing him to a wider international audience. Ihara authored a book, , published in Japan by Amoeba Books.", "Jiraiya (artist) Jiraiya (児雷也, born April 28, 1967) is a pseudonymous Japanese gay manga artist and illustrator. He is noted for his homoerotic, hyperreal drawings of men, and for his use of digital illustration in his artwork. Jiraiya was born in 1967 to a working-class family in Sapporo, Japan. In the late 1980s, he discovered the gay magazine , and was influenced by the artwork by Gengoroh Tagame published in the magazine. In his twenties, Jiraiya worked as a mangaka for Shogakukan, and later as a graphic designer. His career as a gay manga artist began in 1998 when, at the age of 31, he submitted to and was published in the magazine \"G-men\". He became the exclusive cover artist for \"G-men\" in 2001, replacing Gengoroh Tagame following his departure from the magazine, and illustrated the covers for issues 63 to 124 (2001 to 2006). In addition to cover illustrations, Jiraiya contributed manga to \"G-men\". In his private life, Jiraiya works as a commercial advertising designer and is closeted. Consequently, he is notoriously reclusive, rarely makes public appearances, and does not publish photographs of his face. Jiraiya specializes in pin-up art of hypermasculine men with large, muscular builds, and was one of the first gay manga artists to use digital illustration extensively in his work. He is noted for his hyperreal drawing style, the result of a process in which he creates a freehand sketch from a photographic reference of body parts from different men collaged into a single figure, which he then augments with Photoshop, Illustrator, and QuarkXPress. Japanese iconography figures heavily into Jiraiya's artwork, including kendo and judo uniforms, Buddhist monks, festival costumes, and \"fundoshi\". His narrative works are typically comic and light-hearted in tone, contrasting the sadomasochistic material of his peers, and deal with themes of group sex, romance, and athletic competition. Jiraiya has published three major collections of manga: , , and .", "Tadashi Sawashima Sawashima was born in Kotō, Shiga Prefecture, Japan. He joined the Toei Studio in 1950 and worked as an assistant director under Masahiro Makino and Kunio Watanabe before debuting as a director in 1957 with \"Torawakamaru the Koga Ninja\". He is most known for his work in Toei's ninkyo eiga series, but he also directed entertainment jidaigeki featuring Hibari Misora, Chiemi Eri, and Kinnosuke Nakamura. He directed his last film in 1977, and mostly directed stage productions after that. In his final years, he had been attempting to film a version of the Chushingura story, but did not succeed. He was given a Special Award at the 40th Japan Academy Prize ceremony in 2017 for his career in cinema. He directed 49 films and wrote nine screenplays: as director: screenplays:", "Jirair Jirair or Jirayr () is an Armenian masculine given name that may refer to", "Mitsuhiro Mihara Mihara Mitsuhiro (三原光尋; born 1964 in Kyoto, Japan) is a Japanese film director.", "Kohei Ando Kohei Ando (born February 1, 1944) is a Japanese experimental filmmaker, videographer, director, cinematographer, screenwriter, executive producer, and Professor Emeritus of Cinema at Waseda University. He is credited as one of the earliest figures in the rise of video art in Japan during the 1960s and 1970s, and a pioneer in Japanese experimental filmmaking. Ando's rich artistic output is heavily influenced by his Waseda University education, participation in Shuji Terayama's avant-garde Tenjo Sajiki theatrical troupe, and interests in film, literature, and theater. He is celebrated as one of the first Japanese directors to employ image processing and video feedback with newly available video technology into the filmmaking process. Throughout his career, Ando has created a diverse range of films whose narrative structures and visual designs are markedly different from one another, from the abstractionism of \"Oh! My Mother\" (1969) to the fusion of Western Art History and Japanese culture in \"Whispers of Vermeer\" (1998). As a filmmaker and video artist, Ando's career is largely defined by his multidisciplinary nature in which he actively engaged in several projects that overlapped between his participation in Tenjo Sajiki, employment at the Tokyo Broadcasting System, and pursuit of independent filmmaking. As of 2021, Ando's most recent film is a 2003 documentary on the French Post-Impressionist painter Henri Rousseau. Soon after his completion of the documentary short, Ando assumed teaching and advisory positions at his alma mater Waseda University in which he taught Cinema and launched the Kohei Ando Film Laboratory production company. He is a member of the International Committee of the Directors Guild of Japan, and he serves as the Programming Advisor of the Tokyo International Film Festival. Ando was born on February 1, 1944, in Beijing, China. He entered Waseda University in 1962 where he earned his Bachelor's degree from the Faculty of Science and Engineering in 1968. During his undergraduate studies, Ando developed his passions for literature, film, and theater and chose to embark on a career in cinema. Additionally, his participation in a UNESCO Foreign Exchange program to the L’Ecole Centrale in Paris in 1965 further informed his decision to pursue filmmaking.", "Hiroshi Sugawara Hiroshi Sugawara (菅原 浩志) is a Japanese film director, film producer, and screenwriter.", "Kiyoshi Nishimura Kiyoshi Nishimura (\"Nishimura Kiyoshi\") (September 7, 1932 – November 17, 1993) was a Japanese filmmaker known for his hard-boiled action films and television series. During his student days at Tachikawa High School in Tokyo, Nishimura worked part-time at a U.S. military base in Tachikawa and became immersed in filmgoing. In 1956 he graduated from Hitotsubashi University, where he was a classmate of Shintaro Ishihara. He subsequently joined Toho and worked as an assistant director to Akira Kurosawa, Mikio Naruse, Ishirō Honda, Yuzō Kawashima, Hirokawa Horimichi, Yasuki Chiba, Eizō Sugawa, Kengo Furusawa and Hideo Onchi. He was promoted to director for the 1969 suspense actioner \"Shinu ni wa Mada Hayai\" starring Toshio Kurosawa. His next film \"Hakuchū no Shūgeki\" (1970), with Kurosawa again taking the lead role, further established him as one of Toho's most distinctive action directors. He was an aficionado of jazz, which features prominently in the soundtracks of his films, and also an avid diver. As the Japanese film industry continued to decline, Nishimura left Toho to work freelance, and directed numerous television series. He was highly regarded for his ability to accomplish quality work despite budget and time restrictions. After his arrest in 1987 for secretly using a video camera in a public bathhouse for women, few companies would hire Nishimura due to the media's heavy coverage of the scandal. For a time, he directed television shows under the pseudonym Yūsai Itō (井藤雄才). On November 17, 1993, Nishimura was found drowned on the Hayama coast in Kanagawa. A police investigation concluded that he had committed suicide. He was 61.", "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." ]
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[ "September 22, 1878" ]
Are both high schools, Fort Zumwalt South High School and West Chester East High School, located in the same country?
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Fort Zumwalt East High School Fort Zumwalt East High School, also known as FZE, is the fourth high school in the Fort Zumwalt School District, and is located in Saint Peters, Missouri, United States. The school first opened to freshman and sophomore students on August 20, 2007. Encompassing formerly known as Koenig's Farm, the five-story property was built with funds from a no-tax increase bond issue. School highlights include a distance learning laboratory, two gymnasiums, artificial turf on the soccer/football field, an all-weather track, and over of floor space.
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[ "South Park High School (Pennsylvania) South Park High School (SPHS) is a public high school in South Park Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is part of the South Park School District.", "South Adams Junior/Senior High School South Adams Junior-Senior High School is a public high school located in Berne, Indiana, United States.", "Fort Zumwalt School District Fort Zumwalt School District is headquartered in O'Fallon, Missouri, United States. The largest school district in St. Charles County, the district serves the cities of O'Fallon, Saint Peters, Dardenne Prairie, Saint Paul, and portions of Wentzville.", "Wayne High School (Indiana) Wayne High School is a public high school in Fort Wayne Community Schools, located in the southern suburbs of Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States.", "Westville High School (Indiana) Westville High School is a public high school located in Westville, Indiana.", "West Craven High School West Craven High School may refer to:", "Yough Senior High School Yough Senior High School is a high school located in the southeastern region of Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, USA (Parents of Students/Staff/Educators). The school is operated by the Yough School District. Students attend from the townships of Sewickley Township, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania and South Huntingdon. Yough High School has graduating class sizes from 180 to 200.", "Southmont High School Southmont High School is a public high school located at 6425 US 231 South, unincorporated Montgomery County, Indiana, east of New Market and south of Crawfordsville. It is a part of the South Montgomery Community School Corporation. Communities served include portions of Crawfordsville, Alamo, Ladoga, Lake Holiday, New Market, New Ross, and Waveland. Southmont High School offers a variety of courses including dual credit and advanced placement courses. Southmont High School participations in the West Central Career and Technical Education Cooperative. Other high schools in Montgomery County:", "West Chester Area School District The West Chester Area School District serves the borough and surrounding townships of West Chester, Pennsylvania, United States. The other parts include the surrounding townships of East Bradford, East Goshen, Thornbury, West Goshen, West Whiteland, and Westtown, all in Chester County, as well as Thornbury Township in adjacent Delaware County. The WCASD consists of ten elementary schools, three middle schools, and three high schools, as of the fall 2018 school year. There are plans to build an 11th elementary school. Elementary schools include grades 1-5, middle schools grades 6-8, and high schools grades 9-12. Its headquarters are in West Whiteland Township, near the Exton census-designated place. Almost 12,000 students from kindergarten through 12th grade attend schools in the WCASD. The class size average is more than 25 students. Over 900 teachers are employed by the WCASD, with 64 percent holding at least a master's degree. For the 2021–2022 school year, the district had a $279.5 million budget. At Henderson High school, the Promethean torchlight award was given to a chemistry teacher, Sam M. This grant was awarded to only ten classrooms in the entire United States of America. This grant provides the classroom with many state-of-the-art equipment features, including the ActivWand, Expressions, and other technology. For the third consecutive year, the West Chester Area School District has received the top rating of \"Gold Medal District\" by \"Expansion Management Magazine\" in its annual Education Quotient issue. This year's rating places the school district among the top 17 percent of all public secondary school districts in the United States with an enrollment of at least 3,300 students. Those districts—totaling 10 and serving a population of more than 0 million students—were included in an extensive study conducted by the magazine. The West Chester Area School District includes the following elementary schools: The West Chester Area School District includes the following secondary schools:", "Council Rock High School South Council Rock High School South is a high school located in Holland, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. It is operated by the Council Rock School District. The school was built in 2002 in order to address the overpopulation at what was then the district's only high school, now known as Council Rock High School North. South currently serves grades 9-12 and houses over 2000 students. The school colors are blue, white, and gold, and the sports teams are known as The Golden Hawks." ]
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[ "yes" ]
Are both villages, Halvehhani and Aq Bolagh, Qazvin, located in the same country?
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Aq Bolagh, Qazvin Aq Bolagh (, also Romanized as Āq Bolāgh, Ak-Bulak, Āq Būlāgh, and Āqbulāq) is a village in Qaqazan-e Gharbi Rural District, in the Central District of Takestan County, Qazvin Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 173, in 51 families.
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[ "Aq Bolagh, Hamadan Aq Bolagh (, also Romanized as Āq Bolāgh) is a village in Chaharduli Rural District, in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 111, in 22 families.", "Aqjeh Bolagh Aqjeh Bolagh () may refer to:", "Aq Bolagh-e Olya, Zanjan Aq Bolagh-e Olya (, also Romanized as Āq Bolāgh-e ‘Olyā; also known as Āqbolāgh) is a village in Khararud Rural District, in the Central District of Khodabandeh County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 371, in 69 families.", "Qatar Bolaghi Qatar Bolaghi (, also Romanized as Qaţār Bolāghī; also known as Qaţār Bolāgh and Qātir Bulāq) is a village in Howmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Khodabandeh County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 87, in 16 families.", "Qashqa Bolagh, West Azerbaijan Qashqa Bolagh (, also Romanized as Qashqā Bolāgh and Qāshqā Bolāgh) is a village in Firuraq Rural District, in the Central District of Khoy County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 375, in 67 families.", "Kahlik Bolaghi, East Azerbaijan Kahlik Bolaghi (, also Romanized as Kahlīk Bolāghī; also known as Kahlak Bolāghī, Kahlek Boolaghi, Kahlek Bouāghī, Kailikh Bulāgh, and Kiilikhbulag) is a village in Mavazekhan-e Sharqi Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 35, in 7 families.", "Qashqa Bolagh, Qom Qashqa Bolagh (, also Romanized as Qāshqā Bolāgh) is a village in Qomrud Rural District, in the Central District of Qom County, Qom Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 37, in 12 families.", "Aq Bolagh, Saral Aq Bolagh (, also Romanized as Āq Bolāgh and Āqbolāgh; also known as Āl Bolākh and Āqbolāq) is a village in Saral Rural District, Saral District, Divandarreh County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 14 families. The village is populated by Kurds.", "Aq Bolagh-e Aqdaq Aq Bolagh-e Aqdaq (, also Romanized as Āq Bolāgh-e Āqdāq; also known as Aghbolagh Aghdagh, Āq Bolagh, Āq Bolāgh, Aqbolāgh Dāgh, and Āq Būlāq) is a village in Shirin Su Rural District, Shirin Su District, Kabudarahang County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2016 census, its population was 1,433, in 315 families.", "Aq Bolagh-e Aqajan Khan Aq Bolagh-e Aqajan Khan (, also Romanized as Āq Bolāgh-e Āqājān Khān; also known as Āgh Bolāgh (آغ بُلاغ), Āgh Bolāgh-e Moşţafá Khān (آغ بُلاغِ مُصطَفَى خان), and Āq Bolāgh-e Āqājān - آق بُلاغِ آقاجان) is a village in Sharqi Rural District, in the Central District of Ardabil County, Ardabil Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,802 in 384 families." ]
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[ "yes" ]
Which country the director of film La Otra Y Yo is from?
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La otra y yo La otra y yo is a 1949 Argentine comedy film directed by Antonio Momplet and starring Amelia Bence, Enrique Alvarez Diosdado, Fernando Lamas and Mercedes Simone.
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[ "Una vida por otra Una vida por otra (English: One Life for Another) is a 1932 Mexican film, directed by John H. Auer in his directorial debut. The film tells the story of Lucia, who needs money for the treatment of her sick mother. She watches the murder of Joaquin, who blackmailed his former mistress Aurora. Aurora pays Lucia to take the blame. She reports the crime to the police claiming herself to be guilty, but refuses to explain details of the crime. However, when the money arrives at her mother, it no longer helps as she dies. Lucia's lawyer, Rafael, finds out the truth and ultimately resolves to clarify the incident in court, even though Aurora is his wife. When her act is revealed, Aurora commits suicide. The film was produced by the companies Cia Nacional Productora de Pelicula and Inter-Americas Cinema. In the United States, Una vida por otra was distributed in Spanish by Cinexport Distributing and Jack Lustberg. John H. Auer was from Hungary and filmed foreign-language films in Hollywood before coming to Mexico. Since he did not speak Spanish, he was assisted by Fernando de Fuentes, with whom he collaborated in dialogue direction and storyboards.", "Julio Hernández Cordón Julio Hernández Cordón (born January 17, 1975) is an American director, producer and screenwriter. An active filmmaker since 2003, Hernández Cordón has been involved in six films, including shorts and documentaries. Hernández Cordón attained critical acclaim for directing the \"Gasolina\" (2008), \"Polvo\" (2012) and \"Te Prometo Anarquía\" (2015). Hernández Cordón has worked with non-professional actors on his documentary-style narrative films, for which he has been awarded at several international film festivals, including Locarno, Morelia, Toronto and San Sebastián. In 2016, he received nominations for Best Director at the 58th and 62nd Ariel Awards in Mexico for his work in the films \"Te Prometo Anarquía\" and \"Cómprame Un Revólver\". Hernández Cordón was born in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States to a Mexican father and a Guatemalan mother, while his father was studying a doctorate in international trade there. Hernández Cordón was subsequently registered at the Mexican and Guatemalan embassies in Washington and raised between Mexico, Guatemala and Costa Rica. He has American, Guatemalan and Mexican passports. In his youth, he worked in a record store and afterwards as a reporter for the newspaper \"El Periodico\" in Guatemala, where he covered news and the cultural sections. During his tenure in the newspaper, Hernández Cordón also published the story book \"Por El Suelo\" (2000), which he later repented. He joined the Guatemalan Rafael Landívar University to study Communication Sciences and Journalism, and after that he studied filmmaking at the Centro de Capacitación Cinematográfica in Mexico. In 2003 Hernández Cordón directed the short film \"Km 31\" and five years later, \"Gasolina\" (2008), his first feature film, premiered. The film, about three teenagers who steal gasoline to go out at night and drive around in their mom's car, won the Industry, Casa de América and CICAE Awards at the San Sebastián International Film Festival. While reviewing the film, \"Variety\" stated that the director \"prominently displays his pitifully scarce resources in the guise of minimalism\".", "Hernan Aguilar Hernan Aguilar is an Argentine film director, writer and producer. He is a prominent figure of cinema in his country, and known for directing \"Madraza\" (2017) aka \"Godmother\". Madraza won a Best Film Award at Sitges International Film Festival in 2017. Aguilar was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He started studying Business Administration, at Di Tella University but dropped out after three years. His debut as director was in 1999, with the short \"Cachorros,\" a S16mm black and white film, starring a 9-year-old boy and a dog. Aguilar traveled to the United States and entered UCLA where he concentrated his studies on Cinematography and Screenwriting. Aguilar wrote, directed and produced the film \"Madraza\", an action black comedy about a housewife that becomes an assassin for money, which was picked up by the Walt Disney Company and distributed by Buena Vista International. Sitges Film Festival Paraguay International Film Festival Fantaspoa International Film Festival", "La otra alcoba La otra alcoba () is a 1976 Spanish film written and directed by Eloy de la Iglesia. It stars Patxi Andión, Amparo Muñoz and Simón Andreu. The plot follows the beautiful wife of a prosperous business man who starts an affair with a man of a humble background in order to have the child that she cannot have with her sterile husband. The film was shot in Madrid and Navacerrada. Marcos, an important businessman working in Madrid, is wealthy, ambitious and has political aspirations. On top of it, he has a beautiful wife, Diana. Their married life, however, is marred by the fact that the couple has no children after years of trying. At the last minute Diana backs down from adopting a Vietnamese orphan. She is determined to have a biological child. However, Marcos is sterile and has kept this a secret from his wife. When he tells her the truth, Diana reveals that she already knew it having recently consulted a gynecologist who told her that she can conceive. Unfulfilled in her desire to have a child, Diana begins to pay attention to Juan, an attractive gas station attendant. Juan is a working class man who has been saving money to move to a comfortable apartment with his girlfriend, Charo. They are a month away from getting married. Diana's car has an oil leak and Juan helps her with this mechanical problem. A strong sexual attraction grows between them. Eduardo, one of Marco's wealthy friends, has always lust after the beautiful Diana, who has discourage his attentions. When Marcos travels on a business trip abroad, Eduardo invites Diana to go to a night club, where they coincide with Juan and his girlfriend Charo. That night Diana has an erotic dream about Juan. The next day, Diana visits Juan at the gas station where he works and they begin to go out. They soon embark on a passionate sexual affair. Juan opens up to Diana and tells her about his life, but she keeps hers a mystery from him. Differences of experiences and social class quickly become apparent between the lovers. Marcos takes some time off from work and makes a trip with Diana to ski on the mountain. Diana cannot keep Juan out of her mind. Charo works as a secretary in a travel agency, her boss Baena lust after her, but she puts him in place. As his relationship with Diana becomes evident, Juan is teased by Sebas, his young coworker.", "Jesús Franco Jesús Franco Manera (12 May 1930 – 2 April 2013) was a Spanish filmmaker, composer, and actor, known as a prolific director of low-budget exploitation and B-movies. In a career spanning from 1954 to 2013, he wrote, directed, produced, acted in, and scored approximately 173 feature films, working both in his native Spain and (during the rule of Francisco Franco), in France, West Germany, Switzerland and Portugal. Additionally, during the 1960s, he made several films in Rio de Janeiro and Istanbul. Of Cuban and Mexican parentage, Franco was born in Madrid and studied at the city's Instituto de Investigaciones y Experiencias Cinematográficas and the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques in Paris. He began his career in 1954 (aged 24) as an assistant director in the Spanish film industry, performing many tasks including composing music for some films as well as co-writing a number of the screenplays. He assisted directors such as Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent, León Klimovsky and Juan Antonio Bardem. After working on more than 20 films for other directors, he decided to get into directing films himself in 1959, making a few musicals and a crime drama called \"Red Lips\". In 1960, Franco took Marius Lesoeur and Sergio Newman, two producer friends, to a cinema to see the newly released Hammer horror film \"The Brides of Dracula\" and the three men decided to go into the horror film business. His career took off in 1962 with \"The Awful Dr. Orloff\" (a.k.a. \"Gritos en la noche\"), which received wide distribution in the United States and the UK. Franco wrote and directed \"Orloff\", and even supplied some of the music for the film. In the mid-1960s, he went on to direct two other horror films, then proceeded to turn out a number of James Bond-like spy thrillers and softcore sex films based on the works of the Marquis de Sade (which remained one of his major influences throughout his career). Although he had some American box office success with \"Necronomicon - Geträumte Sünden\" (1968), \"99 Women\" (1969) and two 1969 Christopher Lee films – \"The Bloody Judge\" and \"Count Dracula\" – he never achieved wide commercial success.", "Al otro lado (2005 film) Al otro lado is a 2005 documentary film about illegal immigration and drug trafficking between Mexico and the United States, addressing issues facing people north and south of the border, though the film mostly focuses on Magdiel, a 23-year-old fisherman and aspiring composer who dreams of a better life in the United States. \"Al otro lado\" was produced and directed by Natalia Almada and was aired as part of PBS's \"POV\" series in 2006. It was met with critical acclaim and received a 78% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It also received the Special Jury Prize and the Best Editing Award at the Cine Ceará Film Festival and was nominated for the Gotham Award for Best Film Not Playing in a Theater Near You.", "Julián Hernández (filmmaker) Julián Hernández (born 1972 in Mexico City, Mexico as Julián Hernández Pérez) is a Mexican multi-awarded filmmaker. He won twice the Teddy Award at Berlin Film Festival with his movies \"Thousand Clouds of Peace Fence the Sky, Love, Your Being Love Will Never End\" (2003), and \"Raging Sun, Raging Sky\" (2009). He studied at the Centro Universitario de Estudios Cinematográficos (CUEC), from where he was expelled due to his gay-themed films during a homophobic administration, and was not mentioned as a serious director until he started winning international recognition. He has credited his use of cinematographic language to influences from filmmakers such as Michelangelo Antonioni, Leonardo Favio, Robert Bresson, and Alain Resnais. Hernández has directed more than 20 awarded short films (both documentaries and fictional), and became a gay-cinema icon for his feature films, including Broken Sky. Along with producer and director Roberto Fiesco, he founded Cooperativa Cinematográfica Morelos. which later became the prestigious production company Mil Nubes Cine, producing 29 films over two decades. Hernández's movies are known for his approach to the cinematographic language in which he pays special attention to aesthetics. Many critics have compared his work with choreographies and praise his use of sequence shots.", "Yo, Potro Yo, Potro (stylized on screen as Club de Cuervos presenta: Yo, Potro, also known as I, Potro) is a Mexican web series that premiered on October 19, 2018. It is set in a fake documentary format directed and written by Marcos Bucay for Netflix. It is a spin-off of the Mexican web series \"Club de Cuervos\", and in turn is a special episode of the franchise. It stars Joaquín Ferreira as the titular character. The special revolves around Diego Armando Romani aka El Potro, a young Argentine who tries to record a documentary about his life. But suddenly he is notified that he has been fired from his current job, so he decides to go to his native Argentina; where he believes he will be received as a King. Already in his Argentina, he arrives at his brother's wedding where he realizes that he is not well received by him, and his friends, and from there, unexpected situations begin to happen and his life in excess is not well seen by all. Since his arrival, he has been told that he should not drink, get high, or go near his brother's family.", "Guillermo Iván Guillermo Iván Dueñas Lazcano (born 19 January 1981) is a Mexican actor, director, writer, and producer. Born in Mexico City, Mexico. He is best known for his characters in Mexican and American films. On television he made himself known as part of the main cast of Telemundo's telenovela \"Al otro lado del muro\". Graduated from the Faculty of Arts and Letters at the University of Havana, Guillermo Iván received a degree in production and direction from the National Union of Writers and Artists of Cuba.", "¿Y cómo es él? (film) ¿Y cómo es él? (Spanish for \"And How is He?\") is an upcoming Mexican comedy film directed by Ariel Winograd. The film's title is inspired by the song of the same name performed by José Luis Perales, and a remake of the 2006 Korean film \"Driving with my Wife’s Lover\". Its release was scheduled on 3 April 2020 in Mexico, but the premiere was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The film stars Zuria Vega, Mauricio Ochmann and Omar Chaparro." ]
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[ "Spanish" ]
When was the director of film Yellowstone (Film) born?
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Yellowstone (film) Yellowstone is a 1936 American crime film set in Yellowstone National Park, directed by Arthur Lubin and released by Universal Studios. The film, starring Judith Barrett, Henry Hunter, Ralph Morgan, Alan Hale, Raymond Hatton, and Andy Devine, combines murder mystery, romance, and natural setting. The famous historic building Old Faithful Inn is featured in the film. An ex-con is murdered in Yellowstone National Park while a bank robber's son is searching for the loot his father hid there 20 years before. Filming started June 1936 with the majority taking place in the studio, with very little outdoor filming taking place in the national park. The "Christian Science Monitor" called it "an inferior mystery story". "Diabolique" called it "a decent thriller notable for its weak leads, robust support cast and incorporation of location photography at Yellowstone National Park." Lubin called the film "horrible", one of what he considered the "eight flops" in his career. In Grand Design, Tino Balio writes that "set in the national park, [it] wastes its scenic opportunites through unconvincing rear projection and cramped studio shots unimaginatively directed by Arthur Lubin.
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[ "Montana (1990 film) Montana is a 1990 American Western television film directed by William Graham and written by Larry McMurtry. The film stars Gena Rowlands, Richard Crenna, Lea Thompson, Justin Deas, Elizabeth Berridge and Darren Dalton. The film premiered on TNT on February 19, 1990.", " He also directed: \"Coma\" (1978), \"The First Great Train Robbery\" (1979), \"Looker\" (1981) and \"Runaway\" (1984). He was the creator of the television series \"ER\" (1994–2009), and several of his novels were adapted into films, most notably the \"Jurassic Park\" franchise. He held a contrarian position on various scientific issues such as climate change, the health risks of secondhand smoke, and the search for alien life. Crichton himself framed this contrarianism as a practical skepticism of \"consensus-based\" science, arguing that over-reliance on statistical models creates the potential for bias, especially in the face of political and social pressures such as the desire to avert nuclear war. John Michael Crichton was born on October 23, 1942, in Chicago, Illinois, to John Henderson Crichton, a journalist, and Zula Miller Crichton, a homemaker. He was raised on Long Island, in Roslyn, New York, and showed a keen interest in writing from a young age; at 14, he had an article about a trip he took to Sunset Crater published in \"The New York Times\". Crichton later recalled, \"Roslyn was another world. Looking back, it's remarkable what wasn't going on. There was no terror. No fear of children being abused. No fear of random murder. No drug use we knew about. I walked to school. I rode my bike for miles and miles, to the movie on Main Street and piano lessons and the like. Kids had freedom. It wasn't such a dangerous world... We studied our butts off, and we got a tremendously good education there.\" Crichton had always planned on becoming a writer and began his studies at Harvard College in 1960. During his undergraduate study in literature, he conducted an experiment to expose a professor who he believed was giving him abnormally low marks and criticizing his literary style. Informing another professor of his suspicions, Crichton submitted an essay by George Orwell under his own name. The paper was returned by his unwitting professor with a mark of \"B−\".", "Walter Hill Walter Hill (born January 10, 1940) is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer known for his action films and revival of the Western genre. He has directed such films as \"The Warriors\", \"Hard Times\", \"The Driver\", \"Southern Comfort\", \"48 Hrs.\" and its sequel \"Another 48 Hrs.\", \"Streets of Fire\", \"Red Heat\", \"Last Man Standing\", \"Undisputed\", and \"Bullet to the Head\", as well as writing the screenplay for the Jim Thompson crime drama \"The Getaway\" starring Steve McQueen and directed by Sam Peckinpah. He has also directed several episodes of television series such as \"Tales from the Crypt\" and \"Deadwood\" and produced the \"Alien\" films. Hill said in an interview that \"every film I've done has been a Western\", and elaborated in another that \"the Western is ultimately a stripped down moral universe that is, whatever the dramatic problems are, beyond the normal avenues of social control and social alleviation of the problem, and I like to do that even within contemporary stories\". Hill was born in Long Beach, California, the younger of two sons. His paternal grandfather was a wildcat oil driller; his father worked at Douglas Aircraft as a supervisor on the assembly line. Hill has said that his father and grandfather were \"smart, physical men who worked with their heads and their hands\" and had \"great mechanical ability\". Hill's family had originally come from Tennessee and Mississippi, \"one of those fallen Southern families, shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations\". \"I got along with both my parents very well,\" Hill said. \"I admired them enormously.\" Growing up in Southern California, Hill was asthmatic as a child and, as a result, missed several years of school.Despite the discomfort, it made you comfortable being alone with yourself. You weren't as surrounded by your peers as everybody else your age was... In my case it meant tremendous amount of reading at an early age... I read, listened to radio... I became utterly besotted with daytime serials... it enabled me to live in an imaginary world where one is comfortable with abstract ideas, dominated by stories, narrative, and characters. Hill became a film fan at an early age, and the first film he remembers seeing was \"Song of the South\" (1946).", "Kevin Reynolds (director) Kevin Hal Reynolds (born January 17, 1952) is an American film director and screenwriter. He directed \"\", \"Waterworld\", \"The Count of Monte Cristo\", the cult classic \"Fandango\", and the 2016 film \"Risen\". He was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for the History miniseries \"Hatfields & McCoys\". Reynolds was born in San Antonio, Texas, the son of former Baylor University President Herbert H. Reynolds. Reynolds enjoyed initial successes co-writing the Cold War hit \"Red Dawn\" in 1984 and writing and directing the Steven Spielberg-produced \"Fandango\" in 1985. He began a long friendship with Kevin Costner after hiring him for \"Fandango\", when Costner was a little-known actor. Reynolds later advised Costner behind the scenes for the epic western \"Dances with Wolves\" (1990), in particular with the buffalo hunting scenes, on which Reynolds was also an uncredited second unit director. Costner would again be his leading man in \"\" (1991). Costner then produced Reynolds' 1994 film \"Rapa-Nui\". Costner brought on Reynolds to direct the post-apocalyptic film \"Waterworld\" (1995). Mid-way through filming, production problems led to conflict between them. It was reported Reynolds walked away near the end of post-production, leaving star/producer Costner to supervise the completion of editing. The two friends stopped speaking; Reynolds was later quoted as having said of Costner: \"Kevin should only star in movies he directs. That way he can work with his favorite actor and director\". Later, Reynolds and Costner reunited to record a commentary track for the extended special edition DVD of \"Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves\". Reynolds next directed the dramatic thriller \"One Eight Seven\" (1997), which gave Samuel L. Jackson his first top-billed leading role. More recent directorial efforts were two classical adaptations: \"The Count of Monte Cristo\" in 2002 and \"Tristan & Isolde\" in 2006. Reynolds directed Costner again in the History miniseries \"Hatfields & McCoys\" in 2012. The miniseries was nominated for 16 Primetime Emmy Awards, including one for Reynolds for directing.", "Yellowstone National Park Yellowstone National Park is an American national park located in the western United States, largely in the northwest corner of Wyoming and extending into Montana and Idaho. It was established by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Ulysses S. Grant on March 1, 1872. Yellowstone was the first national park in the U.S. and is also widely held to be the first national park in the world. The park is known for its wildlife and its many geothermal features, especially the Old Faithful geyser, one of its most popular. While it represents many types of biomes, the subalpine forest is the most abundant. It is part of the South Central Rockies forests ecoregion. While Native Americans have lived in the Yellowstone region for at least 11,000 years, aside from visits by mountain men during the early-to-mid-19th century, organized exploration did not begin until the late 1860s. Management and control of the park originally fell under the jurisdiction of the United States Department of the Interior, the first Secretary of the Interior to supervise the park being Columbus Delano. However, the U.S. Army was eventually commissioned to oversee management of Yellowstone for a 30-year period between 1886 and 1916. In 1917, administration of the park was transferred to the National Park Service, which had been created the previous year. Hundreds of structures have been built and are protected for their architectural and historical significance, and researchers have examined more than a thousand archaeological sites. Yellowstone National Park spans an area of , comprising lakes, canyons, rivers, and mountain ranges. Yellowstone Lake is one of the largest high-elevation lakes in North America and is centered over the Yellowstone Caldera, the largest supervolcano on the continent. The caldera is considered a dormant volcano. It has erupted with tremendous force several times in the last two million years. Well over half of the world's geysers and hydrothermal features are in Yellowstone, fueled by this ongoing volcanism. Lava flows and rocks from volcanic eruptions cover most of the land area of Yellowstone. The park is the centerpiece of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, the largest remaining nearly-intact ecosystem in the Earth's northern temperate zone. In 1978, Yellowstone was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Hundreds of species of mammals, birds, fish, reptiles, and amphibians have been documented, including several that are either endangered or threatened.", "Frank McDonald (director) Frank McDonald (November 9, 1899 – March 8, 1980) was an American film and television director, active from 1935 to 1966. He directed more than 100 films, including many Westerns starring Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, and numerous TV show episodes. He is interred at Conejo Mountain Memorial Park in Camarillo, California.", "Rowdy Herrington Rowdy L. Herrington (born 1951 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is a Hollywood director and writer currently residing in Livingston, Montana. He is married and has no children. Rowdy attended Penn State from 1969 to 1973 and majored in television production. After college, Rowdy worked at WQED (TV) for two years in a number of production roles. He has, in total, worked fourteen years in television.", "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.", "Ted Geoghegan Ted Geoghegan (born August 10, 1979) is an American filmmaker and publicist. He grew up in Great Falls, Montana, attending private and public schools and studying film extensively. He attended The University of Montana in Missoula, Montana and attained a degree in English Education. Geoghegan is best known for his work in the horror genre. He is also a film publicist.", "Yellowstone: The Music of Nature Yellowstone: The Music of Nature is an album by Mannheim Steamroller, released in 1989. The concept pays homage to nature and to Yellowstone National Park. It was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best New Age Album in 1991. The album is a compilation of older tracks from Chip Davis' Fresh Aire series and six new tracks consisting of fully orchestrated pieces from notable classical composers such as Claude Debussy, Antonio Vivaldi, Ottorino Respighi, and Ferde Grofé. All selections composed by Chip Davis except where noted." ]
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[ "July 25, 1898" ]
Which film came out earlier, Zehreela Insaan or Bert: The Last Virgin?
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Zehreela Insaan Zehreela Insaan () is a 1974 Indian Hindi-language romance film directed by Puttanna Kanagal and produced by Virendra Sinha. The film stars Rishi Kapoor, Moushumi Chatterjee, Neetu Singh and Pran. It is a remake of Kanagal's own 1972 Kannada film "Naagarahaavu" which was based on three Kannada novels: "Nagarahavu", "Ondu Gandu Eradu Hennu" and "Sarpa Mathsara", all written by T. R. Subba Rao. The film did not do well at the box office, but the song "O Hansini" sung by Kishore Kumar attained popularity. Arjun is an ill-tempered but soft-hearted man. He always falls into in situations that others take him as a bad person. His teacher, who he calls Masterji, is the only person who understands him and appreciates his good qualities, hence Arjun follows his wishes completely. Arjun loves a woman named Aarti and wants to marry her, but Aarti's father opposes this alliance and forcibly marries her off to a man of his choice. Arjun is dejected, but soon finds love in Margaret, his Christian college mate. As time passes, he overcomes Aarti and devotes himself to Margaret. While on a business trip to another city, Arjun finds that Aarti is now a prostitute. Angered and irritated, Arjun finds himself in a pitiable state. Margaret's uncle and mother are against her marrying Arjun. Arjun and Margaret flee to the hills; Masterji catches up with them and tries to pacify Arjun, but he refuses and instead pushes him down the hill to his death. Traumatised due to killing his teacher, Arjun asks Margaret if she will join him where he goes; she says she will, and both jump to their deaths. "Zehreela Insaan" is a remake of the 1972 Kannada film "Naagarahaavu", itself based on three different novels: "Nagarahavu", "Ondu Gandu Eradu Hennu" and "Sarpa Mathsara", all written by T. R. Subba Rao. Puttanna Kanagal, who directed the Kannada film, returned to direct the Hindi remake, which was produced by Virendra Sinha under Pragati Chitra International.
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[ "Zindagi inShort Zindagi inShort () is a 2020 Indian Hindi-language anthology film. It is a Flipkart Video Original that comprises seven short films showcasing different stories, directed by a host of directors: Tahira Kashyap, Punarvasu Naik, Vijayeta Kumar, Rakesh Sain, Gautam Govind Sharma, Smrutika Panigrahi and Vinay Chhawal. The films are produced by Guneet Monga and Achin Jain of Sikhya Entertainment. This series of short films stars Divya Dutta, Neena Gupta, Sanjay Kapoor, Swaroop Sampat, Deepak Dobiryal, Isha Talwar, Bijou Thaangjam amongst others. It was released on Flipkart Video on 19 February 2020. \"Zindagi inShort\" is an anthology of short films that portray ordinary life. Every story depicts different stages of life and bittersweet moments that accompany them. These films touch on online romance, the innocence of childhood, the confusion of old age, infidelity, marital rape, a woman owning her role in the family and standing up for yourself when it's the hardest to do so. The series features the following casts. The first look of the film was released on 8 February 2020, after an official announcement made by the producers along with Filpkart Video. After releasing several posters for separate short films, the official trailer was released on 12 February 2020. The anthology film was released on 19 February 2020 through Flipkart Video. After a year of its release, producer Guneet Monga announced that the film will be released through Netflix on 22 February 2021. Ruchi Kaushal of \"Hindustan Times\" reviewed \"The slice-of-life stories have the ability to bestow you with the gift of smile and not just a slight tug of the upper lip but an ear-to-ear grin.\" Pratishruti Ganguly of \"Firstpost\" rated 4 out of 5 and wrote \"For the most part though, \"Zindagi inShort\" proves to be worth your time. If you are in the mood to indulge in some web-watching this weekend, this omnibus of short, delectable nuggets of entertainment, sans the pressure of commitment to countless follow-up seasons, will not disappoint.", "Humshakals Humshakals () is a 2014 Indian Hindi-language comedy film directed by Sajid Khan and produced by Vashu Bhagnani. The film stars Saif Ali Khan, Riteish Deshmukh, Ram Kapoor, Tamannaah Bhatia, Esha Gupta and Bipasha Basu in the lead roles with Satish Shah, Nawab Shah, Chunky Pandey and Darshan Jariwala in supporting roles. In the film, Khan, Deshmukh and Kapoor each have triple roles, that sums up to a total of 9 characters. The film is shot extensively in foreign locations. It is co-produced by Fox Star Studios and Vashu Bhagnani's Pooja Entertainment. It was released on 20 June 2014 and marked the final film appearance of veteran actor Satish Shah before his retirement from Bollywood. Ashok and Kumar are best friends, whereas Shanaya and Mishti are their love interests. Ashok's father is a billionaire but has been in a coma for the last six years, while his wicked maternal uncle, Kunwar Amarnath Singh a.k.a. Mamaji teams up with an evil doctor, Dr. Khan to get rid of Ashok and take over all his property. During a board meeting Mamaji mixes a medicine in Ashok and Kumar's drink and they both start behaving like dogs. They are taken to a mental asylum for treatment by Dr. Shivani, who soon realises the truth and promises to discharge them. But fate takes a twist as two lookalikes of Ashok and Kumar being treated in the same hospital's 'B' ward, who work for Bijlani, a cocaine smuggler, are accidentally released instead of the true ones. Shanaya and Mishti take them to Ashok's mansion where Singh understands the whole mix-up and plans to use the duplicate Ashok to become the owner of the whole business empire. Now the true Ashok and Kumar also come to know of Mamaji's evil plan but are stuck in the asylum. They are offered help by one of the ward boys, Cyrus, who takes them to a secret ward 'C' to meet 'Johnny' who is a look alike of Mamaji but has a dangerous habit of attacking people who sneeze in front of him. Ashok and Kumar plan revenge against Singh with the help of Johnny but get caught by the warden Y. M. Raj before they can escape from the asylum. Y. M.", "Trishna (2011 film) Trishna is a 2011 drama film, written and directed by Michael Winterbottom, and starring Freida Pinto and Riz Ahmed. A British-Swedish-Indian co-production, it is an adaptation of Thomas Hardy's 1891 novel \"Tess of the d'Urbervilles\". It is Winterbottom's third Hardy adaptation, after \"Jude\" and \"The Claim\". The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on 9 September 2011, and after some further festival appearances it saw its first cinema release in the United Kingdom and Ireland on 9 March 2012. Based on Thomas Hardy's classic novel \"Tess of the D'Urbervilles\", \"Trishna\" tells the story of a woman whose life is destroyed by the restrictions of social status, complications of love and life, and her development as an individual. Set in contemporary Rajasthan, Trishna meets a wealthy British businessman, Jay Singh, who has come to India to work in his father's hotel business. He sees her dancing at a hotel, and is attracted to her beauty and innocence. After an accident destroys her father's Jeep and leaves her family without the means to support themselves, Trishna, approached with an offer of employment from Jay, accepts and begins her work beneath him. Jay develops an attraction toward Trishna, expressing it through special treatment and gifts. She is overwhelmed by his generosity and his position of power, and does not know how to respond. After a night out with friends, Jay tracks her down and rescues her from two men harassing her on the street. However, instead of taking her back to the servant quarters of the hotel, he stops in a wooded area and makes an advance. It is implied that he rapes her, when she returns from their encounter crying heavily. She flees the next morning back to her family. An unwanted pregnancy results, and Trishna has an abortion, hoping to put the entire episode behind her and continue in her family as if she'd never left. However, her father's shame over her pregnancy and the family's need for income means that she is sent to work for her aunt and uncle, serving her bed-bound aunt and also working in the small factory her uncle runs. To her dismay, Jay tracks her down again and seems surprised that she has not tried to contact him; due to his own abusive, self-indulgent tendencies, he views the rape as a consensual sexual experience.", "Meher Vij Meher Vij (born Vaishali Sahdev) is an Indian actress who appears in Hindi films and television. She is the recipient of a Filmfare Award. She played supporting roles in the drama film \"Bajrangi Bhaijaan\" (2015) and the musical drama \"Secret Superstar\" (2017), both of which rank among the highest grossing Indian films of all time; for the latter she won the Filmfare Award Best Supporting Actress. She has appeared in television shows including \"Kis Desh Mein Hai Meraa Dil\" and \"Ram Milaye Jodi\". Vij has two brothers, actors Piyush Sahdev and Gireesh Sahdev. In 2009, she married Manav Vij in Mumbai, after which she changed her name from Vaishali Sahdev to Meher Vij.", "Zinda (film) Zinda (English: \"Alive\") is a 2006 Indian Hindi-language neo-noir action thriller film starring Sanjay Dutt, John Abraham, Lara Dutta and Celina Jaitly. The film was directed by Sanjay Gupta and also wrote the film along with Suresh Nair. Vishal–Shekhar composed the film's thematic music, and background music composed by Sanjoy Chowdhury. It was released in India on 13 January 2006. \"Zinda\" has been identified as an unauthorised remake of the South Korean film \"Oldboy\" (an official adaptation of the Japanese manga \"Old Boy\"). Show East, the producers of \"Oldboy\", who had already sold the remake rights to DreamWorks in 2004, initially expressed legal concerns but no legal action was taken as the studio had shut down. Software engineer Balajeet \"Bala\" Roy (Sanjay Dutt), is happily married to Nisha Roy (Celina Jaitly), with whom she has a baby. One day, Bala is captured by unseen assailants and imprisoned in a cell, After one year, Bala gets a visit from Nisha to find out that she was brutally murdered. Bala is kept in total isolation for 14 years without knowing who imprisoned him and why. While in captivity, he practices martial arts which he learns after watching it on the television, with the intention of using it against the people who captured him. He is finally released, again without explanation, and sets out for revenge. He befriends a Bangkok taxi driver named Jenny (Lara Dutta), who helps him track his kidnappers. Bala tracks down the restaurant that served him food during his entire captivity and follows a delivery moped to his captors. Bala discovers that he was held in a private prison where people can pay to have others incarcerated. Bala tortures the owner Wong Foo (Rajendranath Zutshi) for answers by plucking out his teeth with a claw hammer; he then finds out he was imprisoned for \"talking too much\", and fights his way out of the building. Bala is injured during the fight, but a mysterious hooded man saves him and takes him to a taxi. The hooded man turns out to be Rohit Chopra (John Abraham). Soon Wong Foo kidnaps Jenny and tortures her. He threatens to remove Bala's teeth with his own clawhammer but is interrupted by Rohit.", "Ladies vs Ricky Bahl Ladies vs Ricky Bahl is a 2011 Indian Hindi-language romantic comedy film directed by Maneesh Sharma and produced by Aditya Chopra of Yash Raj Films. It stars Ranveer Singh opposite Anushka Sharma in lead roles just like Band Baaja Baaraat (December 10, 2010) along with Parineeti Chopra , Dipannita Sharma and Aditi Sharma in supporting roles. Singh plays a conman named Ricky Bahl who cons women until three of these women unite to con him back. The story was inspired by Jeffrey Archer's novel \"Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less\". It was released on 9 December 2011 to mixed to positive critical reviews and was a commercial success, earning ₹84 crores gross from the box office on a budget of ₹20 crores. Story 1: Delhi Dimple Chaddha is presented as a spoilt brat since her father Suresh Chaddha is the creator of \"Chaddha Industries\", a huge finance company in Delhi. Dimple is used to meeting her boyfriend, Sunny Singh secretly. The two party all night, and one day, eventually Dimple passes out of alcohol. Sunny then drops her home and faces her parents before wandering off. He breaks into a bungalow nearby and starts to throw stones on windows claiming it was part of his family inheritance and consequently is chased by the residents. Later he explains to Dimple that the bungalow actually belongs to his father, who died shortly before, and was encroached by tenants, but he gets taxed. Dimple convinces her father to help him but he tries to make profit out of it by buying the property at less valuation. Her father claims later as if he had fooled Sunny big time, though he is later arrested when the police claims that the family living there had a stay order, and that he entered there with no permission. Dimple realizes she has been conned, and starts to cry out loud. Then, Sunny is spotted in an airport leaving for Mumbai, with the Rs.20 lakhs which he receives as an advance from Dimple's father. Story 2: Mumbai Raina Parulekar is a businesswoman in Mumbai who is paranoid about everything. She has been ordered by her boss to deliver an M.F. Hussain painting, which is sold out everywhere. She meets Deven Shah, who presumably owns an art gallery that comprises the painting she needs.", "Ehenas Ehenas is a Maldivian drama web television series developed for Baiskoafu by Ravee Farooq, based on the 2012 novel \"Ehenas Hama Loabiveyey\" by Ahmed Iqbal. Produced by Ahmed Iqbal under IQ Productions, the series stars Mohamed Vishal, Aishath Rishmy, Ahmed Maseeh, Fathimath Sara Adam, Mohamed Yunaan and Sheela Najeeb in pivotal roles. The film follows the experiences of a long-term domestic and sexually abused male victim and how he faces the societal obstacles of marriage. Ahmed Iqbal initiated penning the first draft of \"Ehenas Hama Loabiveyey\" in 2009 when he was posting stories on blogs. In need of trying a different genre than his previous fictions, Iqbal focused the novel on major three themes; sexual abuse to men, domestic violence and bullying. In an interview Iqbal said; \"I initially struggled to develop the story considering the fact that its themes are labelled to be disgusting in the Maldivian culture\". After posting three to four episodes of his narration, Iqbal received positive comments from readers and decided to build the story further. On 11 March 2016, it was announced that a new production studio, Me studio, has acquired the rights to develop a film based on Ahmed Iqbal's 2012 novel, \"Ehenas Hama Loabiveyey\". The production team expressed their interest to produce the film due to the \"lukewarm response\" the novel has received despite its \"fragile issue\" the original story touches upon. They projected to start filming in May 2016 and release the film before the year ends. However, on 30 January 2019, it was reported that the producers later changed the project to be developed as a web series rather than a feature film, citing the idea of expanding the story and hence \"incidence can be fully elaborated and justified\" in a series without being \"trimmed\" for a film. A casting call was opened for interested actors on the same day by actress Aishath Rishmy. Workshops were held for those actors who were selected to star in the film from the audition. Director, Ravee Farooq revealed that majority of the actors are newcomers though the film will feature established actors like Sheela Najeeb and Mohamed Manik.", "Insaaniyat Insaaniyat (English: Humanity) is a 1974 Bollywood drama film directed by Prayag Raj. The film stars Shashi Kapoor, Madhu and Sujit Kumar in pivotal roles with Jayant, Jagdeep, Durga Khote, Krishan Dhawan, Roopesh Kumar and Kamal Kapoor in supporting roles. \"Insaaniyat\" was the first film produced and distributed by J.V. Films; Madhu, the leading actress in the film, made her debut in the film. \"Insaaniyat\" was also one of the few Indian movies to prominently feature the Great Bombay Circus, India's oldest circus company. Dilip (Shashi Kapoor) and Ram (Sujit Kumar) have been close friends for much of their lives. Whereas Ram is now married to Asha (Aarti), Dilip lives a care-free life with his wealthy father Karamchand (Mubarak) who is trying to get Dilip married to his friend Poonamchand's (Hari Shivdasani) daughter. Dilip, in the meantime spends much of his time wooing Leena (Madhu) who rebuffs him initially but eventually falls in love with him. All seems to going well until one day Karamchand falls seriously ill and on his deathbed tells Dilip that he is not his father. After prodding their loyal servant Ramu (Krishan Dhawan), Dilip learns that he was the son of a judge (Kamal Kapoor) who had sentenced Raghuveer (Jayant), a criminal, to a long prison term. Twenty years ago Raghuveer had escaped from prison and brutally murdered Dilip's father, mother and siblings. Not surprisingly, Dilip is determined to find Raghuveer and places an ad in the newspapers offering a handsome reward to anybody who can help him locate Raghuveer. Michael (Surinder Makkar), who works for a circus, responds to this ad, but is murdered by Raghuveer's henchman, Girdharilal, (Roopesh Kumar) before he can inform Dilip that Raghveer has changed his name to Diwan and is now the owner of the circus. When Dilip learns about this from Michael's girlfriend, he together with Ram and Leena proceed with a plan on going after Raghuveer.", "Ishqeria Ishqeria (; ) is a 2018 Indian Hindi-language romantic drama film written and directed by Prerna Wadhawan. The film stars Richa Chadda and Neil Nitin Mukesh in the lead roles. The dialogues are written by Radhika Anand. \"Ishqeria\" was theatrical released on 21 September 2018 after a delay of three years. The film's motion poster were released on 2 August 2018, followed by the theatrical trailer on 29 August 2018. \"Ishqeria\" was shot between 2012 and 2014 in Mussoorie and Allahabad where the unit had faced problems due to the rough weather and production constraints. The film was slated to release in 2015, however due to Prerna's marriage, it was delayed. The songs are composed by Rashid Khan, Papon and Wasim-Emraan. The lyrics are written by Rashid Khan, Protiqe Majumder, Ajay Garg and Haider Najmi.", "Sallu Ki Shaadi Sallu ki Shaadi () is an Indian Hindi-language romantic action film directed by Mohammad Israr Ansari. The film stars Kashyap Barbhaya, Arshin Mehta, Zeenat Aman and Asrani with Razak Khan and Kiran Kumar in supporting roles. Dedicated to Salman Khan, \"Sallu ki Shaadi\" was released in 8 December 2017. The Film Was Released Worldwide On 8 December 2017. Zeenat and Shahnawaz meet each other at a film theatre in 1989, during a screening of Salman Khan's Maine Pyar Kiya, and fall in love. They marry, and everything was going well for the couple and their children Sallu and Ilmi, until Shahnawaz loses his life to cancer one day. Twenty years later, Zeenat wants to honour Shahnawaz's final wish, which is to find a suitable girl for their son Sallu and get him hitched. The only problem is that Sallu is a die-hard fan of his namesake and has resolved that he will remain a bachelor for as long as his idol does." ]
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[ "Zehreela Insaan" ]
When did Louis Ii Of Italy's father die?
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Louis II of Italy Louis II (825 – 12 August 875), sometimes called the Younger, was the king of Italy and emperor of the Carolingian Empire from 844, co-ruling with his father Lothair I until 855, after which he ruled alone. Louis's usual title was "imperator augustus" ("august emperor"), but he used "imperator Romanorum" ("emperor of the Romans") after his conquest of Bari in 871, which led to poor relations with the Eastern Roman Empire. He was called "imperator Italiae" ("emperor of Italy") in West Francia while the Byzantines called him "Basileus Phrangias" ("Emperor of Francia"). The chronicler Andreas of Bergamo, who is the main source for Louis's activities in southern Italy, notes that "after his death a great tribulation came to Italy." Louis was born in 825, the eldest son of the junior emperor Lothair I and his wife Ermengarde of Tours. His father was the son of the reigning emperor, Louis the Pious. Little is known about his early life, except that he grew up in his grandfather's court and probably developed a warm affection for the emperor who, in 839, designated his grandson as King of Italy, and let Louis take up his residence in that country. Louis the Pious died the next year, and his empire was partitioned between his sons, Louis' father, Lothair, and Louis' uncle, Louis the German. Under his father's rule, he was crowned king and co-emperor to the middle-aged Emperor Lothair I at Rome by Pope Sergius II on 15 June 844. This ceremony mirrors the crowning of Lothair I by his father, a tradition started by Charlemagne and his son Louis the Pious, who were, respectively, great grandfather and grandfather of Louis II. Louis II immediately claimed the rights of an emperor in the city, a claim which was decisively rejected; but in 850 he was crowned joint emperor at Rome by Pope Leo IV, and soon afterwards, in 851, married Engelberga and undertook the independent government of Italy. He marched into the south of Italy in the year of his imperial coronation and compelled the rival dukes of Benevento, Radelchis I and Siconulf, to make peace.
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[ " In 1820 they were transferred and reinterred to Saint-Denis Basilica. During his second crusade, Louis died at Tunis on 25 August 1270, in an epidemic of dysentery that swept through his army. According to European custom, his body was subjected to the process known as \"mos Teutonicus\" prior to his remains being returned to France. (This was a postmortem funerary custom used in medieval Europe whereby the flesh was boiled from the body, so that the bones of the deceased could be transported hygienically from distant lands back home). Louis was succeeded by his son, Philip III. Louis's younger brother, Charles I of Naples, preserved his heart and intestines, and conveyed them for burial in the cathedral of Monreale near Palermo. Louis's bones were carried overland in a lengthy processional across Sicily, Italy, the Alps, and France, until they were interred in the royal necropolis at Saint-Denis in May 1271. Charles and Philip II later dispersed a number of relics to promote his veneration. Pope Boniface VIII proclaimed the canonisation of Louis in 1297; he is the only French king to be declared a saint. Louis IX is often considered the model of the ideal Christian monarch. The influence of his canonization was so great that many of his successors were named Louis after him. Named in his honour, the Sisters of Charity of St. Louis is a Roman Catholic religious order founded in Vannes, France, in 1803. A similar order, the Sisters of St Louis, was founded in Juilly in 1842. He is honoured as co-patron of the Third Order of St. Francis, which claims him as a member of the Order. Even in childhood, his compassion for the poor and suffering people was known to those who were close to him. When he became king, over a hundred poor people were served meals in his house on ordinary days. Often the king served these guests himself. Such acts of charity, coupled with Louis's devout religious practices, gave rise to the legend that he joined the Third Order of St. Francis. Though it is unlikely that Louis did join the order, his life and actions proclaimed him as one of them in spirit. Many countries in which French speakers and Catholicism were prevalent named places after King Louis:", " His uncle Charles II of Spain had produced no descendants and, as he lay dying, had no heir to whom he could pass the throne. The choice of a successor was essentially split between the French and Austrian claimants. In order to improve the chances of a Bourbon succession, Louis gave up his (and his eldest son's) rights in favour of his second son, Philip, Duke of Anjou (later Philip V of Spain), who, as second son, was not expected to succeed to the French throne, thus keeping France and Spain separate. Moreover, in the discussions in the \"Conseil d'en haut\" regarding the French response to Charles II's last will and testament, which did indeed leave all Spanish possessions to Anjou, Louis persuasively argued for acceptance. He opposed those who advocated a rejection of the will and the adherence to the Partition Treaty signed with William III of England, even though that Treaty had awarded Naples, Sicily and Tuscany to him. Louis died of smallpox on 11 April 1711, at the age of 49, predeceasing his father. Louis married Duchess Maria Anna of Bavaria on 7 March 1680. She was known in France as \"Dauphine Marie Anne Victoire\". Although the marriage was not a close one, the couple had three sons. The \"Dauphine\" died in 1690 and in 1695 Louis secretly married his lover Marie Émilie de Joly de Choin. His new wife did not acquire the status of Dauphine of France, and the marriage remained without surviving issue. Pregnant at the time of her marriage, de Choin gave birth to a son, who was secretly sent to the countryside; the child died aged two, in 1697, without having been publicly named. Thus, through his two older sons Burgundy and Anjou, Louis ensured respectively the continuation of the senior Bourbon line on the throne of France and the establishment of the Spanish Bourbon dynasty. Besides his unnamed child with Mme de Choin, Louis had two illegitimate daughters with Françoise Pitel: With another mistress, Marie Anne Caumont de La Force, he had one daughter: Legend has it that a prophecy told at his birth said that Louis would be \"son of a king, father of a king, but never a king\". This was thought to be fulfilled as he was the son of Louis XIV of France and father of Philip V of Spain, but did not himself become king.", "Peter II of Sicily Peter II (1304 – 8 August 1342) was the King of Sicily from 1337 until his death, although he was associated with his father as co-ruler from 1321. Peter's father was Frederick III of Sicily and his mother was Eleanor, a daughter of Charles II of Naples. His reign was marked by strife between the throne and the nobility, especially the old families of Ventimiglia, Palizzi and Chiaramonte, and by war between Sicily and Naples. Contemporaries regarded Peter as feeble-minded. Giovanni Villani, in his \"Nuova Cronica\", calls him \"almost an imbecile\" (Italianate Latin: \"quasi un mentacatto\") and Nicola Speciale, in his \"Historia Sicula\", calls him \"pure and simple\" (\"purus et simplex\"). Under Peter, the Neapolitans conquered the Lipari Islands and took the cities of Milazzo and Termini in Sicily itself. He died after a short illness on 8 August 1342 in Calascibetta and was buried in the cathedral of Palermo. He was succeeded by Louis, his eldest son, who was only four years old. He married Elisabeth of Carinthia, with whom he had nine children:", "Louis, Duke of Savoy Ludovico I or Louis I (Italian: Lodovico; 24 February 1413 – 29 January 1465) was Duke of Savoy from 1440 until his death in 1465. He was born at Geneva the son of Amadeus VIII, Duke of Savoy and Mary of Burgundy; he was the first to hold the title of Prince of Piedmont. On 1 November 1433 (or 12 February 1434), at Chambéry, he married Princess Anne of Cyprus, an heiress of the Kingdom of Cyprus and the defunct Kingdom of Jerusalem. The family lived in Allaman Castle, Vaud/Switzerland and as Count de Vaud, Savoy tried to conquer the Duchy of Milan, then under the \"Repubblica Ambrosiana\", but failed. In 1452 he received the Shroud of Turin from Margaret de Charny. It was held by the House of Savoy until 1946, at the end of the Kingdom of Italy and bequeathed to the Holy See in 1983. Louis died at Lyon in 1465, while returning from France. Louis and Anne had:", "Louis of Piedmont Louis (1364 – 11 December 1418) was the Lord of Piedmont and titular Prince of Achaea from 1402. He was a son of James of Piedmont and Marguerite de Beaujeu (1346–1402). In 1405, he founded the University of Turin. On 24 January 1403, he married Bona (1388–1432), daughter of Amadeus VII, Count of Savoy, but they never had any children. When he died in 1418, the Piedmont-Achaea cadet branch of the House of Savoy died with him. His titles and estates were inherited by the senior line of the House of Savoy.", "Vincenzo II Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua Vincenzo II Gonzaga (7 January 1594 – 25 December 1627) was Duke of Mantua and Duke of Montferrat from 1626 until his death. Vincenzo was the son of Duke Vincent I and Eleonora de' Medici and inherited the duchy upon the death of his elder brother Ferdinand, receiving the imperial investiture on 8 February 1627. He had also received a cardinalate upon Ferdinando's succession, but had dismissed it in 1616 in order to marry his relative Isabella Gonzaga, daughter of Alfonso Gonzaga, Count of Novellara. Conscious of his poor health, the childless Vincenzo set up an inheritance for his lands through the marriage of his niece Maria (daughter of the former Duke Francis IV) with Charles of Nevers' son Charles of Gonzaga-Nevers. The elder Charles was a cousin of his father. Vincenzo died on the marriage day of Mary and Charles. Vincenzo II Gonzaga had no legitimate offspring from the wife, but he recognized four natural sons. By Paola Scarpelli: By Luigia \"the Spanish\":", "Louis, King of Sicily Louis the Child ( or ; 4 February 1338 – 16 October 1355) was King of Sicily (also known as \"Trinacria\") from 15 September 1342 until his death. He was a minor upon his succession, and was under a regency until 1354. His actual rule was short, for he died in an outbreak of plague the next year. His reign was marked by civil war. Born in Catania, Louis was the son of King Peter II and Elisabeth of Carinthia. On the day of his birth, his father announced him as his heir in a proclamation to the municipal governments (\"universitates\") of the realm. Louis was the first male child of Peter since the death of the firstborn, Frederick, in 1325. On 12 February, Peter issued a privilege to the city of Catania exempting it from the payment of the customary hospitality to the royal court. He also credited the intervention of Catania's patron saint, Agatha, on whose feast the child was born, for the successful delivery of a boy. Louis was only four years old when his father died on 15 August 1342, and he was not immediately given the title of king. His uncle, Marquis John of Randazzo, already Peter's second-in-command as vicar, assumed the regency. During his father's lifetime, Louis was called \"primogenitus\" (first born) and \"infans\" (royal prince, i.e. infante). After his father's death and before his own coronation, he was titled \"successor\". On 10 September John ordered the citizens of Palermo to nominate their representatives to swear the oath of fealty at Louis's coronation. Louis was crowned in the cathedral of Palermo on 15 September and thereafter he bore the title of king (\"rex\"). After his coronation, Louis lived at Catania from October 1342 until at least March 1343. Towards the end of 1344 negotiations were begun to marry Louis to Constance, the newborn daughter of Peter IV of Aragon. In June 1346 an ambassador from Louis I of Hungary arrived proposing a marriage between Louis and one of the Hungarian king's relatives. On 7 November 1347 Sicily concluded a peace treaty at Catania with the Kingdom of Naples, which claimed the island of Sicily.", "Louis I, Duke of Nemours Louis of Savoy (1615 – 16 September 1641) was Count of Geneva, Duke of Nemours, and Duke of Aumale from the death of his father Henry of Savoy in 1632 until his own death in 1641. Louis never married. On his death, his titles passed to his brother Charles Amadeus.", "Louis II, Grand Duke of Baden Louis II, Grand Duke of Baden (15 August 1824 – 22 January 1858) was the son of Leopold I, Grand Duke of Baden and Sophie of Holstein-Gottorp, Princess of Sweden. Louis succeeded his father as Grand Duke of Baden on 24 April 1852. His brother Frederick acted as regent, because Louis had mental illness. However, in 1856, Frederick became grand duke as well. He was also an honorary citizen of Karlsruhe.", "Louis XIII Louis XIII (; sometimes called the Just; 27 September 1601 – 14 May 1643) was King of France from 1610 until his death in 1643 and King of Navarre (as Louis II) from 1610 to 1620, when the crown of Navarre was merged with the French crown. Shortly before his ninth birthday, Louis became king of France and Navarre after his father Henry IV was assassinated. His mother, Marie de' Medici, acted as regent during his minority. Mismanagement of the kingdom and ceaseless political intrigues by Marie and her Italian favourites led the young king to take power in 1617 by exiling his mother and executing her followers, including Concino Concini, the most influential Italian at the French court. Louis XIII, taciturn and suspicious, relied heavily on his chief ministers, first Charles d'Albert, duc de Luynes and then Cardinal Richelieu, to govern the Kingdom of France. The King and the Cardinal are remembered for establishing the \"Académie française\", and ending the revolt of the French nobility. They systematically destroyed the castles of defiant lords, and denounced the use of private violence (dueling, carrying weapons, and maintaining private armies). By the end of the 1620s, Richelieu had established \"the royal monopoly of force\" as the ruling doctrine. His reign was also marked by the struggles against the Huguenots and Habsburg Spain. Born at the Palace of Fontainebleau, Louis XIII was the eldest child of King Henry IV of France and his second wife Marie de' Medici. 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." ]
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[ "29 September 855" ]
Are the directors of both films Sharmeelee and American Hustle from the same country?
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American Hustle American Hustle is a 2013 American black comedy crime film directed by David O. Russell. It was written by Eric Warren Singer and Russell, inspired by the FBI Abscam operation of the late 1970s and early 1980s. It stars Christian Bale and Amy Adams as two con artists who are forced by an FBI agent (Bradley Cooper) to set up an elaborate sting operation on corrupt politicians, including the mayor of Camden, New Jersey (Jeremy Renner). Jennifer Lawrence plays the unpredictable wife of Bale's character. Principal photography took place from March to May of 2013 in Boston and Worcester, Massachusetts as well as New York City. "American Hustle" was released nationwide in the United States on December 13, 2013. It opened to wide acclaim from critics, who praised its screenplay and ensemble cast. The film received ten nominations at the 86th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, Best Actor (Bale), Best Actress (Adams), Best Supporting Actor (Cooper), and Best Supporting Actress (Lawrence). It received three BAFTA Awards, three Golden Globe Awards, including Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, and the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture. In 1978, con artists Irving Rosenfeld and Sydney Prosser have started a relationship, and are working together. Sydney has improved Rosenfeld's scams, posing as English aristocrat "Lady Edith Greensly". Irving loves Sydney, but is hesitant to leave his unstable and histrionic wife Rosalyn, fearing he will lose contact with his adopted son Danny. Rosalyn has also threatened to report Irving to the police if he leaves her. FBI agent Richie DiMaso catches Irving and Sydney in a loan scam, but offers to release them if Irving can line up four additional arrests. Richie believes Sydney is English, but has proof that her claim of aristocracy is fraudulent. Sydney tells Irving she will manipulate Richie, distancing herself from Irving. Irving has a friend pretending to be a wealthy Arab sheikh looking for potential investments in America. An associate of Irving's suggests the sheikh do business with Mayor Carmine Polito of Camden, New Jersey, who is trying to revitalize gambling in Atlantic City, but has struggled to find investors. Carmine seems to have a genuine desire to help the area's economy and his constituents.
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[ "Craig Brewer Craig Brewer (born December 6, 1971) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. His 2005 movie \"Hustle & Flow\" won the Audience Award at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival and achieved commercial success, along with an Academy Award for Best Original Song, \"It's Hard out Here for a Pimp\". He is also known for directing the 2011 remake of \"Footloose\", the 2019 film \"Dolemite Is My Name\" and the 2021 film \"Coming 2 America\"; the latter two starring Academy Award-nominee Eddie Murphy. Brewer is the son of Gail, a teacher, and Walter D. Brewer, an executive who worked for Matson Navigation Co. He is of Irish, English, and Spanish descent. He was born in Newport News, Virginia, where his father was stationed in the Army, and grew up in Vallejo, California. \"Hustle & Flow\" was financed by filmmaker John Singleton, also produced by Stephanie Allain, Preston Holmes and executive produced by Dwight Williams. Singleton was impressed by Brewer's first feature, \"The Poor & Hungry\", shot in Memphis, Tennessee. Ten years after the release of \"Hustle & Flow\", Brewer re-teamed with Terrence Howard and Taraji P. Henson on their acclaimed television series, \"Empire\". The episode he directed, \"Fires of Heaven\", aired October 7, 2015. Brewer's subsequent project, \"Black Snake Moan\", began filming in September 2005 and stars Samuel L. Jackson, Christina Ricci, and Justin Timberlake. \"Black Snake Moan\" was partially filmed in Stanton, Tennessee. Production completed on \"Black Snake Moan\" in October 2005 and it was released on March 2, 2007. His first big-budget film, a remake of the 1984 film, \"Footloose\" was released on October 14, 2011 after Brewer and the two stars of the film, Kenny Wormald and Julianne Hough, completed a national press tour promoting the film. In 2012, Brewer was executive producer of \"\". That same year, Brewer premiered a documentary he directed about Indie Memphis and filmmakers called \"Indie Origins\". In 2014, Brewer was elected President of Indie Memphis for two years.", "Gayle Ferraro Gayle Ferraro is a New York-based filmmaker best known for her documentary film \"To Catch a Dollar: Muhammad Yunus Banks on American (2010)\". Her first film was \"Sixteen Decisions\", a 2000 documentary about the effect of Muhammad Yunus' Grameen Bank on impoverished women in Bangladesh. Ferraro also produced and directed \"Anonymously Yours (2002)\", a feature documentary about sex trafficking in Burma, and \" (2003),\" a documentary about a hospice in Varanasi, 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.", "The Brooklyn Heist The Brooklyn Heist (also released as Capers), is a 2008 film written by Julian Mark Kheel and Brett Halsey and directed by Julian Mark Kheel.", "The China Hustle The China Hustle is a 2017 finance documentary produced by Magnolia Pictures and directed by Jed Rothstein. The documentary reveals systematic and formulaic decades-long securities fraud by Chinese companies listed on the US stock market. Many of the film's protagonists such as Dan David and Jon Carnes are activist shareholders and due diligence professionals who discovered the frauds, including fabricated accounting and brazen misrepresentations, and subsequently shorted the stock in order to bring about the collapse of the entities which often led to class action lawsuits, NASDAQ delistment, and SEC deregistration. After the financial crisis of 2007–2008, as investment firms in the United States look for ways to improve clients' investment performance while earning money for themselves, they chance upon the idea of selling opportunities to unsuspecting Americans who want to get rich by participating in the \"China growth story\" but do not know much about the country or its companies. They do so by getting small nondescript Chinese companies (like Orient Paper and Advanced Battery Technologies (ABAT)) to do reverse mergers with defunct American companies (like Buffalo Mining) and thus get listed in the NYSE overnight. The hype that accompanies this is aided by paid guest appearances by the likes of Bill Clinton and Henry Kissinger at so called \"investment conferences\" organized by B level investment firms (Roth Capital is one such firm featured in the documentary), thus adding a garb of respectability and reliability. The stocks of these companies see spikes, investment firms goad their investors into buying them, siphoning off brokerages on the way. When the prices of these stocks crash to their real value, unsuspecting savers are left holding large amounts of worthless stock in their 401(k)s. The documentary investigates the collusion that occurred from 2008 to 2016 between second and third-tier US-based Wall Street investment firms such as Roth Capital Partners and small companies based in China. Most of the companies featured in the film were listed in NYSE through reverse mergers. The film reveals that the actual revenues of Chinese firms (reflected in their filings with Chinese government entities) were typically one-tenth of what was filed with the SEC. Subsequent to investigations, most of the firms were de-listed from the NYSE resulting in losses of billions of dollars to US investors. Information on the frauds was published in Chinese newspapers in 2010 including the online edition of Sina, but American investors were unaware of these as the articles were mostly in Chinese.", "Sherryl Clark Sherryl Clark is an American film producer. Clark has produced the following movies: She is a co-founder of the production group H Collective.", "Hadi Shariati Hadi Shariati () (born 1980) is an Iranian director and screenwriter. He received the Best Screenplay Award from the International Film Festival for Children and Youth for his film \"Inside the Waves\". He has won awards from the Queen Palm International Film Festival and LAKECITY International Film Festival for his documentary film \"Sarah\" which is about his daughter who is not able to see.", "The Hustle Is On The Hustle Is On is the second album released by Core. The album was produced and mixed by Core. Tracks 1, 2, 4, 5, and 7 were recorded at Sub Sound and engineered by Stacey \"Springdale\" Phelon (engineer on Monster Magnet's first album \"Spine of God\"). The other tracks were recorded at Trax East with Eric Rachell. It was mastered at West Side Music by Al Douches. The album mixes stoner, psychedelic rock, punk and jazz, and contains several instrumental tracks. All songs written by Core. (Other instruments played by Core - acoustic guitar, acoustic bass) The album begins with the \"Monolith\" sound of the science fiction film by Stanley Kubrick. The last track's name features \"AuH2O\" which means goldwater (Au=gold, H2O=water).", "Heather Loeffler Heather Loeffler is a set decorator. Loeffler, along with production designer Judy Becker, is nominated for an Academy Award for Best Production Design for the 2013 film \"American Hustle\".", "Hustle (2004 film) Hustle is a television film about the baseball player Pete Rose, created by ESPN Films. It was first broadcast on September 25, 2004. The movie follows Rose as he gambled on Major League Baseball while managing the Cincinnati Reds, was caught and banned from baseball for life. The title is a reference to both Rose's gambling problem and his nickname, \"Charlie Hustle\". The movie stars Tom Sizemore as Pete Rose and was directed by Peter Bogdanovich. The script was largely based on the Dowd Report without Rose's involvement. Major League Baseball did not approve the script or co-operate with the producers. ESPN was not given permission to use the uniforms, logos or trademarks of the Cincinnati Reds. The job of directing was given to Peter Bogdanovich even though he was not a baseball fan. He was interested in that Pete Rose \"is Dostoyevskian, a degenerate gambler. It's intriguing when somebody has an obsession he can't seem to cope with. With all the great things he accomplished, he screwed up his life. It's sad and fascinating.\" Bogdanovich thought the story was \"very American... We build people up to such a degree in this country, they think they are outside the law. We honor celebrity to a fault... Then we're just as quick to tear them down.\" \"Peter's name is synonymous with excellence in film direction,\" said Ron Semaio of ESPN Original Entertainment. \"His visionary and creative approach is well documented and hugely successful.\" Bogdanovich said Rose \"created an atmosphere around himself that was outside society, outside the law... [He] was operating on another level. There was a secret life there. People were living with lies. He traveled with not very distinguished company.\" The lead role was played by Tom Sizemore, who Bogdanovich said would \"be unbelievably great.. This is the right moment in his life to turn in a great performance. This role requires nuance. It's not a black-and-white kind of person. There are lots of colors.\" Sizemore was on bail while making the film. Bogdanovich says ESPN gave him a few days of rehearsal with Sizemore in order to \"make him feel wanted and OK... He had been traumatized a bit by what had been happening to him. He's a sensitive guy.\" Filming started in Toronto on May 17, 2004. It was shot over three weeks." ]
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[ "no" ]
Which film has the director died earlier, Sweepstakes Winner or The Rocket From Calabuch?
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The Rocket from Calabuch Calabuch (US title: The Rocket From Calabuch) is a 1956 comedy film directed by Luis García Berlanga. Calabuch is a little village in the coast of Spain. There arrives Dr. George Hamilton (Edmund Gwenn), a scientist expert in rockets who is tired of his job. Hamilton decides to help people of Calabuch in a fireworks competition. He wins and his photo appears in the local newspaper and then NASA and the army find him. This Spanish-Italian co-production was filmed in Peniscola, Castellón, and features an international cast led by British-American actor Edmund Gwenn in his last film role, and Italians Valentina Cortese and Franco Fabrizi. Berlanga won the OCIC Award at the Venice Film Festival.
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[ "The Winner (1962 film) The Winner (French: \"Un cœur gros comme ça\") is a 1962 French film directed by François Reichenbach. 1962 Locarno International Film Festival", "SS Sweepstakes SS \"Sweepstakes\" may refer to:", "Winner Takes All (1918 film) Winner Takes All is a 1918 American silent Western film directed by Elmer Clifton and starring Monroe Salisbury, Alfred Allen and Betty Schade.", "Sweepstake A sweepstake is a type of contest where a prize or prizes may be awarded to a winner or winners. Sweepstakes began as a form of lottery that were tied to products sold. In response, the FCC and FTC refined U.S. broadcasting laws (creating the anti-lottery laws). Under these laws sweepstakes became strictly \"No purchase necessary to enter or win\" and \"A purchase will not increase your chances of winning\", especially since many sweepstakes companies skirted the law by stating only \"no purchase necessary to enter\", removing the consideration (one of the three legally required elements of gambling) to stop abuse of sweepstakes. Today, sweepstakes in the United States are used as marketing promotions to reward existing consumers and to draw attention to a product. By definition, the winner is determined by pure random chance rather than skill. Sweepstakes with large grand prizes tend to attract more entries regardless of the odds of winning. Therefore, the value of smaller prizes usually totals much less than that of the top prize. Firms that rely on sweepstakes for attracting customers, such as Publishers Clearing House and Reader's Digest, have also found that the more involved the entry process, the more entrants. Businesses often obtain marketing information about their customers from sweepstakes entries. Because of their potential for abuse, sweepstakes are heavily regulated in many countries. The US, Canada, and individual US states all have laws covering sweepstakes, so there are special rules depending on where the entrant lives. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission exercises some authority over sweepstakes promotion and sweepstakes scams in the United States. Notably, sweepstakes in Canada, Australia, and several European countries require entrants to answer a skill testing question such as solving an elementary-school-level mathematical puzzle, or answering a simple general knowledge question, making it (in theory, at least) a contest of skill in order to overcome requirements that would classify sweepstakes as a form of gambling under their country's legal definition. There are similar laws in Brazil. In Australia, a sweepstake is known as a competition, however the technical name for a consumer competition is a trade promotion lottery. A trade promotion lottery is a free entry lottery conducted to promote goods or services supplied by a business. Unlike in the U.S., entrants may be required to purchase a product in order to enter a trade promotion in Australia. Companies or promoters may require a trade promotion lottery permit if the winner(s) are to be chosen via an element of chance, i.e. a competition draw.", "Joe Palooka in Winner Take All Joe Palooka in Winner Take All is a 1947 American film in the \"Joe Palooka\" series. It was directed by Reginald Le Borg.", "Sweepstakes (TV series) Sweepstakes, stylized as $weepstake$, is an American anthology television series that aired in the United States on NBC during the 1978-79 television season. It depicts the lives of people who hope to win a large amount of money in a sweepstakes and what happens after they win — or do not win — the money. \"$weepstake$\" is an anthology series that depicts the lives of people who buy tickets for a state-owned lottery hosted by a master of ceremonies, \"the $weepstake$ M.C.\" Each episode depicts a week in which 12 people became finalists in that week's lottery, and the first half of the episode introduces the three finalists who are destined to win either the $1 million jackpot or one of the two $1,000 consolation prizes, the issues in their lives, and their plans to use the $1 million jackpot if they win it. At the midpoint of each episode, the $weepstake$ M.C. hosts the lottery drawing and announces the winner of the jackpot and that the other two finalists the episode focuses on have won the consolation prizes. The second half of the episode then tells the story of the effect of the lottery on the three winners — how the jackpot winner spends his or her money and how the two consolation prize winners fare after their loss. The only regular in the series is the $weepstake$ M.C.; each episode otherwise has a cast consisting entirely of guest stars and has storylines unrelated to those of other episodes. Some of the stories told in \"$weepstake$\" are comedic in nature and others are dramatic. Sometimes the most deserving finalist wins the jackpot, and sometimes he or she does not. \"$weepstake$\" represented an update of the successful 1950s CBS anthology series \"The Millionaire\", in each episode of which an anonymous benefactor gave someone $1 million and the story of the effect of sudden wealth on their lives followed. \"$weepstake$\" differed from \"The Millionaire\" in that rather than depicting merely the impact of wealth on someone′s life, episodes were constructed to allow viewers to pick their favorite finalist during the first half, see whether or not that finalist won the jackpot, and then see the result of either winning or losing on their lives. Miller-Milkis Productions produced \"$weepstake$\" in association with Paramount Television. Robert Dozier served as executive producer.", "The Squeeze (2015 film) The Squeeze is a 2015 feature film starring Jeremy Sumpter as Augie, a young golfer who just won the local tournament by 15 strokes and tied and broke the public course record during the tournament, and is seduced by a gambler to play golf for bet money. Everything goes well until he goes to Las Vegas and has his life and his family on the line on a high stake gambling scheme. The film was based on the real-life events of Keith Flatt. The film was written and directed by Terry Jastrow, a senior producer of many golf tournaments, winner of 7 Emmy Awards and is recognized by his innovations on golf and sports television coverage.", "Michael Winner Robert Michael Winner (30 October 1935 – 21 January 2013) was an English filmmaker, writer, and media personality. He is known for directing numerous action, thriller, and black comedy films in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, including several collaborations with actors Oliver Reed and Charles Bronson. Winner's best-known works include \"Death Wish\" (1974) and its first two sequels, the World War II comedy \"Hannibal Brooks\" (1969), the hitman thriller \"The Mechanic\" (1972), the supernatural horror film \"The Sentinel\" (1977), the neo-noir \"The Big Sleep\" (1978), the satirical comedy \"Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood\" (1976), and the Revisionist Westerns \"Lawman\" (1971) and \"Chato's Land\" (1972). Winner was known as a media personality in the United Kingdom, appearing regularly on television talk programmes and publishing a restaurant review column for \"The Sunday Times\". He was also a founder of the Police Memorial Trust. Winner was born at 40, Belsize Grove, Belsize Park, Hampstead, London, England, only child of Jewish parents George Joseph Winner (1910–1975), of Russian origin, and Helen (née Zlota; 1906-1984), of Polish parentage. George Winner was a businessman and company director responsible for running a branch of the Winner's clothing chain founded by his father, who became a naturalized British citizen in 1910. Following his father's death, Winner's mother gambled recklessly and sold art and furniture worth around £10m at the time, bequeathed to her not only for her life but to Michael thereafter. She died at the age of 78, in 1984. Winner was educated at St Christopher School, Letchworth, and Downing College, Cambridge, where he read law and economics. He also edited the university's student newspaper, \"Varsity\", and was the youngest ever editor up to that time, both in age and in terms of his university career (being only in the second term of his second year). Winner had earlier written a newspaper column, \"Michael Winner's Showbiz Gossip\", in the \"Kensington Post\" from the age of 14.", "The Winner (2011 film) The Winner () is a 2011 American-Polish co-production written and directed by Wieslaw Saniewski and starring Pawel Szajda, Janusz Gajos, Wojciech Pszoniak and Marta Żmuda-Trzebiatowska. Film tells a story of Oliver (played by Pawel Szajda, \"Under the Tuscan Sun\" and HBO's \"Generation Kill\") who is a young and talented pianist. When his life and promising career suddenly collapse, he finds an unexpected help in a retired math teacher, now a compulsive horse race gambler (played by Janusz Gajos). \"The Winner\" was filmed in Chicago, German town Baden-Baden and Polish city of Wroclaw and Lądek Zdrój. Film's soundtrack includes music of Chopin, three Elvis Presley's songs and tango.", "The Man Who Won (1919 film) The Man Who Won is a 1919 American silent drama film directed by Paul Scardon and written by Edward J. Montagne. The film stars Harry T. Morey, Maurice Costello, and Betty Blythe." ]
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[ "Sweepstakes Winner" ]
Where was the director of film Heroes Of Fort Worth born?
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Heroes of Fort Worth Heroes of Fort Worth or Gli eroi di Fort Worth is a 1965 Italian Spaghetti Western film directed by Alberto De Martino. After the Civil War a band of Southerners with the aid of an Indian tribe, try to defeat a Union command while trying to gain support from Emperor Maximillian.
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[ "Heroes of the Saddle Heroes of the Saddle is a 1940 American Western \"Three Mesquiteers\" B-movie directed by William Witney.", "Saturday's Heroes Saturday's Heroes is a 1937 American drama film directed by Edward Killy from a screenplay by Paul Yawitz, Charles Kaufman, and David Silverstein based on George Templeton's story. Produced and distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, the film stars Van Heflin, Marian Marsh, Richard Lane, Alan Bruce, and Willie Best. Val Webster is the quarterback of Calton College's football team, but besides dealing with criticism of his play, Val needs money, which he gets by scalping tickets to the games. A teammate, Ted Calkins, commits suicide after being caught moonlighting at a job, and Val's ticket scheme is exposed as well, causing university president Hammond to expel him. Disgusted by the hypocrisy in college athletics, where the school reaps hundreds of thousands of dollars while the athletes stay broke, Val teams with sportswriter Red Watson to bring attention to the matter, with girlfriend Frances providing moral support. Val lands a job coaching for a rival college. When its game against Calton comes up, the outcome convinces Hammond and others that something must be done to change the unjust way student-athletes are rewarded for their play.", "Yesterday's Heroes Yesterday's Heroes is a 1940 American drama film directed by Herbert I. Leeds and written by Irving Cummings Jr. and William Conselman Jr.. The film stars Jean Rogers, Robert Sterling, Ted North, Kay Aldridge, Russell Gleason and Richard \"Dick\" Lane. The film was released on September 20, 1940, by 20th Century Fox.", "Stan Moore (director) Stanley Clark Moore (born February 9, 1956 in Memphis, Tennessee) is an American film director, screenwriter, and film producer. Moore was born in Memphis, Tennessee, to a military (Air Force) family. He spent his childhood on several U.S. Air Force bases around Texas and Nevada before his father settled in Houston, Texas, as a pilot for Delta Air Lines. In his early teens, he made amateur 8 mm films with his friends as high school projects. One film, based on the story of Agamemnon, was aired on the local NBC affiliate in Houston. He attended Humble High School in Texas earning letters in football and baseball, plus being named to the National Honor Society and graduating in the top ten of his class. In the autumn of 1974, Moore headed to Baylor University to study Biology and Chemistry and work on a Pre-Med degree. While attending Baylor in the 1970s, Moore became a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. During this time, he also dabbled in acting and filmmaking by attending classes outside of his science degree. Upon completion of his bachelor's degree, Moore applied to NASA for a research grant under their new doctoral program. While waiting on confirmation, he relocated to Dallas and purchased a professional still camera and self-taught himself to take fashion-related photographs. He also was able to find work as a model and actor in the growing film and fashion industries in Dallas. When NASA’s funding was slashed in 1979, Moore found that his hopes to work for the agency had ended. For several years, Moore spent time acting, shooting stills, working as a grip and freelance writing for newspapers and small companies. He also dabbled in stand-up comedy and comedy writing/direction. In Nashville, he wrote and directed shows at the Poverty Playhouse and 3rd Coast Comedy. He also performed his stand up routine in New York at the Comic Strip and Dangerfield’s, in Dallas at the Comedy Corner, at North Texas State University and won the Funniest Man in Denton contest in 1982. In 1983, he applied to attend the graduate film school at North Texas State University. While completing classes toward his degree, Moore also taught the undergraduate TV/Film writing classes and started a practicum for students at the local cable station. The student produced show, NT Scene, gave students real world experience in producing a magazine type program.", "Don O. Newland Don Oliver Newland (1896–1951) was an American film director and producer whose career consisted largely of itinerant work. From the 1920s until his death, he traveled to cities throughout the United States making films that employed local citizens as stars and extras. Using a standard script, Newland personalized each film according to its location – \"Belvidere's Hero\", \"Staunton's Hero\", \"Janesville's Hero\", \"Huntingdon's Hero\", \"Tyrone's Hero\", \"Wilmington's Hero\", \"Portsmouth’s Hero,\" and so on. Newland was born June 8, 1896, in Battle Creek, Michigan, the son of Dr. J.S. Newland and the former Josephine Roche. He enlisted in the United States Army on Aug 28, 1918, in Chicago, Illinois and was assigned to 4th Company, Development Battalion No. 1. He spent less than five months in the military, being discharged at Camp Wadsworth, S.C., on Jan 9, 1919, as part of the country's general demobilization after World War I. While records indicating precisely when Newland entered film production have not surfaced, newspaper publicity for his \"Hero\" films credited him with producing one-reelers with Mary Pickford, James Kirkwood, Flora Finch and John Bunny. Since Bunny died in 1915, Newland would have started in films while still a teenager. He also was credited with directing comedies for Mack Sennett. In the early 1920s, Newland began the frenetic itinerant work that would take him all over the United States capturing communities and their citizens in two-reeler comedies that used the same simple, customizable plot. Operating as the Consolidated Film Producing Co. of Los Angeles, California, he was generally commissioned by local newspapers to produce the films, which always contained the role of a reporter and a prominent look at how the local newspaper was produced – although the papers often stressed that the project was not an advertising film. Contests were frequently held in each community to determine who the \"leading lady\" would be. Filming usually took place in no more than three days, with Newland directing a cameraman and one or two crew members.", "Texas Pioneers Texas Pioneers is a 1932 American Western film written and directed by Harry L. Fraser. The film stars Bill Cody, Andy Shuford, LeRoy Mason, Sheila Bromley, John Elliott and Harry Allen. The film was released on June 18, 1932, by Monogram Pictures.", "Adam Cozad Adam Cozad is an American screenwriter best known for writing the scripts for \"\" and \"The Legend of Tarzan\". Cozad was born and grew up in Chico, California, where he attended Notre Dame School until his tenth grade. He later moved to Texas and went to Trinity University, where he got his major degree in history. In 2014, Cozad wrote his first screenplay for the action film \"\", based on the character created by Tom Clancy, with rewrites by David Koepp, of \"Jurassic Park\" and \"Spider-Man\" fame. \"Shadow Recruit\" stars Kevin Costner, Chris Pine, Keira Knightley and Kenneth Branagh (who also directed). His second screenplay was for the action adventure film \"The Legend of Tarzan\", which he wrote along with Craig Brewer from their own story, which stars Alexander Skarsgård, Margot Robbie, and Christoph Waltz. Cozad had been hired to write the screenplay for the sequel to \"Suicide Squad\" film. He was replaced with James Gunn. He also performed a revision of \"Underwater's\" script from Brian Duffield.", "Héroes verdaderos Héroes verdaderos () is a 2010 Mexican animated biopic adventure film, that chronicles the adventures of the heroes of Mexicans independence Miguel Hidalgo and José María Morelos. Two young men, a Creole and a mestizo who are friends since childhood are involved in the independence movement as beyond the hatred of Xama, half brother of the half-blood.", "Hero (2018 film) Hero is a Trinidad and Tobago film produced and directed by Francess-Anne Solomon. It won an award in the 2019 Africa Movie Academy Award for Best Diaspora Narrative Feature Film category. In 1941 Ulric Cross, a young man from Trinidad, leaves his island home to seek his fortune. He emerges from World War II as the RAF's most decorated West Indian. His life took a dramatically different course when he followed the call of history, and joined the independence movements sweeping Africa in the 50s and 60s.", "Joe Forte Joe Forte is an American filmmaker, screenwriter and director. Born in New Jersey, he is a graduate of New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. Forte is best known for writing the screenplay for \"Firewall\", the 2006 thriller starring Harrison Ford and Paul Bettany. He also directed the 2016 documentary, \"The Man Who Saved Ben-Hur\". Forte won best screenplay for his film \"Say I Do\" at the Breckenridge Festival of Film in 2006." ]
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[ "Rome" ]
When is the composer of film Artham 's birthday?
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Artham Artham () is a 1989 Indian Malayalam-language crime film directed by Sathyan Anthikkad and written by Venu Nagavally. It stars Mammootty, Sreenivasan, Murali, Saranya, in lead roles along with Parvathy, Mamukkoya, Philomina, Mohan Raj, Thikkurissy Sukumaran Nair, Sukumari, Jagannatha Varma, and Oduvil Unnikrishnan in other pivotal roles. Jayaram plays a cameo role.The music was composed by Johnson. The film is an adaptation of the Tamil detective novel "Ethir Katru" by Subha. The story revolves around a loner and award-winning novelist Ben Narendran (Mammootty) who seeks revenge against the forces who murdered his dear friend Janardanan (Jayaram). Joining in Narendran's aid are journalist Manasa (Saranya) and Advocate P. S. Nenmara (Sreenivasan). It was also later adapted in Tamil cinema as "Ethir Kaatru" (1990). The movie starts with a loner named Ben Narendran (Mammootty) writing a suicide note. He mentions that he is committing suicide as he has nothing to do with his life. He chooses to jump in front of the train to perform the act. He waits for the train but ends up saving another young man named Janardanan (Jayaram) who has the same intention. Janardanan has committed a murder out of desperation and is scared of revenge. Narendran consoles him and offers to take the blame of the murder so that Janardanan can live freely. Narendran gets sentenced to lifetime imprisonment. While in jail, he writes a book [Sharanalayam] under the pen name "Ben" which becomes immensely popular. He is also given an award by the state, but his true identity is never revealed. Journalist Manasa (Saranya) discovers that the author is behind bars and tries to get a parole for him. Though Narendran is not initially interested, he eventually applies for parole and is granted 28 days of parole so that he can receive the award in person. Once out of jail, Narendran gets word that Janardanan has died mysteriously. He sets out on a mission to find the culprits and destroy those who caused his death. The film was a one of biggest hit of 1989.
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[ "Visham Visham is a 1981 Indian Malayalam film, directed by P. T. Rajan and produced by Thomas Mathew. The film stars Srividya, Ratheesh, Menaka and MG Soman in the lead roles. The film has musical score by Raghu Kumar. The music was composed by Raghu Kumar and the lyrics were written by Poovachal Khader and Alappuzha Rajasekharan Nair.", "Antham Antham () is a 1992 Indian Telugu-language neo-noir crime film written and directed by Ram Gopal Varma. The film starred Nagarjuna, Urmila Matondkar . The soundtrack and background score was composed by R. D. Burman (for Hindi version), Mani Sharma and M.M. Keeravani (for Telugu version). The film was bilingual and the Hindi-language version was titled Drohi () and was released on 23 October 1992 on Diwali that year. Both versions and the soundtrack received positive reviews upon release. Raghav (Nagarjuna) is an orphan and he gets timely help from underworld gangster (Danny Denzongpa) who hires him for contract killing after growing up. Raghav has a very calm life and there is no room for relationships for him. Just at that juncture, he meets Bhavana (Urmila Matondkar), an ornithologist student and falls in love with her innocence and charm. He hides his real identity from her and she starts loving him too. When things look hopeful for Raghav, Bhavana discovers his real identity and moves away from him. Rest of the film is about what happens to the ill-fated contract killer, Raghav. The music was composed by R. D. Burman and the background score by Mani Sharma. The track \"Chalekki Undhanuko\" is composed by Mani Sharma and \"Gundello Dhada Dhada\" is composed by M. M. Keeravani. The lyrics were written by Sirivennela Sitarama Sastry and the soundtrack was released by SURYA Audio company.", "Rajesh Murugesan Rajesh Murugesan (born 14 May 1988) is an Indian music composer, best known for his compositions in Malayalam cinema, with films such as \"Neram\" and \"Premam\". Rajesh Murugesan born in Nagercoil He completed his schooling at Cochin Refineries School, Ambalamugal and graduated with a Degree from SAE International College, Chennai in 2008 He married Premam actress Aishwarya Raghavan on 22 January 2020. Rajesh made his debut as a music director in \"Neram\" a Tamil - Malayalam bilingual film which was directed by Alphonse Putharen and released in 2013. The music won him immediate attention. The promo song Pistah: The Run Anthem, had gone viral in 2013. The song Pistah also featured as IPL promo song for the year 2016. In 2015, he worked on another movie by Alphonse Putharen, Premam. All the songs in the movie received excellent critical response and the song,'Malare' broke the record for the fastest song in Malayalam to reach 5 lakh hits in YouTube.", "Naam (2018 film) Naam (English: Us) is a 2018 Indian Malayalam-language drama film written, directed and produced by debutant Joshy Thomas Pallickal. It features and tells the story of a group of youngsters. Principal photography commenced in February 2017 at Mundakayam. The other locations were Kuttikkanam and Ponkunnam and Saintgits College of Engineering. The music and background score for the film is composed by Ashwin and Sandeep. The audio launch was held in Kochi on 11 November. All lyrics are written by Shabareesh Varma except where noted; all music is composed by Ashwin Sivadas, Sandeep Mohan. The film was released on 11 May 2018. \"The Times of India\" rated the film 3 out of 5 stars, commenting \"Naam is not devoid of flaws but it has sincerity written all over it, and might even leave some of you choked, through its touching plot. Give it a shot if movies with a heavy dose of friendship can entertain you\".", "Ashwamedham Ashwamedham is a 1967 Indian Malayalam film, directed by A. Vincent and produced by Hari Pothan. The film stars Prem Nazir, Sathyan, Madhu and Sheela 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.", "Sanjoy Chowdhury Sanjoy Chowdhury is an Indian film score composer. He debuted in 1998, by composing the background score of the Malayalam movie, \"Ennu Swantham Janakikutty\". Shortly afterwards, filmmaker John Matthew Matthan roped him in to compose the background score of his Aamir Khan starrer, \"Sarfarosh\". He has specialized as a background music composer and has composed the background score in many films. He is the son of Indian film composer, Salil Chowdhury.", "Vijay Antony Vijay Antony (born 24 July 1975) is an Indian music composer, playback singer, actor, film editor, lyricist, audio engineer, and filmmaker working predominantly in Tamil cinema. He made his debut as music composer in 2005. He is the first Indian Music Director to win the 2009 Cannes Golden Lion for the song \"Naaka Mukka\" advertising film in the Best Music category. The song propelled his fame and was played at the 2011 Cricket World Cup. He made his debut film \"Naan\" in 2012. He is best known for his roles in action thriller films such as \"Salim\" (2014) and \"Pichaikkaran\" (2016). Vijay Antony was born in Nagercoil, Kanyakumari District. His father died when he was seven years old and his sister was four. Vijay Antony made his acting debut in the lead role in the crime thriller \"Naan\". The film's standalone sequel titled \"Salim\", an action thriller, was his next venture as an actor and music director. Both the films were sleeper hits. In 2015, he starred in the romantic comedy \"India Pakistan\" but did not compose the music. In 2016, he acted in the action thriller \"Pichaikkaran\" (2016), collaborating with his \"Dishyum\" director Sasi. It became a commercial success, with overall collections nearing 40 Crore. The Telugu dub \"Bichagadu\" was a bigger success than the original. His next was \"Saithan\", an action thriller directed by debutant Pradeep Krishnamurthy. He appeared in the 2017 political action thriller \"Yaman\" directed by Jeeva Shankar. Produced by A. Subaskaran under the banner Lyca Productions & Vijay Antony Film Corporation, it starred Miya and Thiagarajan. The film was released on 24 February 2017. His next film was the action drama \"Annadurai\", the story of two brothers of contrasting characters who live their life as fate plays a big part in their personalities. In 2018, he starred in \"Kaali\", a period action film directed by Kiruthiga Udhayanidhi and \"Thimiru Pudichavan\", an action film directed by Ganeshaa.", "Abhijit Majumdar Abhijit Majumdar is an Indian film music director and composer in Odia films. Abhijit Majumdar started his career from Sambalpuri Industry, later he started working on Ollywood. He is the most reputed music composer of Odia Film Industry. He has composed more than 700 songs for Odia Movies, Album & Sambalpuri industry.", "S. P. Venkatesh S. P. Venkatesh (also credited as Sangeetharajan; born 5 March 1955) is an Indian musical director and composer who primarily works in Malayalam films. He was at his prime in the late 80s and 90s, being reputed for his background scores and songs in Malayalam cinema. Venkatesh's father Pazhani was an accomplished Mandolin player. Earlier in his life, he played guitar, banjo and mandolin, and was an assistant musical director to Shyam and Raveendran during his early days. He was introduced into the Malayalam film industry by Dennis Joseph, with his first break coming in the film \"Rajavinte Makan\", directed by Thampi Kannanthanam. The film and the songs in it were big hits, and Venkatesh subsequently became a regular collaborator of Thampi's, resulting in a series of hit musical albums during the 1990s. His most well-known film scores include \"Indrajaalam\", \"Kilukkam\", \"Minnaram\", \"Spadikam\", \"Dhruvam\", \"Kauravar\", \"Johnnie Walker\", \"Kizhakkan Pathrose\", and \"Hitler\". He has also handled the orchestration for many other music directors. He composed background scores for films for which songs were composed by other composers, such as \"Devasuram\" He has also scored for some Bollywood and Bengali films. In 1993, he won the Kerala State Film Award for Best Music Director for his work in \"Paithrukam\" and \"Janam\". In 1999, he notably recorded nine songs in a single day for the unreleased Tamil film \"Ithu Mudivithillai\" starring Babu Ganesh and Vichithra. Venkatesh's song compositions feature extensive use of acoustic guitar, bass guitar and violin orchestra, and his background scores feature synth-based orchestra fused with traditional strings. He also used symphonic style strings orchestration in most of his songs. prema yuddha-1981", "Sajan K. Ram Sajan K., better known as Sajan K. Ram, is a music composer, known for his compositions in Malayalam cinema, with films: \"Josettante Hero\", \"Gunda\", \"Moonnu Wikkattinu 365 Runs \" and \"Chennaikoottam\". He wrote film score for the movie Papas. He also composed for short films of the awareness programmes of Kerala State Women's Development Corporation, city traffic police and district legal services authority. Sajan K Ram was born to K Kunhiraman and Anandavalli. Since his childhood he learned Karnatik music from his father, who was a music composer at All India Radio. His uncle Gireesh Puthenchery was a noted Malayalam lyricist and scriptwriter." ]
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[ "26 March 1953" ]
Are the directors of both films Kathiruntha Kangal and Under The Tonto Rim (1928 Film) from the same country?
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Under the Tonto Rim (1933 film) Under the Tonto Rim is a 1933 American pre-Code Western film directed by Henry Hathaway and starring Stuart Erwin and Verna Hillie. The film is a remake of a 1928 silent film starring Richard Arlen and Mary Brian. Both are based on the Zane Grey 1926 novel of the same name, as is a 1947 film. Print held by the Library of Congress. A complete failure as a ranch cowhand and then a chuckwagon driver, Tonto Daley's embarrassment is total after accidentally causing a wagon to tip over and his boss's daughter Nina Weston to fall into a creek. Tonto hits the trail with his tail between his legs, taking a job from Porky and Tom to become a hog farmer. He is miserable and lonely, and things get worse when former foreman Munther tries to railroad Tonto in the rustling of some cattle. He finds out Porky and Tom are in on it, and Nina becomes Tonto's ally in the fight to make things right.
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[ "Patthar Aur Payal Patthar Aur Payal is a 1974 Bollywood action film directed by Harmesh Malhotra and produced by K.P. Singh. The film stars Dharmendra, Hema Malini, Vinod Khanna, Ajit, Rajendranath, Iftekhar and Jayshree T. A story about two brothers' parent that was hanged due to a Thakur having given a false statement in court. They become dacoit (bandits) for revenge.", "Athey Kangal Athey Kangal () is a 1967 Indian Tamil-language mystery thriller film written and directed by A. C. Tirulokchandar. The film stars Ravichandran and Kanchana. It focuses on a girl's family being stalked by a masked murderer, and her lover's attempts to apprehend him. \"Athey Kangal\" was produced by A. V. Meiyappan under Balasubramanian & Co, a subsidiary of his company AVM Productions. It was simultaneously filmed in Telugu as \"Ave Kallu\". The film was released on 26 May 1967 and became a major box-office success. A woman finds her husband just murdered. The masked murderer tries to kill her too but fails, and he escapes. The woman is left in a state of shock and becomes mentally paralysed. A murder case is registered and the investigation takes place. Susi, a college girl, comes home for vacation with her friends. She lives with her three younger paternal uncles – the murdered man, Kamalanathan and Vimalanathan – and her aunt, the murdered man's wife. Susi's parents had died years ago. A series of murders take place at Susi's house with every time a smoking cigar bit being left by the murderer intentionally. Police suspect the visiting doctor, a Siddha doctor close to Kamalanathan's family, butler etc. Since Susi's aunt is the only eyewitness of the murderer, her life is in danger. Despite tight protection, she is killed by him. The murderer frequently calls Susi and threatens that her time is up and he is nearing her to kill her. Susi is frustrated by the incidents at her home and the threatening phone calls. Her lover Baskar promises to help. Baskar investigates Vimalanathan, and later Kamalanathan; he follows him to a strange house and a woman who wanders like a ghost. She is actually Kamalanathan's lover, who was rescued some years back by him when she attempted suicide. Kamalanathan keeps quiet as he wants Susi to get married first, only then, would he marry his lover. Baskar sends everyone out of Susi's house for a night to lure the murderer. As expected, he enters Susi's room to kill her. Baskar fights and tries to unmask the murderer, managing only to retrieve his mask and see his eyes before he escapes.", "Kattoor Kattoor may refer to:", "Katturumbinum Kathu Kuthu Katturumbinum Kathu Kuthu is a 1986 Indian Malayalam film, directed by Girish. The film stars Jagathy Sreekumar, Innocent, Mukesh and KPAC Lalitha in the lead roles. The film has a musical score by Kannur Rajan. The music was composed by Kannur Rajan and the lyrics were written by Panthalam Sudhakaran.", "Dumbachary Dambachary () is a 1935 Tamil-language film directed by Manik Lal Tandon. The film stars M. R. Krishnamuthi, P. S. Rathna Bai and P. S. Saraswathi Bai. P. S. Rathna Bai and P. S. Saraswathi Bai are well known as \"Palayamkottai sisters\". The story is of a man who spends the wealth of his father on his mistress while neglecting his own wife. Later he realizes his folly and returns to a happy life with his wife. After Talkies were introduced in Tamil cinema, almost all the films produced were based on mythological stories. This is the first film based on contemporary life of the time. The film was produced in Pioneer Film Studios in Calcutta (now Kolkata) by Chellam Talkies as there were no studios located in Chennai during those early years of Tamil cinema. The writer, Thiruvetriyur Kasiviswanatha Mudaliar was a well-known playwright and he was also a member of the Brahmo Samaj movement. He also wrote on female education, widow marriage etc. He died in October 1871 aged 66. His play \"Dambachary Vilasam\" was staged several times repeatedly. The film had an alternate title \"Uthama Manaivi\" which means \"Ideal Wife\". It was commonplace those days to give an alternate title to a film. Though the theme of the story was 'social', the film had as many as 38 songs like any other mythological story films of that time. Most of the artistes were Carnatic singers and the audience expected them to sing more rather than 'talk'. However, none of the songs in this film became popular. The film is remembered for the story line and the remarkable performance by M. R. Krishnamurthi and the Palayamkottai sisters.", "Anbu Kattalai Anbu Kattalai () is a 1989 Indian Tamil-language film directed by Yaar Kannan, starring Ramarajan, Pallavi and K. R. Vijaya. The music was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.", "Kattukurangu Kattukurangu is a 1969 Indian Malayalam film, directed by P. Bhaskaran and produced by Raveendranathan Nair. The film stars Sathyan, Sharada, Jayabharathi and Kaviyoor Ponnamma in the lead roles. The film had musical score by G. Devarajan.", "Katha Ithuvare Katha Ithuvare is a 1985 Indian Malayalam film, directed by Joshiy and produced by Joy Thomas. The film stars Madhu, Mammootty, Rahman, Thilakan, Suhasini and Rohini in the lead roles. The film has musical score by Johnson. The music was composed by Johnson and the lyrics were written by Poovachal Khader.", "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.", "Kangkanam Kangkanam is a 1948 Indian Tamil language film directed by S. K. Vasagan. The film was censored in November 1947 but was released in 1948. K. R. Ramasamy, Menaka and P. G. Venkatesan featured in the lead roles. The following list is adapted from the database of Film News Anandan The film was produced by G. P. Narayanan under his own banner G. P. Narayanan and Company and was directed by S. K. Vasagan. A. T. Krishnaswamy wrote the story while the dialogues were penned by Chandrasekar. Music was composed by H. R. Padmanabha Sastry and the lyrics were penned by Kambadasan. This was the debut film for Playback singer P. Leela." ]
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[ "no" ]
Which film has the director died later, The Virtuous Scoundrel or Barbary Coast Gent?
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The Virtuous Scoundrel The Virtuous Scoundrel (), is a French comedy drama film from 1953, directed and written by Sacha Guitry, and starring Michel Simon and Louis de Funès.
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[ "The Virtuous Sinner The Virtuous Sinner (German: Der brave Sünder) is a 1931 German comedy film directed by Fritz Kortner and starring Max Pallenberg, Heinz Rühmann and Dolly Haas. The film was made at the Babelsberg Studio in Berlin, although its setting and many of its principal participants were Austrian. It is based on the play \"The Embezzlers\" which was in turn based on a novel by the Soviet writer Valentin Kataev. Max Pallenberg was a successful stage comedian, but had previously rejected all offers to appear in films based on his theatre appearances. He was finally convinced by the producer Arnold Pressburger to try and film one of his stage successes. The film also offered Kortner a chance to fulfill his ambitions to become a director. The film's art director was Julius von Borsody. Pichler and Wittek, two junior employees of a bank from a provincial Austrian town, travel to Vienna, where they become accidentally embroiled in their director's scheme to embezzle the bank's funds and flee with his mistress. They become desperate as they fear their disgrace. But events ultimately sort themselves out, the dishonest director is arrested, and Pichler is appointed to replace him while Wittek is able to marry Pichler's daughter Hedwig.", "The Scoundrel's Wife The Scoundrel's Wife (U.S. video title: The Home Front) is a 2002 romantic drama film directed by Glen Pitre, who co-wrote screenplay with Michelle Benoit, and starring by Tatum O'Neal, Julian Sands and Tim Curry. \"The Scoundrel's Wife\" tells the story of a woman suspected of being a saboteur, who struggling to raise two children in a small village during World War II. The film is a period drama which takes place in Louisiana at the beginning of U.S. entry into World War II. A certain military is looking for the Germans who are sinking America's ships off the coast and fishermen who are trading goods.", "Pirates of the Coast Pirates of the Coast (, also known as \"Pirates of the Barbary Coast\") is a 1960 Italian adventure film directed by Domenico Paolella.", "Swashbuckler (film) Swashbuckler is a American romantic adventure film. The film is based on the story \"The Scarlet Buccaneer\", written by Paul Wheeler and adapted for the screen by Jeffrey Bloom. It was directed by James Goldstone and was rated PG. The film was released in the UK as The Scarlet Buccaneer. In Jamaica in 1718, a band of pirates led by Captain \"Red\" Ned Lynch oppose the greedy acting Governor, the evil Lord Durant. Durant has ruthlessly imprisoned his Lord High Justice (taking over the role himself) and mercilessly evicted the judge's wife and daughter. The daughter, Jane Barnet, attempts to assassinate Durant by paying Lynch to ambush him at the port. The ambush fails, resulting in Jane and three of Lynch's crew being captured and sentenced to death. The other prisoners, including the judge, are also awaiting execution. Lynch returns to the island and joins forces with the local inhabitants to overthrow the military forces and return everything Durant has stolen to its rightful owners. In the process Durant is killed by Lynch and all the prisoners are released. Pirate films had gone out of fashion with major Hollywood studios since the 1950s, due in part to high cost. The success of \"The Three Musketeers\" (1973) showed there was still an appetite for swashbucklers, so original producer Eliot Kastner prepared a pirate script where most of the action took place on shore. \"It was prepared to avoid all the hazards of filming on water and it could have been inexpensively made\", said co-producer Jennings Lang. \"But we decided that it would be cheating the public to do a pirate movie without boats, that would not be using the basic material.\" The film was shot in Mexico and on the galleon \"Golden Hinde\", a replica of the \"Golden Hind\" captained by English privateer, Francis Drake from 1577 to 1580, which had been moored in San Francisco harbor after a five-month journey to California from England. According to the Special Feature section of the DVD, it was the only pirate movie filmed aboard an actual ship of that era. \"I just hope the audience doesn't think its too small\", said Goldstone during production about the ship. \"All those Errol Flynn movies—the captain's table was 17 feet long. There are parts of our ship that aren't even that wide.", "Virtuous Liars Virtuous Liars is a 1924 American silent drama film directed by Whitman Bennett and starring David Powell, Maurice Costello and Dagmar Godowsky. A man abandons his wife and child and goes to live in Havana with another woman. His wife makes a success of herself, but he then returns and attempts to blackmail her.", "What Scoundrels Men Are! What Scoundrels Men Are! () is a 1932 Italian comedy film directed by Mario Camerini. The film was a great success, De Sica and Lia Franca became stars and the song \"Parlami d'amore Mariù\" was a hit. Rare in Italian film history, it was filmed on real Milan locations, nowadays it is a sort of documentary on what Milan was like in the 1930s. It was produced by Cines with film sets designed by the art director Gastone Medin. The film was remade in 1953 by Glauco Pellegrini.", "Barbary Pirate (film) Barbary Pirate is a 1949 American adventure film directed by Lew Landers and starring Donald Woods and Trudy Marshall. Major Tom Blake of the United States Army is assigned by the first United States Secretary of State - Thomas Jefferson to go undercover and discover who has been attacking American merchant ships after the American Revolutionary War has come to an end. Blake, calling himself \"Brighton,\" boards a vessel and alienates two patriotic passengers, Anne Ridgeway and her brother Sam, who believe he possesses disloyal pro-British sentiments. Men who serve Yusof, the Bey of Tripoli, of the Barbary states in North Africa are behind the raids at sea. Blake ingratiates himself by saving the Bey from an assassin's attack, then locates the knife thrower, Zoltah, and confides his true identity to her. To his surprise, Anne is taken captive by the Bey and offered to him as a personal servant, a reward for his heroism. Blake privately reassures Anne he will not take advantage of the situation. Jefferson is later elected third President of the United States in 1800 and sends a second agent, Tobias Sharpe, to the scene, unaware that Sharpe is a traitor. Blake is captured and sentenced to death, but escapes in time to take part in a battle that eliminates the threat to America, winning the admiration and affection of Anne. Writers Jack Pollexen and Aubrey Wisenberg later sued Katzman for $100,000 on the grounds of plagiarism, saying the film was based on a script they had submitted to him in 1948 called \"Pirate and the Slave Girl\".", "The Sea Hawk (1924 film) The Sea Hawk is a 1924 American silent adventure film about an English noble sold into slavery who escapes and turns himself into a pirate king. Directed by Frank Lloyd, the screen adaptation was written by J. G. Hawks based upon the 1915 Rafael Sabatini novel of the same name. It premiered on June 2, 1924, in New York City, twelve days before its theatrical debut. At the instigation of his half brother Lionel (Lloyd Hughes), Oliver Tressilian (Milton Sills), a wealthy baronet, is shanghaied and blamed for the death of Peter Godolphin (Wallace MacDonald), brother of Oliver's fiancée, whom Lionel actually has slain. At sea Oliver is captured by Spaniards and made a galley slave, but when he escapes to the Moors he becomes Sakr-el-Bahr, the scourge of Christendom. Learning of Rosamund's (Enid Bennett) impending marriage to his half brother, he kidnaps both of them, but to avoid the risk of giving her to Asad-ed-Din (Frank Currier), the Basha of Algiers, he surrenders to a British ship. Rosamund intercedes to save his life, and following the death of Lionel they are married. Director Frank Lloyd recognized that moviegoers of 1924 would be put off by miniature models, and instructed that full-sized ships be created for use in the film at a cost of $200,000. This was done by outfitting the wooden exteriors of existing craft to the design of Fred Gabourie, known for his work in constructing props used in Buster Keaton films. The ocean scenes were filmed off the coast of California's Catalina Island, with 150 tents set up on the island for housing and support of the film's 1,000 extras, 21 technicians, 14 actors, and 64 sailors. A movie with the same title (but an entirely different plot) was released in 1940, starring Errol Flynn. The studio used some key scenes from battles in the 1924 film. They spliced the scenes into the 1940 film, thinking they could not have been done better. The life-sized replicas were considered so well recreated, that Warner Bros. repeatedly used them in later nautical films.", "The Swindler (film) The Swindler is a 1919 British silent drama film directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Cecil Humphreys, Marjorie Hume and Neville Percy. It was based on a short story by Ethel M. Dell.", "The Virtuous Bigamist The Virtuous Bigamist (, ) is a 1956 French-Italian comedy drama film directed by Mario Soldati. It is a remake of Alessandro Blasetti's \"Four Steps in the Clouds\"." ]
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[ "Barbary Coast Gent" ]
Are the directors of both films Night Terrors (Film) and Anhonee (1973 Film) from the same country?
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Anhonee (1973 film) Anhonee is a 1973 Bollywood suspense drama film directed by Ravi Tandon. It stars Sanjeev Kumar, Leena Chandavarkar, Bindu, Padma Khanna and Kamini Kaushal. Laxmikant-Pyarelal provided the music for the film. This is considered one of the best crime thriller film made in Bollywood. After the tragic death of her dad, Dr. Rekha continues to live with her step-mother in Bombay, where she runs a mental institution. While traveling by train one night, they are accosted by a knife-wielding escaped mental patient, Sunil, whose aggression is calmed by Rekha. She gets him admitted into her hospital where he is put under observation and treatment at the hands of Dr. Mathur and herself. He soon starts responding positively under their care, and is on his way to recovery. Once, he saves Rekha from being molested in a parking lot, and this sparks romance between the two. At first Rekha is reluctant to marry Sunil due to a secret which she cannot reveal. After great persistence from Sunil, she reveals that she killed her father by accident when he was trying to have sex with her thinking that she was her stepmother. But she still doesn't understand why didn't he stop when she shrieked out after identifying her voice ; she probably thinks that as he was drunk he might have had the difficulty. It is then revealed that Sunil is not as he pretends to be; He is a well respected Police Inspector trying to find the mystery of Mr.Rai Bahadur's death. All is set for the two to get engaged at a lavish party. It is at this party that Rekha will find out that Sunil who he is and tries to get away from him. Laxmikant-Pyarelal composed the songs on lyrics by Verma Malik.
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[ "Anolkhi Anolkhi is a Marathi movie released on 17 March 1973. The movie was produced and directed by Kamlakar Torne. The music has been directed by Sudhir Phadke.", "O Anjo da Noite O Anjo da Noite (English: \"The Angel of the Night\") is a 1974 Brazilian film directed by Walter Hugo Khouri and starring Selma Egrei and Eliezer Gomes. Gramado Film Festival São Paulo Association of Art Critics Awards", "House of Terror (1973 film) House of Terror is a suspense film involving deception and a murder plot. It was directed by Sergei Goncharoff, and which starred Jennifer Bishop, Arell Blanton, Jacquelyn Hyde and William Kerwin. It was nominated in 1973 for a Saturn Award for Best Horror Film. Directed by Sergei Goncharoff, this film was released around 1972/1973. Jennifer Bishop plays Jennifer Andrews, a nurse who is hired to look after a man's unstable and ill wife. Nurse Andrews has an ex-con former boyfriend who is after the woman's money. After the woman dies, Nurse Andrews marries the dead woman's husband. The ex-con boyfriend has plans to get hold of the money. After the woman's death the nurse and her boyfriend search for the dead woman's money but something isn't quite right, and it may be after them. The film was released VHS byTrans World Entertainment (TWE). It also appears to have had Beta release around 1987. It was released on DVD by Retro Media in 2012 The film is also known as \"The Five at the Funeral\", and has been screened in U.S. cinemas under that title. Another title is \"Scream Bloody Murder\". Director Sergei Goncharoff was also the producer of the 1985 film \"Walking the Edge\" which starred Robert Forster. The art direction for the film was by Phedon Papamichael, Sr. whose son is Phedon Papamichael.", "Anhoniyon Ka Andhera Anhoniyon Ka Andhera is an Indian television horror series that premiered on 26 February 2011 on Colors. It ended on 9 July 2011. The series is produced by Bollywood film producer Vikram Bhatt, and each story of the show revolves around Anahita Malik, a girl who has supernatural powers. Vikram Bhatt film Haunted 3D stars Mahaakshay Chakraborty and Tia Bajpai also made their appearance on 30 April 2011 to promote their film.", "Anuraag (1972 film) Anuraag is a 1972 Indian Hindi-language drama film, directed by Shakti Samanta. The film stars Moushumi Chatterjee in her debut as a heroine and Vinod Mehra in lead roles. The Shakti Samanta fixture Rajesh Khanna, having earlier made \"Aradhana\" (1969) and \"Kati Patang\" with Samanta, makes a special appearance. The music is by S. D. Burman. Initially, Shakti Samanta was thinking whether to make this film or not as he was not sure if the distributors would buy a film with such a story line and had shared the idea with Rajesh Khanna, who encouraged Samanta and volunteered to make an extended appearance for the film, and also distributed the film under the banner \"Shakti-Raj\" (indicating Shakti Samanta and Rajesh Khanna). The film became a semi-hit, while doing extremely well in big cities. and won the Filmfare Best Movie Award for the year. It was later remade into the Telugu film \"Anuraagaalu\" (1975) with Sridevi in her first leading role. A. Bhimsingh also remade it in Malayalam as \"Raagam\" (1975). It was also remade in Tamil as \"Neela Malargal\" (1979), and in Kannada as \"Chiranjeevi\", with Manjula and Srinath. A blind sculptor, Shivani (Moushumi Chatterjee) stays in an ashram and makes friends with a young boy (Satyajit), who is suffering from cancer. She falls in love with Rajesh (Vinod Mehra). Rajesh asks his parents to permit him to marry her, to which his mother agrees, but his father refuses. Then, an eye specialist reveals that an eye replacement would cure her. Later, as a dying wish, the young boy donates his eyes to her. The soundtrack of the film contains 5 songs. The music is composed by S.D. Burman, with lyrics by Anand Bakshi Won Nominated", "Harrikrisna Anenden Harrikrisna Anenden (born 1947) is a Mauritian film director. Anenden was born in Mauritius in 1947. He began taking photographs at age 12 and later moved to London to study medical photography. He graduated from the London Film School and studied film criticism at the University of London. Anenden has worked as a photographer and lab technician for several employers including the University of Mauritius. In 1980, he made his film debut with \"L’Argile et la Flamme\". For many years, Anenden has worked for the World Health Organization (WHO). He has directed several documentaries for the WHO, including \"Blood, the Gift of Life\" in 1999 and \"Facing Up to AIDS\" in 2000. Anenden directed \"La Cathédrale\" in 2006. The film follows Lina, a young woman in the capital city of Port Louis who meets a photographer enamored with her. However, she rejects him on the steps of a Catholic cathedral. \"Cinema Escapist\" named it the best Mauritian film. Anenden chose to film Lina's house at his childhood home. In 2012, Anenden co-directed \"Les enfants de Troumaron\" alongside his son Sharvan Anenden. It follows the lives of four adolescent Mauritians as they struggle to survive in one of the poorest areas on the island, with little more than violence and prostitution. \"Les enfants de Troumaron\" examines themes of the wealth disparity and communication problems. The film received the award for Best Film at the 2014 African Movie Academy Awards, and he earned the Best Director award. It was also named Best Film at the Panafrican Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou (FESPACO). Anenden lives in Ferney-Voltaire, France, on the Swiss border. He is married to the Mauritian writer Ananda Devi.", "Anweshanam Anweshanam is a 1972 Indian Malayalam-language mystery-thriller drama film, directed by J. Sasikumar. The film stars Prem Nazir, Sharada, Kaviyoor Ponnamma and Adoor Bhasi in the lead roles. The film had musical score by M. K. Arjunan. The music was composed by M. K. Arjunan and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi.", "Terror (1977 film) Terror is a 1977 Danish crime film directed by Gert Fredholm and starring Bo Løvetand.", "Strange Behavior Strange Behavior (also known as Dead Kids) is a 1981 slasher film written and directed by Michael Laughlin, co-written with Bill Condon, and starring Michael Murphy, Louise Fletcher, and Dan Shor. Its plot follows a series of bizarre murders being perpetrated against teenagers in a small Midwestern town. An international co-production between the United States, New Zealand, and Australia, the film was intended as the first installment of the \"Strange Trilogy\" which was cancelled after the second installment, \"Strange Invaders\", failed to attract a large enough audience. It is a homage to the pulp horror films of the 1950s. The film is considered a seminal work of New Zealand cinema, being the first horror film produced in the country. It has since attracted a large cult following. While not prosecuted for obscenity, the film was seized and confiscated in the UK under Section 3 of the Obscene Publications Act 1959 during the video nasty panic. Bryan, the son of the Galesburg, Illinois mayor, is brutally murdered in his home, his body later found stuffed and posed as a scarecrow. Local policeman John Brady begins investigating the murder. Meanwhile, John's son Pete, a high school senior, sits in on a course at Galesburg University with his friend, Oliver. During the course, professor Gwen Parkinson screens a lecture by her late mentor, Dr. Le Sange, whom Pete's late mother, Catherine, once worked for. After the lecture, Pete agrees to become one of Gwen's test subjects in order to earn money for his college applications. Later, Pete attends a house party. During the party, one of his classmates, Waldo, is stabbed to death outside by a masked assailant, and Waldo's girlfriend Lucy is attacked and falls into the swimming pool. Pete and several others rush to save her, and the masked attacker flees; in the distance, he removes his mask, revealing himself to be Oliver. John subsequently questions Oliver, who says he cannot recall the events of the party as he was drunk. Medical examiners observe that Waldo's corpse has a bizarre surgical incision near his eye, and, upon scrutinizing the evidence, John concludes that two different people are responsible for the murders of Waldo and Bryan. Meanwhile, Pete attends one of Gwen's studies at a large laboratory, which hosts both human and animal tests. Gwen has Pete swallow a pill and repeat several words before dismissing him.", "Anon (film) Anon is a 2018 British-American science fiction thriller film written and directed by Andrew Niccol, and financed by Sky Cinema Original Films. The film stars Clive Owen and Amanda Seyfried, with Colm Feore, Mark O'Brien, Sonya Walger, Joe Pingue, and Iddo Goldberg appearing in supporting roles. Set in a futuristic world where privacy and anonymity no longer exist, the plot follows a troubled detective (Owen) who comes across a young woman (Seyfried) who has evaded the government's transparency system. The film was released internationally as a \"Netflix Original\" on the streaming service, from 4 May 2018, whilst in the United Kingdom and Ireland, the film was released in cinemas by Altitude Film Distribution and through on-demand by Sky Cinema on 11 May 2018. In the near future, humanity lives in a technologically advanced, dystopian society. The government requires that everyone receive an ocular implant that records everything they see. The implant provides an augmented-reality heads-up display to the user with information about anyone and anything they may see, as well as recording the user's view. Investigations into crimes amount to detectives reviewing video and assessing whether an alleged perpetrator is innocent or guilty. Sal Friedland (Owen), a detective with the metropolitan police force, crosses paths with a young woman (Seyfried) who appears to trigger a glitch in his ocular implant, as no data about her is retrieved. When he reviews his own record of that day, he finds that every single frame of her has been mysteriously deleted. At work, Sal is handed several homicide cases where the victims' own visual records of their deaths are replaced with the killer's point of view, thus hiding the killer's identity. At another murder scene, Sal chases the apparent killer only to nearly be killed when they hack his implant and change what he sees in real time. It is discovered that all the victims hired someone with the expertise to delete pieces of their visual records that were either humiliating or incriminating. The detectives determine that the unknown woman Sal encountered earlier has the ability to manipulate the system in this way, making her their primary suspect. Sal goes undercover, creating a false history as a stockbroker who engages in a brief affair with a prostitute. Using this as the pretext for her services, he makes contact with the woman - who uses the handle 'Anon' - and asks to have his encounter with the prostitute deleted." ]
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[ "no" ]
Which film was released more recently, Gautam Govinda or Danur 2: Maddah?
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Gautam Govinda Gautam-Govinda is a 1979 Indian Hindi-language film made by Subhash Ghai.
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[ "Govinda (actor) Govind Arun Ahuja (born 21 December 1963), known mononymously as Govinda, is an Indian actor, comedian, dancer, and former politician who is known for his work in Hindi-language films. Govinda is well known for his slapstick performances and dancing skills. As such, Govinda has received 12 Filmfare Award nominations and won two Filmfare Special Awards and a Filmfare Award for Best Comedian. Govinda's first film was 1986's \"Ilzaam\", and has appeared in over 165 Hindi films since. In June 1999, he was voted the tenth-greatest star of stage or screen in last thousand years by BBC News Online poll. Starting out as an action and dancing hero in the 1980s, his earlier box-office hits include \"Ilzaam\" (1986), \"Love 86\" (1986), \"Hatya\" (1988), \"Jeete Hain Shaan Se\" (1988), \"Do Qaidi\" (1989), and \"Hum\" (1991). However, Govinda would go on to reinvent himself as a comedy hero in the 1990s after his role as a mischievous young NCC cadet in the 1992 romance \"Shola Aur Shabnam\". Following his comedy debut, Govinda had lead roles in several commercially successful comedy films, including \"Aankhen\" (1993), \"Raja Babu\" (1994), \"Coolie No. 1\" (1995), \"Andolan\" (1995), \"Hero No. 1\" (1997), \"Deewana Mastana\" (1997), \"Dulhe Raja\" (1998), \"Bade Miyan Chote Miyan\" (1998), \"Anari No.1\" (1999) and \"Jodi No. 1\" (2001). He would also receive a Filmfare Award for Best Comedian for \"Haseena Maan Jayegi\" (1999) and a Filmfare Special Award for \"Saajan Chale Sasural\" (1996). In the 2000 film \"Hadh Kar Di Aapne\", he played six roles: Raju and his mother, father, sister, grandmother and grandfather.", "Madipu Madipu is a 2017 Indian Tulu film directed by Chethan Mundadi. Highlighting the futility of the orthodox traditions practiced in the region of Tulu Nadu, the film focuses on Bhootaradhane, a practice of worshipping and appeasing demigods; Buta Kola; and relations between the Hindus and Muslims in the region. The plot revolves around the trouble with depression the protagonist goes through as he steps out of the said practises that he had previously been observing. The film stars Sardar Sathya, M. K. Matta, Seetha Kote and Sujatha Shetty in the lead roles. It was produced by Sandeep Kumar Nandalike under the banner Astha Productions. Music for the film was composed by V. Manohar. The film was selected to be screened at the 9th Bengaluru International Film Festival in February 2017. Upon theatrical release in March, it was received well by critics and audiences alike. At the 64th National Film Awards, it was awarded the Best Feature Film in Tulu under the category of Best Feature Film in Each of the Language Other Than Those Specified In the Schedule VIII of the Constitution. At the 2016 Karnataka State Film Awards, it was named the Best Regional Film.", "Damaru Ko Dandibiyo Damaru Ko Dandibiyo is 2018 Nepalese drama sport film directed by Chhetan Gurung, and written by Khagendra Lamichhane. The film is produced by Binod Gurung, and Norbu Tshering Ghale under the banner of Sambridhi Entertainment. The film stars Khagendra Lamichhane, Anup Baral, Menuka Pradhan, Budhhi Tamang, Ankeet Khadka, Aashant Sharma and Laxmi Bardewa in the lead roles. Damaru (Khagendra Lamichhane) comes to his village to revive the old forgotten sport Dandi Biyo. His father Yogendra (Anup Baral), a former Dandi Biyo player opposes the idea of reviving the game.", "Bhai Thakur (film) Bhai Thakur is a 2000 Bollywood film starring Dharmendra, Shakti Kapoor, Dinesh Hingoo, Shiva Rindani and Joginder. Wealthy Thakur Gajendra Singh lives in a village. He marries Janki, sister of another Thakur Diwan and Ranjit Singh, but Janki is not happy in this arranged marriage because Gajendra is an illiterate person. Later, Janki leaves him and goes missing. Gajendra searches for her, but fails and learns that she is dead. Gajendra then starts to live an indifferent life and helps poor villagers.", "Geetha Govindam Geetha Govindam is a 2018 Indian Telugu-language romantic comedy film written and directed by Parasuram. It is produced by Bunny Vas under GA2 Pictures. The film stars Vijay Devarakonda and Rashmika Mandanna, while Subbaraju, Rahul Ramakrishna, and Nagendra Babu play supporting roles. Released on 15 August 2018, the film is a huge commercial success. Though critics felt that it was a \"tried and tested story,\" the film received praise for its direction, performances, and production values. Vijay meets Nithya on the road at night, where he is sitting alone and sad. Nithya's car breaks down and she asks him for help, he says only if she gives him alcohol and if she will listen to his story. Seeing him as a non-alcoholic, she asks if it is a love story. To which he tells her his story. During a visit to a temple, Vijay comes to know that the decorations were all done by a girl named Geetha. He discovers that the girl is unmarried and is immediately attracted to her. Before he can pursue her, he comes to know that his sister engagement is fixed and leaves for his town Kakinada. Coincidentally, Geetha's is his co-passenger on the bus, occupying the window seat beside him. During this time Ramakrishna calls him and encourages him to kiss her and misbehave with her. Originally he refuses to do so but amidst imitation he tries take a selfie with Geetha, who was sleeping, and accidentally kisses her. She wakes up and feels violated, and slaps Vijay. Vijay keeps apologizing profusely and tries to explain Geetha. But however, she does not listen to him and calls her brother to tell him about the incident. Geetha's brother Phaneendra, after knowing about misbehavior done with Geetha, gets ready with his henchmen at Kakinada station to kill the boy, in front of the temple. Phaneendra is accompanied by police officer Ravi. Vijay freaks out and in a fight with Geetha and jumps off from the bus. When he comes home, he is shocked to find that his sister Sirisha is engaged to Phaneendra, Geetha's brother.", " Following his comedy debut, Govinda had lead roles in several commercially successful comedy films, including \"Aankhen\" (1993), \"Raja Babu\" (1994), \"Coolie No. 1\" (1995), \"Andolan\" (1995), \"Hero No. 1\" (1997), \"Deewana Mastana\" (1997), \"Dulhe Raja\" (1998), \"Bade Miyan Chote Miyan\" (1998), \"Anari No.1\" (1999) and \"Jodi No. 1\" (2001). He would also receive a Filmfare Award for Best Comedian for \"Haseena Maan Jayegi\" (1999) and a Filmfare Special Award for \"Saajan Chale Sasural\" (1996). In the 2000 film \"Hadh Kar Di Aapne\", he played six roles: Raju and his mother, father, sister, grandmother and grandfather. After a series of several unsuccessful films in the 2000s, his later commercial successes include \"Bhagam Bhag\" (2006), \"Partner\" (2007), and \"\" (2014). In 2015, Govinda became a judge on Season 2 of Zee TV's dance-contest program, \"Dance India Dance Super Moms\". The show received the highest TRP of any reality-show opening episode. Govinda was a member of the Parliament of India from 2004 to 2009. As part of the Indian National Congress, he was elected the 7th member of parliament for the Mumbai North constituency of Maharashtra, India in the 14th Lok Sabha elections in 2004, defeating Ram Naik of the Bharatiya Janata Party. He is currently working on a famous and popular Bengali show on Zee Bangla Dance Bangla Dance 2021, Season 11 as Judge which started airing on 22 May 2021. Govinda was born on 21 December 1963 to former actor Aroon (alias Arun Kumar Ahuja) and singer-actress Nirmala Devi. Govinda's mother hailed from Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh. Aroon came to Mumbai from Gujranwala, Punjab which is now in Punjab, Pakistan, to become an actor in the late 1930s. He is best known for appearing in Mehboob Khan's \"Aurat\" (1940).", "Danur Danur (English: Danur: I Can See Ghosts) is a 2017 Indonesian horror film directed by Awi Suryadi and written by Lele Laila, starring Prilly Latuconsina, Shareefa Daanish, Wesley Andrew in lead roles. The film story is adapted from a novel written by Risa Saraswati-based friendship between ghosts and humans. It is the highest-grossing Indonesian horror movie at the time, and has led to two sequels, \"\" and \"\".Two spin-offs are also released Asih (2018) and Asih 2 (2020). Risa Saraswati is a girl who lives with her rich and busy mother Elly, who works as a teacher. Her father, meanwhile, works overseas, and only visits once every six months. She is displayed as an introvert due to the miserable broken home she lives in. Her mother did not celebrate her eighth birthday, thus she celebrates it herself, wishing new friends to end her lonely state of her childhood. Suddenly, she hears a boy singing \"Boneka Abdi\", a Sundanese song that is claimed to be invitation for ghosts. She then sees a group of Indonesian-speaking Dutch kids: Peter, Janshen, William, and Hans. The kids, apparitions of their living selves who died during the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies, can only be seen by Risa. Upon request by Elly, the shamanist Asep explains to Risa that her ability is due to another ability on being able to smell \"danur\", odor of the dead. Gaslighted, she sees the kids in their dead forms, scaring her and prompting her to forget about them. 17-year-old Risa goes back to her childhood house with her little sister Riri and cousin Andri, assigned by Elly, now overseas, to take care of her dying grandma until a nurse arrives. Whilst playing around the house, Riri discovers a ficus tree once warned to Risa by the kids to never approach it. That night, nurse Asih arrives at the house, and Risa started feeling suspicious towards her, especially of the fact that she can get along with Riri instantly. Andri says that he is unable to see Asih, concluding that Asih is a ghost. Amidst a supernatural sabotage, Asih kidnaps Riri, as well as attacking Risa's grandma and Andri, knocking them unconscious.", "Danda Gopuram Danda Gopuram is a 1981 Indian Malayalam film, directed by P. Chandrakumar. The film stars Madhu, Srividya, Sukumaran and Bahadoor in the lead roles. The film has musical score by Shyam. The music was composed by Shyam and the lyrics were written by Sathyan Anthikkad.", "Gaddaar (1995 film) Gaddaar is a 1995 Indian Bollywood action drama film directed by Deepak Sareen and produced by Sunanda R. Shetty. It stars Sunil Shetty, Sonali Bendre and Harish Kumar in pivotal roles. The story is about two close friends who have studied together and spent a lot of time with each other. The real drama stars when the two fall in love with the same girl. Soundtrack released on 1994", "Mukesh Gautam Mukesh Gautam is an Indian film director and works predominantly in Punjabi-language films. He is known for his movies \"Ek Noor\" (2011) and \"Akhiyaan Udeekdian\" (2009). He is also the father of Bollywood actress Yami Gautam and Surilie Gautam. He is currently the vice president of the PTC Punjabi network which he acquired in 2008. He is father of Yami Gautam and Surilie Gautam. He has created docudramas on the life and contributions of Baba Sheikh Farid, Baba Bulleh Shah, Waris Shah, noted Punjabi singers Bibi Surinder Kaur, Kuldeep Manak, Ustad Puran Shahkoti, humourist K Deep, singer Gurmeet Bawa, Surjit Bindrakhia, Sarabjit Kokewali, Sartaj etc. He received a national award from the radio and television fraternity for an outstanding film about Sayyed Waris Shah. Apart from that, he has created around 50 short features on art, culture, history, traditions, rituals and personalities of Punjab. Noteworthy among those are \"Origin of Chandigarh\", \"Gurudwara\", \"Tradition of Langar\", \"Punj Kakaar\", \"Ma Boli\", \"Chhaju Da Chaubara\", \"Dhabas on GT Road\", \"Making of Gur\", and noted writer Amrita Pritam.Recently, he has done short films, based on 'Shaheed Bhagat Singh's Memoires' and 'Faquir Badshah', on the life of Dr Charan Das Sidhu, a legendary figure in Punjabi theatre and literature. Currently, he is working on two feature films titled 'Shubh Karman' and 'Amazing Rano', which are based on social life & values and sports respectively." ]
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[ "Danur 2: Maddah" ]
What nationality is the performer of song Orange Sky (Song)?
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Orange Colored Sky "Orange Colored Sky" is a popular song, written by Milton Delugg and Willie Stein and published in 1950. The first known recording was on July 11, 1950, on KING records catalog number 15061, with Janet Brace singing and Milton Delugg conducting the orchestra. The best-known version of the song was recorded by Nat King Cole (with Stan Kenton's orchestra), was recorded on August 16, 1950, and released by Capitol Records as catalog number 1184. It first reached the "Billboard" Best Seller chart on September 22, 1950, and lasted 13 weeks on the chart, peaking at number 11. (Some sites list a 1945 date for this recording, but this is apparently in error.) but a number of other singers have recorded it, including Cole's daughter, Natalie.
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[ "Sky (Canadian band) Sky was a Canadian R&B-influenced pop rock group from Montreal, Quebec. The duo originally consisted of James Renald (1971 - 2018) and Antoine Sicotte (1972 - ), son of actor Gilbert Sicotte. Both were songwriters, producers and multi-instrumentalists, who met in 1992 at a music engineering school in Montreal. Anastasia (2000–2003) replaced James as the lead singer after he left, and Karl Wolf (2003–2005) was the last lead singer of the group. Their first EP was released on their own Phat Royale label in 1997. Managed by Lee Brown, both members co-wrote, co-produced and co-played every instrument on that record. Quebec radio stations began playing their music and eventually 43 stations in that province had added their songs to their playlists. Canada’s MusiquePlus, the French equivalent to English-language MuchMusic, began playing the video for their song \"America\". In February 1998, Sky signed a major-label record deal with EMI Music Canada. With the recording sessions for their upcoming major-label debut, two world-famous producers, Peter Mokran (Maxwell, R. Kelly, Michael Jackson) and Euro-Syndicate Productions, were brought in for two recording sessions at Gallery Studios in New York and Metalworks Studios in Mississauga, Ontario. Legendary guitar player Wah-Wah Watson was featured as a guest performer as well. \"Piece of Paradise\", the duo’s major-label debut, was launched in 1999. The album debuted at number 6 on the Canadian album charts and reached platinum status in Canada. The group’s debut single, \"Some Kinda Wonderful\", was released in 1998, gained international success, hitting number 4 on the Canadian Singles Chart and number 1 in Thailand. The group’s follow-up single \"Love Song\" was also a major hit in Canada reaching number 1 on the Canadian Singles Chart, but achieved mediocre success in the U.S. This was followed by the next single \"Push\" and finally \"All I Want\". Sky then signed a major deal with Arista Records in the U.S., United Kingdom and Japan. The label released a reworked version of \"Piece of Paradise\" on June 29, 1999, with two additional tracks, \"Strange\" and \"Dreamin'\".", "Oyunaa D. Oyuntulhuur (, born 10 November 1975) better known by the stage name Oyunaa (), is a Mongolian singer based in Japan. Oyunaa won the Grand Prix at the World Children's Music Festival in Tokyo in 1989. In 1996, Oyunaa returned to Ulaanbaatar to play a benefit concert at the Central Cultural Palace, raising more than $70,000 for homeless children, single parents, low-income families, and spring fire and flood victims.", "I'll Be in the Sky \"I'll Be in the Sky\" is a song by American hip hop recording artist B.o.B. The song, produced by B.o.B himself, was originally included on his fourth mixtape \"Who the F#*k Is B.o.B?\" (2008) and was later featured as a bonus track on the European edition and the Japanese edition of his debut album \"\" (2010). The song was initially released for digital download in the United States, on October 21, 2008 and was later serviced as the sixth single from his debut album in the United Kingdom, on January 31, 2011. A music video for the song was released by AtlanticVideos, on October 2, 2009. The video was shot in Los Angeles. The video begins on planet earth where the camera zooms in at a hotel where B.o.B and other party people (this was related to Magic) partying inside the hotel. The next scene shifts in on a beach where a group of girls are lying down in the sand with their bikinis on and B.o.B raps his verse while walking and passing other girls. Then, the final scene shows B.o.B and Jack Johnson competing in a surf contest to see who will win. At the end of the video, B.o.B falls off the board and the woman (played by Keri Hilson) rescues him (reminiscent of Pamela Anderson) and kisses him on the cheek and the camera zooms out to Earth. \"I'll Be in the Sky\" first appeared on the UK Singles Chart at number 84 on 16 January 2011. The following week, the single rose 15 places to number 69; before falling 6 places to number 75 on 30 January. The single also made an appearance on the R&B chart, managing to reach a peak of number 23 on 23 January. On 14 January, the single debuted on the Irish Singles Chart at number 47, before climbing 19 places to number 28 the following week. The single continued to rise, reaching a current peak of number 24 on 4 February.", "L'Orange (song) \"L'Orange\" is a 1964 song recorded by French singer and songwriter Gilbert Bécaud. It was covered in 2003 by the contestants of the French third version of the TV reality show Star Academy, and achieved a great success in France and Belgium (Wallonia), where it topped the chart for several weeks. As of August 2014, the song was the 20th best-selling single of the 21st century in France, with 560,000 units sold. In January 2004, thanks to the cover version, the original one by Gilbert Bécaud was charted for five weeks on the French Singles Chart, but peaked only at #89. The B-side of the CD single is \"Wot!\", a cover version of Captain Sensible's 1980s hit. In the video, the participants of the Star Academy 3 perform the song in a market, and Michal, the finalist, is accused of having robbed an orange.", "O'Chi Brown O'Chi Brown is an English singer and songwriter born in Tottenham, London, England. She scored two hits on the Dance Club Songs, the most successful being \"Whenever You Need Somebody,\" which hit number one in 1986. Despite strong demand, the song's further progress on the US charts was thwarted when stocks of the record ran out. The song's producers (Stock Aitken Waterman) would recycle the song for English singer Rick Astley a year later, and it would be the title of his debut studio album on PWL.", "Iron Sky (song) \"Iron Sky\" is a rock song by Scottish singer/songwriter Paolo Nutini from his third studio album \"Caustic Love\", which was released in April 2014. The song was released as a single on Atlantic Records in August 2014. The song was a minor hit in the UK charts in the spring of 2014, reaching number 42 in April of that year, ahead of its official single release. The song was described as being a \"slow burner.\" The Independent described it as being a \"stirring blend of conscious-soul subject with deep-soul style\" and compared the song to being, \"like Percy Sledge singing Curtis Mayfield.\". The song features an audio excerpt of the famous speech Charlie Chaplin gave in his film \"The Great Dictator\" (1940). Initially a non-charting single in the Netherlands, the song was revived by radio station 3FM in early 2015 following the Paris shootings at the Charlie Hebdo offices on 7 January 2015. It was rush re-released as a single and only a week later reached number 15 in 3FM's Mega Top 50 chart. The song is also sampled in Bon Iver's song \"33 \"GOD\"\" from their 2016 album \"22, A Million\". The music video was filmed in Kyiv, Ukraine by Daniel Wolfe. It won the best music video award at the 2015 SXSW Film Festival.", "Orange Blossom Orange Blossom is a French band that plays a mix of electronic and world music. The band was formed in Nantes in 1993 with Pierre-Jean Chabot (known as \"PJ Chabot\") on violin and Jean-Christophe Waechter (known as \"Jay C.\") on percussions and vocals. The band is named after a 1920s train immortalised by Ervin Rouse and Chubby Wise's fiddle tune \"Orange Blossom Special.\" In 1994, Éric (organ) joined the band and a first audio tape was recorded in September. In 1995 the band stabilized with the arrival of Carlos Robles Arenas on drums, djembé, and sample, and the departure of Éric. Their first disc, \"Orange Blossom\", came out in 1997 on the Prikosnovénie label, selling 15,000 copies. Before their second album came out, the group was influenced by ethnic and traditional music. They met and collaborated with several non-French artists, like Ivorian percussion group Yelemba D'Abidjan and Egyptian group Ganoub. They toured in Egypt, France, and Belgium. Vocalist Jay C. left the band in 2000 and created Prajña. In 2002, percussionist Mathias Vaguenez and vocalist Leïla Bounous joined the group. The album \"Everything Must Change\" came out in 2005 on the Bonsaï Music label. Carlos Robles Arenas is Mexican. Leïla Bounous is part Algerian, part Breton. She later left and Hend El Rawy from Egypt, joined the band in 2014. Their third album, Under the Shade of Violets came out in 2014. Most of the band's songs are sung in Arabic.", "Sky Wu Sky Wu (born 23 July 1966) is a Taiwanese Mandopop singer. He began singing in 1986, and has won two Golden Melody Awards, best new artist in 1990, and best Mandarin male vocalist in 2004.", "Hoàng Oanh Huỳnh Kim Chi, also known by the stage name Hoàng Oanh (born 6 November 1946), is a Vietnamese singer. Born in Mỹ Tho, she was popular during the 1970s before the Fall of Saigon, then emigrated to the United States. She is still popular among Vietnamese overseas as a singer of traditional music.", "Kiss the Sky (song) \"Kiss the Sky\" is a song by the American singer and songwriter, Jason Derulo from his first greatest hits album, \"Platinum Hits\". It was released as the album's promotional single on July 19, 2016. It was also originally intended to appear on the soundtrack of the 2016 animated film \"Storks\", but did not eventually make it on the album. \"Kiss the Sky\" was written by Thomas Troelsen, Bonnie McKee, Jason Derulo, Madison Love, Michael Caren, and Terius Nash, and it was produced by Thomas Troelsen and . \"Kiss the Sky\" is a pop song with includes funk influences and \"a roving bass line\". On August 5, 2016, Derulo performed \"Kiss the Sky\" on \"The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon\" with The Roots as backing band. The song has appeared in the films \"Night School\", \"Aramburu's Magical Mystery Tour\", \"Storks\", \"\", \"Nine Lives\" and \"\". Credits adapted from Qobuz.com." ]
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[ "British" ]
Do both films See Jack Run and Buena Vista Social Club (Film) have the directors that share the same nationality?
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See Jack Run See Jack Run is a 1992 Australian television film about urban teenagers. Directed by Stephen Amis, it stars Trent Mooney. In Melbourne's western suburbs, seventeen year old Brian Johnson has an inadequate education and a family involved in crime. The film screened at the 1994 Melbourne International Film Festival and was nationally screened in Australia on the Channel Nine network.
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[ "Jack Pollexfen Jack Pollexfen (1908–2003) was an American writer, director and producer. He collaborated with Aubrey Wisberg on several science fiction and monster movies of the 1950s. Before entering the film industry he worked as a journalist.", "Buena Vista, California Buena Vista, California may refer to:", "Jack Dietz Jack Dietz (1901 – 30 January 1969) was an American film producer, notable for his collaboration with Sam Katzman at Monogram Studios. At one stage he operated The Cotton Club in Harlem. In the late 1930s he produced movies of heavyweight fights. In 1943 he was sentenced to seven months jail for evading taxes of $200,237 in 1936 and 1937, money earned from distributing fight films. In 1951 he helped set up Mutual Productions. He died while undergoing open heart surgery.", "Buena Vista Hotel Buena Vista Hotel may refer to:", "Jack Perez Jack Perez is an American film and television director, screenwriter and film professor. He directed the comedy-thriller \"Some Guy Who Kills People\" executive produced by John Landis. He also directed \"Mega Shark Versus Giant Octopus\", whose trailer went viral, and was named by Yahoo! as one of the top 10 trailers of 2009, with more trailer views than \"Avatar\". He lives in California.", "Jo Andres Mary Jo Andres Buscemi (May 21, 1954 – January 6, 2019) was an American filmmaker, choreographer and artist. Andres was born in Wichita, Kansas, on May 21, 1954. She first became known on the kinetic downtown New York performance scene of the 1980s for her film/dance/light performances, shown at the Performing Garage, La Mama Experimental Theater Club P.S. 122, St. Marks Danspace, and the Collective for Living Cinema. As a filmmaker, Andres drew acclaim and awards for the 1996 film \"Black Kites\" which aired on PBS and played several film festivals, including Sundance, Berlin, Toronto, London and Human Rights Watch Film Festivals. Andres directed music and art videos, as well as her own film performance works. Andres was a dance consultant to the acclaimed Wooster Group. She was an artist-in-residence at leading universities, museums and art colonies, including Yaddo, and The Rockefeller Study Center in Bellagio, Italy. Andres created a series of cyanotype photographs which can be seen on her website. She married actor Steve Buscemi in 1987; they had one son, Lucian, born in 1990. Andres died at her home in Brooklyn on January 6, 2019, at age 64, from encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis, a rare disease of the bowel. A private memorial service was held on January 8.", "Buena Vista Railroad Buena Vista Railroad may refer to:", "James Jacks James \"Jim\" Jacks (December 29, 1947 – January 20, 2014) was an American film producer of several blockbuster films, and was also known for cultivating visionary independent film auteurs, having produced the first Hollywood films of Richard Linklater, Joel and Ethan Coen, and Kevin Smith. Born December 29, 1947, Jacks grew up in a military family. He graduated from Carnegie Mellon University with a B.S. in Industrial Engineering and from Cornell University with an MBA. He was working as a Wall Street financial analyst when he decided to be a screenwriter. Unsuccessful, he became head of production at Circle Films in the early- to mid-1980s and then senior vice-president of production at Universal Studios from the late-1980s into the early-1990s. In 1992, he became an independent producer with Alphaville Films, which he co-founded with Sean Daniel. He left Alphaville Films in 2004. The shrimp parmigiana at the Los Angeles restaurant Dan Tana's is named for him. Jacks died on January 20, 2014, of a heart attack at his Los Angeles home at the age of 66. \"He was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted.\"", "Jaime Chávarri Jaime Chávarri (born 20 March 1943) is a Spanish film director and screenwriter, best known for his films \"El desencanto\" and \"Las bicicletas son para el verano\". Chávarri comes from a prominent family. His mother María de la Mora y Maura (1907 – Segovia, Sotosalbos, 1 November 2001) was a maternal granddaughter of Antonio Maura. He had already graduated as a lawyer, when he entered the Escuela Oficial de Cine (EOC) in 1968. He abandoned his formal film studies in his second year, moving into film criticism. He wrote for \"Film Ideal\" magazine. His first film industry job was an assistant director to José Luis Borau. while devoting his spare time to make two feature-length films in super 8: \"Run, Blancanieves, Run\" in 1967, and \"Ginebra en los infiernos\" in 1969. He worked with Ivan Zulueta in his series for Spanish television named \"Último grito\" (or \"The Last Cry\"), and subsequently scripted \"Un dos tres... al escondite inglés\" (\"Hide and Seek\") in 1969. Over the next several years, he worked on the technical crew of a number of films and collaborated with Spanish cult film director Jesús Franco on the script for Franco's 1970 opus, \"Vampyros Lesbos\". In 1970, he completed hi first short feature film 'Estado de sitio' (or \"Siege State\"). He also contributed one segment to the collective film, \"Pastel de sangre\" (\"Blood Pie\") in 1971 with Francesc Bellmunt. Chávarri's first feature-length film as a director was \"Los viajes escolares\" (or \"School Trips\") in 1974, a complex autobiographical film that focuses on the ambiance of a dysfunctional family. It was shown at Valladolid International Film Festival and got a mixed reception. Critics recognized the director's talent but criticized the obscure symbolism of the film. Two years later, Chávarri continued the theme of the dysfunctional family with the documentary \"El desencanto\" (or \"The Disenchantment\") in 1976, which portraits the family of the deceased Francoist poet Leopoldo Panero, capturing the visceral relations forged out of the patriarchal tyranny in the poet's three sons and widow.", "Blues Run the Game \"Blues Run the Game\" is a 1965 song by the American singer-songwriter Jackson C. Frank. It was the opening track on his self-titled debut album. Samples of the Jackson C. Frank original appear on the soundtrack of \"This Is Us\", S01E03, \"Kyle,\" and the full song is heard in the 2018 film, \"The Old Man and the Gun\"and in the 7th episode of the second season of \"Britannia\". The song has been performed by various other artists, such as Simon and Garfunkel (on the CD box set \"Old Friends\"), Sandy Denny, Nick Drake (on \"Family Tree\"), John Renbourn and Eddi Reader, and later by Bert Jansch, Counting Crows, John Mayer, Colin Meloy, Robin Pecknold, Headless Heroes, Mark Lanegan, Laura Marling Jack Steadman from Bombay Bicycle Club, Mauricio A. Reyes, Martin Simpson, and Wizz Jones (on Lucky The Man)." ]
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[ "no" ]
Who is the mother of the composer of film Todo Es Mentira?
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Todo es mentira Todo es mentira ("Everything's a Lie") is a 1994 Spanish comedy film written and directed by Álvaro Fernández Armero and starring Penélope Cruz, Coque Malla and Jordi Mollà. It is the first in a series of two films, with "El Juego de la Verdad" ("Truth or Dare") being the last film. Both movies explore the complexities of relationships which include compromise and the unvarnished truth.
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[ "Ernesto Cortázar II Ernesto Cortázar (May 2, 1940August 2, 2004) was a Mexican composer, arranger, and pianist, born in Mexico City and who died in Tampico, Tamaulipas. He was the son of composer, Ernesto Cortázar, founder and president of the . At the age of 13, Ernesto Cortázar lost his parents in a car accident. He finished his musical studies, and at age 17, began his work as a film musician. In 1958, he won the Best Background Music Award for a Latin American film at the International Festival of Cartagena (Colombia), with the melody \"Rio de Sueños\". He scored more than 500 films and managed to become the #1 artist of mp3.com during the years 1999 and 2001, achieving more than 14 million downloads at that time. After living in Los Angeles, California for most of his adult life, he returned to Mexico, settling in Tampico, where he died, the victim of cancer in 2004.", "María Enriqueta Enriqueta García Escoto (c. 1922 – 16 January 1996), known as María Enriqueta, was a Mexican bolero singer. Her dark complexion and great physical beauty earned her the nickname \"La Venus Morena\" (The Swarthy Venus [de Milo]). She was born in Tampico, Tamaulipas, Mexico. Her father, Estanislao García Espinoza, was a founding director of the marching band of the Mexican Navy. Her mother's name was Ángela Escoto. She was most famous in the 1950s when she achieved popularity as a radio performer and was one of RCA Victor Records' best-selling Mexican artists. She also recorded for Musart Records. The noted orchestra conductor Eleazar Martínez was the father of her daughter, Cecilia Martínez García. María Enriqueta lived in Coyoacán with her husband, Roberto Monter Carpio. She died of pneumonia at the age of 74 on 16 January 1996 in Tlalpan, Mexico City. Her remains were cremated at the Panteón Español in Mexico City.", "José Nieto (composer) José Nieto (born March 1, 1942) is a Spanish composer, orchestrator, songwriter, conductor and drum player. He is best known for writing films scores, such as Mad Love (2001), El bosque animado (1987), The Fencing Master (1992), (2003), The Turkish Passion (1994) or (2000). For television he has composed music for the BBC in series like Crusades(1995) or From the Heart of the World (1990), and other international and Spanish series such as Captain James Cook (1988), Armada (1988), Teresa de Jesús (1984) or Los jinetes del alba. He has collaborated in theater with Miguel Narros in \"El burlador de Sevilla\" and \"Salomé\", with María Ruiz in the \"Serrana de la Vera\" and \"The portrait of Dorian Gray\", with José Luis Gómez in \"Bodas que fueron famosas del Pingajo y la Fandanga\" and in \"Life is a Dream\", with Adolfo Marsillach in \"Los locos de Valencia\" and with Josefina Molina in \"No se ser ...\", among others. He also has worked in the field of ballet. Her works in this field include \"Tres Danzas Españolas\", \"Ritmos\", \"Romance de Luna\", \"Don Juan Tenorio\", \"Dualia\" and \"El Corazón de Piedra Verde\", all composed for the National Ballet of Spain. For the Andalusian Dance Company he has composed \"Picasso: Landscapes\" and, on behalf of the Seville Flamenco Biennial of 2012, \"Blood Spell\", based on Macbeth by Shakespeare. Nieto has won 3 times the Film Writers Circle Awards, 6 times the Goya Awards for the best music from the Academia of Sciences and Cinematographic Arts, and the Golden Spike at the 41st Valladolid International Film Week. He is the first composer to obtain the National Prize for Cinematography in Spain (2000). In 2001 he received the award from the Academy of Arts and Sciences of Music for the best soundtrack album of the movie Mad Love (Original Title: \"Juana La Loca\") and for Carmen in 2003. That same year he also received the Max Theater Award for the music of \"El burlador de Sevilla\".", "Claudia Montero Claudia Montero (1962 – 16 January 2021) was an Argentinian composer who lived in Spain for the final twenty years of her life. She won four Latin Grammy Awards over the years 2014, 2016, and 2018, and the award for best classical album in 2018. She died of cancer on 16 January 2021, aged 58. She was composer in residence with the Palau de Musica and the Valencia symphony Orchestra in Spain. The world première of Montero's piano concerto, \"Concierto en Blanco y Negro\", was held in 2017 at the Galway International Arts Festival, with Clare Hammond as soloist.", "Mentiras, el musical Mentiras, el musical, is a 2009 Mexican Jukebox musical based on popular songs from the 1980s written and directed by Jose Manuel Lopez Velarde. It is produced by OCESA, with Federico Gonzalez Compean and Morris Gilbert as Executive Producers. The Musical celebrated 600 shows in November 2010, and a soundtrack has been released in CD and iTunes. Later it was produced the karaoke CD of the shown. It is currently playing in \"Teatro Mexico\" in Mexico City and in a national tour through Mexico. The plot revolves around a funeral in which four women discover they all were romantically involved with the deceased Emmanuel. The funeral is hosted by Emmanuel's sister Manuela, whose face is never revealed as she is hiding under a black cloak. It is stated in Emmanuel's will that one of the women in the funeral was the responsible for his murder, and they should all try to figure it out so the guilty one can be sent to prison and the other ones may receive Emmanuel's Inheritance. The four women start retelling their stories and realize they all had reasons to kill him, but in the end no one was able to do it. They figure out that the will states that anyone in the room might be the murderer and decide to blame Manuela. As Manuela tries to escape, she is captured by the other women and it is revealed she is really Emmanuel in disguise. Emmanuel was getting too anxious trying to hide his relationship with all of them and so decided to fake his own death. The women decide they don't love him any more and leave him all alone. The musical has many references to 1980s pop culture in Mexico, the names of the four protagonists are names of famous singers from the decade, television shows and soap operas from the decade are mentioned as well as popular places. The songs used in the musical are from popular Mexican singers in the 1980s like Yuri, Daniela Romo and Lupita D'Alessio In May 2010, it was confirmed that Mentiras will go on a National Tour, while still playing in Mexico City. On May 26, 2010, it was confirmed that Ricardo Hernández and Mariano Palacios will be playing the role of Emmanuel in Mexico City since Patricio Borghetti will be in the National Tour.", "Mariano Mores Mariano Alberto Martínez (18 February 1918 13 April 2016), known professionally as Mariano Mores, was an Argentine tango composer and pianist. Mariano Martínez was born in the San Telmo section of Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1918. When he was a child, he played classical music on the piano very well. He made his professional debut at the age of 14 at Café Vicente on Corrientes Avenue. Mores took classical music lessons at the D´Andrea conservatoire in Lanús. After a brief spell with the folk group \"La Cuyanita,\" he was hired as conductor and pianist with Roberto Firpo's orchestra. He created the Trio Mores with the sisters Margot and Myrna Mores and began composing music. He will later marry Myrna and adopt her artistic surname as his own. In 1938 he wrote the soundtrack of the film \"Senderos de Santa Fe\" and met showbiz figures such as composer Valdo Sciammarella and playwright Alberto Vaccarezza, who helped him become lead pianist with Francisco Canaro's orchestra in 1939. Mores left this orchestra in 1948 to form his own, which made its debut at the Presidente Alvear Theater. Pianist, composer and conductor, Mariano Mores established himself as one of the leading tango performers. Together with Enrique Santos Discépolo, he authored such classics as \"Uno\" (1943), \"Sin palabras\" (1946) and \"Cafetín de Buenos Aires\" (1948). Mores and José María Contursi wrote \"En esta tarde gris\" (1941), \"Tu piel de jazmín\" (1941), \"Grisel\" (1942) and \"Cristal\" (1944). He co-wrote \"La calesita\" (1953) and \"El patio de la morocha\" (1951) with Cátulo Castillo, \"Una lágrima tuya\" (1949) with Homero Manzi and, \"Cuartito Azul\" (1939) with Mario Battistella. Mariano Mores took part in several musical films together with such stars as Delia Garcés, Osvaldo Miranda, Virginia Luque and Hugo del Carril. He starred in the 1949 films \"Corrientes, calle de ensueños\", and \"La Doctora quiere tangos\" with Mirtha Legrand.", "Coralia López Juana Coralia López Valdés (May 6, 1910 – 1993) was a Cuban pianist, bandleader and composer. Between 1940 and 1956 she directed her own charanga danzonera, being the first woman to direct any such orchestra in Cuba. During her career she composed many popular danzones such as \"Llegó Manolo\", \"El bajo que come chivo\", \"Los jóvenes del agua fria\" and the famous \"Isora Club\", which became a standard in the Latin music repertoire. Juana Coralia López Valdés was born in Havana, Cuba, on May 6, 1910, into a family of musicians. Her father, Pedro López, taught her music since she was child. Soon she was employed as a musician, choosing the piano as her preferred instrument. Her older brother, Orestes, nicknamed \"Macho\", was a multi-instrumentalist playing the bass, cello and piano, while her younger brother Israel, nicknamed \"Cachao\", specialized in the bass. Both Orestes and Israel joined Antonio Arcaño y sus Maravillas in the 1930s. Coralia, started her own orchestra in 1940, and the following year she debuted her composition \"Isora Club\", dedicated to one of the many clubs where she played with her band. It won the 1941 danzón contest organized by Radio Mil Diez. In 1943, the song was recorded by Arcaño, and many other covers would follow over the years, including Cachao's (1958, 1993), Orquesta Aragón's (1960) and Rubén González's (2000). Coralia's charanga featured flutist Edelmiro Pérez, güirist Alfredo Lazo, timbalero Armando Lazo, singer Rubén Cortada, bassist Pepito Seoani, and a violin section with Raúl Valdés, Jesús Lanza, Tomás Reisoto and Enrique Jorrín, who would later join the Maravillas, Orquesta América and in 1951 create the chachachá. Coralia's nephew, bassist Orlando \"Cachaíto\" López (son of Orestes), began his career in her band. Despite their many live performances and original compositions, the group never made a recording before their dissolution in 1956.", "María Teresa Lara María Teresa Lara Aguirre del Pino (Tlatlauquitepec, 1904 – May 23, 1984) was a Mexican lyricist and composer. Lara was a daughter of Joaquín M. Lara and his wife, María Aguirre del Pino. Her aunt was Refugio Aguirre del Pino. Her elder brother was Agustín Lara, who was a songwriter and composer, singer and actor. Her sister-in-law was María Félix, mother of actor Enrique Álvarez Félix, who appeared in many telenovelas. She worked with Agustín on several songs and married Nicanor Guzmán Guerrero (1909 – 1992). Some of Agustín's songs were copyrighted in her name.", "Raúl Lavista Raúl Lavista (31 October 1913 – 19 October 1980) was a Mexican composer of film scores. Lavista worked prolifically during the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, and was credited on more than three hundred different productions. He is the father of the photographer Paulina Lavista.", "Todo mujer Todo mujer is a 2015 Spanish drama film directed by Rafael Gordon and portrayed by Isabel Ordaz, Julia Quintana, Miguel Torres, Arantxa de Juan and Alfonso Arranz. It receives 14 chosen candidates." ]
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[ "Amparo Valle" ]
Do Yaman Okay and Mike Fiers have the same nationality?
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Yaman Yaman may refer to:
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[ "Michael Yarus Michael Yarus is an American biologist and an Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.", "Yamané Yamané may refer to:", "Michael Noer Michael Noer may refer to:", "Mike Miles Mike Miles may refer to:", "Mike Fellows Mike Fellows may refer to:", "Mike Powers Mike or Michael Powers may refer to:", "Frank Yablans Frank Yablans (August 27, 1935 – November 27, 2014) was an American studio executive, film producer, and screenwriter. Yablans served as an executive at Paramount Pictures, including President of the studio, in the 1960s and 70s. As a filmmaker, he is best known for writing and producing the film \"Mommie Dearest\" (1981), which was nominated for nine Razzies at the 2nd Golden Raspberry Awards, including \"winning\" Worst Picture and Worst Screenplay for Yablans. Yablans was born in Brooklyn, New York to Annette and Morris Yablans. His father was a cab driver. His older brother is film producer Irwin Yablans of \"Halloween\" (1978) fame. He was Jewish. Yablans entered the motion picture business in 1956 joining Warner Bros. sales. In 1959, he joined Buena Vista as the Milwaukee sales manager where he stayed until 1966. He joined Sigma III and later transitioned to Filmways after it acquired Sigma III. He became executive vice president of sales for Paramount Pictures in June 1969. In this position, his expert marketing of the film \"Love Story\" (1970) led to his appointment as Paramount Studios' president on May 10, 1971. As head of Paramount, he oversaw the release and marketing of \"The Godfather\" (1972), \"The Godfather Part II\" (1974), and \"Chinatown\" (1974). He also personally supervised the 100th birthday celebrations of studio founder Adolph Zukor in January 1973. After a reorganization at Paramount in which Charles Bluhdorn, the chairman and CEO of Gulf & Western Industries, was replaced by Barry Diller, Yablans announced his resignation as president on November 8, 1974. Following the end of his presidency, he became an independent producer, working primarily through Paramount and 20th Century Fox. He was executive producer of \"Silver Streak\" (1976), \"The Other Side of Midnight\" (1977), \"Congo\" (1995), and the popular HBO series \"Rome.", "Mike Miller (wrestler) James Michael Hillman (born October 14, 1951), better known by the ring name \"Mean\" Mike Miller, is an American professional wrestler who had great success in Pacific Northwest Wrestling. Mean Mike was brought in to professional wrestling by Herb Welch. In Pacific Northwest Wrestling he wrestled for many years and held the NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship and NWA Pacific Northwest Tag Team Championship a combined 11 times. During his career Mean Mike faced many wrestling legends such as Rip Oliver, Bobby Jaggers, Tom Prichard, Jerry Lawler, Chief Jay Strongbow, Brett Sawyer, Billy Jack Haynes, and Steve Doll.", "Mikio Yahara Mikio Yahara (; born April 4, 1947 in Ehime Prefecture) is a Japanese karate expert of the Shotokan style. He holds the rank of 10th dan. Yahara was born in 1947 in Ehime Prefecture, the fourth son of a prominent family with ancient samurai roots. He started his martial art training in judo. After studying at Kokushikan University, he became a kenshusei (or junior instructor) with the Japan Karate Association and began his career as a competitive \"karateka\". In the period 1974-1984, he achieved substantial success both in kumite and kata. In 2000, after a battle for leadership at the JKA, which lasted from 1987 to 1999, Yahara decided to establish his own organization, the Karatenomichi World Federation that promotes Yahara's core concept of \"one killing blow\".", "Yiman Yiman may refer to:" ]
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[ "no" ]
Are both villages, Khalti and Chah-E Chaheh, located in the same country?
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Khalti Khalti (, also Romanized as Khāltī, Khālţī, and Khālatī; also known as Khālt) is a village in Tudeshk Rural District, Kuhpayeh District, Isfahan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 64, in 21 families.
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[ "Cham Khalifeh Cham Khalifeh (, also Romanized as Cham Khalīfeh and Cham-e Khalīfeh) is a village in Saman Rural District, Saman County, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 885, in 233 families. The village is populated by Turkic people.", "Challeh Khuni Challeh Khuni (, also Romanized as Chālleh Khūnī and Chelleh Khūnī) is a village in Tula Rud Rural District, in the Central District of Talesh County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 158, in 39 families.", "Khalilabad, Markazi Khalilabad (, also Romanized as Khalīlābād; also known as Khalil Abad Japlogh) is a village in Chahar Cheshmeh Rural District, Kamareh District, Khomeyn County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 534, in 150 families.", "Khalsha Khalsha (, also Romanized as Khalshā, Khalsha’, and Kholashā) is a village in Chahardeh Rural District, in the Central District of Astaneh-ye Ashrafiyeh County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 154, in 48 families.", "Chah Kharg Chah Kharg (, also Romanized as Chāh Kharg) is a village in Shamil Rural District, Takht District, Bandar Abbas County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 514, in 109 families.", "Chaleh Tak Chaleh Tak (, also Romanized as Chāleh Tāḵ) is a village in Dasht-e Lali Rural District, in the Central District of Lali County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 46, in 5 families.", "Khalifehi, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Khalifehi (, also Romanized as Khalīfeh'ī; also known as Khalīfeh) is a village in Rak Rural District, in the Central District of Kohgiluyeh County, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 324, in 77 families.", "Chalgari Chalgari or chhalgari is town and union council of Kachhi District in the Balochistan province of Pakistan. It is located at an altitude of 82 metres (272 feet).", "Chal Kareh Chal Kareh (, also Romanized as Chāl Kareh) is a village in Shahi Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 66, in 14 families.", "Chah-e Hasan Chah-e Hasan or Chah Hasan () may refer to:" ]
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[ "yes" ]
Which film has the director who is older, Les Braqueuses or Call Northside 777?
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Call Northside 777 Call Northside 777 is a 1948 reality-based newspaper drama directed by Henry Hathaway. The film parallels the true story of a Chicago reporter who proved that a man jailed for murder was wrongly convicted 11 years before. James Stewart stars as the persistent journalist and Richard Conte plays the imprisoned Frank Wiecek. Wiecek is based on Joseph Majczek, who was wrongly convicted of the murder of a Chicago policeman in 1932, one of the worst years of organized crime during Prohibition. In Chicago in 1932, during Prohibition, a policeman is murdered inside a speakeasy. Frank Wiecek (Richard Conte) and another man are quickly arrested, and are later sentenced to serve 99 years imprisonment each for the killing. Eleven years later, Wiecek's mother (Kasia Orzazewski) puts an ad in the newspaper offering a $5,000 reward for information about the true killers of the police officer. This leads the city editor of the "Chicago Times", Brian Kelly (Lee J. Cobb), to assign reporter P.J. McNeal (James Stewart) to look more closely into the case. McNeal is skeptical at first, believing Wiecek to be guilty. But he starts to change his mind, and meets increased resistance from the police and the state attorney's office, who are unwilling to be proved wrong. This is quickly followed by political pressure from the state capital, where politicians are anxious to end a story that might prove embarrassing to the administration. Eventually, Wiecek is proved innocent by, among other things, the enlarging of a photograph showing the date on a newspaper that proves that a key witness statement was false. In actuality, innocence was determined not as claimed in the film but when it was found out that the prosecution had suppressed the fact that the main witness had initially declared that she could not identify the two men involved in the police shooting. It was reported on January 24, 1947, that, according to the studio, the picture would be filmed in the documentary manner. Fox had obtained the necessary legal clearances from the persons involved in the story and had dispatched Otto Lang, producer, and Leonard Hoffman, writer, to Chicago to gather material for the film. Eventually, Quentin Reynolds and Jay Dratler joined Hoffman in writing the script. Casting the film proved complex.
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[ "Drôles de zèbres Drôles de zèbres () is a 1977 French comedy film. Two unemployed men, heavily in debt due to losses at the racetrack, are hired by a criminal mastermind to harass the guests of a hotel he hopes to purchase at a below-market price in order to access a tunnel below the building that leads directly to a nearby bank. Written and directed by Guy Lux, the film stars Patrick Topaloff, Coluche, Annie Cordy, Claude François, Sim, Petula Clark, and Katia Tchenko.", "The Accuser (film) The Accuser aka L'Imprécateur is a 1977 French film directed by Jean-Louis Bertucelli. After an executive is killed in a mysterious car accident, the French offices of his multinational company based in Paris is inundated with mysteriously threatening be-ribboned anti-capitalist tracts, delivered overnight to everyone's desks. When Americans from the head office get wind of these developments, they institute a search for the perpetrator which leads to mysterious subterranean passages under the company's skyscraper. The CD soundtrack composed by Richard Rodney Bennett is available on Music Box Records label (website).", "Le Maître-nageur Le Maître-nageur is a 1979 French comedy-drama film directed by Jean-Louis Trintignant.", "The Wolf's Call The Wolf's Call () is a 2019 French action thriller film directed and written by Antonin Baudry. The film is about a submarine's sonar operator Chanteraide (François Civil), who must use his brilliant sense of hearing to track down a French ballistic missile submarine and end the threat of nuclear war. The French submarine \"Titan\" - \"Titane\" (\"Titanium\") in the original French version - is sent near the Mediterranean coast of Tartus, Syria to stealthily recover a French Special Forces unit operating in the area. The submarine sails under the command of Captain Grandchamp and Executive Officer (XO) D'Orsi. However, during their mission they encounter an unidentified sonar contact. The sonar expert of the submarine, Chanteraide — nicknamed \"Socks\", and serving as \"golden ear\", the officer specialized in underwater acoustics — first classifies the contact as a wounded whale, but it quickly turns out that the contact is an unknown submarine transmitting their position to an Iranian frigate and a maritime helicopter operating in the area. The helicopter launches depth charges in what seems to be an unprovoked act of aggression which, however, is a valid defensive measure as the \"Titan\" is in fact violating sovereign Syrian waters while recovering a foreign force that has already engaged in combat and killed Syrian nationals. After evading the barrage, the \"Titan\" surfaces, and the captain shoots down the helicopter with a Panzerfaust 3. They recover the Special Forces unit and return to base. When the \"Titan\" returns to base, the radio announces that Russia is invading Finland's Åland Islands, and that the French President has decided to send a naval task force to the Baltic Sea in support of Finland. The Russian government then threatens nuclear retaliation against the French Republic. Chanteraide, trying to identify the unknown contact in Syria, hacks into his superior officer's computer and after conducting research at a bookstore where he starts a romantic relationship with Diane, as well as the naval archives, discovers that it is in fact a Russian \"Timour III\" ballistic missile submarine, supposedly dismantled. Meanwhile, Grandchamp is promoted for his actions to command \"Formidable\" - \"Effroyable\" (\"Dreadful\") in the original French version - while D'Orsi takes over command of \"Titan\". The \"Formidable\" is launched with its new captain with the \"Titan\" as its escort submarine.", "Moi, fleur bleue Moi, fleur bleue is a 1977 French film directed by Éric Le Hung. The film is sometimes known in English as \"Stop Calling Me Baby!\". It starred Jodie Foster as Isabelle Tristran, nicknamed \"Fleur bleue\".", "Nicolas Duvauchelle Nicolas Duvauchelle (born 27 March 1980) is a French actor, perhaps best known for his role as Theo in three seasons of the crime drama \"Braquo\". Duvauchelle starred in numerous films including \"Lightweight\", \"À tout de suite\" and \"Le Grand Meaulnes\". He has worked with Béatrice Dalle on films such as \"Trouble Every Day\" and \"Inside\". Duvauchelle has three children: daughters Bonnie (with ex-partner Ludivine Sagnier) and Romy (with Laura Isaaz, a journalist and sister of actress Alice Isaaz), and son Andrea (with model Anouchka Alsif).", "Brasco Brasco is a French rapper, originally from Guadeloupe. He is signed to the label O-VNEE Music. Brasco's agency is called VMC (Major Company). Brasco came to the inner suburbs of Paris from Guadeloupe in 1997. He started in rap by forming the group Apothéose with two other artists. They released several EP's and participated in several mixtapes. In 2005, along with El Matador, he recorded the CD \"\"Bombattak Mc's\"\", and started to build a reputation. After participating in the soundtrack of the film Banlieue 13, he participated in the album of El Matador, Bombattak's other signed artist. After many postponements, Brasco released his first album \"Vagabond\" on 8 September 2008. This album was very successful. He released four music videos for this album: \"Vagabond\", \"Ma France d'en bas\" \"D'une Blessure à l'autre\" and \"8000km\". He also participated in the album U District 13 with his hit \"Et Alors?\" (\"So what?\"). In 2010 Brasco left the label Bombattak. He set up a new label: O-VNEE Music.", "777 777 may refer to:", "Le braconnier de Dieu Le braconnier de Dieu is a 1983 French comedy drama film directed by Jean-Pierre Darras.", "Braquo Braquo is a French crime drama television series created by Olivier Marchal. It was produced by Capa Drama with the participation of Canal+ in association with Marathon Group, Be-Films and RTBF. Braquo was first broadcast in France from 12 October to 2 November 2009. The first season of \"Braquo\" established a record audience for an original production of the channel and surpassed that of many U.S. productions broadcast by the network. The second season started on Canal+ on 21 November 2011. A third and apparently final season was announced by lead actor Jean-Hugues Anglade in 2011. The ending of the third season, with two plot strands left unfinished, suggested a possible return. The series was available in the US from Hulu as of September 2013. The fourth - and final - season of \"Braquo\" was shot between February and June 2015 in Marseille and Paris. It is directed by Xavier Palud and Frédéric Jardin and written by Abdel Raouf Dafri. It screened in France in September 2016, closely followed by a Spanish broadcast and began airing in the UK in November on FOX UK. The name of the series comes from the French word \"braquage\", meaning armed robberies, particularly of banks. The protagonists are four police agents in the Hauts-de-Seine area of Paris: Eddy Caplan (Jean-Hugues Anglade), Walter Morlighem (Joseph Malerba), Théo Vachewski (Nicolas Duvauchelle) and Roxanne Delgado (Karole Rocher). Their colleague Max Rossi (Olivier Rabourdin) is accused of criminal misconduct, and commits suicide. His guilt is then presumed, disrupting the lives of the other four. The four police agents then decide to \"cross the yellow line\": do whatever is necessary, even breaking the law, to clear Rossi's name. In crossing the yellow line, however, they fall under the close scrutiny of Vogel, of the police internal affairs bureau, a sworn enemy of Caplan. The main cast of Braquo is made up of the following:" ]
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[ "Call Northside 777" ]