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Who was the director of Pilot?
[ "Peter Horton" ]
director
Pilot (Dirty Sexy Money)
5,453,479
86
[ { "id": "11645394", "title": "Pilot (V)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ", "score": "1.4781814" }, { "id": "14177516", "title": "The Pilot (film)", "text": " The Pilot (also known as Danger in the Skies) is a 1980 American action-drama film by director and star Cliff Robertson and is based on the novel of the same name by Robert P. Davis.", "score": "1.4499825" }, { "id": "8602681", "title": "Pilots (film)", "text": " Pilots is a 2000 Indian Malayalam-language drama film written and directed by Rajiv Anchal and produced by Menaka under Revathy Kalamandhir. Starring Suresh Gopi, Sreenivasan, and Praveena.", "score": "1.4494889" }, { "id": "14985590", "title": "Alan Smithee", "text": " of season 4 of American television series, believed to be directed by Joseph L. Scanlan. ; Riviera, 1987 ABC-TV movie intended as pilot, directed by John Frankenheimer. ; MacGyver, \"Pilot\", directed by Jerrold Freedman, and \"The Heist\", director unknown (1985). ; Moonlight, TV movie and pilot for an unsold series (1982) (not to be confused with the later CBS vampire series), directed by Jackie Cooper and Rod Holcomb. ; The Owl, 1991 television film credited to director Tom Holland when originally broadcast. Holland approved of the 46-minute television cut but disliked the extended 84-minute home video cut and credited it to \"Alan Smithee\". ", "score": "1.4493661" }, { "id": "14920510", "title": "Pilot (The Americans)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.", "score": "1.4418707" }, { "id": "30220069", "title": "Tucker Cawley", "text": "\"Pilot\" ", "score": "1.435677" }, { "id": "6731306", "title": "Jay Sandrich", "text": "Kuney, Jack. Take One: Television Directors on Directing. ISBN: 978-0275935467 New York: Greenwood, 1990. ; Meisler, Andy. \"Jay Sandrich: Ace of Pilots.\" Channels magazine (New York), October 1986. ; Ravage, John W. Television: The Director's Viewpoint. Boulder, ISBN: 978-0891583370, Colorado: Westview, 1978. ", "score": "1.4349737" }, { "id": "6019210", "title": "Pilot (Masters of Sex)", "text": " The series opens in October 1956 at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri where Bill Masters (Michael Sheen) is honored for his work in obstetric surgery. While making a speech, Bill states that he has to go. Later, he watches through a peephole as Betty DiMello (Annaleigh Ashford), a prostitute whom he hired, has sex with Ernie (Steve Rosen). Afterwards, Bill talks with Betty at a bar where they discuss her sexual response. She tells him she faked her orgasm, a practice which Bill is unfamiliar with. A young doctor, Ethan Haas (Nicholas D'Agosto) speaks to Bill about a new female ", "score": "1.4300442" }, { "id": "13378281", "title": "Pilot (studio)", "text": " Aleksandr Tatarsky served as the Pilot's artistic director up until his death in 2007. He was replaced by Eduard Nazarov who held the position until 2013. Currently Igor Gelashvili serves as the studio's director. Pilot produced over 130 animated films. A subdivision called \"Pilot-TV\", founded in 1997, produced satirical animated series using 3D motion-captured characters, most famous of them being the studio's key mascots: the Pilot Brothers based on Chief and Colleague from the popular Soviet mini-series Investigation Held by Kolobki. The studio has received over 50 awards at international film festivals. It is best known for animating the popular Cartoon Network series Mike, Lu & Og outside of ", "score": "1.4285988" }, { "id": "27706142", "title": "Pilot (Homeland)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the psychological thriller TV series Homeland. It originally aired on Showtime on October 2, 2011. The episode focuses on the return home of Marine Sergeant Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), rescued after eight years as a prisoner-of-war in Afghanistan. While Brody is celebrated as a hero, CIA officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) believes Brody to actually be acting as a sleeper agent for al-Qaeda. The pilot was universally acclaimed by critics and was the highest-rated drama premiere on Showtime since 2003.", "score": "1.4216971" }, { "id": "27932156", "title": "Pilot (Person of Interest)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.", "score": "1.4200339" }, { "id": "9331023", "title": "John Hodge (engineer)", "text": " in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ", "score": "1.4185274" }, { "id": "14175622", "title": "Pilot (Preacher)", "text": " The \"Pilot\" of Preacher was directed by series creators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, both first-time television directors. Prior to directing for the series, Rogen and Goldberg's directorial filmography included This Is the End (2013) and The Interview (2014). Shortly after the airing of the pilot, AMC released a featurette titled \"Directors' Commentary On “Pilot”\" which went into greater detail about the creation of the pilot episode, with both Rogen and Goldberg providing commentary and insight into its construction. The directors were intent on challenging themselves within the production, with the budget limitations helping in that regard, as it forced both ", "score": "1.4113898" }, { "id": "9073659", "title": "Pilot Speed", "text": " Pilot Speed (formerly known as Pilate) was a Canadian rock band, who were active in the early 2000s. Based in Toronto, Ontario, the band consisted of vocalist and pianist Todd Clark, guitarist Chris Greenough, bassist Ruby Bumrah and drummer Bill Keeley. Clark was a graduate of the music program at the University of Western Ontario, while all of the other three members were alumni of OCAD University. They released their debut EP, For All That's Given, Wasted, independently in 2001 before signing to MapleMusic Recordings, which released their full-length debut album Caught by the Window in 2003. The album was most noted for the single \"Into Your Hideout\"; the song's music video, directed by Maxime Giroux, won the MuchMusic Video Award for Best Independent Video at ", "score": "1.4102072" }, { "id": "12877364", "title": "The Flying Ace", "text": " With principal photography in Jacksonville, Florida, The Flying Ace was an example of producer Norman's \"home talent\" films, in which he would travel to various towns with stock footage and a basic script. After recruiting local celebrities for minor roles, they would film a small portion of footage (approximately 200 feet of new material) over the course of a few days. The films were processed at Norman's laboratory in Chicago. Once completed, the films would be screened and any funds raised would be split between Norman and the town where the scenes were shot. Norman cast J. Laurence Criner, a veteran of Harlem’s prestigious all-black theater troupe the Lafayette Players, in the leading role of Captain Billy Stokes, a black pilot who fought in France during World War I. While Eugene Bullard was a black pilot in the Lafayette Escadrille, African-Americans were not allowed to serve as ", "score": "1.4081718" }, { "id": "26447212", "title": "Pilot (Revenge)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.", "score": "1.4069793" }, { "id": "2971117", "title": "Pilot (Lost)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ", "score": "1.4053873" }, { "id": "27683816", "title": "Wes Archer", "text": "\"Pilot\" ", "score": "1.4042232" }, { "id": "26346022", "title": "Pilot (The Deuce)", "text": " by a former adult film star who was working craft services for the shot. Of the project, Simon said \"We’re interested in what it means when profit is the primary metric for what we call society. In that sense, this story is intended as neither prurient nor puritan. It’s about a product, and those human beings who created, sold, profited from and suffered with that product... Porn, prostitution, pimps, the Mob, after-hours nightlife, institutional corruption, and New York in its Wild West heyday ... it’s a world rich in character, and a fascinating story we’re eager to tell.\" Filming began in October 2015, and in January, 2016, the pilot was picked up for series.", "score": "1.4006654" }, { "id": "8882905", "title": "Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies", "text": " Steven Spielberg had developed the story of a flyer with a young son, containing themes that interested him: aircraft and flying and parental responsibility. He developed the premise with fellow Cal State alumni Claudia Salter, and hoped to direct it himself, but Richard D. Zanuck, who was then the president of 20th Century Fox, declined to hire Spielberg as director. Producers Robert Fryer and James Cresson hired John Erman to direct because he was older. The film originally ended with Eli committing suicide, but the studio recut it to give it a happier ending. Spielberg was so displeased by the film that he publicly complained it had been \"turned into a really sick film. They should bury it.\" Spielberg would not make a film for Twentieth Century Fox until 2002's Minority Report (even then, this was a co-production with DreamWorks). Fryer, ", "score": "1.3966904" } ]
[ "Pilot (V)\n \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ", "The Pilot (film)\n The Pilot (also known as Danger in the Skies) is a 1980 American action-drama film by director and star Cliff Robertson and is based on the novel of the same name by Robert P. Davis.", "Pilots (film)\n Pilots is a 2000 Indian Malayalam-language drama film written and directed by Rajiv Anchal and produced by Menaka under Revathy Kalamandhir. Starring Suresh Gopi, Sreenivasan, and Praveena.", "Alan Smithee\n of season 4 of American television series, believed to be directed by Joseph L. Scanlan. ; Riviera, 1987 ABC-TV movie intended as pilot, directed by John Frankenheimer. ; MacGyver, \"Pilot\", directed by Jerrold Freedman, and \"The Heist\", director unknown (1985). ; Moonlight, TV movie and pilot for an unsold series (1982) (not to be confused with the later CBS vampire series), directed by Jackie Cooper and Rod Holcomb. ; The Owl, 1991 television film credited to director Tom Holland when originally broadcast. Holland approved of the 46-minute television cut but disliked the extended 84-minute home video cut and credited it to \"Alan Smithee\". ", "Pilot (The Americans)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.", "Tucker Cawley\n\"Pilot\" ", "Jay Sandrich\nKuney, Jack. Take One: Television Directors on Directing. ISBN: 978-0275935467 New York: Greenwood, 1990. ; Meisler, Andy. \"Jay Sandrich: Ace of Pilots.\" Channels magazine (New York), October 1986. ; Ravage, John W. Television: The Director's Viewpoint. Boulder, ISBN: 978-0891583370, Colorado: Westview, 1978. ", "Pilot (Masters of Sex)\n The series opens in October 1956 at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri where Bill Masters (Michael Sheen) is honored for his work in obstetric surgery. While making a speech, Bill states that he has to go. Later, he watches through a peephole as Betty DiMello (Annaleigh Ashford), a prostitute whom he hired, has sex with Ernie (Steve Rosen). Afterwards, Bill talks with Betty at a bar where they discuss her sexual response. She tells him she faked her orgasm, a practice which Bill is unfamiliar with. A young doctor, Ethan Haas (Nicholas D'Agosto) speaks to Bill about a new female ", "Pilot (studio)\n Aleksandr Tatarsky served as the Pilot's artistic director up until his death in 2007. He was replaced by Eduard Nazarov who held the position until 2013. Currently Igor Gelashvili serves as the studio's director. Pilot produced over 130 animated films. A subdivision called \"Pilot-TV\", founded in 1997, produced satirical animated series using 3D motion-captured characters, most famous of them being the studio's key mascots: the Pilot Brothers based on Chief and Colleague from the popular Soviet mini-series Investigation Held by Kolobki. The studio has received over 50 awards at international film festivals. It is best known for animating the popular Cartoon Network series Mike, Lu & Og outside of ", "Pilot (Homeland)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the psychological thriller TV series Homeland. It originally aired on Showtime on October 2, 2011. The episode focuses on the return home of Marine Sergeant Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), rescued after eight years as a prisoner-of-war in Afghanistan. While Brody is celebrated as a hero, CIA officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) believes Brody to actually be acting as a sleeper agent for al-Qaeda. The pilot was universally acclaimed by critics and was the highest-rated drama premiere on Showtime since 2003.", "Pilot (Person of Interest)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.", "John Hodge (engineer)\n in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ", "Pilot (Preacher)\n The \"Pilot\" of Preacher was directed by series creators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, both first-time television directors. Prior to directing for the series, Rogen and Goldberg's directorial filmography included This Is the End (2013) and The Interview (2014). Shortly after the airing of the pilot, AMC released a featurette titled \"Directors' Commentary On “Pilot”\" which went into greater detail about the creation of the pilot episode, with both Rogen and Goldberg providing commentary and insight into its construction. The directors were intent on challenging themselves within the production, with the budget limitations helping in that regard, as it forced both ", "Pilot Speed\n Pilot Speed (formerly known as Pilate) was a Canadian rock band, who were active in the early 2000s. Based in Toronto, Ontario, the band consisted of vocalist and pianist Todd Clark, guitarist Chris Greenough, bassist Ruby Bumrah and drummer Bill Keeley. Clark was a graduate of the music program at the University of Western Ontario, while all of the other three members were alumni of OCAD University. They released their debut EP, For All That's Given, Wasted, independently in 2001 before signing to MapleMusic Recordings, which released their full-length debut album Caught by the Window in 2003. The album was most noted for the single \"Into Your Hideout\"; the song's music video, directed by Maxime Giroux, won the MuchMusic Video Award for Best Independent Video at ", "The Flying Ace\n With principal photography in Jacksonville, Florida, The Flying Ace was an example of producer Norman's \"home talent\" films, in which he would travel to various towns with stock footage and a basic script. After recruiting local celebrities for minor roles, they would film a small portion of footage (approximately 200 feet of new material) over the course of a few days. The films were processed at Norman's laboratory in Chicago. Once completed, the films would be screened and any funds raised would be split between Norman and the town where the scenes were shot. Norman cast J. Laurence Criner, a veteran of Harlem’s prestigious all-black theater troupe the Lafayette Players, in the leading role of Captain Billy Stokes, a black pilot who fought in France during World War I. While Eugene Bullard was a black pilot in the Lafayette Escadrille, African-Americans were not allowed to serve as ", "Pilot (Revenge)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.", "Pilot (Lost)\n \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ", "Wes Archer\n\"Pilot\" ", "Pilot (The Deuce)\n by a former adult film star who was working craft services for the shot. Of the project, Simon said \"We’re interested in what it means when profit is the primary metric for what we call society. In that sense, this story is intended as neither prurient nor puritan. It’s about a product, and those human beings who created, sold, profited from and suffered with that product... Porn, prostitution, pimps, the Mob, after-hours nightlife, institutional corruption, and New York in its Wild West heyday ... it’s a world rich in character, and a fascinating story we’re eager to tell.\" Filming began in October 2015, and in January, 2016, the pilot was picked up for series.", "Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies\n Steven Spielberg had developed the story of a flyer with a young son, containing themes that interested him: aircraft and flying and parental responsibility. He developed the premise with fellow Cal State alumni Claudia Salter, and hoped to direct it himself, but Richard D. Zanuck, who was then the president of 20th Century Fox, declined to hire Spielberg as director. Producers Robert Fryer and James Cresson hired John Erman to direct because he was older. The film originally ended with Eli committing suicide, but the studio recut it to give it a happier ending. Spielberg was so displeased by the film that he publicly complained it had been \"turned into a really sick film. They should bury it.\" Spielberg would not make a film for Twentieth Century Fox until 2002's Minority Report (even then, this was a co-production with DreamWorks). Fryer, " ]
Who was the director of La Rival?
[ "Chano Urueta", "Santiago Eduardo Urueta Sierra" ]
director
La Rival
4,903,474
45
[ { "id": "10229617", "title": "La Rival", "text": " La Rival (\"The Rival\") is a 1955 Mexican film. It was directed by Chano Urueta.", "score": "1.8273666" }, { "id": "30778802", "title": "The Rival (film)", "text": " The Rival (La rivale) is a 1955 Italian-French melodrama film directed by Anton Giulio Majano.", "score": "1.734967" }, { "id": "3431137", "title": "Rivals (2008 film)", "text": " Rivals (Les Liens du sang) is a 2008 French action film directed by Jacques Maillot.", "score": "1.703351" }, { "id": "3431138", "title": "Rivals (2008 film)", "text": "Guillaume Canet as François ; François Cluzet as Gabriel ; Clotilde Hesme as Corinne ; Marie Denarnaud as Nathalie ; Mehdi Nebbou as José Lazaga ; Olivier Perrier as Henri ; Carole Franck as Monique ", "score": "1.6355342" }, { "id": "11065662", "title": "Rivales (film)", "text": " Rivales is a 2008 Spanish comedy-sport film directed by Fernando Colomo and written by Joaquín Oristrell and Inés París. The plot follows an Under-12 Spanish football tournament.", "score": "1.5279474" }, { "id": "30778803", "title": "The Rival (film)", "text": "Anna Maria Ferrero: Barbara ; Gérard Landry: Roberto ; Maria Mauban: Agnese ; Luisa Rivelli: Fides ; Roberto Risso: Ugo Perelli ; Nerio Bernardi: Prefect Candi ; Aldo Bufi Landi: Corporal Ruffo ; Laura Nucci: Miss Cardi ; Nino Vingelli: Piedigrotta ; Gastone Moschin: Marco ; Franca Dominici: Fides' Mother ; Antonio Battistella: Gerardo ; Arturo Bragaglia: Giuseppe ; Ivo Garrani: Official ; Cesare Fantoni ", "score": "1.5273852" }, { "id": "6649905", "title": "Rivals (1923 film)", "text": " Rivals (Rivalen) is a 1923 German-British silent adventure film directed by Harry Piel and starring Piel, Inge Helgard and Adolf Klein. It premiered in Berlin on 23 February 1923.", "score": "1.5208578" }, { "id": "4655707", "title": "Steven Spielberg's unrealized projects", "text": " On May 21, 2003, Spielberg was set to direct and produce the film The Rivals for Paramount Pictures. It was revealed that Nicole Kidman and Gwyneth Paltrow were set to play Sarah Bernhardt and Eleanor Duse, until Marion Cotillard replaced Paltrow. In 2008, Spielberg left the project due to DreamWorks Pictures' split from Paramount, which still has the project.", "score": "1.5157499" }, { "id": "32019213", "title": "The Rival of the Empress", "text": " The Rival of the Empress (Italian: La rivale dell'imperatrice) is a 1951 Italian historical adventure film directed by Jacopo Comin and Sidney Salkow and starring Richard Greene, Valentina Cortese and Isa Pola. A separate English-language version Shadow of the Eagle was released the previous year. It was shot at the Scalera Studios in Rome with sets designed by Wilfred Shingleton. The costumes were designed by Vittorio Nino Novarese. Star Richard Greene was dubbed by the Italian actor Massimo Serato.", "score": "1.5116937" }, { "id": "7206020", "title": "Mi rival", "text": " Mi rival is a Mexican telenovela produced by Valentín Pimstein for Televisa in 1973. Based on the soap opera of Ines Rodena, Cuando la rival es una hija.", "score": "1.5079131" }, { "id": "11065664", "title": "Rivales (film)", "text": " • Rosa Maria Sardà as Rosa • Ernesto Alterio as Guillermo • Jorge Sanz as Jorge • Juanjo Puigcorbé as Fernando • María Pujalte as María • Goya Toledo as Maribel • Santi Millán as Xavier • Kira Miró as Sara • Gonzalo de Castro as Carlos • Javier Cifrián as Pepe", "score": "1.5072043" }, { "id": "4502874", "title": "Jean-Marc Vallée", "text": " (Les Mots magiques) (1998), awarded respectively Best Short Film at the 16th Genie Awards and the 1st Jutra Awards, in which the director explored the relationship between father and son. Vallée made his feature-length debut in 1995 with Liste noire (Black List), which became the highest-grossing film in Quebec that year and received nine Genie Award notimations, including Best Motion Picture and Best Achievement in Direction. In the wake of this success, Vallée moved to Los Angeles where he directed Los Locos (1998), a Western film written by and starring Mario Van Peebles, and Loser Love (1999). After these two low-budget productions, he directed two episodes of the television series The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne (2000).", "score": "1.500941" }, { "id": "14344352", "title": "The Two Rivals (1944 film)", "text": " The Two Rivals (Spanish: Los Dos rivales) is a 1944 Argentine film.", "score": "1.500641" }, { "id": "30777890", "title": "Mimí Bechelani", "text": "Mi rival (1973) (original by Inés Rodena) ; Los que ayudan a Dios (1973) (original by Nené Cascallar) ; Mi primer amor (1973) (original by Walter Negrão) ", "score": "1.4910997" }, { "id": "27994000", "title": "Kim Nguyen", "text": "The Marsh (Le Marais) - 2002 ; Truffe - 2008 ; City of Shadows (La Cité) - 2010 ; War Witch (Rebelle) - 2012 ; Two Lovers and a Bear (Un ours et deux amants) - 2016 ; Eye on Juliet - 2017 ; The Hummingbird Project - 2018 Soleil glacé (2000, short) ; The Glove (2004, short) ; La chambre no. 13 (2006, television) ; Le Nez (2014) ; Bellevue (2017, director: 2 episodes) ; Never Have I Ever (2021, director: \"...opened a textbook\") ; Mr. Mayor (2021, director: \"Mr. Mayor's Magical L.A. Christmas\") Feature films Others", "score": "1.4890704" }, { "id": "4052443", "title": "Théâtre Lyrique", "text": " Émile Perrin became the new director on 26 July 1854, while also retaining his post as director of the Opéra-Comique. This arrangement created some anxieties within the company regarding potential conflicts of interest between itself and its chief rival. An announcement was made in an attempt to allay these concerns: \"Each of the two establishments will have a separate company and special repertory. The Théâtre Lyrique will not be the vassal of its elder brother, on the contrary, every effort will be made to keep up a noble spirit of emulation between the two, which cannot fail to be profitable to the art.\" ", "score": "1.4738929" }, { "id": "30044165", "title": "Yannick Andréi", "text": "1953: Quand tu liras cette lettre, assistant director ; 1953: Maternité clandestine, assistant director ; 1953: Mon frangin du Sénégal, assistant director ; 1954: Sur le banc, assistant director ; 1956: Ces sacrées vacances, assistant director ; 1958: Premier mai, assistant director ; 1959: Deux hommes dans Manhattan, assistant director ; 1959: Bonjour la chance (La ironía del dinero), adaptation ; 1961: Samedi soir, (director and screenwriter ; 1975: , director and screenwriter ; 1985: Paris-minuit, actor ", "score": "1.4639133" }, { "id": "10977704", "title": "Frédéric Auburtin", "text": " also directed movies, including San-Antonio (2004) and Envoyés très spéciaux (2009). In 2006, he co-directed (again with Depardieu) the segment \"Quartier Latin\", written and starred by Gena Rowlands with Ben Gazzara and Gérard Depardieu, in the highly acclaimed movie Paris, je t'aime. In 2014, he became widely known for directing the infamous movie United Passions. The film recounts the origins of the world-governing body of association football, Fédération Internationale de Football Association, and was ninety-percent funded by them. Released in North America at the peak of the scandals of the 2015 FIFA corruption case, the film grossed very badly in the box-office (a mere $918 in its opening weekend) and received overwhelming dislike from critics around the world. It's now considered one of the worst movies ever made and all the actors and Auburtin himself considered the film a \"disaster\".", "score": "1.4630618" }, { "id": "28608097", "title": "Le Tigre aime la chair fraiche", "text": " Josée Dayan was the assistant director on the movie.", "score": "1.4608059" }, { "id": "10977705", "title": "Frédéric Auburtin", "text": "Rouge midi (1985) (third assistant director) ; Les Fugitifs (1986) (third assistant director) ; Under the Sun of Satan (1987) (second assistant director) ; La Bohème (1988) (second assistant director) ; La Révolution française (1989) (second assistant director) ; La fille des collines (1990) (first assistant director) ; Merci la vie (1991) (second unit director) ; The Lover (1992) (first assistant director) ; Germinal (1993) (first assistant director) ; The Horseman on the Roof (1995) (first assistant director) ; Lucie Aubrac (1997) (first assistant director) ; The Man in the Iron Mask (1998) (first assistant director) ", "score": "1.4562736" } ]
[ "La Rival\n La Rival (\"The Rival\") is a 1955 Mexican film. It was directed by Chano Urueta.", "The Rival (film)\n The Rival (La rivale) is a 1955 Italian-French melodrama film directed by Anton Giulio Majano.", "Rivals (2008 film)\n Rivals (Les Liens du sang) is a 2008 French action film directed by Jacques Maillot.", "Rivals (2008 film)\nGuillaume Canet as François ; François Cluzet as Gabriel ; Clotilde Hesme as Corinne ; Marie Denarnaud as Nathalie ; Mehdi Nebbou as José Lazaga ; Olivier Perrier as Henri ; Carole Franck as Monique ", "Rivales (film)\n Rivales is a 2008 Spanish comedy-sport film directed by Fernando Colomo and written by Joaquín Oristrell and Inés París. The plot follows an Under-12 Spanish football tournament.", "The Rival (film)\nAnna Maria Ferrero: Barbara ; Gérard Landry: Roberto ; Maria Mauban: Agnese ; Luisa Rivelli: Fides ; Roberto Risso: Ugo Perelli ; Nerio Bernardi: Prefect Candi ; Aldo Bufi Landi: Corporal Ruffo ; Laura Nucci: Miss Cardi ; Nino Vingelli: Piedigrotta ; Gastone Moschin: Marco ; Franca Dominici: Fides' Mother ; Antonio Battistella: Gerardo ; Arturo Bragaglia: Giuseppe ; Ivo Garrani: Official ; Cesare Fantoni ", "Rivals (1923 film)\n Rivals (Rivalen) is a 1923 German-British silent adventure film directed by Harry Piel and starring Piel, Inge Helgard and Adolf Klein. It premiered in Berlin on 23 February 1923.", "Steven Spielberg's unrealized projects\n On May 21, 2003, Spielberg was set to direct and produce the film The Rivals for Paramount Pictures. It was revealed that Nicole Kidman and Gwyneth Paltrow were set to play Sarah Bernhardt and Eleanor Duse, until Marion Cotillard replaced Paltrow. In 2008, Spielberg left the project due to DreamWorks Pictures' split from Paramount, which still has the project.", "The Rival of the Empress\n The Rival of the Empress (Italian: La rivale dell'imperatrice) is a 1951 Italian historical adventure film directed by Jacopo Comin and Sidney Salkow and starring Richard Greene, Valentina Cortese and Isa Pola. A separate English-language version Shadow of the Eagle was released the previous year. It was shot at the Scalera Studios in Rome with sets designed by Wilfred Shingleton. The costumes were designed by Vittorio Nino Novarese. Star Richard Greene was dubbed by the Italian actor Massimo Serato.", "Mi rival\n Mi rival is a Mexican telenovela produced by Valentín Pimstein for Televisa in 1973. Based on the soap opera of Ines Rodena, Cuando la rival es una hija.", "Rivales (film)\n • Rosa Maria Sardà as Rosa • Ernesto Alterio as Guillermo • Jorge Sanz as Jorge • Juanjo Puigcorbé as Fernando • María Pujalte as María • Goya Toledo as Maribel • Santi Millán as Xavier • Kira Miró as Sara • Gonzalo de Castro as Carlos • Javier Cifrián as Pepe", "Jean-Marc Vallée\n (Les Mots magiques) (1998), awarded respectively Best Short Film at the 16th Genie Awards and the 1st Jutra Awards, in which the director explored the relationship between father and son. Vallée made his feature-length debut in 1995 with Liste noire (Black List), which became the highest-grossing film in Quebec that year and received nine Genie Award notimations, including Best Motion Picture and Best Achievement in Direction. In the wake of this success, Vallée moved to Los Angeles where he directed Los Locos (1998), a Western film written by and starring Mario Van Peebles, and Loser Love (1999). After these two low-budget productions, he directed two episodes of the television series The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne (2000).", "The Two Rivals (1944 film)\n The Two Rivals (Spanish: Los Dos rivales) is a 1944 Argentine film.", "Mimí Bechelani\nMi rival (1973) (original by Inés Rodena) ; Los que ayudan a Dios (1973) (original by Nené Cascallar) ; Mi primer amor (1973) (original by Walter Negrão) ", "Kim Nguyen\nThe Marsh (Le Marais) - 2002 ; Truffe - 2008 ; City of Shadows (La Cité) - 2010 ; War Witch (Rebelle) - 2012 ; Two Lovers and a Bear (Un ours et deux amants) - 2016 ; Eye on Juliet - 2017 ; The Hummingbird Project - 2018 Soleil glacé (2000, short) ; The Glove (2004, short) ; La chambre no. 13 (2006, television) ; Le Nez (2014) ; Bellevue (2017, director: 2 episodes) ; Never Have I Ever (2021, director: \"...opened a textbook\") ; Mr. Mayor (2021, director: \"Mr. Mayor's Magical L.A. Christmas\") Feature films Others", "Théâtre Lyrique\n Émile Perrin became the new director on 26 July 1854, while also retaining his post as director of the Opéra-Comique. This arrangement created some anxieties within the company regarding potential conflicts of interest between itself and its chief rival. An announcement was made in an attempt to allay these concerns: \"Each of the two establishments will have a separate company and special repertory. The Théâtre Lyrique will not be the vassal of its elder brother, on the contrary, every effort will be made to keep up a noble spirit of emulation between the two, which cannot fail to be profitable to the art.\" ", "Yannick Andréi\n1953: Quand tu liras cette lettre, assistant director ; 1953: Maternité clandestine, assistant director ; 1953: Mon frangin du Sénégal, assistant director ; 1954: Sur le banc, assistant director ; 1956: Ces sacrées vacances, assistant director ; 1958: Premier mai, assistant director ; 1959: Deux hommes dans Manhattan, assistant director ; 1959: Bonjour la chance (La ironía del dinero), adaptation ; 1961: Samedi soir, (director and screenwriter ; 1975: , director and screenwriter ; 1985: Paris-minuit, actor ", "Frédéric Auburtin\n also directed movies, including San-Antonio (2004) and Envoyés très spéciaux (2009). In 2006, he co-directed (again with Depardieu) the segment \"Quartier Latin\", written and starred by Gena Rowlands with Ben Gazzara and Gérard Depardieu, in the highly acclaimed movie Paris, je t'aime. In 2014, he became widely known for directing the infamous movie United Passions. The film recounts the origins of the world-governing body of association football, Fédération Internationale de Football Association, and was ninety-percent funded by them. Released in North America at the peak of the scandals of the 2015 FIFA corruption case, the film grossed very badly in the box-office (a mere $918 in its opening weekend) and received overwhelming dislike from critics around the world. It's now considered one of the worst movies ever made and all the actors and Auburtin himself considered the film a \"disaster\".", "Le Tigre aime la chair fraiche\n Josée Dayan was the assistant director on the movie.", "Frédéric Auburtin\nRouge midi (1985) (third assistant director) ; Les Fugitifs (1986) (third assistant director) ; Under the Sun of Satan (1987) (second assistant director) ; La Bohème (1988) (second assistant director) ; La Révolution française (1989) (second assistant director) ; La fille des collines (1990) (first assistant director) ; Merci la vie (1991) (second unit director) ; The Lover (1992) (first assistant director) ; Germinal (1993) (first assistant director) ; The Horseman on the Roof (1995) (first assistant director) ; Lucie Aubrac (1997) (first assistant director) ; The Man in the Iron Mask (1998) (first assistant director) " ]
Who was the director of Echo?
[ "Hossein Shahabi" ]
director
Echo (2001 film)
1,404,706
97
[ { "id": "25801770", "title": "Echo (producer)", "text": "Echo Presenta: Invasion (2007) ", "score": "1.5586782" }, { "id": "29501416", "title": "Víctor Pérez (director)", "text": "ECHO (Short) - (2017) ; Another Love (Short) - (2015) ; Project Kronos (Short) - 2013 ", "score": "1.5444436" }, { "id": "29501408", "title": "Víctor Pérez (director)", "text": " film freak!” In early 2016 and with the acclaim of Another Love, Victor began writing and directing his second short film ECHO. Unlike Another Love, Perez focused on ECHO as a way of bringing together his abilities as VFX artist to explore new ways of storytelling. The experimental film is about girl who wakes up in the middle of nowhere only to see her reflection in a mirror 10 seconds ahead of her time. When she wakes up again, the nightmare starts over. To create this never-before-seen mirroring footage, ECHO featured a pioneering motion control technology that was developed at Stiller Studios in Stockholm, Sweden - by Tomas Tjernberg ", "score": "1.5303473" }, { "id": "32928531", "title": "John C. Corlette", "text": " Sittler got “Echo” going. John was an original and this showed itself in his creation Aiglon and its most characteristic custom: the morning Meditation. He collected art and had a weakness for Jaguars (petrol driven). He was a master of publicity and used this much to the benefit of his school. During the first American conference at Athenian in 1972, Aiglon gave a reception in San Francisco and a very fine film of the school was shown with a commentary by the best of the BBC announcers. It began with the camera swinging through the arc of mountains between Aiguille Verte and ", "score": "1.5273477" }, { "id": "9234510", "title": "Amanda Marsalis", "text": " Marsalis made her directorial debut with the film Echo Park starring Mamie Gummer and Tony Okungbowa. The film premiered at the 2014 Los Angeles Film Festival. It was acquired for distribution in 2016 by ARRAY. She said that Rebecca Walker, an author with whom she had worked previously, referred her to the producers when they said they were looking for a director.", "score": "1.5244262" }, { "id": "6586775", "title": "Echorsis", "text": " The film was directed by Lemuel Lorca and was produced by Chris Cahilig under the production firm, Insight 360. Jerry Gracio served as writer of the film. Echorsis was described as a parody of The Exorcist. The concept for Echorsis was created in 2011, when director Lorca and writer Gracio were discussing of a concept for a film in 2011. They were laughing about the concept which revolves around someone being possessed by a gay demon. In 2012 the two became serious about the concept and a script based on it was completed by late 2015. One of the challenges to producing the film was finding a producer to finance the film. The script was sent to Chris ", "score": "1.5153127" }, { "id": "7816788", "title": "Echo Films", "text": " Echo Films is an American production company founded in April 2008 by American actress Jennifer Aniston and production partner Kristin Hahn. Echo Films has a production deal with Universal Pictures. The company produces projects for both film and television. Most of the projects star Jennifer Aniston.", "score": "1.5141361" }, { "id": "7603074", "title": "Echo (1997 film)", "text": " Echo is a 1997 erotic thriller film directed by Charles Correll made for TV starring Jack Wagner and Alexandra Paul. The film was also known as Deadly Echo in Canada and the United Kingdom.", "score": "1.5081019" }, { "id": "29501410", "title": "Víctor Pérez (director)", "text": " to capture a complex vision in a simple cinematic way. “I wanted to take this technology at its maximum expression in terms of narrative to tell the story of ECHO, and the team at Stiller Studios accepted the challenge. The result is a whole short film shot entirely in just five long takes, with an actress who is synchronised with the camera movements as a hidden musical choreography. But after all technicalities and technology, I had always one key element in mind: tell a good story in a new way that’s never been seen before. Integrating VFX at the service of storytelling, not the other way around,” said Perez.", "score": "1.495935" }, { "id": "28385801", "title": "The Echo (2008 film)", "text": " The Echo is a 2008 American supernatural horror film directed by Yam Laranas and written by Eric Bernt and Shintaro Shimosawa. It is a remake of the 2004 Filipino film Sigaw, which was also directed by Laranas. The film stars Jesse Bradford and Amelia Warner, with Iza Calzado reprising her role from the original. The film was first released at the Fantasia Film Festival on July 17, 2008 in Canada. The film ultimately failed to get a theatrical release in the United States and was released straight-to-video on November 10, 2009 on DVD and Blu-ray formats. The theatrical release occurred internationally.", "score": "1.4884491" }, { "id": "29501415", "title": "Víctor Pérez (director)", "text": "ECHO (Short) - (2017) ; Another Love (Short) - (2015) ; Ensemble - Co-Writer ", "score": "1.4882389" }, { "id": "8065357", "title": "Echo (2007 film)", "text": " Echo is a 2007 Danish drama film, directed by Anders Morgenthaler, and starring Kim Bodnia.", "score": "1.4846503" }, { "id": "25801765", "title": "Echo (producer)", "text": " Paul Frederick Irizarry Suau, (born January 18), known artistically as Echo, is a Puerto Rican record producer and songwriter. Grammy Award-winning producer and engineer, Paul Irizarry “Echo” has successfully worked for the last 15 years with major urban and pop artists in Latin, mainstream, and European markets.", "score": "1.4769449" }, { "id": "16092017", "title": "Haliburton Echo", "text": " group of local businessmen consisting of Creighton Feir, Vince Connaughan, Peter Curry, Don Popple, Dave Gray, Gerry Dawson, and Ken Wilson. In 1985, Len Pizzey, an Echo staff member since 1978, bought the Echo. The Minden Recorder portion of the paper's title was dropped in 1991. In 1993, the Echo's Creighton Feir died. With more than 40 years to his credit, he was the longest serving staff member in the history of the Echo, a man whose career spanned both the letterpress and offset eras. In 1985, Pizzey hired a young reporter named Martha Perkins. Three years later he decided to concentrate more ", "score": "1.4745556" }, { "id": "29032753", "title": "Sanjeev Arora (physician)", "text": " Sanjeev Arora, MD, MACP, FACG (born September 1956), an Indian-American physician, is the Founder and Director of Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes), a telementoring model for quickly scaling up health expertise in local communities. Dr. Arora is also a Distinguished Professor of Medicine, Director of the Office of Clinical Affairs, and Executive Vice Chair for the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center (UNMHSC) in Albuquerque. Dr. Arora developed and implemented the Hepatitis C Disease Management Program at UNMHSC.", "score": "1.4729189" }, { "id": "6684695", "title": "Trent Harris", "text": " relationship with its star, Richard Griffiths. When Harris describes his technique, he compares himself to two directors most film lovers would never mention in the same breath: Michelangelo Antonioni and Ed Wood. Harris' web series Echo People is a spin-off of Rubin and Ed. Harris’ films have played at dozens of festivals and museums worldwide with screenings at: Sundance, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the British Film Institute in London, the Edinburgh Film Festival, the Museum of Modern Art in Vienna Austria, Les Laboratories in Aubervilliers France, The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco and the Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley.", "score": "1.4714682" }, { "id": "15841022", "title": "Echo Park (2014 film)", "text": " New York Times reviewer, Ken Jaworowski, finds the film understated and charming. He states: \"It's no surprise to learn that the director, Amanda Margolis, has a background in photography. Here, in her feature debut, she's skilled in conjuring moods by using soft images of her actors and their surroundings.\"", "score": "1.4685984" }, { "id": "29501409", "title": "Víctor Pérez (director)", "text": " Tomas Wall - synchronising for the first time two motion control rigs: the massive and pixel-accurate Cyclops® and the fastest and versatile Bolt®, both manufactured by the highly regarded Mark Roberts. Months of research and development, rehearsals and planning were necessary to accomplish the “Echo Mirroring Effect”. Stiller Studios – owned by Patrik Forsberg – brought a state-of-the-art motion control technology featuring a 3D virtual representation of their real sound stage to allow the filmmakers to design a choreography with the actress to match the virtual world to the real one and vice versa, with visual feedback in real time. This was truly a teamwork effort of narrative visual ", "score": "1.4640228" }, { "id": "566479", "title": "Echo (2001 film)", "text": "Producer: Mansour Sharifian ; cinematography: Kazem Sarvar ; Sound Recorder: Ali koohzad ; Costume Designer: Fariba Mortazavi ; Music: Hossein Shahabi ; Make Up: Sahar Amini ; Produced In Kish TV Iran 1997 ", "score": "1.462831" }, { "id": "2039117", "title": "Echo (The Americans)", "text": " The episode was written by Joel Fields and the series creator Joe Weisberg, and directed by Daniel Sackheim.", "score": "1.4590092" } ]
[ "Echo (producer)\nEcho Presenta: Invasion (2007) ", "Víctor Pérez (director)\nECHO (Short) - (2017) ; Another Love (Short) - (2015) ; Project Kronos (Short) - 2013 ", "Víctor Pérez (director)\n film freak!” In early 2016 and with the acclaim of Another Love, Victor began writing and directing his second short film ECHO. Unlike Another Love, Perez focused on ECHO as a way of bringing together his abilities as VFX artist to explore new ways of storytelling. The experimental film is about girl who wakes up in the middle of nowhere only to see her reflection in a mirror 10 seconds ahead of her time. When she wakes up again, the nightmare starts over. To create this never-before-seen mirroring footage, ECHO featured a pioneering motion control technology that was developed at Stiller Studios in Stockholm, Sweden - by Tomas Tjernberg ", "John C. Corlette\n Sittler got “Echo” going. John was an original and this showed itself in his creation Aiglon and its most characteristic custom: the morning Meditation. He collected art and had a weakness for Jaguars (petrol driven). He was a master of publicity and used this much to the benefit of his school. During the first American conference at Athenian in 1972, Aiglon gave a reception in San Francisco and a very fine film of the school was shown with a commentary by the best of the BBC announcers. It began with the camera swinging through the arc of mountains between Aiguille Verte and ", "Amanda Marsalis\n Marsalis made her directorial debut with the film Echo Park starring Mamie Gummer and Tony Okungbowa. The film premiered at the 2014 Los Angeles Film Festival. It was acquired for distribution in 2016 by ARRAY. She said that Rebecca Walker, an author with whom she had worked previously, referred her to the producers when they said they were looking for a director.", "Echorsis\n The film was directed by Lemuel Lorca and was produced by Chris Cahilig under the production firm, Insight 360. Jerry Gracio served as writer of the film. Echorsis was described as a parody of The Exorcist. The concept for Echorsis was created in 2011, when director Lorca and writer Gracio were discussing of a concept for a film in 2011. They were laughing about the concept which revolves around someone being possessed by a gay demon. In 2012 the two became serious about the concept and a script based on it was completed by late 2015. One of the challenges to producing the film was finding a producer to finance the film. The script was sent to Chris ", "Echo Films\n Echo Films is an American production company founded in April 2008 by American actress Jennifer Aniston and production partner Kristin Hahn. Echo Films has a production deal with Universal Pictures. The company produces projects for both film and television. Most of the projects star Jennifer Aniston.", "Echo (1997 film)\n Echo is a 1997 erotic thriller film directed by Charles Correll made for TV starring Jack Wagner and Alexandra Paul. The film was also known as Deadly Echo in Canada and the United Kingdom.", "Víctor Pérez (director)\n to capture a complex vision in a simple cinematic way. “I wanted to take this technology at its maximum expression in terms of narrative to tell the story of ECHO, and the team at Stiller Studios accepted the challenge. The result is a whole short film shot entirely in just five long takes, with an actress who is synchronised with the camera movements as a hidden musical choreography. But after all technicalities and technology, I had always one key element in mind: tell a good story in a new way that’s never been seen before. Integrating VFX at the service of storytelling, not the other way around,” said Perez.", "The Echo (2008 film)\n The Echo is a 2008 American supernatural horror film directed by Yam Laranas and written by Eric Bernt and Shintaro Shimosawa. It is a remake of the 2004 Filipino film Sigaw, which was also directed by Laranas. The film stars Jesse Bradford and Amelia Warner, with Iza Calzado reprising her role from the original. The film was first released at the Fantasia Film Festival on July 17, 2008 in Canada. The film ultimately failed to get a theatrical release in the United States and was released straight-to-video on November 10, 2009 on DVD and Blu-ray formats. The theatrical release occurred internationally.", "Víctor Pérez (director)\nECHO (Short) - (2017) ; Another Love (Short) - (2015) ; Ensemble - Co-Writer ", "Echo (2007 film)\n Echo is a 2007 Danish drama film, directed by Anders Morgenthaler, and starring Kim Bodnia.", "Echo (producer)\n Paul Frederick Irizarry Suau, (born January 18), known artistically as Echo, is a Puerto Rican record producer and songwriter. Grammy Award-winning producer and engineer, Paul Irizarry “Echo” has successfully worked for the last 15 years with major urban and pop artists in Latin, mainstream, and European markets.", "Haliburton Echo\n group of local businessmen consisting of Creighton Feir, Vince Connaughan, Peter Curry, Don Popple, Dave Gray, Gerry Dawson, and Ken Wilson. In 1985, Len Pizzey, an Echo staff member since 1978, bought the Echo. The Minden Recorder portion of the paper's title was dropped in 1991. In 1993, the Echo's Creighton Feir died. With more than 40 years to his credit, he was the longest serving staff member in the history of the Echo, a man whose career spanned both the letterpress and offset eras. In 1985, Pizzey hired a young reporter named Martha Perkins. Three years later he decided to concentrate more ", "Sanjeev Arora (physician)\n Sanjeev Arora, MD, MACP, FACG (born September 1956), an Indian-American physician, is the Founder and Director of Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes), a telementoring model for quickly scaling up health expertise in local communities. Dr. Arora is also a Distinguished Professor of Medicine, Director of the Office of Clinical Affairs, and Executive Vice Chair for the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center (UNMHSC) in Albuquerque. Dr. Arora developed and implemented the Hepatitis C Disease Management Program at UNMHSC.", "Trent Harris\n relationship with its star, Richard Griffiths. When Harris describes his technique, he compares himself to two directors most film lovers would never mention in the same breath: Michelangelo Antonioni and Ed Wood. Harris' web series Echo People is a spin-off of Rubin and Ed. Harris’ films have played at dozens of festivals and museums worldwide with screenings at: Sundance, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the British Film Institute in London, the Edinburgh Film Festival, the Museum of Modern Art in Vienna Austria, Les Laboratories in Aubervilliers France, The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco and the Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley.", "Echo Park (2014 film)\n New York Times reviewer, Ken Jaworowski, finds the film understated and charming. He states: \"It's no surprise to learn that the director, Amanda Margolis, has a background in photography. Here, in her feature debut, she's skilled in conjuring moods by using soft images of her actors and their surroundings.\"", "Víctor Pérez (director)\n Tomas Wall - synchronising for the first time two motion control rigs: the massive and pixel-accurate Cyclops® and the fastest and versatile Bolt®, both manufactured by the highly regarded Mark Roberts. Months of research and development, rehearsals and planning were necessary to accomplish the “Echo Mirroring Effect”. Stiller Studios – owned by Patrik Forsberg – brought a state-of-the-art motion control technology featuring a 3D virtual representation of their real sound stage to allow the filmmakers to design a choreography with the actress to match the virtual world to the real one and vice versa, with visual feedback in real time. This was truly a teamwork effort of narrative visual ", "Echo (2001 film)\nProducer: Mansour Sharifian ; cinematography: Kazem Sarvar ; Sound Recorder: Ali koohzad ; Costume Designer: Fariba Mortazavi ; Music: Hossein Shahabi ; Make Up: Sahar Amini ; Produced In Kish TV Iran 1997 ", "Echo (The Americans)\n The episode was written by Joel Fields and the series creator Joe Weisberg, and directed by Daniel Sackheim." ]
Who was the director of The Trap?
[ "Frank Reicher" ]
director
The Trap (1919 film)
1,035,763
97
[ { "id": "16198949", "title": "The Trap (1985 film)", "text": " The Trap (La Gabbia), also known as Collector's Item, Dead Fright and The Cage, is a 1985 erotic thriller directed by Giuseppe Patroni Griffi (his last theatrical film), and starring Tony Musante, Laura Antonelli, and Florinda Bolkan. Famed Italian horror director Lucio Fulci contributed to the screenplay (this film was done during the time Fulci was recovering from hepatitus, so he was unable to direct it). The film is based on a story called \"L'Occhio\", written by filmmaker Francesco Barilli. Barilli intended to make the film himself, but had trouble securing backing and balked at the producers wanting Shelly Winters in the lead role. So he sold the idea to Griffi and let him produce and direct it, retitling it The Trap. Barilli said of the finished product \"Lets' talk frankly here, that movie sucks....\" and Fulci even used profanity alluding to his opinion of Griffi, who he felt stole his chance to direct the film.", "score": "1.6133705" }, { "id": "8199445", "title": "The Trap (1913 film)", "text": " The Trap is a 1913 American silent short drama film directed by Edwin August, produced by Pat Powers, and starring Murdock MacQuarrie, Pauline Bush and Lon Chaney. The film is now considered lost. Chaney would later appear in an unrelated film of the same name in 1922.", "score": "1.6083536" }, { "id": "4741021", "title": "The Trap (1949 film)", "text": " The Trap (Spanish: La trampa) is a 1949 Argentine thriller film directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen and starring Zully Moreno, George Rigaud, and Juana Sujo. A woman marries a man without understanding the darker depths of his personality.", "score": "1.5761395" }, { "id": "12321516", "title": "The Trap (1950 film)", "text": " The Trap (Past) is a 1950 Czech drama film directed by Martin Frič. It was entered into the 1951 Cannes Film Festival.", "score": "1.5657349" }, { "id": "16199915", "title": "The Trap (1959 film)", "text": " The Trap is a 1959 color film noir directed by Norman Panama and released through Paramount Pictures. It stars Richard Widmark, Lee J. Cobb, Tina Louise, Earl Holliman, and Lorne Greene.", "score": "1.5629964" }, { "id": "27069191", "title": "The Trap (American TV series)", "text": " The Trap was an hour-long American television dramatic anthology series about people who found themselves in situations of which they had lost control. It was broadcast on CBS from April 29, 1950. through June 24, 1950. Franklin Heller was the producer, and Joseph DeSantis was its host and narrator. Nine 60-minute episodes aired live on CBS in 1950. Its notable stars, many early in their careers, included Kim Stanley, E.G. Marshall, Leslie Nielsen, and George Reeves. The October 17, 1950, episode was \"The Vanishing Lady\", starring Kim Stanley and Jeff Morrow.", "score": "1.5606731" }, { "id": "4670800", "title": "Traps (1994 film)", "text": " Set in Vietnam during the 1950s, journalist Michael Duffield (Robert Reynolds) and his English photographer wife Louisa (Saskia Reeves) arrive at the plantation of a Frenchman named Daniel (Sami Frey) and his daughter Sarah (Jacqueline McKenzie).", "score": "1.5590756" }, { "id": "12431041", "title": "The Trap (1922 film)", "text": " The Trap is a 1922 American silent film directed by Robert Thornby and starring Lon Chaney and Alan Hale. It was released by Universal Pictures. The film was released in the United Kingdom under the title Heart of a Wolf. The film stars Chaney as the leading character, Alan Hale as his rival, and Irene Rich as the female lead. Chaney had also appeared in an unrelated film of the same name in 1913. The film also features in a minor role Chaney's son Creighton (later known as Lon Chaney Jr.) in his film debut.", "score": "1.5479696" }, { "id": "27360227", "title": "Traps (1985 film)", "text": " Traps is a 1985 Australian film directed by John Hughes. It screened at the Melbourne International Film Festival.", "score": "1.5455238" }, { "id": "9119845", "title": "Roman Musheghyan", "text": " television series Trap 1, Trap 2, and Trap 3 (drama, a gangster saga). It became the highest rated project on the Armenian television. The Russian film production \"Central Partnership\" purchased the license on the production of the thriller TV series. While working at Shant TV he directed the TV series Inheritors and Lucky man. In 2010 he directed the TV series Beyond for Armenia TV. By order of the Russian producer company \"Bergsound\" two detective films were directed: Million-dollar murder in 2012 and Pay off in 2013. He is a frequent guest and a jury member at local and international film festivals, held in the region.", "score": "1.5440959" }, { "id": "12321517", "title": "The Trap (1950 film)", "text": "Vlasta Chramostová - Ruzena ; Jindra Hermanová - Woman Asking for Permission ; Miloslav Holub - Dönnert ; Vera Kalendová - Kraftová ; Otomar Krejča - Bor ; Jaroslav Mareš - Hans ; Karel Peyer - Cortus ; Vladimír Ráž - Antosch ; Majka Tomášová - Hertha ", "score": "1.5196278" }, { "id": "16199920", "title": "The Trap (1959 film)", "text": " When released, The New York Times film critic, Bosley Crowther, gave the film a mixed review, writing, \"And its tale of a conscience-smitten shyster nabbing a contemporary fugitive badman and bringing him in, against grueling opposition, is in the Western vein. It is not in the high tradition. After a promising start, in which the shyster transforms from a mouthpiece for the fugitive into a self-appointed deputy for his sheriff father, who gets killed, it settles down rather flatly into an ordinary \"chase,\" with the shyster attempting to get the badman by automobile to Barstow, 120 miles away...However, for all its pattern plotting and its heavy reliance on the guns, it comes off a fairly taut picture in the outdoor action frame. Norman Panama, who, with Melvin Frank, produced it, directed it and helped to write the script, has seen to it that there's no waste motion and that the pressure is on all the time.\"", "score": "1.5134414" }, { "id": "5249966", "title": "Man-Trap", "text": " Man-Trap is a 1961 American neo-noir film about a Korean War veteran who becomes involved in a scheme to steal $3.5 million from a Central American dictator. The film was directed by Edmond O'Brien and stars Jeffrey Hunter, David Janssen and Stella Stevens. The plot is based on the novel Soft Touch by John D. MacDonald, which had previously been serialised in Cosmopolitan magazine in March 1958 as \"Taint of the Tiger\".", "score": "1.5103195" }, { "id": "9119841", "title": "Roman Musheghyan", "text": " Roman Musheghyan (Ռոման Մուշեղյան born 13 November 1980) is an Armenian and Russian film-director. He gained a wide popularity due to the TV series Trap which was broadcast in the director's homeland and then was bought to be shown on Russian television.", "score": "1.5031617" }, { "id": "30158637", "title": "Star Trap", "text": " Star Trap is a 1988 UK television film with a screenplay written by Tony Bicât that was commissioned for London Weekend Television. Also directed by Bicât, the film was made over a period of six weeks; mainly in the Cotswolds. The final climax of the movie, set during a production of Shakespeare's Richard III, was filmed inside the Cochrane Theatre in London which was made to resemble the Stratford Memorial Theatre for the movie. Star Trap is a detective story featuring two rivals investigating murder that involves the occult. The film stars Daniel Flynn as the Detective, Nicky Henson as Adam Blunt, Philip Sayer as Basil Underwood, Jeananne Crowley as Lady Diana Fortesque, John Pennington as Sir John Fortesque, Frances Tomelty as Hermione Bradstreet, Lucy Benjamin as Nancy, Hugh Simon as Cradock, Allan Surtees as Dr Gregson, Sandra Yue as the Old Woman, Bryan Matheson as the Judge, Arthur Blake as Jim and Sharon Holm as Sue.", "score": "1.498872" }, { "id": "13457218", "title": "In the Trap", "text": " The film premiered at Trieste Science+Fiction Festival on 31 October 2019.", "score": "1.4969212" }, { "id": "4741022", "title": "The Trap (1949 film)", "text": "Zully Moreno as Paulina Figueroa ; George Rigaud as Hugo Morán / Paul Deval ; Juana Sujo as Agatha Valle ; Carlos Thompson as Mario Casares ; Juan Corona as Dr. Vargas ; María Santos as Srta. Martín ; María Esther Buschiazzo as Josefina ; Arnoldo Chamot as Relator ; Raquel Notar as Presidenta de la Liga ; André Dumont as Extorsionador ; Mario Caraballo ; Gloria Ferrandiz as Sra. Salcedo ", "score": "1.4944124" }, { "id": "8433932", "title": "The Trap (1946 film)", "text": " The Trap is a 1946 crime film directed by Howard Bretherton and starring Sidney Toler and Victor Sen Yung. The main premise is that two members of a show troupe are murdered, and detective Charlie Chan is called in to solve the case. The title credit mentions \"Charlie Chan\" as appearing in the film, as if he were an actor and not a fictional character portrayed by Toler. This was Toler's 22nd and final appearance as Chan, and his final film of any kind. Suffering from cancer during his last few films, Toler was often so weak that he could hardly walk or say his lines coherently.", "score": "1.4877473" }, { "id": "31969043", "title": "The Trap (British TV series)", "text": "Isaiah Berlin, political philosopher ; Kenneth Clark, historian, presenter of BBC TV series Civilisation ; Malcolm Muggeridge, British journalist ; Stuart Hall, cultural historian ; Jean-Paul Sartre, existentialist philosopher ; Frantz Fanon, psychoanalyst, revolutionary ; Jim Howard, field director, OXFAM ; Michael Ledeen, advocate of US regime change policy ; Alexander Haig, first US Secretary of State under Ronald Reagan ; Samuel P. Huntington, US political scientist ; Elliott Abrams, Assistant US Secretary of State 1981–1989 ; Robert Parry, Press Association reporter in Nicaragua in the 1980s ; Francis Fukuyama, political philosopher ; Jeffrey Sachs, US economist ; Yevgeny Kiselyov, general director of NTV, Russian TV station ", "score": "1.482194" }, { "id": "3354943", "title": "Belime", "text": "2010: Trap ", "score": "1.4821794" } ]
[ "The Trap (1985 film)\n The Trap (La Gabbia), also known as Collector's Item, Dead Fright and The Cage, is a 1985 erotic thriller directed by Giuseppe Patroni Griffi (his last theatrical film), and starring Tony Musante, Laura Antonelli, and Florinda Bolkan. Famed Italian horror director Lucio Fulci contributed to the screenplay (this film was done during the time Fulci was recovering from hepatitus, so he was unable to direct it). The film is based on a story called \"L'Occhio\", written by filmmaker Francesco Barilli. Barilli intended to make the film himself, but had trouble securing backing and balked at the producers wanting Shelly Winters in the lead role. So he sold the idea to Griffi and let him produce and direct it, retitling it The Trap. Barilli said of the finished product \"Lets' talk frankly here, that movie sucks....\" and Fulci even used profanity alluding to his opinion of Griffi, who he felt stole his chance to direct the film.", "The Trap (1913 film)\n The Trap is a 1913 American silent short drama film directed by Edwin August, produced by Pat Powers, and starring Murdock MacQuarrie, Pauline Bush and Lon Chaney. The film is now considered lost. Chaney would later appear in an unrelated film of the same name in 1922.", "The Trap (1949 film)\n The Trap (Spanish: La trampa) is a 1949 Argentine thriller film directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen and starring Zully Moreno, George Rigaud, and Juana Sujo. A woman marries a man without understanding the darker depths of his personality.", "The Trap (1950 film)\n The Trap (Past) is a 1950 Czech drama film directed by Martin Frič. It was entered into the 1951 Cannes Film Festival.", "The Trap (1959 film)\n The Trap is a 1959 color film noir directed by Norman Panama and released through Paramount Pictures. It stars Richard Widmark, Lee J. Cobb, Tina Louise, Earl Holliman, and Lorne Greene.", "The Trap (American TV series)\n The Trap was an hour-long American television dramatic anthology series about people who found themselves in situations of which they had lost control. It was broadcast on CBS from April 29, 1950. through June 24, 1950. Franklin Heller was the producer, and Joseph DeSantis was its host and narrator. Nine 60-minute episodes aired live on CBS in 1950. Its notable stars, many early in their careers, included Kim Stanley, E.G. Marshall, Leslie Nielsen, and George Reeves. The October 17, 1950, episode was \"The Vanishing Lady\", starring Kim Stanley and Jeff Morrow.", "Traps (1994 film)\n Set in Vietnam during the 1950s, journalist Michael Duffield (Robert Reynolds) and his English photographer wife Louisa (Saskia Reeves) arrive at the plantation of a Frenchman named Daniel (Sami Frey) and his daughter Sarah (Jacqueline McKenzie).", "The Trap (1922 film)\n The Trap is a 1922 American silent film directed by Robert Thornby and starring Lon Chaney and Alan Hale. It was released by Universal Pictures. The film was released in the United Kingdom under the title Heart of a Wolf. The film stars Chaney as the leading character, Alan Hale as his rival, and Irene Rich as the female lead. Chaney had also appeared in an unrelated film of the same name in 1913. The film also features in a minor role Chaney's son Creighton (later known as Lon Chaney Jr.) in his film debut.", "Traps (1985 film)\n Traps is a 1985 Australian film directed by John Hughes. It screened at the Melbourne International Film Festival.", "Roman Musheghyan\n television series Trap 1, Trap 2, and Trap 3 (drama, a gangster saga). It became the highest rated project on the Armenian television. The Russian film production \"Central Partnership\" purchased the license on the production of the thriller TV series. While working at Shant TV he directed the TV series Inheritors and Lucky man. In 2010 he directed the TV series Beyond for Armenia TV. By order of the Russian producer company \"Bergsound\" two detective films were directed: Million-dollar murder in 2012 and Pay off in 2013. He is a frequent guest and a jury member at local and international film festivals, held in the region.", "The Trap (1950 film)\nVlasta Chramostová - Ruzena ; Jindra Hermanová - Woman Asking for Permission ; Miloslav Holub - Dönnert ; Vera Kalendová - Kraftová ; Otomar Krejča - Bor ; Jaroslav Mareš - Hans ; Karel Peyer - Cortus ; Vladimír Ráž - Antosch ; Majka Tomášová - Hertha ", "The Trap (1959 film)\n When released, The New York Times film critic, Bosley Crowther, gave the film a mixed review, writing, \"And its tale of a conscience-smitten shyster nabbing a contemporary fugitive badman and bringing him in, against grueling opposition, is in the Western vein. It is not in the high tradition. After a promising start, in which the shyster transforms from a mouthpiece for the fugitive into a self-appointed deputy for his sheriff father, who gets killed, it settles down rather flatly into an ordinary \"chase,\" with the shyster attempting to get the badman by automobile to Barstow, 120 miles away...However, for all its pattern plotting and its heavy reliance on the guns, it comes off a fairly taut picture in the outdoor action frame. Norman Panama, who, with Melvin Frank, produced it, directed it and helped to write the script, has seen to it that there's no waste motion and that the pressure is on all the time.\"", "Man-Trap\n Man-Trap is a 1961 American neo-noir film about a Korean War veteran who becomes involved in a scheme to steal $3.5 million from a Central American dictator. The film was directed by Edmond O'Brien and stars Jeffrey Hunter, David Janssen and Stella Stevens. The plot is based on the novel Soft Touch by John D. MacDonald, which had previously been serialised in Cosmopolitan magazine in March 1958 as \"Taint of the Tiger\".", "Roman Musheghyan\n Roman Musheghyan (Ռոման Մուշեղյան born 13 November 1980) is an Armenian and Russian film-director. He gained a wide popularity due to the TV series Trap which was broadcast in the director's homeland and then was bought to be shown on Russian television.", "Star Trap\n Star Trap is a 1988 UK television film with a screenplay written by Tony Bicât that was commissioned for London Weekend Television. Also directed by Bicât, the film was made over a period of six weeks; mainly in the Cotswolds. The final climax of the movie, set during a production of Shakespeare's Richard III, was filmed inside the Cochrane Theatre in London which was made to resemble the Stratford Memorial Theatre for the movie. Star Trap is a detective story featuring two rivals investigating murder that involves the occult. The film stars Daniel Flynn as the Detective, Nicky Henson as Adam Blunt, Philip Sayer as Basil Underwood, Jeananne Crowley as Lady Diana Fortesque, John Pennington as Sir John Fortesque, Frances Tomelty as Hermione Bradstreet, Lucy Benjamin as Nancy, Hugh Simon as Cradock, Allan Surtees as Dr Gregson, Sandra Yue as the Old Woman, Bryan Matheson as the Judge, Arthur Blake as Jim and Sharon Holm as Sue.", "In the Trap\n The film premiered at Trieste Science+Fiction Festival on 31 October 2019.", "The Trap (1949 film)\nZully Moreno as Paulina Figueroa ; George Rigaud as Hugo Morán / Paul Deval ; Juana Sujo as Agatha Valle ; Carlos Thompson as Mario Casares ; Juan Corona as Dr. Vargas ; María Santos as Srta. Martín ; María Esther Buschiazzo as Josefina ; Arnoldo Chamot as Relator ; Raquel Notar as Presidenta de la Liga ; André Dumont as Extorsionador ; Mario Caraballo ; Gloria Ferrandiz as Sra. Salcedo ", "The Trap (1946 film)\n The Trap is a 1946 crime film directed by Howard Bretherton and starring Sidney Toler and Victor Sen Yung. The main premise is that two members of a show troupe are murdered, and detective Charlie Chan is called in to solve the case. The title credit mentions \"Charlie Chan\" as appearing in the film, as if he were an actor and not a fictional character portrayed by Toler. This was Toler's 22nd and final appearance as Chan, and his final film of any kind. Suffering from cancer during his last few films, Toler was often so weak that he could hardly walk or say his lines coherently.", "The Trap (British TV series)\nIsaiah Berlin, political philosopher ; Kenneth Clark, historian, presenter of BBC TV series Civilisation ; Malcolm Muggeridge, British journalist ; Stuart Hall, cultural historian ; Jean-Paul Sartre, existentialist philosopher ; Frantz Fanon, psychoanalyst, revolutionary ; Jim Howard, field director, OXFAM ; Michael Ledeen, advocate of US regime change policy ; Alexander Haig, first US Secretary of State under Ronald Reagan ; Samuel P. Huntington, US political scientist ; Elliott Abrams, Assistant US Secretary of State 1981–1989 ; Robert Parry, Press Association reporter in Nicaragua in the 1980s ; Francis Fukuyama, political philosopher ; Jeffrey Sachs, US economist ; Yevgeny Kiselyov, general director of NTV, Russian TV station ", "Belime\n2010: Trap " ]
Who was the director of Cocktail?
[ "Herman Yau", "Herman Yau Lai-to" ]
director
Cocktail (2006 film)
3,761,375
97
[ { "id": "7875292", "title": "Cocktail (1988 film)", "text": " Cocktail is a 1988 American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Roger Donaldson and written by Heywood Gould, whose screenplay was based on his book of the same name. The film tells the story of a young New York City business student, Brian Flanagan, who takes up bartending in order to make ends meet. The film stars Tom Cruise, Bryan Brown, and Elisabeth Shue. Released on July 29, 1988, by Buena Vista Pictures (under its adult film label Touchstone Pictures), Cocktail features an original music score composed by J. Peter Robinson. Despite earning overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics, and winning the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Picture, the film was a huge box office success, grossing more than $170 million worldwide against a budget of $20 million.", "score": "1.6543033" }, { "id": "6348292", "title": "Cocktail (2010 film)", "text": " Cocktail is a 2010 Malayalam thriller film edited and directed by Arun Kumar Aravind. The film stars Jayasurya, Anoop Menon, and Samvrutha Sunil in the lead roles, while Fahadh Faasil, Aparna Nair, Innocent, and Mamukkoya play supporting roles. The film released on 22 October 2010. The film was co-written by Anoop Menon and is an uncredited remake of the Canadian film Butterfly on a Wheel. It was the directorial debut of film editor Arun Kumar.", "score": "1.539166" }, { "id": "7875305", "title": "Cocktail (1988 film)", "text": " A music score was originally done by Maurice Jarre. A new score was added at the last minute. Kelly Lynch later said the film \"was actually a really complicated story about the '80s and power and money, and it was really re-edited where they completely lost my character's backstory—her low self-esteem, who her father was, why she was this person that she was—but it was obviously a really successful movie, if not as good as it could've been.\" She claimed Disney reshot \"about a third of the film... and turned it into flipping the bottles and this and that.... But we had a really great time. And Tom was so much fun, just a ball to work with, both on and off camera.\"", "score": "1.5107455" }, { "id": "25144855", "title": "Cocktails (The Office)", "text": " \"Cocktails\" was written by Paul Lieberstein, who plays Human Resources representative Toby Flenderson on the series. Lost series creator J. J. Abrams was hired on as episode director, his first such credit for the series. Abrams disliked the American series when it first premiered, due to his love for the original British series. The director explained, \"I resented it before I saw it, because I thought, 'well, how are you going to do what Ricky and Steve did. In fact, the first season I didn't get into it at all. In the second season, they really found their voice. And that's despite having to make 22 episodes, which is twice the length of what the BBC show did. And I thought that the show became brilliant. I was ", "score": "1.4867566" }, { "id": "7875293", "title": "Cocktail (1988 film)", "text": " Cocky Brian Flanagan is eager to land a high-powered job in the business world in New York City. When he fails, he settles for work as a bartender while attending business school during the day. An older and more experienced bartender, Doug Coughlin, takes him under his wing and the two become friends, with Doug giving Brian the idea for a nationwide chain of bars called Cocktails and Dreams. Brian drops out of business school and he and Doug become popular bartenders at a trendy nightclub. Eventually, their act catches the eye of Coral, a wealthy photographer and she and Brian begin dating. Doug bets Brian that the relationship won't last and, unbeknownst ", "score": "1.4856977" }, { "id": "7875299", "title": "Cocktail (1988 film)", "text": " The film was based on Heywood Gould's semi-autobiographical novel published in 1984. Gould had worked as a bartender in New York from 1969 to 1981 to support his writing career. Gould said he \"met a lot of interesting people behind the bar and very rarely was it someone who started out wanting to be a bartender. They all had ambitions, some smoldering and some completely forgotten or suppressed.\" Gould says the lead character \"is a composite of a lot of people I met, including myself in those days. I was in my late 30s, and I was drinking pretty good, and I was starting to feel like ", "score": "1.4757025" }, { "id": "13161073", "title": "Cocktail (2006 film)", "text": " Cocktail is a 2006 Hong Kong film produced and directed by Herman Yau and Long Ching.", "score": "1.4300752" }, { "id": "15396054", "title": "Lynnette Marrero", "text": " After working behind the bar at Elettaria, Marrero worked as a rum ambassador for UK-based alcoholic beverages provider Diageo for two years. Subsequently, she launched her own consulting company, Drinksat6. After Marrero moved to a new position as beverage director of New York's Rye House, the bar won Time Out's Eat Out Award for \"Best New Cocktail Bar\" and \"Best Bar Restaurant Hybrid.\" After winning awards at Rye House, Marrero and partner Jim Kearns created the cocktail program at the Astor Room in the Kaufman Astoria Studios. In 2009, at perhaps the height of her on-bar career, Marrero was presented with the James Beard Foundation award as one of \"America's Leading Female Mixologists.\"", "score": "1.4213157" }, { "id": "14045138", "title": "Robert Simonson", "text": " Robert Simonson began writing about cocktails, spirits and bars for The New York Times in 2009. He has also written frequently for Imbibe, Whiskey Advocate, Saveur, Food & Wine and Lucky Peach. Since 2017, he has been a contributing editor at Punch. His book 3-Ingredient Cocktails was nominated for a James Beard Award. His other writings have been nominated for a total of 10 Spirited Awards, which are awarded annually by Tales of the Cocktail. Prior to becoming a cocktail writer, he wrote about the theater for 15 years, primarily for The New York Times and Playbill, where he was an editor and writer for 16 years. He also wrote four books about the theater.", "score": "1.4187938" }, { "id": "7763563", "title": "Genevieve Gorder", "text": " Before being known as a designer, Gorder appeared as a commentator on the MTV series Sex in the 90s. During her tenure at design company Duffy & Partners (now Duffy) in New York City from 1998 to 2000, Gorder designed the bottle for Tanqueray No. 10 gin.", "score": "1.4154336" }, { "id": "7875304", "title": "Cocktail (1988 film)", "text": " Gould says the tricks involving throwing bottles was not in the book, but something he showed Cruise and Bryan Brown. They used it and it became a prominent feature of the film.", "score": "1.4149511" }, { "id": "315063", "title": "Manhattan Cocktail (film)", "text": " Manhattan Cocktail is a lost film except for a one-minute montage sequence, \"Skyline Dance\" by Slavko Vorkapich, which was released in October 2005 on the DVD Unseen Cinema: Early American Avant Garde Film 1894–1941.", "score": "1.414216" }, { "id": "7875301", "title": "Cocktail (1988 film)", "text": " wanted movie characters. Characters who were upbeat and who were going to have a happy ending and a possible future in their lives. That's what you want for a big commercial Hollywood movie. So I tried to walk that thin line between giving them what they wanted and not completely betraying the whole arena of saloons in general.\" Tom Cruise expressed interest in playing the role, which helped get it financed. \"There were a lot of bartenders around like Tom Cruise, younger guys who came on and were doing this for a while—and then 10 years later, still doing it,\" said Gould. \"It wasn't as if I ", "score": "1.4135898" }, { "id": "30233790", "title": "Cocktail Hour (film)", "text": " Cocktail Hour is a 1933 American Pre-Code romantic drama film produced and distributed by Columbia Pictures and starring Bebe Daniels. This film was directed by Victor Schertzinger. A copy of the film is preserved in the Library of Congress.", "score": "1.4103668" }, { "id": "315062", "title": "Manhattan Cocktail (film)", "text": " Manhattan Cocktail (1928) was a part-talkie film, directed by Dorothy Arzner, and starring Nancy Carroll, Richard Arlen, and Lilyan Tashman. At the time this movie was made, Hollywood was already making the transition of silent to sound, either making all talking movies, part talking movies, or silent movies with their own soundtrack and sound effects.", "score": "1.407851" }, { "id": "28125794", "title": "Cocktail (2012 film)", "text": " Cocktail is a 2012 Indian romantic comedy drama film directed by Homi Adajania and produced by Saif Ali Khan and Dinesh Vijan, starring Deepika Padukone, Saif Ali Khan and debutante Diana Penty as the lead roles, with Boman Irani and Dimple Kapadia and Randeep Hooda as supporting roles. The soundtrack was performed by Pritam and Salim–Sulaiman. Cocktail was released worldwide on 13 July 2012, with mixed-to-positive reviews, garnering high praise for Padukone and Penty's performances. Made on a budget of inr 650000000, Cocktail emerged as a commercial success, grossing inr 1260000000 worldwide.", "score": "1.4053109" }, { "id": "10845385", "title": "D. Harlan Wilson", "text": "The Cocktail Party (2006): Co-written with director Brandon Duncan, this short, animated, rotoscoped film is a highly abstracted and philosophical (post)postmodern meditation on the narcissistic themes of consumerism, redundant self-analysis and rampant hypocrisy. The film won over ten awards, among them Best Animation at ACE Film Festival. ", "score": "1.3985438" }, { "id": "7875300", "title": "Cocktail (1988 film)", "text": " was missing the boat. The character in the book is an older guy who has been around and starting to feel that he's pretty washed-up.\" Universal bought the film rights and Gould wrote the script, changing it from his novel. He says the studio put the project in turnaround \"because I wasn't making the character likable enough.\" Disney picked up the project \"and I went through the same process with them. I would fight them at every turn, and there was a huge battle over making the lead younger, which I eventually did.\" Gould later admitted that the people who wanted him to make changes \"were correct. ", "score": "1.3917797" }, { "id": "25144851", "title": "Cocktails (The Office)", "text": " \"Cocktails\" is the eighteenth episode of the third season of the American version of The Office, and the show's forty-sixth episode overall. It was written by actor Paul Lieberstein and directed by Lost series creator J. J. Abrams. NBC hired Abrams and Joss Whedon to each direct an episode during their February sweeps week. Michael Patrick McGill, Dan Cole, Owen Daniels, and Jean Villepique guest starred. In the episode, Michael, Dwight, Jim and Karen attend a cocktail party at CFO David Wallace's house. While there, Michael and Jan make their relationship public, Karen makes Jim uncomfortable by pointing out all of her ex-boyfriends in attendance, and Dwight inspects the home. Meanwhile, the rest of the office goes to a bar and Pam tries to be more honest with Roy. The first American broadcast of \"Cocktails\" occurred on February 22, 2007 to an estimated 8.3 million viewers. The episode was positively received by television critics, with Kevin Fitzpatrick of UGO Networks calling it one of the best of the series.", "score": "1.3910961" }, { "id": "26686583", "title": "Cocktails (film)", "text": " Cocktails is a 1928 British silent comedy film directed by Monty Banks and starring Harald Madsen, Enid Stamp-Taylor and Carl Schenstrøm.", "score": "1.3900712" } ]
[ "Cocktail (1988 film)\n Cocktail is a 1988 American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Roger Donaldson and written by Heywood Gould, whose screenplay was based on his book of the same name. The film tells the story of a young New York City business student, Brian Flanagan, who takes up bartending in order to make ends meet. The film stars Tom Cruise, Bryan Brown, and Elisabeth Shue. Released on July 29, 1988, by Buena Vista Pictures (under its adult film label Touchstone Pictures), Cocktail features an original music score composed by J. Peter Robinson. Despite earning overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics, and winning the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Picture, the film was a huge box office success, grossing more than $170 million worldwide against a budget of $20 million.", "Cocktail (2010 film)\n Cocktail is a 2010 Malayalam thriller film edited and directed by Arun Kumar Aravind. The film stars Jayasurya, Anoop Menon, and Samvrutha Sunil in the lead roles, while Fahadh Faasil, Aparna Nair, Innocent, and Mamukkoya play supporting roles. The film released on 22 October 2010. The film was co-written by Anoop Menon and is an uncredited remake of the Canadian film Butterfly on a Wheel. It was the directorial debut of film editor Arun Kumar.", "Cocktail (1988 film)\n A music score was originally done by Maurice Jarre. A new score was added at the last minute. Kelly Lynch later said the film \"was actually a really complicated story about the '80s and power and money, and it was really re-edited where they completely lost my character's backstory—her low self-esteem, who her father was, why she was this person that she was—but it was obviously a really successful movie, if not as good as it could've been.\" She claimed Disney reshot \"about a third of the film... and turned it into flipping the bottles and this and that.... But we had a really great time. And Tom was so much fun, just a ball to work with, both on and off camera.\"", "Cocktails (The Office)\n \"Cocktails\" was written by Paul Lieberstein, who plays Human Resources representative Toby Flenderson on the series. Lost series creator J. J. Abrams was hired on as episode director, his first such credit for the series. Abrams disliked the American series when it first premiered, due to his love for the original British series. The director explained, \"I resented it before I saw it, because I thought, 'well, how are you going to do what Ricky and Steve did. In fact, the first season I didn't get into it at all. In the second season, they really found their voice. And that's despite having to make 22 episodes, which is twice the length of what the BBC show did. And I thought that the show became brilliant. I was ", "Cocktail (1988 film)\n Cocky Brian Flanagan is eager to land a high-powered job in the business world in New York City. When he fails, he settles for work as a bartender while attending business school during the day. An older and more experienced bartender, Doug Coughlin, takes him under his wing and the two become friends, with Doug giving Brian the idea for a nationwide chain of bars called Cocktails and Dreams. Brian drops out of business school and he and Doug become popular bartenders at a trendy nightclub. Eventually, their act catches the eye of Coral, a wealthy photographer and she and Brian begin dating. Doug bets Brian that the relationship won't last and, unbeknownst ", "Cocktail (1988 film)\n The film was based on Heywood Gould's semi-autobiographical novel published in 1984. Gould had worked as a bartender in New York from 1969 to 1981 to support his writing career. Gould said he \"met a lot of interesting people behind the bar and very rarely was it someone who started out wanting to be a bartender. They all had ambitions, some smoldering and some completely forgotten or suppressed.\" Gould says the lead character \"is a composite of a lot of people I met, including myself in those days. I was in my late 30s, and I was drinking pretty good, and I was starting to feel like ", "Cocktail (2006 film)\n Cocktail is a 2006 Hong Kong film produced and directed by Herman Yau and Long Ching.", "Lynnette Marrero\n After working behind the bar at Elettaria, Marrero worked as a rum ambassador for UK-based alcoholic beverages provider Diageo for two years. Subsequently, she launched her own consulting company, Drinksat6. After Marrero moved to a new position as beverage director of New York's Rye House, the bar won Time Out's Eat Out Award for \"Best New Cocktail Bar\" and \"Best Bar Restaurant Hybrid.\" After winning awards at Rye House, Marrero and partner Jim Kearns created the cocktail program at the Astor Room in the Kaufman Astoria Studios. In 2009, at perhaps the height of her on-bar career, Marrero was presented with the James Beard Foundation award as one of \"America's Leading Female Mixologists.\"", "Robert Simonson\n Robert Simonson began writing about cocktails, spirits and bars for The New York Times in 2009. He has also written frequently for Imbibe, Whiskey Advocate, Saveur, Food & Wine and Lucky Peach. Since 2017, he has been a contributing editor at Punch. His book 3-Ingredient Cocktails was nominated for a James Beard Award. His other writings have been nominated for a total of 10 Spirited Awards, which are awarded annually by Tales of the Cocktail. Prior to becoming a cocktail writer, he wrote about the theater for 15 years, primarily for The New York Times and Playbill, where he was an editor and writer for 16 years. He also wrote four books about the theater.", "Genevieve Gorder\n Before being known as a designer, Gorder appeared as a commentator on the MTV series Sex in the 90s. During her tenure at design company Duffy & Partners (now Duffy) in New York City from 1998 to 2000, Gorder designed the bottle for Tanqueray No. 10 gin.", "Cocktail (1988 film)\n Gould says the tricks involving throwing bottles was not in the book, but something he showed Cruise and Bryan Brown. They used it and it became a prominent feature of the film.", "Manhattan Cocktail (film)\n Manhattan Cocktail is a lost film except for a one-minute montage sequence, \"Skyline Dance\" by Slavko Vorkapich, which was released in October 2005 on the DVD Unseen Cinema: Early American Avant Garde Film 1894–1941.", "Cocktail (1988 film)\n wanted movie characters. Characters who were upbeat and who were going to have a happy ending and a possible future in their lives. That's what you want for a big commercial Hollywood movie. So I tried to walk that thin line between giving them what they wanted and not completely betraying the whole arena of saloons in general.\" Tom Cruise expressed interest in playing the role, which helped get it financed. \"There were a lot of bartenders around like Tom Cruise, younger guys who came on and were doing this for a while—and then 10 years later, still doing it,\" said Gould. \"It wasn't as if I ", "Cocktail Hour (film)\n Cocktail Hour is a 1933 American Pre-Code romantic drama film produced and distributed by Columbia Pictures and starring Bebe Daniels. This film was directed by Victor Schertzinger. A copy of the film is preserved in the Library of Congress.", "Manhattan Cocktail (film)\n Manhattan Cocktail (1928) was a part-talkie film, directed by Dorothy Arzner, and starring Nancy Carroll, Richard Arlen, and Lilyan Tashman. At the time this movie was made, Hollywood was already making the transition of silent to sound, either making all talking movies, part talking movies, or silent movies with their own soundtrack and sound effects.", "Cocktail (2012 film)\n Cocktail is a 2012 Indian romantic comedy drama film directed by Homi Adajania and produced by Saif Ali Khan and Dinesh Vijan, starring Deepika Padukone, Saif Ali Khan and debutante Diana Penty as the lead roles, with Boman Irani and Dimple Kapadia and Randeep Hooda as supporting roles. The soundtrack was performed by Pritam and Salim–Sulaiman. Cocktail was released worldwide on 13 July 2012, with mixed-to-positive reviews, garnering high praise for Padukone and Penty's performances. Made on a budget of inr 650000000, Cocktail emerged as a commercial success, grossing inr 1260000000 worldwide.", "D. Harlan Wilson\nThe Cocktail Party (2006): Co-written with director Brandon Duncan, this short, animated, rotoscoped film is a highly abstracted and philosophical (post)postmodern meditation on the narcissistic themes of consumerism, redundant self-analysis and rampant hypocrisy. The film won over ten awards, among them Best Animation at ACE Film Festival. ", "Cocktail (1988 film)\n was missing the boat. The character in the book is an older guy who has been around and starting to feel that he's pretty washed-up.\" Universal bought the film rights and Gould wrote the script, changing it from his novel. He says the studio put the project in turnaround \"because I wasn't making the character likable enough.\" Disney picked up the project \"and I went through the same process with them. I would fight them at every turn, and there was a huge battle over making the lead younger, which I eventually did.\" Gould later admitted that the people who wanted him to make changes \"were correct. ", "Cocktails (The Office)\n \"Cocktails\" is the eighteenth episode of the third season of the American version of The Office, and the show's forty-sixth episode overall. It was written by actor Paul Lieberstein and directed by Lost series creator J. J. Abrams. NBC hired Abrams and Joss Whedon to each direct an episode during their February sweeps week. Michael Patrick McGill, Dan Cole, Owen Daniels, and Jean Villepique guest starred. In the episode, Michael, Dwight, Jim and Karen attend a cocktail party at CFO David Wallace's house. While there, Michael and Jan make their relationship public, Karen makes Jim uncomfortable by pointing out all of her ex-boyfriends in attendance, and Dwight inspects the home. Meanwhile, the rest of the office goes to a bar and Pam tries to be more honest with Roy. The first American broadcast of \"Cocktails\" occurred on February 22, 2007 to an estimated 8.3 million viewers. The episode was positively received by television critics, with Kevin Fitzpatrick of UGO Networks calling it one of the best of the series.", "Cocktails (film)\n Cocktails is a 1928 British silent comedy film directed by Monty Banks and starring Harald Madsen, Enid Stamp-Taylor and Carl Schenstrøm." ]
Who was the director of Mother and Child?
[ "Hans Steinhoff" ]
director
Mother and Child (1934 film)
1,153,613
59
[ { "id": "9276023", "title": "Mother and Child (2009 film)", "text": " Mother and Child is a 2009 drama directed and written by Rodrigo García. It premiered on September 14, 2009, at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival and at the Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2010, and was the closing night selection within Maryland Film Festival 2010. It was given a limited release in the United States beginning May 7, 2010.", "score": "1.6027743" }, { "id": "8029316", "title": "Shellen Lubin", "text": " about the experience of having her first child (entitled 'Mother/Child') at numerous cabaret spaces and theatres from 1986–88, including the Susan Bloch Theater and Interart Theatre. In 1989, she began her professional theater directing career at the Producer's Club Theatre with LIARS, written by Elliot Meyers and starring James “Jimmy” Wlcek, Peter Sprague, Annie Hughes, and Joyce West. She followed LIARS with the critically acclaimed Larry Myers’ Gene Tierney Moved Next Door in 1994 at Theater for the New City, with Cynthia Enfield, Rik Walter and Tom Fenaughty. She worked with Larry Myers again two years later, directing Coffee With Kurt Cobain, starring Angelica Page Torn ", "score": "1.5770974" }, { "id": "33106141", "title": "David Conolly", "text": " Having spent a few years in constant development it was decided to combine their many skills and create a feature film, entitled Mothers & Daughters. Six months were spent with actors devising and rehearsing the screenplay, followed by intense bursts of filming with breaks so that cast and crew could earn money to live on during production and so that Hannah and David could earn money to finance the next phase of filming! Finally producer and writer Lynda La Plante (Prime Suspect) saw a rough-cut of Mothers & Daughters and became their post production fairy Godmother. Mothers & Daughters was invited to film festivals worldwide, debuting at Cannes then playing at São Paulo, Montreal, Quebec, Barcelona, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, The Hamptons, London and Dinard \"Great performances, good pacing, sharp script\", Variety declared, they were nominated - The Golden Hitchcock Award for Direction. Mothers & Daughters was selected as one of the top six British Films of the year.", "score": "1.5412571" }, { "id": "27911343", "title": "Little Mother (1973 film)", "text": " Little Mother (also known as Woman of the Year) is a 1973 drama, romance, cult film directed by Radley Metzger and starring Christiane Krüger, Siegfried Rauch and Ivan Desny. The story was loosely modelled on that of Evita Peron in Argentina. It was a co-production between the United States, West Germany and Yugoslavia.", "score": "1.5253487" }, { "id": "4321170", "title": "Mothers (2010 film)", "text": " The film was written and directed by Milcho Manchevski, and produced by Christina Kallas. Vladimir Samoilovski was the director of photography, David Munns was the production designer, Zaklina Stojcevska edited the film, and the music was composed by Igor Vasilev and Novogradska. Principal photography took place in Mariovo, Macedonia, Kicevo, Macedonia, and Skopje, Macedonia.", "score": "1.5110157" }, { "id": "3773141", "title": "Mother of the Bride (1993 film)", "text": " Mother of the Bride is a 1993 American made-for-television drama film that stars Kristy McNichol, who also served as producer of the movie and was directed by Charles Correll Jr. It premiered on CBS on February 27, 1993 and was released on DVD in 2006. It was preceded by Children of the Bride (1990) and Baby of the Bride (1991).", "score": "1.5102799" }, { "id": "9276027", "title": "Mother and Child (2009 film)", "text": " The film was originally going to be produced by Cha Cha Cha Films, Focus Films and Universal Studios; Julie Lynn through Mockingbird Films took over in late 2008 with a production budget of $7 million. Principal photography began in January, 2009.", "score": "1.5091628" }, { "id": "9302446", "title": "Mother (1996 film)", "text": " Mother is a 1996 American comedy-drama film directed by Albert Brooks, co-written by Brooks with Monica Johnson, and starring Brooks and Debbie Reynolds as son and mother. Brooks portrays a novelist who moves back home with his mother after his second divorce, hoping to determine why all his relationships with women were unsuccessful. Mother was Reynolds's first major film role in over 20 years. The film earned positive reviews and was Brooks's most financially successful film as a director.", "score": "1.5064029" }, { "id": "16391722", "title": "Lynne Ramsay", "text": " in which she was the writer, producer and director. The film, based on Lionel Shriver's novel, is about a mother dealing with the aftermath of a school massacre committed by her son. Budgetary difficulties held the production up, but after several script drafts, the film, which employed a fragmented, elliptical narrative and starred Tilda Swinton as the tormented mother, premiered in 2011 to great acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival. Ramsay went on to receive a BAFTA nomination for Best Director as well as taking the Best Director prize at the British Independent Film Awards, and a win for Best ", "score": "1.5009475" }, { "id": "2631550", "title": "Children, Mother, and the General", "text": " Children, Mother, and the General (Kinder, Mütter und ein General, and also released as Sons, Mothers, and a General) is a 1955 West German war film directed by László Benedek and starring Hilde Krahl, Therese Giehse and Ewald Balser. The film was not a popular success, possibly because its anti-war perspective clashed with support for German rearmament and membership in NATO. The film's sets were designed by the art director Erich Kettelhut and Johannes Ott. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich and the Wandsbek Studios in Hamburg. Location filming took place on Lüneburg Heath.", "score": "1.4996046" }, { "id": "28603027", "title": "Sian Heder", "text": " After graduation, Heder moved to Hollywood to become an actress and screenwriter while working for a nanny agency. At the agency, she worked for guests with children staying at four-star hotels and her experiences inspired her first short film. In early 2005, the script for Mother was 1 of 8 chosen to be awarded a fellowship for the prestigious American Film Institute's DWW (Directing Workshop for Women). Mother, Heder's first short film as writer and director, won the Grand Jury Award for \"Best Narrative Short\" at the Florida Film Festival. Mother also received honors at the Cinéfondation Competition of the Cannes Film Festival and the Seattle ", "score": "1.4995553" }, { "id": "11093060", "title": "Stage mother", "text": " A stage mother may also be the official manager of her child (e.g., Rose Thompson Hovick, Dina Lohan, Ethel Gumm, Teri Shields, Susan Duff, Catherine Belkhodja etc.)—representing her child in negotiations for the professional services of her child. Such managers have often been referred to as \"momagers\" in the film industry. In certain cases where a mother and child both work in the film industry, an automatic labeling of \"stage mother\" can be affixed to the mother without cause. Kathie Lee Gifford has been against the concept of stage mothers and had explained that when her son Cody co-starred with her in the film Model Behavior, it had been on his own volition to try acting and not at her insistence. Gifford plays a stage mother in that movie.", "score": "1.4836515" }, { "id": "32836718", "title": "Mothers & Daughters (2004 film)", "text": " David Conolly was in a show on London’s West End that seemed to close on the first day of rehearsal. Conolly’s unexpected unemployment meant a new ear to listen to the stories and a new eye for the structure of the screenplay. Eight actors were chosen for the film (including Hannah Davis's mother Jean Boht ) and six months were spent devising and rehearsing the script. This was followed by intense periods of filming with breaks so that the cast and crew could earn money to keep them going also giving time for Conolly and Davis to earn enough to finance the next phase of production. Producer and best-selling novelist Lynda La Plante (of Prime Suspect, Trial & Retribution and Commander fame) saw a teaser for the movie and offered to become part of the post-production team and sign on as executive producer.", "score": "1.4805784" }, { "id": "12723523", "title": "Liu Jiang (director)", "text": " signed to direct the comedy television series Fathers and Mothers in the following year, it was broadcast in QTV-1 in May 2009. Liu rose to fame after directing A Beautiful Daughter-in-law Era (2010), which earned him an Outstanding Director Award at the 28th Flying Apsaras Awards. That same year, he also directed Before Dawn, for which he won the Most Popular Director Award at the 17th Shanghai Television Festival and was nominated for the Best Director Award. In 2011, he directed Enemies Among Us, based on Mai Jia's novel of the same name. In 2013, he was hired to direct Let's get married, for which he received three Best Director Awards at the 18th ", "score": "1.4775443" }, { "id": "31329748", "title": "John Bowlby", "text": " film because the mother was pregnant). Bowlby also incorporated Robertson's naturalistic observation methods of children's behaviors. ; Melanie Klein during his psychoanalytic training. She was his supervisor; however, they had different views about the role of the mother in the treatment of a three-year-old boy. Specifically and importantly, Klein stressed the role of the child's fantasies about his mother, but Bowlby emphasised the actual history of the relationship. Bowlby's views—that children were responding to real life events and not unconscious fantasies—were rejected by psychoanalysts, and Bowlby was effectively ostracised by the psychoanalytic community. He later expressed the view that his interest in real-life ", "score": "1.4760795" }, { "id": "6748499", "title": "Mother (1990 film)", "text": " Mother (Мать, translit. Mat, also known as Zapreshchyonnye lyudi) is a 1990 Soviet drama film based on Maxim Gorky's novels The Mother (1906) and The Life of a Useless Man (1908) and short story \"Karamora\" (1923), directed by Gleb Panfilov and co-produced with Italy. It was entered into the 1990 Cannes Film Festival.", "score": "1.4692215" }, { "id": "29371178", "title": "Mother and Child (Gordine)", "text": " The original casting of Mother and Child was commissioned by Queen Elizabeth of England to adorn the entrance of the Royal Marsden Cancer Centre in Sutton, Surrey. This casting was unveiled at the hospital by the Queen in 1963.", "score": "1.4685137" }, { "id": "11909596", "title": "Mothers and Daughters (2016 film)", "text": " Mothers and Daughters is a 2016 American independent drama film co-directed by Paul Duddridge and Nigel Levy, scripted by Paige Cameron from a concept by Duddridge, about the lives of different mothers and their children. The film stars an ensemble cast that includes Susan Sarandon, Christina Ricci, Sharon Stone, Eva Amurri, Courteney Cox, Roselyn Sánchez, Paul Wesley, E. G. Daily, Ashanti, Mira Sorvino and Selma Blair. Principal photography began in July 2015 in Los Angeles. The film was Duddridge's directorial debut.", "score": "1.4672906" }, { "id": "12293673", "title": "Arturo S. Mom", "text": " Arturo S. Mom (December 2, 1893 - ? in La Plata Buenos Aires Province) was an Argentine screenwriter and film director of the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. He wrote and directed films such as Monte Criollo (1935), Crazy Dandy (1936), Palermo (film) (1937), Our Land of Peace (1939) and Albergue de mujeres (1946).", "score": "1.4672117" }, { "id": "14815319", "title": "The Mother (Brecht play)", "text": " from Tver). It premièred on 17 January 1932 at the Komödienhaus am Schiffbauerdamm (near Theater am Schiffbauerdamm, but not the same) in Berlin. It was directed by Emil Burri and the scenic design was by Caspar Neher. Helene Weigel played the Mother and Ernst Busch played Pavel. Years later, Brecht directed the play with the Berliner Ensemble at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin in a production that opened on 10 January 1951. Neher also designed the sets for this production and Helene Weigel recreated the lead role, with Ernst Kahler playing Pavel and Busch as Lapkin. After Brecht's death, Manfred Wekwerth revised that production at ", "score": "1.466965" } ]
[ "Mother and Child (2009 film)\n Mother and Child is a 2009 drama directed and written by Rodrigo García. It premiered on September 14, 2009, at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival and at the Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2010, and was the closing night selection within Maryland Film Festival 2010. It was given a limited release in the United States beginning May 7, 2010.", "Shellen Lubin\n about the experience of having her first child (entitled 'Mother/Child') at numerous cabaret spaces and theatres from 1986–88, including the Susan Bloch Theater and Interart Theatre. In 1989, she began her professional theater directing career at the Producer's Club Theatre with LIARS, written by Elliot Meyers and starring James “Jimmy” Wlcek, Peter Sprague, Annie Hughes, and Joyce West. She followed LIARS with the critically acclaimed Larry Myers’ Gene Tierney Moved Next Door in 1994 at Theater for the New City, with Cynthia Enfield, Rik Walter and Tom Fenaughty. She worked with Larry Myers again two years later, directing Coffee With Kurt Cobain, starring Angelica Page Torn ", "David Conolly\n Having spent a few years in constant development it was decided to combine their many skills and create a feature film, entitled Mothers & Daughters. Six months were spent with actors devising and rehearsing the screenplay, followed by intense bursts of filming with breaks so that cast and crew could earn money to live on during production and so that Hannah and David could earn money to finance the next phase of filming! Finally producer and writer Lynda La Plante (Prime Suspect) saw a rough-cut of Mothers & Daughters and became their post production fairy Godmother. Mothers & Daughters was invited to film festivals worldwide, debuting at Cannes then playing at São Paulo, Montreal, Quebec, Barcelona, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, The Hamptons, London and Dinard \"Great performances, good pacing, sharp script\", Variety declared, they were nominated - The Golden Hitchcock Award for Direction. Mothers & Daughters was selected as one of the top six British Films of the year.", "Little Mother (1973 film)\n Little Mother (also known as Woman of the Year) is a 1973 drama, romance, cult film directed by Radley Metzger and starring Christiane Krüger, Siegfried Rauch and Ivan Desny. The story was loosely modelled on that of Evita Peron in Argentina. It was a co-production between the United States, West Germany and Yugoslavia.", "Mothers (2010 film)\n The film was written and directed by Milcho Manchevski, and produced by Christina Kallas. Vladimir Samoilovski was the director of photography, David Munns was the production designer, Zaklina Stojcevska edited the film, and the music was composed by Igor Vasilev and Novogradska. Principal photography took place in Mariovo, Macedonia, Kicevo, Macedonia, and Skopje, Macedonia.", "Mother of the Bride (1993 film)\n Mother of the Bride is a 1993 American made-for-television drama film that stars Kristy McNichol, who also served as producer of the movie and was directed by Charles Correll Jr. It premiered on CBS on February 27, 1993 and was released on DVD in 2006. It was preceded by Children of the Bride (1990) and Baby of the Bride (1991).", "Mother and Child (2009 film)\n The film was originally going to be produced by Cha Cha Cha Films, Focus Films and Universal Studios; Julie Lynn through Mockingbird Films took over in late 2008 with a production budget of $7 million. Principal photography began in January, 2009.", "Mother (1996 film)\n Mother is a 1996 American comedy-drama film directed by Albert Brooks, co-written by Brooks with Monica Johnson, and starring Brooks and Debbie Reynolds as son and mother. Brooks portrays a novelist who moves back home with his mother after his second divorce, hoping to determine why all his relationships with women were unsuccessful. Mother was Reynolds's first major film role in over 20 years. The film earned positive reviews and was Brooks's most financially successful film as a director.", "Lynne Ramsay\n in which she was the writer, producer and director. The film, based on Lionel Shriver's novel, is about a mother dealing with the aftermath of a school massacre committed by her son. Budgetary difficulties held the production up, but after several script drafts, the film, which employed a fragmented, elliptical narrative and starred Tilda Swinton as the tormented mother, premiered in 2011 to great acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival. Ramsay went on to receive a BAFTA nomination for Best Director as well as taking the Best Director prize at the British Independent Film Awards, and a win for Best ", "Children, Mother, and the General\n Children, Mother, and the General (Kinder, Mütter und ein General, and also released as Sons, Mothers, and a General) is a 1955 West German war film directed by László Benedek and starring Hilde Krahl, Therese Giehse and Ewald Balser. The film was not a popular success, possibly because its anti-war perspective clashed with support for German rearmament and membership in NATO. The film's sets were designed by the art director Erich Kettelhut and Johannes Ott. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich and the Wandsbek Studios in Hamburg. Location filming took place on Lüneburg Heath.", "Sian Heder\n After graduation, Heder moved to Hollywood to become an actress and screenwriter while working for a nanny agency. At the agency, she worked for guests with children staying at four-star hotels and her experiences inspired her first short film. In early 2005, the script for Mother was 1 of 8 chosen to be awarded a fellowship for the prestigious American Film Institute's DWW (Directing Workshop for Women). Mother, Heder's first short film as writer and director, won the Grand Jury Award for \"Best Narrative Short\" at the Florida Film Festival. Mother also received honors at the Cinéfondation Competition of the Cannes Film Festival and the Seattle ", "Stage mother\n A stage mother may also be the official manager of her child (e.g., Rose Thompson Hovick, Dina Lohan, Ethel Gumm, Teri Shields, Susan Duff, Catherine Belkhodja etc.)—representing her child in negotiations for the professional services of her child. Such managers have often been referred to as \"momagers\" in the film industry. In certain cases where a mother and child both work in the film industry, an automatic labeling of \"stage mother\" can be affixed to the mother without cause. Kathie Lee Gifford has been against the concept of stage mothers and had explained that when her son Cody co-starred with her in the film Model Behavior, it had been on his own volition to try acting and not at her insistence. Gifford plays a stage mother in that movie.", "Mothers & Daughters (2004 film)\n David Conolly was in a show on London’s West End that seemed to close on the first day of rehearsal. Conolly’s unexpected unemployment meant a new ear to listen to the stories and a new eye for the structure of the screenplay. Eight actors were chosen for the film (including Hannah Davis's mother Jean Boht ) and six months were spent devising and rehearsing the script. This was followed by intense periods of filming with breaks so that the cast and crew could earn money to keep them going also giving time for Conolly and Davis to earn enough to finance the next phase of production. Producer and best-selling novelist Lynda La Plante (of Prime Suspect, Trial & Retribution and Commander fame) saw a teaser for the movie and offered to become part of the post-production team and sign on as executive producer.", "Liu Jiang (director)\n signed to direct the comedy television series Fathers and Mothers in the following year, it was broadcast in QTV-1 in May 2009. Liu rose to fame after directing A Beautiful Daughter-in-law Era (2010), which earned him an Outstanding Director Award at the 28th Flying Apsaras Awards. That same year, he also directed Before Dawn, for which he won the Most Popular Director Award at the 17th Shanghai Television Festival and was nominated for the Best Director Award. In 2011, he directed Enemies Among Us, based on Mai Jia's novel of the same name. In 2013, he was hired to direct Let's get married, for which he received three Best Director Awards at the 18th ", "John Bowlby\n film because the mother was pregnant). Bowlby also incorporated Robertson's naturalistic observation methods of children's behaviors. ; Melanie Klein during his psychoanalytic training. She was his supervisor; however, they had different views about the role of the mother in the treatment of a three-year-old boy. Specifically and importantly, Klein stressed the role of the child's fantasies about his mother, but Bowlby emphasised the actual history of the relationship. Bowlby's views—that children were responding to real life events and not unconscious fantasies—were rejected by psychoanalysts, and Bowlby was effectively ostracised by the psychoanalytic community. He later expressed the view that his interest in real-life ", "Mother (1990 film)\n Mother (Мать, translit. Mat, also known as Zapreshchyonnye lyudi) is a 1990 Soviet drama film based on Maxim Gorky's novels The Mother (1906) and The Life of a Useless Man (1908) and short story \"Karamora\" (1923), directed by Gleb Panfilov and co-produced with Italy. It was entered into the 1990 Cannes Film Festival.", "Mother and Child (Gordine)\n The original casting of Mother and Child was commissioned by Queen Elizabeth of England to adorn the entrance of the Royal Marsden Cancer Centre in Sutton, Surrey. This casting was unveiled at the hospital by the Queen in 1963.", "Mothers and Daughters (2016 film)\n Mothers and Daughters is a 2016 American independent drama film co-directed by Paul Duddridge and Nigel Levy, scripted by Paige Cameron from a concept by Duddridge, about the lives of different mothers and their children. The film stars an ensemble cast that includes Susan Sarandon, Christina Ricci, Sharon Stone, Eva Amurri, Courteney Cox, Roselyn Sánchez, Paul Wesley, E. G. Daily, Ashanti, Mira Sorvino and Selma Blair. Principal photography began in July 2015 in Los Angeles. The film was Duddridge's directorial debut.", "Arturo S. Mom\n Arturo S. Mom (December 2, 1893 - ? in La Plata Buenos Aires Province) was an Argentine screenwriter and film director of the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. He wrote and directed films such as Monte Criollo (1935), Crazy Dandy (1936), Palermo (film) (1937), Our Land of Peace (1939) and Albergue de mujeres (1946).", "The Mother (Brecht play)\n from Tver). It premièred on 17 January 1932 at the Komödienhaus am Schiffbauerdamm (near Theater am Schiffbauerdamm, but not the same) in Berlin. It was directed by Emil Burri and the scenic design was by Caspar Neher. Helene Weigel played the Mother and Ernst Busch played Pavel. Years later, Brecht directed the play with the Berliner Ensemble at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin in a production that opened on 10 January 1951. Neher also designed the sets for this production and Helene Weigel recreated the lead role, with Ernst Kahler playing Pavel and Busch as Lapkin. After Brecht's death, Manfred Wekwerth revised that production at " ]
Who was the director of The Pigskin Palooka?
[ "Gordon Douglas", "Gordon Douglas Brickner" ]
director
The Pigskin Palooka
5,947,872
94
[ { "id": "25497625", "title": "The Pigskin Palooka", "text": " The Pigskin Palooka is a 1937 Our Gang short comedy film directed by Gordon Douglas. It was the 159th Our Gang short (160th episode, 70th talking short, and 71st talking episode) that was released.", "score": "1.9010292" }, { "id": "25497630", "title": "The Pigskin Palooka", "text": " Hugh Chapman, Dix Davis, Barry Downing, Roger McGee, Fred Walburn, Robert Winkler", "score": "1.8383517" }, { "id": "25497629", "title": "The Pigskin Palooka", "text": " Daniel Boone, John Collum, Charles Flickinger, Larry Harris, Paul Hilton, Darwood Kaye, Tommy McFarland, Donald Proffitt, Drew Roddy, Harold Switzer", "score": "1.7982678" }, { "id": "25497631", "title": "The Pigskin Palooka", "text": " Barry Downing, Bobby Callahan, Dix Davis, Floyd Fisher, Vincent Graeff, Payne B. Johnson, Henry Lee, Joe Levine, Priscilla Lyon, Drew Roddy, Norman Salling, Joe Straunch, Jr., Fred Walburn, Robert Winckler", "score": "1.7862267" }, { "id": "25497627", "title": "The Pigskin Palooka", "text": "Carl Switzer as Alfalfa ; Darla Hood as Darla ; Eugene Lee as Porky ; George McFarland as Spanky ; Billie Thomas as Buckwheat ; Pete The Pup as Himself ", "score": "1.6532688" }, { "id": "27887042", "title": "Palooka (film)", "text": " Palooka is a 1934 American Pre-Code comedy film directed by Benjamin Stoloff and starring Stuart Erwin in the titular role, Lupe Velez and Jimmy Durante, and based on the comic strip by Ham Fisher. The film was adapted by Jack Jevne, Arthur Kober, Gertrude Purcell, Murray Roth and Ben Ryan from the comic strip. The film is also known as The Great Schnozzle in the United Kingdom.", "score": "1.6345686" }, { "id": "25497626", "title": "The Pigskin Palooka", "text": " Having written of his football heroics in military school, Alfalfa returns home to a hero's welcome. But the fact is that Alfalfa never played a game in his life and borrowed Rex's, a classmate and football player's uniform to take a picture, angering him as well. No sooner has he stepped off the train than his old pal Spanky, manager of the gang's football team, informs Alfalfa that he's been slated to be star player in an upcoming gridiron battle—which is to be staged within the next few hours. Alfalfa winds up winning the game in a total fluke, which Buckwheat and Porky helped cause.", "score": "1.5375613" }, { "id": "27887045", "title": "Palooka (film)", "text": " The film was the second movie Edward Small made under an agreement with United Artists. Small bought the rights to the song \"Inka Dinka Doo\" specifically for the movie.", "score": "1.5226843" }, { "id": "25497628", "title": "The Pigskin Palooka", "text": "Rex Downing as Cadet (photographer) ; Gary Jasgur as Junior (timekeeper) ; Cullen Johnson as Scorekeeper ; Dickie Jones as Spike ; Sidney Kibrick as Spike's sidekick ; Delmar Watson as Captain of the military academy's football team ", "score": "1.5177225" }, { "id": "27887044", "title": "Palooka (film)", "text": "Jimmy Durante as Knobby Walsh / Junior ; Lupe Vélez as Nina Madero ; Stuart Erwin as Joe Palooka ; Marjorie Rambeau as Mayme Palooka ; Robert Armstrong as Pete 'Goodtime' Palooka ; Mary Carlisle as Anne ; Thelma Todd as Trixie ; Gus Arnheim as Orchestra Bandleader ; Franklyn Ardell as Doc Wise ; Tom Dugan as Whitey, Joe's Trainer ; Louise Beavers as Crystal – Mayme's Housekeeper ; Fred 'Snowflake' Toones as Smokey ; William Cagney, brother of James Cagney as Al McSwatt ; Rolfe Sedan as Alphonse ", "score": "1.4909106" }, { "id": "32550822", "title": "Jack Kinney", "text": " (1952) ; Man's Best Friend (director) (1952) ; Hello Aloha (director) (1952) ; Donald's Diary (director) (1953) ; How to Sleep (director) (1953) ; Football Now and Then (director) (1953) ; How to dance (director) (1953) ; Father's Week-end (director) (1953) ; For Whom the Bulls Toil (director) (1953) ; Father's Day Off (director) (1953) ; Canvas Back Duck (writer) (1953) ; Two for the Record (director) (1954) ; The Lone Chipmunks (director) (1954) ; Pigs Is Pigs (director) (1954) ; Casey Bats Again (director) (1954) ; Social Lion (director) (1954) ; Chips Ahoy (director) (1955) ; Contrast in Rhythm (director) (1956) ; How to Have an Accident in the Home (writer) (1956) ; How to Have an Accident at Work (writer) (1959) ", "score": "1.4789209" }, { "id": "10500392", "title": "Pigskin Champions", "text": " Pigskin Champions is a 1937 sports short subject documentary directed by Charles G. Clarke and Produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It featured the then-World Champion Green Bay Packers in an exhibition of football skills. It premiered in Green Bay, Wisconsin on August 13, 1937. The film featured prominent players from the team, such as Curly Lambeau, Arnie Herber, and Clarke Hinkle, performing difficult passes and kicks, as well as various workouts and drills.", "score": "1.4544219" }, { "id": "3549263", "title": "Chris Owen (director)", "text": " Owen's 1984 film Tukana (also called What Went Wrong?) was not a documentary, but a fictionalised feature film about the problems facing young people in the Bougainville Province. His 1990 film Man Without Pigs was about John Waiko (who would go on to become the PNG foreign minister from 2000 to 2001) returning to his home village to take part in a traditional ritual after receiving a PhD from the University of Papua New Guinea. The film was about the complexities of village politics, and the pressures and expectations placed on Waiko in a community where wealth and status are measured by the number of pigs one owns. The film won the awards for Best Documentary at the Hawaii International Film Festival, and the International Jurors' Prize at the Sydney Film Festival. Bridewealth for a Goddess (2000) won the Award for Excellence at the American Anthropological Association Film and Video Festival in 2001. Betelnut Bisnis (2004) won the award for Best Documentary at the Australian Capital Territory Film & Television Council.", "score": "1.4401784" }, { "id": "14801566", "title": "Palookaville (film)", "text": " Palookaville is a 1995 crime comedy film about a trio of burglars and their dysfunctional family of origin, starring William Forsythe, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Vincent Gallo, Adam Trese and Frances McDormand and directed by Alan Taylor. The writing is a free interpretation of three short stories by Italo Calvino", "score": "1.4329647" }, { "id": "32550815", "title": "Jack Kinney", "text": " Pigs (1954), Casey Bats Again (1954), and Social Lion (1954). Pigs Is Pigs was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. It was the third and last film directed by Kinney to be nominated for the Award. Another film credit for Kinney as a director was The Lone Chipmunks (1954). It was the last animated short film of the Chip 'n' Dale series. From 1954 to 1957, Kinney started directing television animation. He supervised new animation used to tie some of the old shorts together for the Walt Disney anthology television series, which was broadcast by the American Broadcasting ", "score": "1.4285145" }, { "id": "14801570", "title": "Palookaville (film)", "text": "1995, nominated, Thessaloniki Film Festival Golden Alexander for director Alan Taylor ; 1997, won Tromsø International Film Festival Audience Award for Alan Taylor ; 1998, won London Critics Circle Film Awards ALFS Award for British Producer of the Year for Uberto Pasolini ", "score": "1.4250172" }, { "id": "14306510", "title": "List of one-act plays by Tennessee Williams", "text": " The Palooka is a 1937 one-act about an old has-been boxer. The characters are The Palooka (Galveston Joe), The Kid and The Trainer. The Kid is nervous about his first fight, and The Palooka relieves the Kid's anxiety by telling about the fictional life he wanted to lead after he retired as Galveston Joe. Its world premiere was presented by the Chattanooga Theatre Centre (Chattanooga, TN) as part of the Fellowship of Southern Writers' Southern Writers Conference in 2000, and was later performed on October 2, 2003, by the Hartford Stage Company in Hartford, Connecticut.", "score": "1.4233582" }, { "id": "927229", "title": "Howard Ryshpan", "text": " Time\" by Harold Pinter and N. Simpson. In 1969, Howard Ryshpan directed the production of The Playmakers by Corner Brook at the Saint John Drama Festival in Newfoundland. He was chosen as the best director of the festival and won an award for directing the best play \"Live Like Pigs\" written by John Arden. This troupe represented the Maritime provinces at the National Dramatic Festival, from May 19 to May 24, 1969, in Kelowna, in British Columbia. On May 4, 1969, Howard interprets extracts from works by Franz Kafka, in a special program at the Saidye Bronfman Center in Montreal.", "score": "1.411308" }, { "id": "27887043", "title": "Palooka (film)", "text": " Joe Palooka (Stuart Erwin) is a naive young man whose father Pete (Robert Armstrong) was a champion boxer, but his lifestyle caused Joe's mother Mayme (Marjorie Rambeau) to leave him and to take young Joe to the country to raise him. But when a shady boxing manager (Jimmy Durante) discovers Joe's natural boxing talent, Joe decides to follow him to the big city, where he becomes a champion and begins to follow his father's path of debauchery, much of it including the glamorous cabaret singer and fortune hunter Nina Madero (Lupe Vélez). The film also stars William Cagney, the younger brother of actor James Cagney in the role of the adversary prize fighter to Knobby. Finally his mother comes to the city to look after things ...", "score": "1.4028678" }, { "id": "1176932", "title": "Off Sides (Pigs vs. Freaks)", "text": "Frank Beascoechea: Director of Photography ; Gordon Dawson: Screenwriter ; Jack Epps, Jr.: Writer, original story; Producer ; Duane Toler: Script Supervisor ; Robert Lovenheim: Supervising Producer ; Robert Huddleston: Producer ; Mark Snow: Music ; Dale Johnston: Sound Editor ; Caro Jones: Casting ", "score": "1.3783937" } ]
[ "The Pigskin Palooka\n The Pigskin Palooka is a 1937 Our Gang short comedy film directed by Gordon Douglas. It was the 159th Our Gang short (160th episode, 70th talking short, and 71st talking episode) that was released.", "The Pigskin Palooka\n Hugh Chapman, Dix Davis, Barry Downing, Roger McGee, Fred Walburn, Robert Winkler", "The Pigskin Palooka\n Daniel Boone, John Collum, Charles Flickinger, Larry Harris, Paul Hilton, Darwood Kaye, Tommy McFarland, Donald Proffitt, Drew Roddy, Harold Switzer", "The Pigskin Palooka\n Barry Downing, Bobby Callahan, Dix Davis, Floyd Fisher, Vincent Graeff, Payne B. Johnson, Henry Lee, Joe Levine, Priscilla Lyon, Drew Roddy, Norman Salling, Joe Straunch, Jr., Fred Walburn, Robert Winckler", "The Pigskin Palooka\nCarl Switzer as Alfalfa ; Darla Hood as Darla ; Eugene Lee as Porky ; George McFarland as Spanky ; Billie Thomas as Buckwheat ; Pete The Pup as Himself ", "Palooka (film)\n Palooka is a 1934 American Pre-Code comedy film directed by Benjamin Stoloff and starring Stuart Erwin in the titular role, Lupe Velez and Jimmy Durante, and based on the comic strip by Ham Fisher. The film was adapted by Jack Jevne, Arthur Kober, Gertrude Purcell, Murray Roth and Ben Ryan from the comic strip. The film is also known as The Great Schnozzle in the United Kingdom.", "The Pigskin Palooka\n Having written of his football heroics in military school, Alfalfa returns home to a hero's welcome. But the fact is that Alfalfa never played a game in his life and borrowed Rex's, a classmate and football player's uniform to take a picture, angering him as well. No sooner has he stepped off the train than his old pal Spanky, manager of the gang's football team, informs Alfalfa that he's been slated to be star player in an upcoming gridiron battle—which is to be staged within the next few hours. Alfalfa winds up winning the game in a total fluke, which Buckwheat and Porky helped cause.", "Palooka (film)\n The film was the second movie Edward Small made under an agreement with United Artists. Small bought the rights to the song \"Inka Dinka Doo\" specifically for the movie.", "The Pigskin Palooka\nRex Downing as Cadet (photographer) ; Gary Jasgur as Junior (timekeeper) ; Cullen Johnson as Scorekeeper ; Dickie Jones as Spike ; Sidney Kibrick as Spike's sidekick ; Delmar Watson as Captain of the military academy's football team ", "Palooka (film)\nJimmy Durante as Knobby Walsh / Junior ; Lupe Vélez as Nina Madero ; Stuart Erwin as Joe Palooka ; Marjorie Rambeau as Mayme Palooka ; Robert Armstrong as Pete 'Goodtime' Palooka ; Mary Carlisle as Anne ; Thelma Todd as Trixie ; Gus Arnheim as Orchestra Bandleader ; Franklyn Ardell as Doc Wise ; Tom Dugan as Whitey, Joe's Trainer ; Louise Beavers as Crystal – Mayme's Housekeeper ; Fred 'Snowflake' Toones as Smokey ; William Cagney, brother of James Cagney as Al McSwatt ; Rolfe Sedan as Alphonse ", "Jack Kinney\n (1952) ; Man's Best Friend (director) (1952) ; Hello Aloha (director) (1952) ; Donald's Diary (director) (1953) ; How to Sleep (director) (1953) ; Football Now and Then (director) (1953) ; How to dance (director) (1953) ; Father's Week-end (director) (1953) ; For Whom the Bulls Toil (director) (1953) ; Father's Day Off (director) (1953) ; Canvas Back Duck (writer) (1953) ; Two for the Record (director) (1954) ; The Lone Chipmunks (director) (1954) ; Pigs Is Pigs (director) (1954) ; Casey Bats Again (director) (1954) ; Social Lion (director) (1954) ; Chips Ahoy (director) (1955) ; Contrast in Rhythm (director) (1956) ; How to Have an Accident in the Home (writer) (1956) ; How to Have an Accident at Work (writer) (1959) ", "Pigskin Champions\n Pigskin Champions is a 1937 sports short subject documentary directed by Charles G. Clarke and Produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It featured the then-World Champion Green Bay Packers in an exhibition of football skills. It premiered in Green Bay, Wisconsin on August 13, 1937. The film featured prominent players from the team, such as Curly Lambeau, Arnie Herber, and Clarke Hinkle, performing difficult passes and kicks, as well as various workouts and drills.", "Chris Owen (director)\n Owen's 1984 film Tukana (also called What Went Wrong?) was not a documentary, but a fictionalised feature film about the problems facing young people in the Bougainville Province. His 1990 film Man Without Pigs was about John Waiko (who would go on to become the PNG foreign minister from 2000 to 2001) returning to his home village to take part in a traditional ritual after receiving a PhD from the University of Papua New Guinea. The film was about the complexities of village politics, and the pressures and expectations placed on Waiko in a community where wealth and status are measured by the number of pigs one owns. The film won the awards for Best Documentary at the Hawaii International Film Festival, and the International Jurors' Prize at the Sydney Film Festival. Bridewealth for a Goddess (2000) won the Award for Excellence at the American Anthropological Association Film and Video Festival in 2001. Betelnut Bisnis (2004) won the award for Best Documentary at the Australian Capital Territory Film & Television Council.", "Palookaville (film)\n Palookaville is a 1995 crime comedy film about a trio of burglars and their dysfunctional family of origin, starring William Forsythe, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Vincent Gallo, Adam Trese and Frances McDormand and directed by Alan Taylor. The writing is a free interpretation of three short stories by Italo Calvino", "Jack Kinney\n Pigs (1954), Casey Bats Again (1954), and Social Lion (1954). Pigs Is Pigs was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. It was the third and last film directed by Kinney to be nominated for the Award. Another film credit for Kinney as a director was The Lone Chipmunks (1954). It was the last animated short film of the Chip 'n' Dale series. From 1954 to 1957, Kinney started directing television animation. He supervised new animation used to tie some of the old shorts together for the Walt Disney anthology television series, which was broadcast by the American Broadcasting ", "Palookaville (film)\n1995, nominated, Thessaloniki Film Festival Golden Alexander for director Alan Taylor ; 1997, won Tromsø International Film Festival Audience Award for Alan Taylor ; 1998, won London Critics Circle Film Awards ALFS Award for British Producer of the Year for Uberto Pasolini ", "List of one-act plays by Tennessee Williams\n The Palooka is a 1937 one-act about an old has-been boxer. The characters are The Palooka (Galveston Joe), The Kid and The Trainer. The Kid is nervous about his first fight, and The Palooka relieves the Kid's anxiety by telling about the fictional life he wanted to lead after he retired as Galveston Joe. Its world premiere was presented by the Chattanooga Theatre Centre (Chattanooga, TN) as part of the Fellowship of Southern Writers' Southern Writers Conference in 2000, and was later performed on October 2, 2003, by the Hartford Stage Company in Hartford, Connecticut.", "Howard Ryshpan\n Time\" by Harold Pinter and N. Simpson. In 1969, Howard Ryshpan directed the production of The Playmakers by Corner Brook at the Saint John Drama Festival in Newfoundland. He was chosen as the best director of the festival and won an award for directing the best play \"Live Like Pigs\" written by John Arden. This troupe represented the Maritime provinces at the National Dramatic Festival, from May 19 to May 24, 1969, in Kelowna, in British Columbia. On May 4, 1969, Howard interprets extracts from works by Franz Kafka, in a special program at the Saidye Bronfman Center in Montreal.", "Palooka (film)\n Joe Palooka (Stuart Erwin) is a naive young man whose father Pete (Robert Armstrong) was a champion boxer, but his lifestyle caused Joe's mother Mayme (Marjorie Rambeau) to leave him and to take young Joe to the country to raise him. But when a shady boxing manager (Jimmy Durante) discovers Joe's natural boxing talent, Joe decides to follow him to the big city, where he becomes a champion and begins to follow his father's path of debauchery, much of it including the glamorous cabaret singer and fortune hunter Nina Madero (Lupe Vélez). The film also stars William Cagney, the younger brother of actor James Cagney in the role of the adversary prize fighter to Knobby. Finally his mother comes to the city to look after things ...", "Off Sides (Pigs vs. Freaks)\nFrank Beascoechea: Director of Photography ; Gordon Dawson: Screenwriter ; Jack Epps, Jr.: Writer, original story; Producer ; Duane Toler: Script Supervisor ; Robert Lovenheim: Supervising Producer ; Robert Huddleston: Producer ; Mark Snow: Music ; Dale Johnston: Sound Editor ; Caro Jones: Casting " ]
Who was the director of Public Opinion?
[ "Frank Reicher" ]
director
Public Opinion (1916 film)
2,910,921
97
[ { "id": "11553297", "title": "John Mueller", "text": " Presidents and Public Opinion (New York: Wiley, originally published in 1973) was awarded the first Warren J. Mitofsky Award for Excellence in Public Opinion Research by the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Connecticut in 2007, for being \"a trailblazing book in public opinion research, in political science, and in the use of the Roper Center's data.\" This book featured the first definition of what is known as the Rally Round the Flag Syndrome. It also analyzed press coverage of the Tet offensive, 1968, in the Vietnam War. Although primarily known as a political scientist, Mueller is also an expert on filmed dance and a leading authority on the work ", "score": "1.4850217" }, { "id": "8857743", "title": "Public Opinion (1935 film)", "text": " Public Opinion is a 1935 American drama film directed by Frank R. Strayer and starring Lois Wilson, Crane Wilbur and Shirley Grey.", "score": "1.4836252" }, { "id": "26003295", "title": "Steven Kull", "text": " Dr. Steven Kull is a political psychologist who studies the impact of public opinion on public policy. He has conducted polls and focus groups in over 30 countries around the world. He has led in-depth studies in the United States and the Muslim world, as well as numerous large multi-nation studies of world public opinion. Kull appears regularly in international media and has testified to or consulted with the U.S. Congress, the U.S. State Department, the United Nations, NATO, the European Commission, and other agencies. Kull is director of the Program for Public Consultation (PPC), part of the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland. PPC was established to develop the methods and theory of public consultation and to conduct public consultations. In particular it ", "score": "1.4714143" }, { "id": "14309433", "title": "Public Opinion (magazine)", "text": " Public Opinion was a British magazine that ran from 1861 to 1951. It was a weekly \"review of current thought and activity\", published in London by G. Cole. An 82 reel microfilm was published by the Library of Congress in 1972.", "score": "1.4613152" }, { "id": "10759466", "title": "Public Opinion (1916 film)", "text": " Public Opinion is a surviving 1916 American silent drama film produced by Jesse Lasky and distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was directed by Frank Reicher and stars Blanche Sweet. Margaret Turnbull provided the original screen story and scenario. Public Opinion is one of very few of Blanche Sweet's Paramount Pictures films still in existence. It is preserved by the Library of Congress.", "score": "1.4570894" }, { "id": "1590749", "title": "Elmo Roper", "text": " the reputation of Roper's techniques. In 1940, Roosevelt hired Roper to assess public opinion of Lend-Lease prior to its implementation. In 1942 he was hired by William Joseph Donovan to be the deputy director of the Office of Strategic Services; Roper subsequently worked with the Office of War Information. After leaving the OWI he founded the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Connecticut in 1947. From 1956 he served as chairman of board of directors of Fund for the Republic succeeding Paul G. Hoffman. Roper Opinion Research Company (the \"Roper Poll\") was later renamed Roper Starch Worldwide Company and eventually acquired by NOP World and then GfK in 2005.", "score": "1.4446764" }, { "id": "27991626", "title": "Robert Chung", "text": " Dr. Robert Chung is a Hong Kong academician. He is the former Director of the Public Opinion Programme (POP) of the University of Hong Kong. POP became an independent institute in May 2019 as the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute, with Chung remaining its head. In 2000, Chung wrote an academic article stating that he felt pressure to stop conducting public opinion research polls. Later known as the 'Robert Chung affair', his article showed that freedom of speech is still alive in Hong Kong.", "score": "1.4439468" }, { "id": "11038530", "title": "John Zaller", "text": " John Raymond Zaller (born 1949) is a political scientist and professor specializing in public opinion at the University of California, Los Angeles. He was an Editor of the American Political Science Review. He graduated from Saint Monica Catholic High School in Santa Monica, CA. He pursued his undergraduate studies at the University of California, Riverside. He received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1984.", "score": "1.4286414" }, { "id": "14513428", "title": "Philip Converse", "text": " Philip Ernest Converse (November 17, 1928 – December 30, 2014) was an American political scientist. He was a professor in political science and sociology at the University of Michigan who conducted research on public opinion, survey research, and quantitative social science. Converse's book chapter \"The Nature of Belief Systems in Mass Publics\" (Ideology and Discontent, edited by David E. Apter, 1964) held that most people lack structure and stability in their political views. With Angus Campbell, Warren Miller, and Donald E. Stokes, he co-wrote The American Voter, which used data from the American National Election Studies to create a set of surveys of American public opinion carried out by the University of Michigan Survey Research Center and the Center for Political Studies. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1969.", "score": "1.4270102" }, { "id": "13633913", "title": "Public Opinion (1954 film)", "text": " Public Opinion (French: Rumeur publique, Italian: Opinione pubblica) is a 1954 French-Italian drama film directed by Maurizio Corgnati and Goffredo Alessandrini and starring Daniel Gélin, Delia Scala and Giulio Calì.", "score": "1.4221327" }, { "id": "4518496", "title": "Opinions (TV series)", "text": " Opinions was a British talk programme broadcast on Channel 4 television in the 1980s and 1990s. According to Time magazine, Opinions gave \"a public figure 30-minutes of airtime each week to expound on a controversial topic (Germaine Greer on Margaret Thatcher, Edward Teller on nuclear defence)\". \"A speaker could express his or her own views straight to camera for 30 minutes\" \"an earnest of Channel 4's faith and mission to bring edgy, alternative fare to the public and to excite reaction\". During the time it was produced by Open Media, the series featured such figures as Edward de Bono, Alan Clark, Linda Colley, Brian Cox, James Goldsmith, Paul Hill, Dusan Makavejev, G.F. Newman, George Soros and Norman Stone. One - by Dennis Potter, in 1993 - was given a cinema screening by the BFI in July 2014. Among those appearing in the Opinions 1993 debate in Westminster Central Hall about democracy in Britain chaired by Vincent Hanna were Zaki Badawi, Christine Crawley, Paul Ekins, Christopher Hitchens, Paul Kennedy, Michael Mansfield, David Miliband, Geoff Mulgan, Vincent Nichols, Janet Paraskeva, Jonathan Sacks, Nancy Seear, Roger Scruton, Anthony Smith and Crispin Tickell.", "score": "1.4190409" }, { "id": "9603912", "title": "Everett Carll Ladd", "text": " Everett Carll Ladd, Jr. (September 24, 1937– December 8, 1999) was an American political scientist based at the University of Connecticut. He was best known for his analysis and collection of public opinion polls. He directed the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Connecticut; the Center's mission is to collect and preserve the reports and the original raw computerized data (on IBM cards and tapes) of polls and surveys since the 1930s. At his death, he had amassed 14,000 surveys from many countries. He was also an expert on the opinions and careers of social scientists.", "score": "1.4158237" }, { "id": "26366266", "title": "Robert Blendon", "text": " series with National Public Radio and POLITICO. Previously, he co-directed a special polling series with The Washington Post and Kaiser Family Foundation. Additionally, Dr. Blendon co-directed a special survey project for the Minneapolis Star Tribune on health care that received the National Press Club’s 1998 Award for Consumer Journalism. He also co-directed a project for National Public Radio and the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation on American attitudes toward domestic policy. The series was cited by the National Journal as setting a new standard for use of public opinion surveys in broadcast journalism. In 2008, Dr. Blendon received the Warren J. Mitofsky Award for Excellence in Public Opinion Research from the Board of Directors of the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at Cornell University.", "score": "1.4156429" }, { "id": "26001752", "title": "Public Opinion (book)", "text": " Public Opinion is a book by Walter Lippmann, published in 1922. It is a critical assessment of functional democratic government, especially of the irrational and often self-serving social perceptions that influence individual behavior and prevent optimal societal cohesion. The detailed descriptions of the cognitive limitations people face in comprehending their sociopolitical and cultural environments, leading them to apply an evolving catalogue of general stereotypes to a complex reality, rendered Public Opinion a seminal text in the fields of media studies, political science, and social psychology.", "score": "1.415443" }, { "id": "10158216", "title": "Elizabeth Zechmeister", "text": " Zechmeister held her first position as an Assistant Professor at University of California, Davis in 2003 before joining the faculty at Vanderbilt University in the Department of Political Science in 2008. She became Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Political Science in 2018. Zechmeister is director of the Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP). As Director, she oversees the AmericasBarometer, a comparative public opinion survey that covers 34 nations including all of North, Central, and South America and many Caribbean nations. The survey typically includes more than 40,000 interviews, and is the most expansive regional survey project in the Western Hemisphere. Zechmeister is also ", "score": "1.3998795" }, { "id": "27991628", "title": "Robert Chung", "text": " on 1 January 2002. The programme regularly conducts independent surveys, covers media development, and launches electoral studies, policy issues, and youth studies. Under his leadership, the programme is famous for being impartial and professional, and is a highly respected public opinion study programme in the region. Its studies are widely covered in mass media and frequently cited in academic publications. Chung has written numerous articles on public opinion and social surveys published in various journals and periodicals, and is the Chief Editor of the monthly POP newsletters, POP Express, and the HKU POP Site. Besides, Chung is a Panelist of Television Programme Advisory Panel of Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK) and a Panelist of the Television Programme Appreciation Index Research Panel. From 1993 to 1994, Chung ", "score": "1.3944392" }, { "id": "8595418", "title": "Alberto Cinta", "text": " In 1991 Cinta joined the public service working for the President of the Republic's office as Director of public opinion analysis under President Carlos Salinas de Gortari. He also joined the office of the President Ernesto Zedillo of the PRI, as General Director of Research and Analysis (1995–1997). From 1999 to 2000 he served as advisor for Francisco Labastida's presidential campaign (PRI). From 2003 to 2005 he served as General Director of the Centro de Estudios Sociales y de Opinión Pública of the Chamber of Deputies.", "score": "1.390703" }, { "id": "26775266", "title": "Roper Center for Public Opinion Research", "text": "2007: John Mueller ; 2008: Robert Blendon ; 2009: Robert Wuthnow ; 2010: James A. Davis ; 2011: Kathleen Frankovic ; 2012: Norman Bradburn ; 2013: Eric Schickler and Adam Berinsky ; 2014: Andrew Kohut ; 2015: Daniel Yankelovich ; 2016: James Stimson ; 2017: Howard Schuman ; 2018: Mollyann Brodie ; 2019: Patricia Moy The Warren J. Mitofsky Award for Excellence in Public Opinion Research is named in honor of Warren Mitofsky. Previous winners: ", "score": "1.3904829" }, { "id": "8985650", "title": "Donald S. Kellermann", "text": " was the director of cultural programming. He spent five years in the 1970s as chief of staff to U.S. Senator Jacob K. Javits. He co-authored the 1973 book, The President Versus Congress, with Javits. Kellermann later worked for the Joint Republican Leadership Office. Returning to media, he was hired by the Times Mirror company, publisher of the Los Angeles Times, where he initially worked in Washington, D.C. before moving to Los Angeles to become the firm's director of corporate public affairs. As part of the newspaper company's opinion polling operation, Kellermann was named to serve as the first director of the Times Mirror Center, ", "score": "1.3825699" }, { "id": "13633914", "title": "Public Opinion (1954 film)", "text": "Daniel Gélin as Paolo Jaier ; Delia Scala as Lauretta ; Giulio Calì ; Carlo Campanini as Leonide Forgesi, the producer ; Manfred Freyberger ; Maria Mauban as Dora Markus ; Paul Muller as Carlo Leone, the director ; Renato Salvatori as Mario ; Massimo Serato as Massimo Gorini ; Gianrico Tedeschi as Egisto Bianchi ; Luigi Tosi as Attilio ; Saro Urzì ", "score": "1.3822186" } ]
[ "John Mueller\n Presidents and Public Opinion (New York: Wiley, originally published in 1973) was awarded the first Warren J. Mitofsky Award for Excellence in Public Opinion Research by the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Connecticut in 2007, for being \"a trailblazing book in public opinion research, in political science, and in the use of the Roper Center's data.\" This book featured the first definition of what is known as the Rally Round the Flag Syndrome. It also analyzed press coverage of the Tet offensive, 1968, in the Vietnam War. Although primarily known as a political scientist, Mueller is also an expert on filmed dance and a leading authority on the work ", "Public Opinion (1935 film)\n Public Opinion is a 1935 American drama film directed by Frank R. Strayer and starring Lois Wilson, Crane Wilbur and Shirley Grey.", "Steven Kull\n Dr. Steven Kull is a political psychologist who studies the impact of public opinion on public policy. He has conducted polls and focus groups in over 30 countries around the world. He has led in-depth studies in the United States and the Muslim world, as well as numerous large multi-nation studies of world public opinion. Kull appears regularly in international media and has testified to or consulted with the U.S. Congress, the U.S. State Department, the United Nations, NATO, the European Commission, and other agencies. Kull is director of the Program for Public Consultation (PPC), part of the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland. PPC was established to develop the methods and theory of public consultation and to conduct public consultations. In particular it ", "Public Opinion (magazine)\n Public Opinion was a British magazine that ran from 1861 to 1951. It was a weekly \"review of current thought and activity\", published in London by G. Cole. An 82 reel microfilm was published by the Library of Congress in 1972.", "Public Opinion (1916 film)\n Public Opinion is a surviving 1916 American silent drama film produced by Jesse Lasky and distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was directed by Frank Reicher and stars Blanche Sweet. Margaret Turnbull provided the original screen story and scenario. Public Opinion is one of very few of Blanche Sweet's Paramount Pictures films still in existence. It is preserved by the Library of Congress.", "Elmo Roper\n the reputation of Roper's techniques. In 1940, Roosevelt hired Roper to assess public opinion of Lend-Lease prior to its implementation. In 1942 he was hired by William Joseph Donovan to be the deputy director of the Office of Strategic Services; Roper subsequently worked with the Office of War Information. After leaving the OWI he founded the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Connecticut in 1947. From 1956 he served as chairman of board of directors of Fund for the Republic succeeding Paul G. Hoffman. Roper Opinion Research Company (the \"Roper Poll\") was later renamed Roper Starch Worldwide Company and eventually acquired by NOP World and then GfK in 2005.", "Robert Chung\n Dr. Robert Chung is a Hong Kong academician. He is the former Director of the Public Opinion Programme (POP) of the University of Hong Kong. POP became an independent institute in May 2019 as the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute, with Chung remaining its head. In 2000, Chung wrote an academic article stating that he felt pressure to stop conducting public opinion research polls. Later known as the 'Robert Chung affair', his article showed that freedom of speech is still alive in Hong Kong.", "John Zaller\n John Raymond Zaller (born 1949) is a political scientist and professor specializing in public opinion at the University of California, Los Angeles. He was an Editor of the American Political Science Review. He graduated from Saint Monica Catholic High School in Santa Monica, CA. He pursued his undergraduate studies at the University of California, Riverside. He received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1984.", "Philip Converse\n Philip Ernest Converse (November 17, 1928 – December 30, 2014) was an American political scientist. He was a professor in political science and sociology at the University of Michigan who conducted research on public opinion, survey research, and quantitative social science. Converse's book chapter \"The Nature of Belief Systems in Mass Publics\" (Ideology and Discontent, edited by David E. Apter, 1964) held that most people lack structure and stability in their political views. With Angus Campbell, Warren Miller, and Donald E. Stokes, he co-wrote The American Voter, which used data from the American National Election Studies to create a set of surveys of American public opinion carried out by the University of Michigan Survey Research Center and the Center for Political Studies. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1969.", "Public Opinion (1954 film)\n Public Opinion (French: Rumeur publique, Italian: Opinione pubblica) is a 1954 French-Italian drama film directed by Maurizio Corgnati and Goffredo Alessandrini and starring Daniel Gélin, Delia Scala and Giulio Calì.", "Opinions (TV series)\n Opinions was a British talk programme broadcast on Channel 4 television in the 1980s and 1990s. According to Time magazine, Opinions gave \"a public figure 30-minutes of airtime each week to expound on a controversial topic (Germaine Greer on Margaret Thatcher, Edward Teller on nuclear defence)\". \"A speaker could express his or her own views straight to camera for 30 minutes\" \"an earnest of Channel 4's faith and mission to bring edgy, alternative fare to the public and to excite reaction\". During the time it was produced by Open Media, the series featured such figures as Edward de Bono, Alan Clark, Linda Colley, Brian Cox, James Goldsmith, Paul Hill, Dusan Makavejev, G.F. Newman, George Soros and Norman Stone. One - by Dennis Potter, in 1993 - was given a cinema screening by the BFI in July 2014. Among those appearing in the Opinions 1993 debate in Westminster Central Hall about democracy in Britain chaired by Vincent Hanna were Zaki Badawi, Christine Crawley, Paul Ekins, Christopher Hitchens, Paul Kennedy, Michael Mansfield, David Miliband, Geoff Mulgan, Vincent Nichols, Janet Paraskeva, Jonathan Sacks, Nancy Seear, Roger Scruton, Anthony Smith and Crispin Tickell.", "Everett Carll Ladd\n Everett Carll Ladd, Jr. (September 24, 1937– December 8, 1999) was an American political scientist based at the University of Connecticut. He was best known for his analysis and collection of public opinion polls. He directed the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Connecticut; the Center's mission is to collect and preserve the reports and the original raw computerized data (on IBM cards and tapes) of polls and surveys since the 1930s. At his death, he had amassed 14,000 surveys from many countries. He was also an expert on the opinions and careers of social scientists.", "Robert Blendon\n series with National Public Radio and POLITICO. Previously, he co-directed a special polling series with The Washington Post and Kaiser Family Foundation. Additionally, Dr. Blendon co-directed a special survey project for the Minneapolis Star Tribune on health care that received the National Press Club’s 1998 Award for Consumer Journalism. He also co-directed a project for National Public Radio and the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation on American attitudes toward domestic policy. The series was cited by the National Journal as setting a new standard for use of public opinion surveys in broadcast journalism. In 2008, Dr. Blendon received the Warren J. Mitofsky Award for Excellence in Public Opinion Research from the Board of Directors of the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at Cornell University.", "Public Opinion (book)\n Public Opinion is a book by Walter Lippmann, published in 1922. It is a critical assessment of functional democratic government, especially of the irrational and often self-serving social perceptions that influence individual behavior and prevent optimal societal cohesion. The detailed descriptions of the cognitive limitations people face in comprehending their sociopolitical and cultural environments, leading them to apply an evolving catalogue of general stereotypes to a complex reality, rendered Public Opinion a seminal text in the fields of media studies, political science, and social psychology.", "Elizabeth Zechmeister\n Zechmeister held her first position as an Assistant Professor at University of California, Davis in 2003 before joining the faculty at Vanderbilt University in the Department of Political Science in 2008. She became Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Political Science in 2018. Zechmeister is director of the Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP). As Director, she oversees the AmericasBarometer, a comparative public opinion survey that covers 34 nations including all of North, Central, and South America and many Caribbean nations. The survey typically includes more than 40,000 interviews, and is the most expansive regional survey project in the Western Hemisphere. Zechmeister is also ", "Robert Chung\n on 1 January 2002. The programme regularly conducts independent surveys, covers media development, and launches electoral studies, policy issues, and youth studies. Under his leadership, the programme is famous for being impartial and professional, and is a highly respected public opinion study programme in the region. Its studies are widely covered in mass media and frequently cited in academic publications. Chung has written numerous articles on public opinion and social surveys published in various journals and periodicals, and is the Chief Editor of the monthly POP newsletters, POP Express, and the HKU POP Site. Besides, Chung is a Panelist of Television Programme Advisory Panel of Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK) and a Panelist of the Television Programme Appreciation Index Research Panel. From 1993 to 1994, Chung ", "Alberto Cinta\n In 1991 Cinta joined the public service working for the President of the Republic's office as Director of public opinion analysis under President Carlos Salinas de Gortari. He also joined the office of the President Ernesto Zedillo of the PRI, as General Director of Research and Analysis (1995–1997). From 1999 to 2000 he served as advisor for Francisco Labastida's presidential campaign (PRI). From 2003 to 2005 he served as General Director of the Centro de Estudios Sociales y de Opinión Pública of the Chamber of Deputies.", "Roper Center for Public Opinion Research\n2007: John Mueller ; 2008: Robert Blendon ; 2009: Robert Wuthnow ; 2010: James A. Davis ; 2011: Kathleen Frankovic ; 2012: Norman Bradburn ; 2013: Eric Schickler and Adam Berinsky ; 2014: Andrew Kohut ; 2015: Daniel Yankelovich ; 2016: James Stimson ; 2017: Howard Schuman ; 2018: Mollyann Brodie ; 2019: Patricia Moy The Warren J. Mitofsky Award for Excellence in Public Opinion Research is named in honor of Warren Mitofsky. Previous winners: ", "Donald S. Kellermann\n was the director of cultural programming. He spent five years in the 1970s as chief of staff to U.S. Senator Jacob K. Javits. He co-authored the 1973 book, The President Versus Congress, with Javits. Kellermann later worked for the Joint Republican Leadership Office. Returning to media, he was hired by the Times Mirror company, publisher of the Los Angeles Times, where he initially worked in Washington, D.C. before moving to Los Angeles to become the firm's director of corporate public affairs. As part of the newspaper company's opinion polling operation, Kellermann was named to serve as the first director of the Times Mirror Center, ", "Public Opinion (1954 film)\nDaniel Gélin as Paolo Jaier ; Delia Scala as Lauretta ; Giulio Calì ; Carlo Campanini as Leonide Forgesi, the producer ; Manfred Freyberger ; Maria Mauban as Dora Markus ; Paul Muller as Carlo Leone, the director ; Renato Salvatori as Mario ; Massimo Serato as Massimo Gorini ; Gianrico Tedeschi as Egisto Bianchi ; Luigi Tosi as Attilio ; Saro Urzì " ]
Who was the director of College?
[ "Franco Castellano", "Giuseppe Moccia" ]
director
College (1984 film)
2,769,263
90
[ { "id": "29214894", "title": "William B. Langsdorf", "text": " an administrative staff that included Executive Dean Dr. Stuart McComb who had been Superintendent of the Pico Rivera School District, Dean of Instruction Dr. Gerhard Ehmann who had been president of Glendale Community College, Finance Officer Jack Lyons from the San Francisco State College Foundation, Dean of Students Dr. Earnest A. Becker from Pasadena City College, and Librarian Dr. Earnest Toy, Jr. from Riverside City College. At the time the state colleges in California were under the nominal control of the California state department of education and the Superintendent of Public Instruction. However, in practice, the individual state colleges enjoyed a considerable degree of ", "score": "1.4896159" }, { "id": "12132716", "title": "West Shore Community College", "text": " John Eaton was the college's initial president; he served from 1967 to 1983. William M. Anderson was the college's second president, serving from 1983 to 1998. Afterward in 2001, Governor John Engler appointed Anderson the founding director of the Michigan Department of History, Arts and Libraries. Governor Jennifer Granholm reappointed Dr. Anderson to her cabinet, where he continued to serve as the director of HAL until 2009. Charles T. Dillon served as West Shore Community College's third president from 1998 to 2014. He was succeeded by Kenneth Urban (2015–2017).", "score": "1.4740107" }, { "id": "14178236", "title": "Robert J. Bernard", "text": " After graduation, he became an assistant to Pomona president James Blaisdell. When the Claremont Colleges were established in 1925, he was appointed secretary under Blaisdell. He became administrative director in 1942; his title changed to managing director in 1944 and president in 1959.", "score": "1.4711351" }, { "id": "13633997", "title": "José Aybar", "text": " Aybar served as director of the state of Florida's Latin American and Caribbean Basin Scholarship Program. He subsequently worked at the James F. Byrnes International Center at the University of South Carolina. Later, at Colorado Mountain College (CMC), he served as dean of the Vail/Eagle Valley campus. In addition to his administrative work at CMC, he led a great books discussion group for local residents. Aybar joined the administration of the City Colleges of Chicago in 2003, after completing his contract at CMC. From late 2003 to 2009, he served as Associate Vice Chancellor for Arts and Sciences. In this capacity he became the first in the City Colleges system to receive the \"Administrator of the Year\" award in 2004. Aybar was appointed president of Daley College in August 2009, ", "score": "1.4673684" }, { "id": "2893227", "title": "Council for Educational Technology", "text": " Geoffrey Hubbard was appointed as Director in June 1969. He was previously an engineer and then a civil servant at the Ministry of Technology. He successfully steered the Council through its sometimes difficult relationship with government. He retired in 1986 but continued his role as Chairman of the National Extension College.", "score": "1.4662199" }, { "id": "8751813", "title": "Charles Longsworth", "text": " Charles R. Longsworth (born August 21, 1929) is the current director of Saul Centers, Inc.. He assumed this position in June 1993. He serves as president Emeritus of Hampshire College. He worked as president of The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation from 1977 to 1994, as Chief Executive Officer until November 1992, and Chairman from November 1991 to November 1994. He works as Chairman Emeritus of The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation of Williamsburg, Virginia. He graduated from Amherst College in 1951 and serves as Life Trustee at the college. Mr. Longsworth was Hampshire College's founding vice president who succeeded Franklin Patterson as President (1971–1977), and who had helped draft the final 1965 plan in the form of The Making of College from the New College Plan.", "score": "1.4655746" }, { "id": "26737227", "title": "Howard Community College", "text": " faculty at Corning Community College, hired in June 1969. In 1973, he signed a five-year contract to remain as president. In 1976, Smith faced scrutiny for accounting expense allowances from the County which funded 35% of operational costs. Dwight Burrill took the role of dean in 1981, serving for seventeen years. In 1980, the Columbia Film Society moves to the HCC performing arts center for weekend movies. Dr. Mary Ellen Duncan became president of the college in 1998, followed by Dr. Kathleen Hetherington in 2007. In 2019 HCC won the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award in the category of education. That same year, the original ST and Nursing buildings were remodeled and renamed Academic Commons and Howard Hall, respectively", "score": "1.460318" }, { "id": "8961366", "title": "Goodenough College", "text": " As the name of the College and the Director's equivalent position has changed over time, the title of each appointee is given.", "score": "1.4599769" }, { "id": "29554024", "title": "American Conservatory of Music", "text": " desire to leave his pro bono post, the board accepted it and launched a nationwide search for a new president and a dean. The board hired Steven J. Nelson, as president, and Carl L. Waldschmidt, PhD (1917–1995), the former dean, longtime music professor, and choral director from Concordia University in Chicago (retired 1987), as dean. Steve Nelson had studied violin at Cleveland Institute of Music and had served as president of the Center for Creative Studies – Institute of Music and Dance in Detroit. After leaving the American Conservatory of Music, Steve Nelson served as vice president college of relations at Landmark College in Putney, Vermont. In 1998, he became head master at the Calhoun School in New York City. Vern Nelson remained on the board.", "score": "1.4527482" }, { "id": "11931762", "title": "Dana Mohler-Faria", "text": " From 1975 to 1984, Mohler-Faria was Director of Financial Aid and the SACHEM Outreach Program at Cape Cod Community College. Following that post, he served as Assistant Dean of Administrative Services at Bristol Community College until 1987, and then in various leadership positions at Mount Wachusett Community College until 1991. In 1991 he began his association with Bridgewater State College, serving eleven years as the Vice President for Administration and Finance. In 2002, he succeeded Adrian Tinsley as President of Bridgewater State College. He stepped down the at end of the 2014-2015 academic year. According to his biographical sketch on the Commonwealth of Massachusetts' website, Mohler-Faria, in ascending to the presidency of Bridgewater State University, became the \"first person of color to lead Bridgewater State College and is only the second Cape Verdean in the United States to be elected the president of a higher education institution.\" He is currently a member of the advisory council for the Wampanoag Language Immersion School, a partnership between the Wôpanâak Language Reclamation Project and the Montessori Academy of Cape Cod.", "score": "1.4475753" }, { "id": "7867614", "title": "Hilary Boulding", "text": " In July 2007, Boulding was appointed the Principal of the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama (RWCMD) in succession to Edmond Fivet. During her time in charge, she oversaw £22.5 million of development including the building of a 450-seat concert hall and a 160-seat theatre. In September 2016, it was announced that Boulding had been elected as the next President of Trinity College, Oxford, in succession to Sir Ivor Roberts. This made her the first woman in its 462-year history to head the college. She took up the appointment on 1 August 2017.", "score": "1.4451343" }, { "id": "11861108", "title": "Wheelock College", "text": " Dr. Gordon L. Marshall. The Wheelock Family Threatre opened in 1981 and held its first production, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. In 1983, Gordon Marshall retired and Dr. Daniel S. Cheever, Jr. became President of the college. In 1984, the college awarded its first Bachelor of Social Work degree. In 1991, Gerald Tirozzi replaced Daniel Cheever as President. In 1992, the Center for International Education, Leadership, and Innovation was opened. Tirozzi resigned as president in 1993 and Marjorie Bakken was named Acting President. She was formally inaugurated as president the following year. In 1994, Wheelock College joined the Colleges of the Fenway consortium. In 2004, Jackie Jenkins-Scott became the 13th president of Wheelock College. In 2005, Wheelock College and Jumpstart began a partnership, providing ", "score": "1.4387534" }, { "id": "28603861", "title": "David A. Caputo", "text": " David Armand Caputo became the sixth president of Pace University in 2000. He serves as co-chair of the New York State Regents' Professional Standards and Practices Board, as a director of the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, on the Council of Presidents of the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, and as a director of the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and the Westchester Arts Council. Caputo also serves on the Council on Foreign Relations. He received his B.A. in Government from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and his M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from Yale University. Prior to his appointment at Pace he served for five years as president of Hunter College, the largest college in the City University of New York system. Before that, he was at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, for 25 years, last serving as dean of its School of Liberal Arts. On May 15, 2007, he announced his retirement from the position of President of Pace University, effective June 3.", "score": "1.4328196" }, { "id": "10102462", "title": "Richard Kneedler", "text": " John Vanderzell, Dean of the College at Franklin & Marshall. He subsequently held appointments as Assistant to President Keith Spalding, Secretary of the College, Administrative Vice President, Vice President for Administration, and Vice President for Development, as well as serving as Secretary of the College's Board of Visitors and the College's Board of Trustees. He served as Franklin & Marshall's President from 1988 until 2002. Dr. Kneedler has served on boards of education-related organizations at regional, state and national levels, including The Association of Independent College and Universities of Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania Association of Colleges and Universities, The National ", "score": "1.4317173" }, { "id": "31410941", "title": "William J. Flynn (athletic director)", "text": " William J. Flynn (July 13, 1915 – June 27, 1997) was an American college athletics administrator. He was the athletic director at Boston College from 1957 to 1990. He began his association with Boston College in 1930 as a student athlete. He was also a mathematics professor and assistant football coach at the school.", "score": "1.4313581" }, { "id": "30349615", "title": "Oaklands College", "text": "John Hunter Smith (1921-50) ; Rowland Line (1950-55) ; Eric Pelham (1955-79) ; Richard Blossom (1979-91) ; Keith Gardner (1991-97) ; Liz Cristofoli (1997-2001) ; Helen Parr (2001-04) ; Mark Dawe (2005-10) ; Zoe Hancock (2011-21) ; Andrew Slade (2021-) The college corporation oversees all aspects of the college and is responsible for appointing the principal. The principal oversees its day-to-day running. The current corporation chair is Peter Thompson. Andrew Slade is the tenth and current principal of Oaklands College, having assumed office on 1 September 2021. The following people have served in a permanent role as principal of Oaklands College, or its predecessor, Hertfordshire College of Agriculture and Horticulture. The incumbent is shown in bold. ", "score": "1.4309034" }, { "id": "10510073", "title": "London School of Economics", "text": " The director is the head of LSE and its chief executive officer, responsible for executive management and leadership on academic issues. The director reports to and is accountable to the council. The director is also the accountable officer for the purposes of the Higher Education Funding Council for England Financial Memorandum. The LSE's current director is Dame Nemat Shafik, who replaced interim director, Professor Julia Black, on 1 September 2017. The director is supported by a deputy director and provost who oversees the heads of academic departments and institutes, three pro-directors each with designated portfolios (teaching and learning, research and planning and resources) and the school secretary who acts as company secretary. † Titled as director and president", "score": "1.4274895" }, { "id": "25585667", "title": "MidKent College", "text": " The current chief executive of MidKent College is Simon Cook, who has held the position since the retirement of previous CEO, Stephen Grix, in July 2016. Mr Grix first joined the College in 1971 when, having left school at age 15 with no formal qualifications, he enrolled as a day-release bricklaying student at the old Horsted site in Chatham. After 13 years in the trade he returned to study an education degree, followed by a master's degree in education management. The father-of-three eventually went on to become principal of Sir George Monoux College in Walthamstow, north-east London, and then head of Ofsted's post-compulsory education division. Next was a role as director of education for the London borough of Tower Hamlets before Mr Grix returned to MidKent College as principal and chief executive in March 2005. Once back at the place where he launched his career, ", "score": "1.4267533" }, { "id": "15256746", "title": "Richard G. Jewell", "text": " Richard G. Jewell was the eighth president of Grove City College, a Christian liberal arts college in Grove City, Pennsylvania. The 1967 Grove City graduate assumed the presidency in fall of 2003 after a successful career in law and business. He left his position in 2014 and was succeeded by Paul J. McNulty. In June 2015, he was appointed to a two-year term as commissioner of the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board by Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives Mike Turzai. Immediately before becoming President of Grove City College, Jewell was the Pittsburgh director of Navigant Consulting Inc., the nation's largest forensic accounting firm. Jewell is known throughout the Pittsburgh region for his leadership in numerous civic groups. Prior to assuming ", "score": "1.4253937" }, { "id": "27554695", "title": "Collège La Cité", "text": " The first president of the college, Andrée Lortie, helmed the establishment until her retirement in March 2010. She was replaced by Lise Bourgeois, who had been head of the Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est (CECCE) (Ontario) (Central-Eastern Catholic School Board), the largest French school board in Canada outside of the province of Québec.", "score": "1.4235027" } ]
[ "William B. Langsdorf\n an administrative staff that included Executive Dean Dr. Stuart McComb who had been Superintendent of the Pico Rivera School District, Dean of Instruction Dr. Gerhard Ehmann who had been president of Glendale Community College, Finance Officer Jack Lyons from the San Francisco State College Foundation, Dean of Students Dr. Earnest A. Becker from Pasadena City College, and Librarian Dr. Earnest Toy, Jr. from Riverside City College. At the time the state colleges in California were under the nominal control of the California state department of education and the Superintendent of Public Instruction. However, in practice, the individual state colleges enjoyed a considerable degree of ", "West Shore Community College\n John Eaton was the college's initial president; he served from 1967 to 1983. William M. Anderson was the college's second president, serving from 1983 to 1998. Afterward in 2001, Governor John Engler appointed Anderson the founding director of the Michigan Department of History, Arts and Libraries. Governor Jennifer Granholm reappointed Dr. Anderson to her cabinet, where he continued to serve as the director of HAL until 2009. Charles T. Dillon served as West Shore Community College's third president from 1998 to 2014. He was succeeded by Kenneth Urban (2015–2017).", "Robert J. Bernard\n After graduation, he became an assistant to Pomona president James Blaisdell. When the Claremont Colleges were established in 1925, he was appointed secretary under Blaisdell. He became administrative director in 1942; his title changed to managing director in 1944 and president in 1959.", "José Aybar\n Aybar served as director of the state of Florida's Latin American and Caribbean Basin Scholarship Program. He subsequently worked at the James F. Byrnes International Center at the University of South Carolina. Later, at Colorado Mountain College (CMC), he served as dean of the Vail/Eagle Valley campus. In addition to his administrative work at CMC, he led a great books discussion group for local residents. Aybar joined the administration of the City Colleges of Chicago in 2003, after completing his contract at CMC. From late 2003 to 2009, he served as Associate Vice Chancellor for Arts and Sciences. In this capacity he became the first in the City Colleges system to receive the \"Administrator of the Year\" award in 2004. Aybar was appointed president of Daley College in August 2009, ", "Council for Educational Technology\n Geoffrey Hubbard was appointed as Director in June 1969. He was previously an engineer and then a civil servant at the Ministry of Technology. He successfully steered the Council through its sometimes difficult relationship with government. He retired in 1986 but continued his role as Chairman of the National Extension College.", "Charles Longsworth\n Charles R. Longsworth (born August 21, 1929) is the current director of Saul Centers, Inc.. He assumed this position in June 1993. He serves as president Emeritus of Hampshire College. He worked as president of The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation from 1977 to 1994, as Chief Executive Officer until November 1992, and Chairman from November 1991 to November 1994. He works as Chairman Emeritus of The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation of Williamsburg, Virginia. He graduated from Amherst College in 1951 and serves as Life Trustee at the college. Mr. Longsworth was Hampshire College's founding vice president who succeeded Franklin Patterson as President (1971–1977), and who had helped draft the final 1965 plan in the form of The Making of College from the New College Plan.", "Howard Community College\n faculty at Corning Community College, hired in June 1969. In 1973, he signed a five-year contract to remain as president. In 1976, Smith faced scrutiny for accounting expense allowances from the County which funded 35% of operational costs. Dwight Burrill took the role of dean in 1981, serving for seventeen years. In 1980, the Columbia Film Society moves to the HCC performing arts center for weekend movies. Dr. Mary Ellen Duncan became president of the college in 1998, followed by Dr. Kathleen Hetherington in 2007. In 2019 HCC won the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award in the category of education. That same year, the original ST and Nursing buildings were remodeled and renamed Academic Commons and Howard Hall, respectively", "Goodenough College\n As the name of the College and the Director's equivalent position has changed over time, the title of each appointee is given.", "American Conservatory of Music\n desire to leave his pro bono post, the board accepted it and launched a nationwide search for a new president and a dean. The board hired Steven J. Nelson, as president, and Carl L. Waldschmidt, PhD (1917–1995), the former dean, longtime music professor, and choral director from Concordia University in Chicago (retired 1987), as dean. Steve Nelson had studied violin at Cleveland Institute of Music and had served as president of the Center for Creative Studies – Institute of Music and Dance in Detroit. After leaving the American Conservatory of Music, Steve Nelson served as vice president college of relations at Landmark College in Putney, Vermont. In 1998, he became head master at the Calhoun School in New York City. Vern Nelson remained on the board.", "Dana Mohler-Faria\n From 1975 to 1984, Mohler-Faria was Director of Financial Aid and the SACHEM Outreach Program at Cape Cod Community College. Following that post, he served as Assistant Dean of Administrative Services at Bristol Community College until 1987, and then in various leadership positions at Mount Wachusett Community College until 1991. In 1991 he began his association with Bridgewater State College, serving eleven years as the Vice President for Administration and Finance. In 2002, he succeeded Adrian Tinsley as President of Bridgewater State College. He stepped down the at end of the 2014-2015 academic year. According to his biographical sketch on the Commonwealth of Massachusetts' website, Mohler-Faria, in ascending to the presidency of Bridgewater State University, became the \"first person of color to lead Bridgewater State College and is only the second Cape Verdean in the United States to be elected the president of a higher education institution.\" He is currently a member of the advisory council for the Wampanoag Language Immersion School, a partnership between the Wôpanâak Language Reclamation Project and the Montessori Academy of Cape Cod.", "Hilary Boulding\n In July 2007, Boulding was appointed the Principal of the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama (RWCMD) in succession to Edmond Fivet. During her time in charge, she oversaw £22.5 million of development including the building of a 450-seat concert hall and a 160-seat theatre. In September 2016, it was announced that Boulding had been elected as the next President of Trinity College, Oxford, in succession to Sir Ivor Roberts. This made her the first woman in its 462-year history to head the college. She took up the appointment on 1 August 2017.", "Wheelock College\n Dr. Gordon L. Marshall. The Wheelock Family Threatre opened in 1981 and held its first production, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. In 1983, Gordon Marshall retired and Dr. Daniel S. Cheever, Jr. became President of the college. In 1984, the college awarded its first Bachelor of Social Work degree. In 1991, Gerald Tirozzi replaced Daniel Cheever as President. In 1992, the Center for International Education, Leadership, and Innovation was opened. Tirozzi resigned as president in 1993 and Marjorie Bakken was named Acting President. She was formally inaugurated as president the following year. In 1994, Wheelock College joined the Colleges of the Fenway consortium. In 2004, Jackie Jenkins-Scott became the 13th president of Wheelock College. In 2005, Wheelock College and Jumpstart began a partnership, providing ", "David A. Caputo\n David Armand Caputo became the sixth president of Pace University in 2000. He serves as co-chair of the New York State Regents' Professional Standards and Practices Board, as a director of the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, on the Council of Presidents of the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, and as a director of the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and the Westchester Arts Council. Caputo also serves on the Council on Foreign Relations. He received his B.A. in Government from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and his M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from Yale University. Prior to his appointment at Pace he served for five years as president of Hunter College, the largest college in the City University of New York system. Before that, he was at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, for 25 years, last serving as dean of its School of Liberal Arts. On May 15, 2007, he announced his retirement from the position of President of Pace University, effective June 3.", "Richard Kneedler\n John Vanderzell, Dean of the College at Franklin & Marshall. He subsequently held appointments as Assistant to President Keith Spalding, Secretary of the College, Administrative Vice President, Vice President for Administration, and Vice President for Development, as well as serving as Secretary of the College's Board of Visitors and the College's Board of Trustees. He served as Franklin & Marshall's President from 1988 until 2002. Dr. Kneedler has served on boards of education-related organizations at regional, state and national levels, including The Association of Independent College and Universities of Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania Association of Colleges and Universities, The National ", "William J. Flynn (athletic director)\n William J. Flynn (July 13, 1915 – June 27, 1997) was an American college athletics administrator. He was the athletic director at Boston College from 1957 to 1990. He began his association with Boston College in 1930 as a student athlete. He was also a mathematics professor and assistant football coach at the school.", "Oaklands College\nJohn Hunter Smith (1921-50) ; Rowland Line (1950-55) ; Eric Pelham (1955-79) ; Richard Blossom (1979-91) ; Keith Gardner (1991-97) ; Liz Cristofoli (1997-2001) ; Helen Parr (2001-04) ; Mark Dawe (2005-10) ; Zoe Hancock (2011-21) ; Andrew Slade (2021-) The college corporation oversees all aspects of the college and is responsible for appointing the principal. The principal oversees its day-to-day running. The current corporation chair is Peter Thompson. Andrew Slade is the tenth and current principal of Oaklands College, having assumed office on 1 September 2021. The following people have served in a permanent role as principal of Oaklands College, or its predecessor, Hertfordshire College of Agriculture and Horticulture. The incumbent is shown in bold. ", "London School of Economics\n The director is the head of LSE and its chief executive officer, responsible for executive management and leadership on academic issues. The director reports to and is accountable to the council. The director is also the accountable officer for the purposes of the Higher Education Funding Council for England Financial Memorandum. The LSE's current director is Dame Nemat Shafik, who replaced interim director, Professor Julia Black, on 1 September 2017. The director is supported by a deputy director and provost who oversees the heads of academic departments and institutes, three pro-directors each with designated portfolios (teaching and learning, research and planning and resources) and the school secretary who acts as company secretary. † Titled as director and president", "MidKent College\n The current chief executive of MidKent College is Simon Cook, who has held the position since the retirement of previous CEO, Stephen Grix, in July 2016. Mr Grix first joined the College in 1971 when, having left school at age 15 with no formal qualifications, he enrolled as a day-release bricklaying student at the old Horsted site in Chatham. After 13 years in the trade he returned to study an education degree, followed by a master's degree in education management. The father-of-three eventually went on to become principal of Sir George Monoux College in Walthamstow, north-east London, and then head of Ofsted's post-compulsory education division. Next was a role as director of education for the London borough of Tower Hamlets before Mr Grix returned to MidKent College as principal and chief executive in March 2005. Once back at the place where he launched his career, ", "Richard G. Jewell\n Richard G. Jewell was the eighth president of Grove City College, a Christian liberal arts college in Grove City, Pennsylvania. The 1967 Grove City graduate assumed the presidency in fall of 2003 after a successful career in law and business. He left his position in 2014 and was succeeded by Paul J. McNulty. In June 2015, he was appointed to a two-year term as commissioner of the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board by Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives Mike Turzai. Immediately before becoming President of Grove City College, Jewell was the Pittsburgh director of Navigant Consulting Inc., the nation's largest forensic accounting firm. Jewell is known throughout the Pittsburgh region for his leadership in numerous civic groups. Prior to assuming ", "Collège La Cité\n The first president of the college, Andrée Lortie, helmed the establishment until her retirement in March 2010. She was replaced by Lise Bourgeois, who had been head of the Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est (CECCE) (Ontario) (Central-Eastern Catholic School Board), the largest French school board in Canada outside of the province of Québec." ]
Who was the director of Day by Day?
[ "Alfredo Giannetti" ]
director
Day by Day, Desperately
2,819,248
73
[ { "id": "6909922", "title": "Day by Day (Soviet TV series)", "text": " Day by Day (День за днём) is a Soviet TV series directed by Vsevolod Shilovsky, based on a screenplay by. Considered the first Soviet television series (17 episodes) filmed by the USSR Central Television.", "score": "1.6162732" }, { "id": "7957927", "title": "Day by Day (film)", "text": " Day by Day (Spanish: Día tras día) is a 1951 Spanish drama film directed by Antonio del Amo. Shot in Madrid, it has certain characteristics similar to Italian neorealism.", "score": "1.5899487" }, { "id": "732522", "title": "Day by Day, Desperately", "text": " Day by Day, Desperately (Giorno per giorno disperatamente) is a 1961 Italian drama film written and directed by Alfredo Giannetti. According to the film critic Morando Morandini, the film is \"a naturalistic drama of strong emotional charge, crossed by a vein of desperate lyricism.\"", "score": "1.5423789" }, { "id": "6326194", "title": "Day by Day (book)", "text": " Day by Day is a daily meditation book for alcoholics and addicts. It was written in 1973 by members of the Young People's Group of Alcoholics Anonymous in Denver, Colorado. The project was spearheaded by Shelly M., a member of the group who went on to compile Young, Sober & Free and The Pocket Sponsor. Day by Day was written when there were fewer than 200 Narcotics Anonymous meetings held worldwide, and was the group’s effort to produce twelve step literature inclusive of addicts. Each day’s entry contains a meditation, followed by and open-ended statement after which there is a blank space for writing. Every entry concludes with the sentence, “God help me to stay clean and sober today!”", "score": "1.5177119" }, { "id": "25189834", "title": "Day by Day (webcomic)", "text": " Day by Day (also Day by Day Cartoon) is an American political webcomic by Chris Muir. The humor usually centers on four principal characters who had initially been presented as co-workers at an unspecified firm until the firm went out of business on December 25, 2007. Romantic relationships among the principals resulted in marriages and children, with one of the couples opening a small bar in the unnamed Texas Rio Grande Valley ranchland in which the strip is now principally set. These characters, their friends, and their families remain the strip's focus. The strip has a conservative libertarian viewpoint, and often makes reference to political weblogs. It was a Yahoo! Pick in the \"Comics and Animation\" category in 2004.", "score": "1.502487" }, { "id": "27374097", "title": "Day by Day (EP)", "text": " On June 13, 2012, Core Contents Media announced that the group would be releasing a new EP entitled Day By Day on July 3. The EP marked the debut of T-ara's eighth member, Areum. Both the EP and its title track were released on July 3. \"Day by Day\" was written by Kim Tae-hyun and produced by Cho Young-soo and Ahn Young-min, who have all previously worked with T-ara on songs such as \"Cry Cry\" and \"Neo Ttaemune Michyeo\". Before its official release, a choreography video in which \"Day by Day\" can be heard in was leaked onto YouTube in late May 2012. The music video for \"Day by Day\" was directed by Cha Eun-taek in Seoul, South Korea. It was announced on June 12, 2012, as a 20-minute music video drama starring ", "score": "1.4931085" }, { "id": "6546784", "title": "Bill Day (filmmaker)", "text": " Day directed the documentary Saviors of the Forest which was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. He also directed Rubber Jungle, a behind the scenes look at the life of Brazilian labor leader Chico Mendes and the movie about his life. In 2002, Day co-produced the musical documentary Under The Covers, followed by Alternative Rock and Roll Years in 2003 for Discovery Channel. Day served as a field producer for Hopkins 24/7, a television documentary series. With Carlo Gennarelli, he co-produced Ordinary Joe, a documentary film about Joe Sciacca, a Vietnam veteran from New York City. Day made a film about XXXchurch.com called Missionary Positions. He also produced and directed The Pussycat Preacher, a film about Heather Veitch and her organization, JC's Girls. He holds the YouTube channel 'billschannel', which posts videos of wildlife trips around the world and a series named 'Real or Fake?' This series shows him and his research group 'The Chewy Piranhas' uncover photographs and videos on the internet and using various methods to show whether they are portraying real-life events, fake hoaxes or unknown mysteries.", "score": "1.491882" }, { "id": "15662215", "title": "Carol Scott", "text": " Carol Scott Englehart Caramadre (26 May 1949 – 27 June 2005; professionally known as Carol Scott) was an American television producer and director who won four Daytime Emmy Awards for her work on soap opera General Hospital (1963) as a camera director, line producer, co-producer, editorial supervisor, and producer. Scott worked as an associate director on the television shows Day by Day (1988), Champs (1996), Night Court (1984) and The Stockard Channing Show (1979). She also worked on the sitcoms All in the Family and True Colors (1990).", "score": "1.4530971" }, { "id": "32926356", "title": "Day by Day (Godspell song)", "text": "In the 2000 film Meet the Parents, Greg Focker (Ben Stiller) is asked by Jack Byrnes (Robert De Niro) to say Grace before dinner, resulting in Greg reciting the lyrics from \"Day by Day.\" ; In the 2001 film Wet Hot American Summer, summer camp counselors Susie (Amy Poehler) and Ben (Bradley Cooper) direct a group of kids to sing and dance “Day by Day” in similar style and costume to the original Godspell Broadway cast, which they perform at the talent show. The audience claps along happily, but after the performance ends with a glowing luminescent cross on the wall, it is met with overwhelming boos. The host comments it is one of his favorite Broadway numbers, but erroneously pronounces it as “Day Bidet.” ", "score": "1.4489586" }, { "id": "28738332", "title": "Robert Day (director)", "text": " Day was married to Eileen Day and then, following their divorce, to actress Dorothy Provine until her death in 2010. He was the brother of cinematographer Ernest Day. Day died at the age of 94 on Bainbridge Island near Seattle on 17 March 2017.", "score": "1.4355865" }, { "id": "28738330", "title": "Robert Day (director)", "text": " Robert Frederick Day (11 September 1922 – 17 March 2017) was an English film director. He directed more than 40 films between 1956 and 1991.", "score": "1.4354656" }, { "id": "5466541", "title": "Eliza Byard", "text": " Early in Byard's career she served as the director of development for the Center for Investigative Reporting. In 1996 she became the editor, writer, and co-producer of the film Out of the Past, which was published in 1997. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 1998, where it won the Audience Award for Best Documentary. While working on the film she met Kevin Jennings, the founder and then executive director of GLSEN. Byard joined GLSEN as deputy executive director in 2001, where she led the development of programs including the national Think B4 You Speak anti-bullying program, LGBT ad campaigns, and GLSEN's research and student organization efforts. In 2008 she became the organization's executive director. Byard announced on January 13, 2021 that she would be stepping down as executive director on March 1, 2021. Byard also serves on the board of trustees for America's Promise Alliance, Sodexo's diversity advisory board, the National Collaboration for Youth steering committee, and the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention LGBT suicide task force. She also served on Michael Bloomberg's commission for runaway and homeless children, and was the chair of the board of directors for Arts Engine.", "score": "1.4302418" }, { "id": "1633509", "title": "Day by Day Entertainment", "text": " Day by Day Entertainment is an independent hip hop record label and record distribution company based in New York City. It was started in 1999 by MF Grimm before his three-year incarceration starting in 2000. After a brief hiatus, Day by Day Entertainment was relaunched on August 24, 2009. After several years of relative inactivity the label released new material by MF Grimm and Ayatollah. Part of the significance of the label's being a taste-maker of underground hip-hop music is its release of The Downfall of Ibliys: A Ghetto Opera of tracks recorded within 24 hours of going to prison, and American Hunger, which is MF Grimm's three-disc volume of new material recorded in 2006. The releases were well received by Pitchfork.", "score": "1.4277686" }, { "id": "6299379", "title": "Linda Day", "text": " Day started as a script supervisor on the Television film Victory at Entebbe, and on the soap opera parody Soap. She became an associate director for WKRP in Cincinnati in 1978, and began directing episodes of the show in 1980. Linda Day went on to direct a number of successful sitcoms in the 1980s and '90s, including the pilot of Married With Children and 32 more episodes of the show. Day also directed four episodes of the soap opera Dallas during what would become the show's \"dream season\" in 1985–86, when the events of the entire season were explained away as being a character's dream. In addition to a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series nomination, she received a Humanitas Prize and was honored by the Directors Guild of America for paving the way for women in television; she directed more than 350 episodes and 50 series.", "score": "1.4260846" }, { "id": "6299378", "title": "Linda Day", "text": " Linda Day (August 12, 1938 – October 23, 2009) was an American television director, working primarily in situation comedies. Day was born as Linda Brickner in Los Angeles, the daughter of Roy Brickner, a film editor. At the age of 67, she married her childhood sweetheart, L. Steve Varnum, in Texas.", "score": "1.4210842" }, { "id": "27374096", "title": "Day by Day (EP)", "text": " Day by Day is the fourth extended play by South Korean girl group T-ara, which was released on July 3, 2012, by Core Contents Media. The album marked the first appearance of the group's eighth member, Areum, and the last appearance of member Ryu Hwayoung. A repackaged version of the EP, titled Mirage, was released on September 4, 2012. \"Sexy Love\" was released as the lead single from the Mirage repackage.", "score": "1.4120643" }, { "id": "6909923", "title": "Day by Day (Soviet TV series)", "text": " Moscow in the early 1970s. The heroes are the residents of a large communal apartment, different families, in particular, the Yakushevs and Banykins. Neighbors become almost relatives, and their fate is closely intertwined. The old house is going to be scrapped, and all neighbors will have to be resettled in different apartments.", "score": "1.4099278" }, { "id": "11705862", "title": "Day by Day (Regina song)", "text": " \"Day by Day\" is a 1997 single released by Regina Saraiva.", "score": "1.4088218" }, { "id": "29769042", "title": "John Tusa", "text": " Leadership Programme. From 2000 until 2005, Tusa interviewed 55 major figures in the arts for BBC Radio 3. From October 2009 until the end of the year Tusa presented a 91-part series on BBC Radio 4. Day By Day used original archive news material to track events on a daily basis from 1989, including the fall of the Berlin Wall. In February 2010 he became honorary chairman of theartsdesk.com. In 2014, he became co-chairman of the European Union Youth Orchestra. Tusa is a strong defender of spending on the arts and argues that cuts in arts funding do more harm than good.", "score": "1.4087727" }, { "id": "25189840", "title": "Day by Day (webcomic)", "text": " beachfront home was razed by the town (in a commentary on Kelo v. New London), he began living with, and is now married to, Jan. They have one son. ; Jan Portago is an ardent liberal marketing director, who does not seem to understand how Damon can be both black and conservative. At some point after Damon moved in with her after losing his house, they began a romantic relationship, and have since been married. Prior to the beginning of their romance, Jan secretly went out of her way to prevent him from leaving their company. ; Javier Luciano Thomas is Damon and Jan's son. ; M. Luciano de la Portago y ", "score": "1.4065694" } ]
[ "Day by Day (Soviet TV series)\n Day by Day (День за днём) is a Soviet TV series directed by Vsevolod Shilovsky, based on a screenplay by. Considered the first Soviet television series (17 episodes) filmed by the USSR Central Television.", "Day by Day (film)\n Day by Day (Spanish: Día tras día) is a 1951 Spanish drama film directed by Antonio del Amo. Shot in Madrid, it has certain characteristics similar to Italian neorealism.", "Day by Day, Desperately\n Day by Day, Desperately (Giorno per giorno disperatamente) is a 1961 Italian drama film written and directed by Alfredo Giannetti. According to the film critic Morando Morandini, the film is \"a naturalistic drama of strong emotional charge, crossed by a vein of desperate lyricism.\"", "Day by Day (book)\n Day by Day is a daily meditation book for alcoholics and addicts. It was written in 1973 by members of the Young People's Group of Alcoholics Anonymous in Denver, Colorado. The project was spearheaded by Shelly M., a member of the group who went on to compile Young, Sober & Free and The Pocket Sponsor. Day by Day was written when there were fewer than 200 Narcotics Anonymous meetings held worldwide, and was the group’s effort to produce twelve step literature inclusive of addicts. Each day’s entry contains a meditation, followed by and open-ended statement after which there is a blank space for writing. Every entry concludes with the sentence, “God help me to stay clean and sober today!”", "Day by Day (webcomic)\n Day by Day (also Day by Day Cartoon) is an American political webcomic by Chris Muir. The humor usually centers on four principal characters who had initially been presented as co-workers at an unspecified firm until the firm went out of business on December 25, 2007. Romantic relationships among the principals resulted in marriages and children, with one of the couples opening a small bar in the unnamed Texas Rio Grande Valley ranchland in which the strip is now principally set. These characters, their friends, and their families remain the strip's focus. The strip has a conservative libertarian viewpoint, and often makes reference to political weblogs. It was a Yahoo! Pick in the \"Comics and Animation\" category in 2004.", "Day by Day (EP)\n On June 13, 2012, Core Contents Media announced that the group would be releasing a new EP entitled Day By Day on July 3. The EP marked the debut of T-ara's eighth member, Areum. Both the EP and its title track were released on July 3. \"Day by Day\" was written by Kim Tae-hyun and produced by Cho Young-soo and Ahn Young-min, who have all previously worked with T-ara on songs such as \"Cry Cry\" and \"Neo Ttaemune Michyeo\". Before its official release, a choreography video in which \"Day by Day\" can be heard in was leaked onto YouTube in late May 2012. The music video for \"Day by Day\" was directed by Cha Eun-taek in Seoul, South Korea. It was announced on June 12, 2012, as a 20-minute music video drama starring ", "Bill Day (filmmaker)\n Day directed the documentary Saviors of the Forest which was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. He also directed Rubber Jungle, a behind the scenes look at the life of Brazilian labor leader Chico Mendes and the movie about his life. In 2002, Day co-produced the musical documentary Under The Covers, followed by Alternative Rock and Roll Years in 2003 for Discovery Channel. Day served as a field producer for Hopkins 24/7, a television documentary series. With Carlo Gennarelli, he co-produced Ordinary Joe, a documentary film about Joe Sciacca, a Vietnam veteran from New York City. Day made a film about XXXchurch.com called Missionary Positions. He also produced and directed The Pussycat Preacher, a film about Heather Veitch and her organization, JC's Girls. He holds the YouTube channel 'billschannel', which posts videos of wildlife trips around the world and a series named 'Real or Fake?' This series shows him and his research group 'The Chewy Piranhas' uncover photographs and videos on the internet and using various methods to show whether they are portraying real-life events, fake hoaxes or unknown mysteries.", "Carol Scott\n Carol Scott Englehart Caramadre (26 May 1949 – 27 June 2005; professionally known as Carol Scott) was an American television producer and director who won four Daytime Emmy Awards for her work on soap opera General Hospital (1963) as a camera director, line producer, co-producer, editorial supervisor, and producer. Scott worked as an associate director on the television shows Day by Day (1988), Champs (1996), Night Court (1984) and The Stockard Channing Show (1979). She also worked on the sitcoms All in the Family and True Colors (1990).", "Day by Day (Godspell song)\nIn the 2000 film Meet the Parents, Greg Focker (Ben Stiller) is asked by Jack Byrnes (Robert De Niro) to say Grace before dinner, resulting in Greg reciting the lyrics from \"Day by Day.\" ; In the 2001 film Wet Hot American Summer, summer camp counselors Susie (Amy Poehler) and Ben (Bradley Cooper) direct a group of kids to sing and dance “Day by Day” in similar style and costume to the original Godspell Broadway cast, which they perform at the talent show. The audience claps along happily, but after the performance ends with a glowing luminescent cross on the wall, it is met with overwhelming boos. The host comments it is one of his favorite Broadway numbers, but erroneously pronounces it as “Day Bidet.” ", "Robert Day (director)\n Day was married to Eileen Day and then, following their divorce, to actress Dorothy Provine until her death in 2010. He was the brother of cinematographer Ernest Day. Day died at the age of 94 on Bainbridge Island near Seattle on 17 March 2017.", "Robert Day (director)\n Robert Frederick Day (11 September 1922 – 17 March 2017) was an English film director. He directed more than 40 films between 1956 and 1991.", "Eliza Byard\n Early in Byard's career she served as the director of development for the Center for Investigative Reporting. In 1996 she became the editor, writer, and co-producer of the film Out of the Past, which was published in 1997. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 1998, where it won the Audience Award for Best Documentary. While working on the film she met Kevin Jennings, the founder and then executive director of GLSEN. Byard joined GLSEN as deputy executive director in 2001, where she led the development of programs including the national Think B4 You Speak anti-bullying program, LGBT ad campaigns, and GLSEN's research and student organization efforts. In 2008 she became the organization's executive director. Byard announced on January 13, 2021 that she would be stepping down as executive director on March 1, 2021. Byard also serves on the board of trustees for America's Promise Alliance, Sodexo's diversity advisory board, the National Collaboration for Youth steering committee, and the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention LGBT suicide task force. She also served on Michael Bloomberg's commission for runaway and homeless children, and was the chair of the board of directors for Arts Engine.", "Day by Day Entertainment\n Day by Day Entertainment is an independent hip hop record label and record distribution company based in New York City. It was started in 1999 by MF Grimm before his three-year incarceration starting in 2000. After a brief hiatus, Day by Day Entertainment was relaunched on August 24, 2009. After several years of relative inactivity the label released new material by MF Grimm and Ayatollah. Part of the significance of the label's being a taste-maker of underground hip-hop music is its release of The Downfall of Ibliys: A Ghetto Opera of tracks recorded within 24 hours of going to prison, and American Hunger, which is MF Grimm's three-disc volume of new material recorded in 2006. The releases were well received by Pitchfork.", "Linda Day\n Day started as a script supervisor on the Television film Victory at Entebbe, and on the soap opera parody Soap. She became an associate director for WKRP in Cincinnati in 1978, and began directing episodes of the show in 1980. Linda Day went on to direct a number of successful sitcoms in the 1980s and '90s, including the pilot of Married With Children and 32 more episodes of the show. Day also directed four episodes of the soap opera Dallas during what would become the show's \"dream season\" in 1985–86, when the events of the entire season were explained away as being a character's dream. In addition to a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series nomination, she received a Humanitas Prize and was honored by the Directors Guild of America for paving the way for women in television; she directed more than 350 episodes and 50 series.", "Linda Day\n Linda Day (August 12, 1938 – October 23, 2009) was an American television director, working primarily in situation comedies. Day was born as Linda Brickner in Los Angeles, the daughter of Roy Brickner, a film editor. At the age of 67, she married her childhood sweetheart, L. Steve Varnum, in Texas.", "Day by Day (EP)\n Day by Day is the fourth extended play by South Korean girl group T-ara, which was released on July 3, 2012, by Core Contents Media. The album marked the first appearance of the group's eighth member, Areum, and the last appearance of member Ryu Hwayoung. A repackaged version of the EP, titled Mirage, was released on September 4, 2012. \"Sexy Love\" was released as the lead single from the Mirage repackage.", "Day by Day (Soviet TV series)\n Moscow in the early 1970s. The heroes are the residents of a large communal apartment, different families, in particular, the Yakushevs and Banykins. Neighbors become almost relatives, and their fate is closely intertwined. The old house is going to be scrapped, and all neighbors will have to be resettled in different apartments.", "Day by Day (Regina song)\n \"Day by Day\" is a 1997 single released by Regina Saraiva.", "John Tusa\n Leadership Programme. From 2000 until 2005, Tusa interviewed 55 major figures in the arts for BBC Radio 3. From October 2009 until the end of the year Tusa presented a 91-part series on BBC Radio 4. Day By Day used original archive news material to track events on a daily basis from 1989, including the fall of the Berlin Wall. In February 2010 he became honorary chairman of theartsdesk.com. In 2014, he became co-chairman of the European Union Youth Orchestra. Tusa is a strong defender of spending on the arts and argues that cuts in arts funding do more harm than good.", "Day by Day (webcomic)\n beachfront home was razed by the town (in a commentary on Kelo v. New London), he began living with, and is now married to, Jan. They have one son. ; Jan Portago is an ardent liberal marketing director, who does not seem to understand how Damon can be both black and conservative. At some point after Damon moved in with her after losing his house, they began a romantic relationship, and have since been married. Prior to the beginning of their romance, Jan secretly went out of her way to prevent him from leaving their company. ; Javier Luciano Thomas is Damon and Jan's son. ; M. Luciano de la Portago y " ]
Who was the director of The Day?
[ "Alfred Rolfe" ]
director
The Day (1914 film)
5,920,612
48
[ { "id": "28738330", "title": "Robert Day (director)", "text": " Robert Frederick Day (11 September 1922 – 17 March 2017) was an English film director. He directed more than 40 films between 1956 and 1991.", "score": "1.5339239" }, { "id": "28738331", "title": "Robert Day (director)", "text": " Day was born in Sheen, England. He worked his way up from clapper boy to camera operator then cinematographer while in his native country, and began directing in the mid-1950s. His first film as director, the black comedy The Green Man (1956) for the writer-producer team of Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat, gained good reviews. Using this as a starting point, Day went on to become one of the industry's busiest directors including directing several Tarzan films. He relocated to Hollywood in the 1960s and directed many TV episodes and made-for-TV movies. He occasionally had small parts in his own productions, including The Haunted Strangler (1958), Two-Way Stretch (1960), and the TV mini-series Peter and Paul (1981). In the 1970s and 1980s, Day would direct episodes of numerous American television shows, including Barnaby Jones, The F.B.I., Dallas, Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, and Matlock.", "score": "1.5140513" }, { "id": "26836073", "title": "James Day (journalist)", "text": " James Day (December 22, 1918 – April 24, 2008) was an American public television station and network executive and on-air interviewer, and professor of television broadcasting at Brooklyn College. Day was a co-founder, and the founding president and general manager, of pioneer San Francisco public television station KQED, and in 1969 became the final president of National Educational Television (NET) before it wound down operations by 1970, making way for its successor, the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Day then became general manager of NET's now-former flagship, New York PBS member station WNET. Day was an original PBS board member, and was also a founding board member of the Children's Television Workshop, creators and producers of Sesame Street, which quickly became a \"flagship\" children's program for public television. Day was born in Alameda, California and died in New York City. One of Day's innovations ", "score": "1.508014" }, { "id": "28738332", "title": "Robert Day (director)", "text": " Day was married to Eileen Day and then, following their divorce, to actress Dorothy Provine until her death in 2010. He was the brother of cinematographer Ernest Day. Day died at the age of 94 on Bainbridge Island near Seattle on 17 March 2017.", "score": "1.4969795" }, { "id": "8244991", "title": "L. B. Day", "text": " In 1970, Day was appointed as a regional director for the U.S. Department of the Interior under Interior Secretary Walter Hickel. When President Richard Nixon fired Hickel, Day returned to Oregon and was appointed soon after to serve as Governor Tom McCall's first director of the newly formed Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. During 1973 negotiations over Oregon's landmark comprehensive land-use planning legislation, Senate Bill 100, Day played a vital role in developing the compromises necessary to move SB 100 through the Senate. He then served as the first chairman of the new state Land Conservation and Development Commission in 1974.", "score": "1.4899297" }, { "id": "27839686", "title": "Day of the Fight", "text": " high-school friend of Stanley Kubrick (both attended William Howard Taft High School in the Bronx), served as assistant director and as a cameraman on this production. Singer also worked on Kubrick's Killer's Kiss (1955) and The Killing (1956), and went on to have a long career as a director of films and television dramas. ; Douglas Edwards, the narrator on Day of the Fight, was a veteran CBS radio and television newscaster. At the time, he was the anchor on the first televised daily news program, which would later be titled Douglas Edwards with the News and then The CBS Evening News. ", "score": "1.4725494" }, { "id": "7339487", "title": "Phil Day (town planner)", "text": " with the Department of Local Government, he moved to the Department of Decentralisation and Development in 1968, eventually becoming director. He was next director of town planning for Brisbane City Council, and then moved to the University of Queensland, where he was head of school from 1977 to 1980, when he moved to the Australian Institute of Urban Studies as director. He retired from the Institute and wrote his last report in 1989 as a member of the Chalk Committee of Inquiry into Valuation and Rating. From 1987 he was editor of Queensland Planner, and wrote frequently for The Courier-Mail. In his eighties he published Hijacked Inheritance, based on his doctorate thesis which he had completed at the age of 77. Day died in 2011.", "score": "1.4704428" }, { "id": "6299379", "title": "Linda Day", "text": " Day started as a script supervisor on the Television film Victory at Entebbe, and on the soap opera parody Soap. She became an associate director for WKRP in Cincinnati in 1978, and began directing episodes of the show in 1980. Linda Day went on to direct a number of successful sitcoms in the 1980s and '90s, including the pilot of Married With Children and 32 more episodes of the show. Day also directed four episodes of the soap opera Dallas during what would become the show's \"dream season\" in 1985–86, when the events of the entire season were explained away as being a character's dream. In addition to a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series nomination, she received a Humanitas Prize and was honored by the Directors Guild of America for paving the way for women in television; she directed more than 350 episodes and 50 series.", "score": "1.4690467" }, { "id": "6299378", "title": "Linda Day", "text": " Linda Day (August 12, 1938 – October 23, 2009) was an American television director, working primarily in situation comedies. Day was born as Linda Brickner in Los Angeles, the daughter of Roy Brickner, a film editor. At the age of 67, she married her childhood sweetheart, L. Steve Varnum, in Texas.", "score": "1.4677607" }, { "id": "6546784", "title": "Bill Day (filmmaker)", "text": " Day directed the documentary Saviors of the Forest which was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. He also directed Rubber Jungle, a behind the scenes look at the life of Brazilian labor leader Chico Mendes and the movie about his life. In 2002, Day co-produced the musical documentary Under The Covers, followed by Alternative Rock and Roll Years in 2003 for Discovery Channel. Day served as a field producer for Hopkins 24/7, a television documentary series. With Carlo Gennarelli, he co-produced Ordinary Joe, a documentary film about Joe Sciacca, a Vietnam veteran from New York City. Day made a film about XXXchurch.com called Missionary Positions. He also produced and directed The Pussycat Preacher, a film about Heather Veitch and her organization, JC's Girls. He holds the YouTube channel 'billschannel', which posts videos of wildlife trips around the world and a series named 'Real or Fake?' This series shows him and his research group 'The Chewy Piranhas' uncover photographs and videos on the internet and using various methods to show whether they are portraying real-life events, fake hoaxes or unknown mysteries.", "score": "1.4549351" }, { "id": "9170684", "title": "New York University Press", "text": "Arthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "score": "1.4459186" }, { "id": "15566901", "title": "DaDaFest", "text": "Mandy Colleran – Former director ; Ruth Gould - Gould was appointed as the Creative Director of the NWDAF in 2001, she is now the Chief Executive Officer of DaDaFest. Whilst working for the NWDAF in 2001, she was asked to create something for International Disabled People's Day but she claimed that \"one day was not enough\" and set about producing a festival with the help of a steering group. The result of this was the first DaDaFest in December 2001 and the subsequent change of 'DaDaFest' as a one off festival into its own brand. ; Jane Cordell - Cordell ", "score": "1.4415345" }, { "id": "10760847", "title": "Nick Day (film director)", "text": " Day trained and worked as an editor in London while studying cinema as part of the British Film Institute/University of London diploma program. After relocating to the US, he worked for several years in television production on a wide range of programming, including commercials, news, current affairs, and arts and entertainment for broadcast in Italy, Brazil, Germany, as well as the US. He later produced and directed the documentary Short Cut to Nirvana: Kumbh Mela with Maurizio Benazzo, which won several awards. Day also won an award for best screenplay for The Fallen, a World War I drama directed by Ari Taub. Day currently produces ", "score": "1.4328623" }, { "id": "16187317", "title": "David Maloney", "text": " David John Lee Maloney (14 December 1933 – 18 July 2006) was a British television director and producer best known for his work on the BBC science-fiction series Doctor Who, Blake's 7 and The Day of the Triffids. The Guardian described him on his death as \"one of that old school who could turn out 30-minute dramas in two days shooting time\".", "score": "1.422816" }, { "id": "9214394", "title": "Geoff Posner", "text": " Wood's All Day Breakfast, director, 1992 ; It's A Mad World, World, World, World, director, 1994 ; Paul Calf's Video Diary, director / producer, 1994 ; Victoria Wood: Live In Your Own Home, director/ producer, 1994 ; A Christmas Night With the Stars, director, 1994 ; Pauline Calf's Wedding Video, director/ producer, 1994 ; Coogan's Run, director/ producer, 1995 ; The Tony Ferrino Phenomenon, director/ producer, 1997 ; Harry Enfield and Chums, director/ producer, 1997 ; Victoria Wood: Live, director/ producer, 1997 ; Eurovision Song Contest 1998, director, 1998 ; Stephen Fry's Live From The Lighthouse, director/ producer, 1998 ; Steve Coogan: The Man Who Thinks He's It, director/ producer, 1998 ; dinnerladies, director/ producer, 1998-2000 ; tlc, director/ ", "score": "1.4224641" }, { "id": "14210029", "title": "Robin Day", "text": " Day spent almost his entire working life in journalism. He rose to prominence on the new Independent Television News (ITN) from 1955. According to Dick Taverne, Day first came to notice by interviewing Sir Kenneth Clark, then chairman of the regulator Independent Television Authority. The ITA had proposed to cut ITN's broadcasting hours and finances. His direct, non-deferential approach was then entirely new. Day was the first British journalist to interview Egypt's President Nasser after the Suez Crisis. In 1958, he interviewed Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, in what the Daily Express called: \"the most vigorous cross-examination a prime minister has been subjected to in public\". The interview turned Day into ", "score": "1.4140456" }, { "id": "6038090", "title": "Thomas B. Day", "text": " Communication. He advocated for affirmative action programs and selected Mary Alice Hill in 1983 to be the first female athletic director at a university with a Division I-A football program. Facing budget shortfalls in 1992, Day proposed sharp cuts that would have eliminated whole departments and laid off faculty. In August 1992, faculty passed a vote of no confidence in Day and asked the California State University Board of Trustees to replace him. An improvement in the budget situation led to the cuts being rescinded, but Day remained unpopular on campus, and was ultimately asked to resign, ostensibly for health reasons. Day was a member of the National Science Board from 1984 to 1996 and a vice-chairman from 1990 to 1994. He was also a Senior Fellow of the California Council on Science and Technology and a former board member.", "score": "1.413914" }, { "id": "6075163", "title": "Walter Percy Day", "text": " A meeting with Alexander Korda opened up new perspectives for the Day studio. Day worked with Korda on The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933) a film starring Charles Laughton. Day accordingly established a studio in Iver (Buckinghamshire) and from 1936, directed the matte department at Denham Studios. The artist painted mattes and created trick shots for numerous films by Korda and his stable of directors, who included his brother Zoltan Korda, Anthony Asquith, William Cameron Menzies (Things to Come, 1936), Michael Powell, and Lothar Mendes. In 1946 Day joined the Korda group as Director of Special Effects at Korda's new ", "score": "1.4119899" }, { "id": "4681269", "title": "Question Time (TV programme)", "text": " Veteran broadcaster Sir Robin Day was the programme's first chair, presenting it for nearly 10 years until June 1989. Question Time soon gained popularity under Day's lead, with his quick wit and interrogation skills. His famous catchphrase when he had introduced the panel was: \"There they are, and here we go.\" The programme was mainly filmed at the Greenwood Theatre in London on the south side of London Bridge. Day's last appearance as presenter was broadcast from Paris on 12 July 1989. He was allowed to choose his own guests.", "score": "1.4064087" }, { "id": "9401955", "title": "The Day (1960 film)", "text": " Although Finch was best known as an actor, he had worked as a writer and director before, notably on stage. He also helped make the documentary Primitive Peoples (1949).", "score": "1.4043875" } ]
[ "Robert Day (director)\n Robert Frederick Day (11 September 1922 – 17 March 2017) was an English film director. He directed more than 40 films between 1956 and 1991.", "Robert Day (director)\n Day was born in Sheen, England. He worked his way up from clapper boy to camera operator then cinematographer while in his native country, and began directing in the mid-1950s. His first film as director, the black comedy The Green Man (1956) for the writer-producer team of Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat, gained good reviews. Using this as a starting point, Day went on to become one of the industry's busiest directors including directing several Tarzan films. He relocated to Hollywood in the 1960s and directed many TV episodes and made-for-TV movies. He occasionally had small parts in his own productions, including The Haunted Strangler (1958), Two-Way Stretch (1960), and the TV mini-series Peter and Paul (1981). In the 1970s and 1980s, Day would direct episodes of numerous American television shows, including Barnaby Jones, The F.B.I., Dallas, Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, and Matlock.", "James Day (journalist)\n James Day (December 22, 1918 – April 24, 2008) was an American public television station and network executive and on-air interviewer, and professor of television broadcasting at Brooklyn College. Day was a co-founder, and the founding president and general manager, of pioneer San Francisco public television station KQED, and in 1969 became the final president of National Educational Television (NET) before it wound down operations by 1970, making way for its successor, the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Day then became general manager of NET's now-former flagship, New York PBS member station WNET. Day was an original PBS board member, and was also a founding board member of the Children's Television Workshop, creators and producers of Sesame Street, which quickly became a \"flagship\" children's program for public television. Day was born in Alameda, California and died in New York City. One of Day's innovations ", "Robert Day (director)\n Day was married to Eileen Day and then, following their divorce, to actress Dorothy Provine until her death in 2010. He was the brother of cinematographer Ernest Day. Day died at the age of 94 on Bainbridge Island near Seattle on 17 March 2017.", "L. B. Day\n In 1970, Day was appointed as a regional director for the U.S. Department of the Interior under Interior Secretary Walter Hickel. When President Richard Nixon fired Hickel, Day returned to Oregon and was appointed soon after to serve as Governor Tom McCall's first director of the newly formed Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. During 1973 negotiations over Oregon's landmark comprehensive land-use planning legislation, Senate Bill 100, Day played a vital role in developing the compromises necessary to move SB 100 through the Senate. He then served as the first chairman of the new state Land Conservation and Development Commission in 1974.", "Day of the Fight\n high-school friend of Stanley Kubrick (both attended William Howard Taft High School in the Bronx), served as assistant director and as a cameraman on this production. Singer also worked on Kubrick's Killer's Kiss (1955) and The Killing (1956), and went on to have a long career as a director of films and television dramas. ; Douglas Edwards, the narrator on Day of the Fight, was a veteran CBS radio and television newscaster. At the time, he was the anchor on the first televised daily news program, which would later be titled Douglas Edwards with the News and then The CBS Evening News. ", "Phil Day (town planner)\n with the Department of Local Government, he moved to the Department of Decentralisation and Development in 1968, eventually becoming director. He was next director of town planning for Brisbane City Council, and then moved to the University of Queensland, where he was head of school from 1977 to 1980, when he moved to the Australian Institute of Urban Studies as director. He retired from the Institute and wrote his last report in 1989 as a member of the Chalk Committee of Inquiry into Valuation and Rating. From 1987 he was editor of Queensland Planner, and wrote frequently for The Courier-Mail. In his eighties he published Hijacked Inheritance, based on his doctorate thesis which he had completed at the age of 77. Day died in 2011.", "Linda Day\n Day started as a script supervisor on the Television film Victory at Entebbe, and on the soap opera parody Soap. She became an associate director for WKRP in Cincinnati in 1978, and began directing episodes of the show in 1980. Linda Day went on to direct a number of successful sitcoms in the 1980s and '90s, including the pilot of Married With Children and 32 more episodes of the show. Day also directed four episodes of the soap opera Dallas during what would become the show's \"dream season\" in 1985–86, when the events of the entire season were explained away as being a character's dream. In addition to a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series nomination, she received a Humanitas Prize and was honored by the Directors Guild of America for paving the way for women in television; she directed more than 350 episodes and 50 series.", "Linda Day\n Linda Day (August 12, 1938 – October 23, 2009) was an American television director, working primarily in situation comedies. Day was born as Linda Brickner in Los Angeles, the daughter of Roy Brickner, a film editor. At the age of 67, she married her childhood sweetheart, L. Steve Varnum, in Texas.", "Bill Day (filmmaker)\n Day directed the documentary Saviors of the Forest which was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. He also directed Rubber Jungle, a behind the scenes look at the life of Brazilian labor leader Chico Mendes and the movie about his life. In 2002, Day co-produced the musical documentary Under The Covers, followed by Alternative Rock and Roll Years in 2003 for Discovery Channel. Day served as a field producer for Hopkins 24/7, a television documentary series. With Carlo Gennarelli, he co-produced Ordinary Joe, a documentary film about Joe Sciacca, a Vietnam veteran from New York City. Day made a film about XXXchurch.com called Missionary Positions. He also produced and directed The Pussycat Preacher, a film about Heather Veitch and her organization, JC's Girls. He holds the YouTube channel 'billschannel', which posts videos of wildlife trips around the world and a series named 'Real or Fake?' This series shows him and his research group 'The Chewy Piranhas' uncover photographs and videos on the internet and using various methods to show whether they are portraying real-life events, fake hoaxes or unknown mysteries.", "New York University Press\nArthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "DaDaFest\nMandy Colleran – Former director ; Ruth Gould - Gould was appointed as the Creative Director of the NWDAF in 2001, she is now the Chief Executive Officer of DaDaFest. Whilst working for the NWDAF in 2001, she was asked to create something for International Disabled People's Day but she claimed that \"one day was not enough\" and set about producing a festival with the help of a steering group. The result of this was the first DaDaFest in December 2001 and the subsequent change of 'DaDaFest' as a one off festival into its own brand. ; Jane Cordell - Cordell ", "Nick Day (film director)\n Day trained and worked as an editor in London while studying cinema as part of the British Film Institute/University of London diploma program. After relocating to the US, he worked for several years in television production on a wide range of programming, including commercials, news, current affairs, and arts and entertainment for broadcast in Italy, Brazil, Germany, as well as the US. He later produced and directed the documentary Short Cut to Nirvana: Kumbh Mela with Maurizio Benazzo, which won several awards. Day also won an award for best screenplay for The Fallen, a World War I drama directed by Ari Taub. Day currently produces ", "David Maloney\n David John Lee Maloney (14 December 1933 – 18 July 2006) was a British television director and producer best known for his work on the BBC science-fiction series Doctor Who, Blake's 7 and The Day of the Triffids. The Guardian described him on his death as \"one of that old school who could turn out 30-minute dramas in two days shooting time\".", "Geoff Posner\n Wood's All Day Breakfast, director, 1992 ; It's A Mad World, World, World, World, director, 1994 ; Paul Calf's Video Diary, director / producer, 1994 ; Victoria Wood: Live In Your Own Home, director/ producer, 1994 ; A Christmas Night With the Stars, director, 1994 ; Pauline Calf's Wedding Video, director/ producer, 1994 ; Coogan's Run, director/ producer, 1995 ; The Tony Ferrino Phenomenon, director/ producer, 1997 ; Harry Enfield and Chums, director/ producer, 1997 ; Victoria Wood: Live, director/ producer, 1997 ; Eurovision Song Contest 1998, director, 1998 ; Stephen Fry's Live From The Lighthouse, director/ producer, 1998 ; Steve Coogan: The Man Who Thinks He's It, director/ producer, 1998 ; dinnerladies, director/ producer, 1998-2000 ; tlc, director/ ", "Robin Day\n Day spent almost his entire working life in journalism. He rose to prominence on the new Independent Television News (ITN) from 1955. According to Dick Taverne, Day first came to notice by interviewing Sir Kenneth Clark, then chairman of the regulator Independent Television Authority. The ITA had proposed to cut ITN's broadcasting hours and finances. His direct, non-deferential approach was then entirely new. Day was the first British journalist to interview Egypt's President Nasser after the Suez Crisis. In 1958, he interviewed Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, in what the Daily Express called: \"the most vigorous cross-examination a prime minister has been subjected to in public\". The interview turned Day into ", "Thomas B. Day\n Communication. He advocated for affirmative action programs and selected Mary Alice Hill in 1983 to be the first female athletic director at a university with a Division I-A football program. Facing budget shortfalls in 1992, Day proposed sharp cuts that would have eliminated whole departments and laid off faculty. In August 1992, faculty passed a vote of no confidence in Day and asked the California State University Board of Trustees to replace him. An improvement in the budget situation led to the cuts being rescinded, but Day remained unpopular on campus, and was ultimately asked to resign, ostensibly for health reasons. Day was a member of the National Science Board from 1984 to 1996 and a vice-chairman from 1990 to 1994. He was also a Senior Fellow of the California Council on Science and Technology and a former board member.", "Walter Percy Day\n A meeting with Alexander Korda opened up new perspectives for the Day studio. Day worked with Korda on The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933) a film starring Charles Laughton. Day accordingly established a studio in Iver (Buckinghamshire) and from 1936, directed the matte department at Denham Studios. The artist painted mattes and created trick shots for numerous films by Korda and his stable of directors, who included his brother Zoltan Korda, Anthony Asquith, William Cameron Menzies (Things to Come, 1936), Michael Powell, and Lothar Mendes. In 1946 Day joined the Korda group as Director of Special Effects at Korda's new ", "Question Time (TV programme)\n Veteran broadcaster Sir Robin Day was the programme's first chair, presenting it for nearly 10 years until June 1989. Question Time soon gained popularity under Day's lead, with his quick wit and interrogation skills. His famous catchphrase when he had introduced the panel was: \"There they are, and here we go.\" The programme was mainly filmed at the Greenwood Theatre in London on the south side of London Bridge. Day's last appearance as presenter was broadcast from Paris on 12 July 1989. He was allowed to choose his own guests.", "The Day (1960 film)\n Although Finch was best known as an actor, he had worked as a writer and director before, notably on stage. He also helped make the documentary Primitive Peoples (1949)." ]
Who was the director of Le Guérisseur?
[ "Yves Ciampi" ]
director
Le Guérisseur
2,449,220
83
[ { "id": "27151081", "title": "Le Guérisseur", "text": " Le Guérisseur (The Faith healer) is a French drama film from 1953, directed by Yves Ciampi and written by Jacques-Laurent Bost, starring Dieter Borsche and Jean Marais. The film was released in other countries under the titles Der Arzt und das Mädchen (Austria/Germany), De wonderdokter (Belgium), and Flickan och polisen (Sweden).", "score": "1.7303975" }, { "id": "27151082", "title": "Le Guérisseur", "text": "Jean Marais : Pierre Lachaux dit Laurent Le Guérisseur ; Danièle Delorme : Isabelle Dancey, modiste de Paris ; Maurice Ronet : André Turenne ; Dieter Borsche : Dr. Jean Scheffer (de la Faculté en Bretagne) ; Jean Murat : Professeur Chataignier ; Jean Galland : Michel Boëldieu ; Pierre Mondy : Robert, assistant de Laurent ; Marianne Oswald : The healer Lucie ; Jim Gérald : Virolet, le rebouteux ; Colette Régis : Louise Mériadec, la tante d'Isabelle ; Renée Passeur : La comtesse ", "score": "1.5193532" }, { "id": "1595236", "title": "Louis Leterrier", "text": " and L'Oréal as well as on the film Joan of Arc. He also collaborated, as the second assistant director, with Alain Chabat on the production of Astérix & Obélix: Mission Cléopâtre (2002). Later in 2002, Louis Leterrier directed The Transporter, an action movie starring Jason Statham. Although the US release lists him as artistic director and Corey Yuen as director, the opening credits of the European release grant him directorial credit and list Yuen as action director. Leterrier later entered the so-called \"Besson stable\" – a group of directors working on films produced by or associated with Luc Besson – alongside Chris Nahon and Pierre Morel. He directed ", "score": "1.4993341" }, { "id": "6152859", "title": "Les Intrigantes", "text": " Les Intrigantes (The Plotters), is a French crime drama film from 1954, directed by Henri Decoin, written by François Boyer, starring Raymond Rouleau and Louis de Funès. Paul Rémi, a well-known theater director, accused by Andrieux, his secretary. Advised by Mona, hiding in psychiatric hospital.", "score": "1.4891518" }, { "id": "900248", "title": "Stéphane Lissner", "text": " Université Paris-Dauphine in 1984, and was appointed Director General of the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris in 1988, while he has been a member of the Board of Directors since 1983. He remained so until 1997 while assuming the general management of the Orchestre de Paris from 1994 to 1996. The direction of the Aix-en-Provence Festival was entrusted to him in 1998. He also headed the Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord with Peter Brook from 1998 to June 2005, and has been directing with Frédéric Franck the Théâtre de la Madeleine since 2002. As he was to retain the management of ", "score": "1.4749839" }, { "id": "32447419", "title": "Théâtre National Populaire", "text": " by Heinrich von Kleist. Vilar hired the young composer Maurice Jarre as music director. Jarre scored 36 plays including the famous Lorenzaccio. In 1963, Georges Wilson succeeded Vilar and created a second room devoted to contemporary writers. In 1972 the French Minister of Cultural Affairs (Jacques Duhamel) decided to move the TNP to Villeurbanne, near Lyon. Specifically, to the Théâtre de la Cité, founded by Roger Planchon in 1957. Patrice Chéreau, Robert Gilbert and Roger Planchon took over leadership of the organization. In 1986, Georges Lavaudant replaced Patrice Chéreau and shared the leadership with Roger Planchon until 1996. Then in 2002, the current director, Christian Schiaretti left the Comedy of Reims to lead the TNP.", "score": "1.4730753" }, { "id": "28451408", "title": "Christian Le Guillochet", "text": " he installed \"Le Lucernaire\" at 53 rue Notre-Dame des Champs. In the 1970s, he began a long-term friendship with Laurent Terzieff to whom he entrusted the artistic direction of the Lucernaire for five years. On 5 November 2003, on the evening of the premiere of Subvention, a play by Jean-Luc Jeener in which he embodied a theater director, he started a hunger strike so that the city of Paris and the Ministry of Culture did not cut subsidies to the \"Lucernaire\". In 2004, his wife died, and, at age 70, he sold the \"Lucernaire\" to the group owner of the publishing house L'Harmattan.", "score": "1.4647956" }, { "id": "11539312", "title": "Françoise Berd", "text": " Françoise Berd then returned to Europe as a fellow of the Canadian Council for the Arts, where she developed relationships in the film industry. But she only managed to get hired through her own insistence. The producer Philippe Dussart, gave her a job as telephone operator. Then, since she knew English, she was asked to interpret contracts for Jacques Demy who directed The Young Girls of Rochefort (Les Demoiselles de Rochefort), in a coproduction with Warner Bros.. For two and a half years, the productions continued: Godard, Bresson and Robert Hossein (Raspoutine).", "score": "1.4564233" }, { "id": "5886265", "title": "Les Subsistances", "text": " Paul Grémeret was appointed director in May 1998, succeeded by Klaus Hersche in September 2000. In 2003 Guy Walter and Cathy Bouvard became directors of Les Subsistances.", "score": "1.4550169" }, { "id": "31178227", "title": "Jacques Peuchmaurd", "text": " of Éditions Julliard, before being hired by Éditions Robert Laffont, of which he became one of the closest collaborators as a literary director. He was also the founder of the group of authors called \"École de Brive\" Which he directed for nearly twenty-five years, including authors such as Michel Peyramaure, Christian Signol, Claude Michelet, Gilbert Bordes, Colette Laussac... As a writer, he was the author of several novels of autobiographical inspiration, including Le Soleil de Palicorna, which earned him the Prix des libraires in 1965 and Le plein été which made him the winner of the Prix Cazes in 1959. He was Pierre Peuchmaurd's father", "score": "1.4443862" }, { "id": "32912010", "title": "Philippe Fourastié", "text": " He learned the trade by starting as an assistant. He started with Pierre Schoendoerffer on La 317e Section (prize for best screenplay, Festival de Cannes 1965). He worked again with him on Objectif 500 millions, where he met actor Bruno Cremer with whom he would later collaborate. He also assisted Claude Chabrol for Marie-Chantal against Doctor Kha, Jean-Luc Godard for Pierrot le fou and Jacques Rivette, on another film banned by censorship, Suzanne Simonin, the Nun of Diderot. In 1966, he directed his first feature film: A choice of assassins, adaptation of William McGivern, the author of Odds against tomorrow (adapted in 1959 by Robert Wise). The film tells the story of a cartoonist who goes adrift ", "score": "1.4435062" }, { "id": "13392519", "title": "Audrey Azoulay", "text": " In 2000, Azoulay was appointed civil administrator, assigned to the general secretariat of Prime Minister Lionel Jospin's government. From April 2000 to July 2003, she worked at the head of the public audiovisual sector office, especially for the strategy and the funding of sector organization in the media development department. At the same time, she manages media expertise missions for the European Commission within the process of pre-accession programs. In 2003, Azoulay was in charge of conference in media strategy, audiovisual and cinema financing at Sciences Po. From September 2003 to February 2006, she worked for the Ile-de-France Regional Chamber Accounts and with the committee for inquiry into the cost and performance of public service. In 2004, she appeared in the distribution of the Film \" Le Grand Rôle \" by the director Steve Suissa, where she played the director's assistant. In 2006, Azoulay joined the National Center of Cinematography and the moving image (CNC), successively holding the positions of Deputy Director for Multimedia Affairs, Chief Financial and Legal Officer and Deputy Director-General. From 2014 until 2016, Azoulay served as advisor on communications and cultural affairs to President François Hollande.", "score": "1.4387271" }, { "id": "4175070", "title": "Fernand Dansereau", "text": " After five years working as a reporter for the Montreal daily Le Devoir, Dansereau joined the NFB in 1955. He was a founding member of the NFB's French Unit and until 1960, he wrote and directed several feature films and documentaries for the series Panorama. He worked on the television series Temps présent from 1960 to 1964 and then returned to directing with the fiction feature Le festin des morts which won 2 Canadian Film Awards including Best Feature Film in 1966. He left the NFB in 1970 for the private sector. Among his many achievements, he wrote and directed the feature documentary Faut aller parmi l'monde pour le savoir (1971) which was selected for the Directors' Fortnight at the ", "score": "1.4279132" }, { "id": "16186955", "title": "Ariane Mnouchkine", "text": " Ariane Mnouchkine (born 3 March 1939) is a French stage director. She founded the Parisian avant-garde stage ensemble Théâtre du Soleil in 1964. She wrote and directed 1789 (1974) and Molière (1978), and directed La Nuit Miraculeuse (1989). She holds a Chair of Artistic Creation at the Collège de France, an Honorary Degree in Performing Arts from the University of Rome III, awarded in 2005 and an Honorary Doctor of Letters from Oxford University, awarded 18 June 2008.", "score": "1.4270033" }, { "id": "30558331", "title": "Théâtre de la Michodière", "text": " by Diego Fabbri after Dostoievski, directed by Pierre Franck, 15 October ; 1970: L'Idée fixe, by Paul Valéry, directed by Pierre Franck ; 1970: Jeu, set et match by Anthony Shaffer, directed by Clifford Williams, 18 December ; 1971: Et alors ? by Bernard Haller, 9 September ; 1971: Mon Faust by Paul Valéry, directed by Pierre Franck ; 1971: Le Client by Jean-Claude Carrière, directed by the author ; 1972: Et alors ? by Bernard Haller, 1 August ; 1972: La Claque by André Roussin, directed by the author, 17 October ; 1973: L'Arnacœur by Pierrette Bruno, directed by Pierre Mondy, 10 October ; 1975: Les Diablogues ", "score": "1.424511" }, { "id": "9501471", "title": "Bernard Gosselin", "text": "Le jeu de l'hiver (Co-Directed with Jean Dansereau, 1961) ; Les voyageurs (1964) ; Le beau plaisir (Co-Directed with Pierre Perrault and Michel Brault, 1968) ; Capture (aka The Catch, 1969) ; L'odyssée du Manhattan (1970) ; Passage au Nord-Ouest (1970) ; César et son canot d'écorce (1971) ; Les raquettes des Atcikameg (1973) ; Les boeufs de labour (Co-Directed with Léo Plamondon, 1977) (La Belle Ouvrage series) ; Le pain d'habitant (1re partie) - Construction du four (Co-Directed with Léo Plamondon, 1977) (La Belle Ouvrage series) ; Le pain d'habitant (2e partie) - La caisson (Co-Directed with Léo Plamondon, 1977) (La Belle Ouvrage series) ; Armand Hardy, menuisier-tonnelier (Co-Directed with ", "score": "1.423764" }, { "id": "31142719", "title": "Daniel Kamwa", "text": "Boubou-cravate, director (1973) ; Pousse-Pousse, director (1976) ; Notre Fille, director (1980) ; Vidéolire, director (1991) ; Totor, actor and director (1994) ; Le Cercle des pouvoirs, director (1998) ", "score": "1.4211502" }, { "id": "25348637", "title": "Lotfi Achour", "text": " He associated with the author Natacha Pontcharra, with whom he created a dozen texts in residence in various drama centers and national scenes, including La Chartreuse de Villeneuve Lez Avignon, where he directed three shows, including L’Angélie, a show created at the Avignon Festival in 1998, and billed as \"The best show in Avignon festival\", by Le Soir in Belgium. Achour thus became the first Tunisian director to occur in the \"IN\" of Avignon Festival. Working in both Arabic and French, he designed and implemented international projects involving multidisciplinary artistic collaborations with artists from different nationalities and backgrounds. He ran the Rio Theatre in Grenoble for four years, making it exclusively for contemporary art and living artists. He designed an installation for the Nuit Blanche in Paris 2006. In 2009, he joined Anissa Daoud, actress and author, and created the APA, Artistes Producteurs Associés (Producers Artists Associated), a structure for innovative creation that produces movies, theater plays, and musical performances.", "score": "1.4208374" }, { "id": "8893847", "title": "Auteur", "text": " The French magazine Cahiers du cinéma was founded in 1951 and quickly became a focal point for discussion on the role of directors in cinema. François Truffaut criticized the prevailing \"Cinema of Quality\" trend in France in his 1954 essay Une certaine tendance du cinéma français (\"A certain tendency in French cinema\"). He characterised these films as being made by directors who were faithful to the script, which in turn was usually a faithful adaptation of a literary novel. The director was used only as a metteur en scene, a \"stager\" who simply adds the performers and pictures to an already completed script. Truffaut argued that the directors who had authority and flexibility over how to realise the script were the ones who made better films. He coined the phrase La politique des auteurs (\"The policy of the authors\") to describe his view. These discussions took ", "score": "1.418921" }, { "id": "7130555", "title": "La Job", "text": " mistakes. André St-Pierre is the director of the episodes. He is best known as the co-director of the Télé-Québec show Les Francs-Tireurs and La Job was his first fiction. Script adaptation was given to Ian Lauzon and Jean-Philippe Granger was made screenwriter. Like the American Office, improv veterans were called to fill the shoes of some of the original actors. The role of the David Brent boss was entrusted to Antoine Vézina, a performer of the reputed Ligue nationale d'improvisation (LNI), a Quebec-born concept of improvisational theatre and international improv team competition (Quebec, France, Belgium, Switzerland and Italy). Sophie Cadieux, who holds the role ", "score": "1.4175134" } ]
[ "Le Guérisseur\n Le Guérisseur (The Faith healer) is a French drama film from 1953, directed by Yves Ciampi and written by Jacques-Laurent Bost, starring Dieter Borsche and Jean Marais. The film was released in other countries under the titles Der Arzt und das Mädchen (Austria/Germany), De wonderdokter (Belgium), and Flickan och polisen (Sweden).", "Le Guérisseur\nJean Marais : Pierre Lachaux dit Laurent Le Guérisseur ; Danièle Delorme : Isabelle Dancey, modiste de Paris ; Maurice Ronet : André Turenne ; Dieter Borsche : Dr. Jean Scheffer (de la Faculté en Bretagne) ; Jean Murat : Professeur Chataignier ; Jean Galland : Michel Boëldieu ; Pierre Mondy : Robert, assistant de Laurent ; Marianne Oswald : The healer Lucie ; Jim Gérald : Virolet, le rebouteux ; Colette Régis : Louise Mériadec, la tante d'Isabelle ; Renée Passeur : La comtesse ", "Louis Leterrier\n and L'Oréal as well as on the film Joan of Arc. He also collaborated, as the second assistant director, with Alain Chabat on the production of Astérix & Obélix: Mission Cléopâtre (2002). Later in 2002, Louis Leterrier directed The Transporter, an action movie starring Jason Statham. Although the US release lists him as artistic director and Corey Yuen as director, the opening credits of the European release grant him directorial credit and list Yuen as action director. Leterrier later entered the so-called \"Besson stable\" – a group of directors working on films produced by or associated with Luc Besson – alongside Chris Nahon and Pierre Morel. He directed ", "Les Intrigantes\n Les Intrigantes (The Plotters), is a French crime drama film from 1954, directed by Henri Decoin, written by François Boyer, starring Raymond Rouleau and Louis de Funès. Paul Rémi, a well-known theater director, accused by Andrieux, his secretary. Advised by Mona, hiding in psychiatric hospital.", "Stéphane Lissner\n Université Paris-Dauphine in 1984, and was appointed Director General of the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris in 1988, while he has been a member of the Board of Directors since 1983. He remained so until 1997 while assuming the general management of the Orchestre de Paris from 1994 to 1996. The direction of the Aix-en-Provence Festival was entrusted to him in 1998. He also headed the Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord with Peter Brook from 1998 to June 2005, and has been directing with Frédéric Franck the Théâtre de la Madeleine since 2002. As he was to retain the management of ", "Théâtre National Populaire\n by Heinrich von Kleist. Vilar hired the young composer Maurice Jarre as music director. Jarre scored 36 plays including the famous Lorenzaccio. In 1963, Georges Wilson succeeded Vilar and created a second room devoted to contemporary writers. In 1972 the French Minister of Cultural Affairs (Jacques Duhamel) decided to move the TNP to Villeurbanne, near Lyon. Specifically, to the Théâtre de la Cité, founded by Roger Planchon in 1957. Patrice Chéreau, Robert Gilbert and Roger Planchon took over leadership of the organization. In 1986, Georges Lavaudant replaced Patrice Chéreau and shared the leadership with Roger Planchon until 1996. Then in 2002, the current director, Christian Schiaretti left the Comedy of Reims to lead the TNP.", "Christian Le Guillochet\n he installed \"Le Lucernaire\" at 53 rue Notre-Dame des Champs. In the 1970s, he began a long-term friendship with Laurent Terzieff to whom he entrusted the artistic direction of the Lucernaire for five years. On 5 November 2003, on the evening of the premiere of Subvention, a play by Jean-Luc Jeener in which he embodied a theater director, he started a hunger strike so that the city of Paris and the Ministry of Culture did not cut subsidies to the \"Lucernaire\". In 2004, his wife died, and, at age 70, he sold the \"Lucernaire\" to the group owner of the publishing house L'Harmattan.", "Françoise Berd\n Françoise Berd then returned to Europe as a fellow of the Canadian Council for the Arts, where she developed relationships in the film industry. But she only managed to get hired through her own insistence. The producer Philippe Dussart, gave her a job as telephone operator. Then, since she knew English, she was asked to interpret contracts for Jacques Demy who directed The Young Girls of Rochefort (Les Demoiselles de Rochefort), in a coproduction with Warner Bros.. For two and a half years, the productions continued: Godard, Bresson and Robert Hossein (Raspoutine).", "Les Subsistances\n Paul Grémeret was appointed director in May 1998, succeeded by Klaus Hersche in September 2000. In 2003 Guy Walter and Cathy Bouvard became directors of Les Subsistances.", "Jacques Peuchmaurd\n of Éditions Julliard, before being hired by Éditions Robert Laffont, of which he became one of the closest collaborators as a literary director. He was also the founder of the group of authors called \"École de Brive\" Which he directed for nearly twenty-five years, including authors such as Michel Peyramaure, Christian Signol, Claude Michelet, Gilbert Bordes, Colette Laussac... As a writer, he was the author of several novels of autobiographical inspiration, including Le Soleil de Palicorna, which earned him the Prix des libraires in 1965 and Le plein été which made him the winner of the Prix Cazes in 1959. He was Pierre Peuchmaurd's father", "Philippe Fourastié\n He learned the trade by starting as an assistant. He started with Pierre Schoendoerffer on La 317e Section (prize for best screenplay, Festival de Cannes 1965). He worked again with him on Objectif 500 millions, where he met actor Bruno Cremer with whom he would later collaborate. He also assisted Claude Chabrol for Marie-Chantal against Doctor Kha, Jean-Luc Godard for Pierrot le fou and Jacques Rivette, on another film banned by censorship, Suzanne Simonin, the Nun of Diderot. In 1966, he directed his first feature film: A choice of assassins, adaptation of William McGivern, the author of Odds against tomorrow (adapted in 1959 by Robert Wise). The film tells the story of a cartoonist who goes adrift ", "Audrey Azoulay\n In 2000, Azoulay was appointed civil administrator, assigned to the general secretariat of Prime Minister Lionel Jospin's government. From April 2000 to July 2003, she worked at the head of the public audiovisual sector office, especially for the strategy and the funding of sector organization in the media development department. At the same time, she manages media expertise missions for the European Commission within the process of pre-accession programs. In 2003, Azoulay was in charge of conference in media strategy, audiovisual and cinema financing at Sciences Po. From September 2003 to February 2006, she worked for the Ile-de-France Regional Chamber Accounts and with the committee for inquiry into the cost and performance of public service. In 2004, she appeared in the distribution of the Film \" Le Grand Rôle \" by the director Steve Suissa, where she played the director's assistant. In 2006, Azoulay joined the National Center of Cinematography and the moving image (CNC), successively holding the positions of Deputy Director for Multimedia Affairs, Chief Financial and Legal Officer and Deputy Director-General. From 2014 until 2016, Azoulay served as advisor on communications and cultural affairs to President François Hollande.", "Fernand Dansereau\n After five years working as a reporter for the Montreal daily Le Devoir, Dansereau joined the NFB in 1955. He was a founding member of the NFB's French Unit and until 1960, he wrote and directed several feature films and documentaries for the series Panorama. He worked on the television series Temps présent from 1960 to 1964 and then returned to directing with the fiction feature Le festin des morts which won 2 Canadian Film Awards including Best Feature Film in 1966. He left the NFB in 1970 for the private sector. Among his many achievements, he wrote and directed the feature documentary Faut aller parmi l'monde pour le savoir (1971) which was selected for the Directors' Fortnight at the ", "Ariane Mnouchkine\n Ariane Mnouchkine (born 3 March 1939) is a French stage director. She founded the Parisian avant-garde stage ensemble Théâtre du Soleil in 1964. She wrote and directed 1789 (1974) and Molière (1978), and directed La Nuit Miraculeuse (1989). She holds a Chair of Artistic Creation at the Collège de France, an Honorary Degree in Performing Arts from the University of Rome III, awarded in 2005 and an Honorary Doctor of Letters from Oxford University, awarded 18 June 2008.", "Théâtre de la Michodière\n by Diego Fabbri after Dostoievski, directed by Pierre Franck, 15 October ; 1970: L'Idée fixe, by Paul Valéry, directed by Pierre Franck ; 1970: Jeu, set et match by Anthony Shaffer, directed by Clifford Williams, 18 December ; 1971: Et alors ? by Bernard Haller, 9 September ; 1971: Mon Faust by Paul Valéry, directed by Pierre Franck ; 1971: Le Client by Jean-Claude Carrière, directed by the author ; 1972: Et alors ? by Bernard Haller, 1 August ; 1972: La Claque by André Roussin, directed by the author, 17 October ; 1973: L'Arnacœur by Pierrette Bruno, directed by Pierre Mondy, 10 October ; 1975: Les Diablogues ", "Bernard Gosselin\nLe jeu de l'hiver (Co-Directed with Jean Dansereau, 1961) ; Les voyageurs (1964) ; Le beau plaisir (Co-Directed with Pierre Perrault and Michel Brault, 1968) ; Capture (aka The Catch, 1969) ; L'odyssée du Manhattan (1970) ; Passage au Nord-Ouest (1970) ; César et son canot d'écorce (1971) ; Les raquettes des Atcikameg (1973) ; Les boeufs de labour (Co-Directed with Léo Plamondon, 1977) (La Belle Ouvrage series) ; Le pain d'habitant (1re partie) - Construction du four (Co-Directed with Léo Plamondon, 1977) (La Belle Ouvrage series) ; Le pain d'habitant (2e partie) - La caisson (Co-Directed with Léo Plamondon, 1977) (La Belle Ouvrage series) ; Armand Hardy, menuisier-tonnelier (Co-Directed with ", "Daniel Kamwa\nBoubou-cravate, director (1973) ; Pousse-Pousse, director (1976) ; Notre Fille, director (1980) ; Vidéolire, director (1991) ; Totor, actor and director (1994) ; Le Cercle des pouvoirs, director (1998) ", "Lotfi Achour\n He associated with the author Natacha Pontcharra, with whom he created a dozen texts in residence in various drama centers and national scenes, including La Chartreuse de Villeneuve Lez Avignon, where he directed three shows, including L’Angélie, a show created at the Avignon Festival in 1998, and billed as \"The best show in Avignon festival\", by Le Soir in Belgium. Achour thus became the first Tunisian director to occur in the \"IN\" of Avignon Festival. Working in both Arabic and French, he designed and implemented international projects involving multidisciplinary artistic collaborations with artists from different nationalities and backgrounds. He ran the Rio Theatre in Grenoble for four years, making it exclusively for contemporary art and living artists. He designed an installation for the Nuit Blanche in Paris 2006. In 2009, he joined Anissa Daoud, actress and author, and created the APA, Artistes Producteurs Associés (Producers Artists Associated), a structure for innovative creation that produces movies, theater plays, and musical performances.", "Auteur\n The French magazine Cahiers du cinéma was founded in 1951 and quickly became a focal point for discussion on the role of directors in cinema. François Truffaut criticized the prevailing \"Cinema of Quality\" trend in France in his 1954 essay Une certaine tendance du cinéma français (\"A certain tendency in French cinema\"). He characterised these films as being made by directors who were faithful to the script, which in turn was usually a faithful adaptation of a literary novel. The director was used only as a metteur en scene, a \"stager\" who simply adds the performers and pictures to an already completed script. Truffaut argued that the directors who had authority and flexibility over how to realise the script were the ones who made better films. He coined the phrase La politique des auteurs (\"The policy of the authors\") to describe his view. These discussions took ", "La Job\n mistakes. André St-Pierre is the director of the episodes. He is best known as the co-director of the Télé-Québec show Les Francs-Tireurs and La Job was his first fiction. Script adaptation was given to Ian Lauzon and Jean-Philippe Granger was made screenwriter. Like the American Office, improv veterans were called to fill the shoes of some of the original actors. The role of the David Brent boss was entrusted to Antoine Vézina, a performer of the reputed Ligue nationale d'improvisation (LNI), a Quebec-born concept of improvisational theatre and international improv team competition (Quebec, France, Belgium, Switzerland and Italy). Sophie Cadieux, who holds the role " ]
Who was the director of The Photo?
[ "Hossein Shahabi" ]
director
The Photo
1,354,085
71
[ { "id": "15289978", "title": "Philip H. Lathrop", "text": "\tPoint Blank (1967) Director of Photography •\tI Love You, Alice B. Toklas! (1968) Director of Photography •\tFinian’s Rainbow (1968) Director of Photography •\tThe Illustrated Man (1969) Director of Photography •\tThe Gypsy Moths (1969) as Philip Lathrop •\tThey Shoot Horses, Don’t They? (1969) Director of Photography •\tThe Hawaiians (1970) Director of Photography •\tThe Traveling Executioner (1970) Director of Photography •\tRabbit, Run (1970) •\tWild Rovers (1971) Director of Photography •\tEvery Little Crook and Nanny (1972) as Philip Lathrop •\tPortnoy’s Complaint (1972) as Philip Lathrop •\tLolly-Madonna XXX (1973) as Philip Lathrop ", "score": "1.428379" }, { "id": "15289977", "title": "Philip H. Lathrop", "text": " (TV Series: 1 episode, 1963) Director of Photography •\tTwilight of Honor (1963) Director of Photography •\tSoldier in the Rain (1963) Director of Photography •\tThe Pink Panther (1963) Director of Photography •\tThe Americanization of Emily (1964) as Philip Lathrop •\t36 Hours (1964) •\tGirl Happy (1965) Director of Photography •\tThe Cincinnati Kid (1965) Director of Photography •\tNever Too Late (1965) as Philip Lathrop •\tWhat Did You Do in the War, Daddy? (1966) Director of Photography •\tThe Happening (1967) Director of Photography •\tDon't Make Waves (1967) •\tGunn (1967) Director of Photography ", "score": "1.3620062" }, { "id": "29730975", "title": "David Myers (cinematographer)", "text": " In 1957 he directed a documentary film Ansel Adams, Photographer, written by Nancy Newhall and narrated by Beaumont Newhall. He then directed the documentary short Ask Me, Don't Tell Me (1961) with the support of photographer Imogen Cunningham, and continued his career shooting documentaries for both National Geographic and the United Nations through the 1960s, requiring much international travel. His first major credit was co-photography with Didier Tarot on Agnes Varda's short Oncle Yanco ( 'Uncle Yanco', 1967), made in San Francisco about one of her relatives who was a painter leading a hippie life on a barge. At fifty-six, his contribution as one of five camera operators on the landmark rock concert documentary Woodstock (1970) brought an Oscar and established his reputation as a filmmaker in ", "score": "1.3603599" }, { "id": "3451348", "title": "The Photographer (1974 film)", "text": " The Photographer is a 1974 American thriller film written and directed by William Byron Hillman. The film stars Michael Callan, Barbara Nichols, Harold J. Stone, Edward Andrews, Jed Allan and Spencer Milligan. The film was released on December 5, 1974, by Embassy Pictures.", "score": "1.3568228" }, { "id": "12452808", "title": "Robert E. Gilka", "text": " staff of the National Geographic in 1958 and, after a stint as a picture editor, was named director of photography in 1963. In that role, he was responsible for making the photographic assignments for all the Society’s books and magazines. He pioneered a summer intern program for university students who sought careers in photojournalism. Scores went through the program. Some became staff members; others are on newspaper staffs scattered around the country. He also nurtured and hired photographers he met as a member of the University of Missouri photojournalism workshop faculty for nearly 50 years. For 17 years he was in charge of the Hearst annual photojournalism contest.", "score": "1.3519282" }, { "id": "8550878", "title": "Hal Buell", "text": " Hal Buell was the former head of the Photography Service (photography director) at the Associated Press for twenty-five years where he supervised an international staff of 300 photographers. He is also the author of Moments: The Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photographs and Uncommon Valor, Common Virtue, a book about war photographer Joe Rosenthal.", "score": "1.3506913" }, { "id": "11245076", "title": "C. M. Battey", "text": " Cornelius Marion Battey (August 26, 1873 – March 14, 1927) was an American photographer who shot photographic portraits of black Americans in a pictorialist style. His photograph of black leaders appeared on the cover of the NAACP's magazine The Crisis beginning in the 1910s. He later founded and headed up the photography department at the Tuskegee Institute. ", "score": "1.3441098" }, { "id": "12452805", "title": "Robert E. Gilka", "text": " Robert E. Gilka (July 12, 1916 – June 25, 2013) was an American photojournalist best known for being an editor and director of photography at National Geographic for 27 years (1958–1985).", "score": "1.3435988" }, { "id": "32268459", "title": "Stefan Lorant", "text": " and Marilyn Monroe. He gave advice to Life founder Henry Luce around the time of that magazine's startup in 1936, and he edited the works of many leading photographers while in Europe, including Felix Man, Kurt Hutton, Alfred Eisenstaedt, and Robert Capa. Lorant also edited the works of a notable British photojournalist for Picture Post, Bert Hardy, though Hardy's early work for that magazine was not attributed to him, even in the purchase, apparently because the agency he worked for did not allow freelancing. More about Lorant's late life and work can be found in Michael Hallet's book: Stefan Lorant: Godfather of Photojournalism", "score": "1.3421489" }, { "id": "1215030", "title": "Christopher Morris (photographer)", "text": " In 2007, for The New York Times, Morris directed the short film The Gentle Shepherd about the pastor Terry Fox at the Wild West World theme park in Wichita. For Time LightBox, in 2013, Morris directed, edited and produced the short film Conclave about people waiting, in St. Peter's Square, for the announcement of the new Pope. In 2016, he introduced a new way to film the United States presidential candidates’ rallies using a high-speed camera, his short movies being played back in slow-motion.", "score": "1.334983" }, { "id": "1109699", "title": "Edward Steichen", "text": " In the summer of 1929, Museum of Modern Art director Alfred H. Barr, Jr. had included a department devoted to photography in a plan presented to the Trustees. Though not put in place until 1940, it became the first department of photography in a museum devoted to twentieth-century art and was headed by Beaumont Newhall. On the strength of attendances of his propaganda exhibitions Road to Victory and Power in the Pacific, and precipitating curator Newhall's resignation along with most of his staff, in 1947 Steichen was appointed Director of Photography until 1962, later assisted by Grace M. Mayer. His appointment was protested by ", "score": "1.3325632" }, { "id": "6251153", "title": "Gordon Parks", "text": " Gordon Roger Alexander Buchanan Parks (November 30, 1912 – March 7, 2006) was an American photographer, musician, writer and film director, who became prominent in U.S. documentary photojournalism in the 1940s through 1970s—particularly in issues of civil rights, poverty and African-Americans—and in glamour photography. Parks was the first African American to produce and direct major motion pictures—developing films relating the experience of slaves and struggling black Americans, and creating the \"blaxploitation\" genre. He is best remembered for his iconic photos of poor Americans during the 1940s (taken for a federal government project), for his photographic essays for Life magazine, and as the director of the 1971 film Shaft. Parks also was an author, poet and composer.", "score": "1.3273435" }, { "id": "32215589", "title": "Ernst Haas", "text": " Haas was a respected stills photographer for many films, including The Misfits, Little Big Man, Moby Dick, Hello Dolly, West Side Story, and Heaven's Gate. John Huston employed Haas as a second-unit director for his 1966 film The Bible: In the Beginning (a.k.a. The Bible), to visualize the section devoted to creation. In addition to editorial journalism and unit stills work, Haas was also highly regarded for advertising photography, contributing groundbreaking campaigns for Volkswagen automobiles and Marlboro cigarettes, among other clients.", "score": "1.324158" }, { "id": "1109700", "title": "Edward Steichen", "text": " who saw him as anti art photography, one of the most vocal being Ansel Adams who on April 29, 1946, wrote a letter to Stephen Clark (copied to Newhall) to express his disappointment over Steichen's hiring for the new position of director; “To supplant Beaumont Newhall, who has made such a great contribution to the art through his vast knowledge and sympathy for the medium, with a regime which is inevitably favorable to the spectacular and 'popular' is indeed a body blow to the progress of creative photography.” Nevertheless, Ansel Adams' image Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico was first published in U.S. Camera Annual 1943, ", "score": "1.3202322" }, { "id": "9170684", "title": "New York University Press", "text": "Arthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "score": "1.319207" }, { "id": "31566704", "title": "Kenneth Alexander (photographer)", "text": " Kenneth Alexander (March 3, 1887 – January 24, 1975) was a photographer for United Artists, 20th Century Studios and Samuel Goldwyn Productions. He was known for his celebrity portraiture, photographing such stars as Marlene Dietrich, Lillian Gish, Betty Blythe, and Vilma Bánky.", "score": "1.3122976" }, { "id": "12990464", "title": "Beata Bergström", "text": "Bergman in Focus – Nobel Laureates Find a Director, 21 September 2008 to 18 January 2009, Photographers K.G. Kristoffersson, Lennart Nilsson, Beata Bergström, Bo-Erik Gyberg, Per Adolphson, Arne Carlsson and Bengt Wanselius. ; Photo, 19 April 2013 to 6 January 2014, Beata Bergström, Music and Theatre Museum, Stockholm. ", "score": "1.3119797" }, { "id": "27175093", "title": "John G. Morris", "text": " PM. Morris graduated in 1938, then obtained a job in the mailroom of Time-Life publications before moving up to a role as Life’s Hollywood correspondent, working for the weekly picture magazine throughout World War II and becoming Life's London picture editor. There, he was responsible for the coverage of the invasion of France on June 6, 1944 – D-Day, and edited the historic photographs of Robert Capa. After the war he became successively the picture editor of the U.S. monthly Ladies' Home Journal, executive editor of Magnum Photos, assistant managing editor for graphics of The Washington Post in the 1960s and picture editor of The New York Times from ", "score": "1.3117516" }, { "id": "27220696", "title": "Matthew Leifheit", "text": " After graduating RISD, Leifheit was hired as photo-editor by Vice. While a photo-editor at Vice, Leifheit put a photograph by Robert Mapplethorpe on the cover of the 2014 fashion issue. In 2016, he wrote an article featuring the work of Neil Winokur, highlighting an \"overlooked\" photographer with work in many museum collections including Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.", "score": "1.3100922" }, { "id": "16103867", "title": "Vassilis Photopoulos", "text": " Vassilis Photopoulos (Βασίλης Φωτόπουλος) (1934, Kalamata – January 14, 2007, Athens, Greece) was an influential Greek painter, film director, art director and set designer. He was an Academy Award winner for the film Zorba the Greek for art direction. Vassilis Photopoulos was born in Kalamata and studied painting at a very young age under Vangelis Drakos. He appeared for the first time on the Art scene as the stage designer for play \"Servant Lady\", in the Athens Opera House. He also worked for the National Greek Theatre, the Public Theatre of Northern Greece, and the Liberal Theatre. In 1966, he worked with Francis Ford Coppola in the film You're a Big Boy Now, which starred Geraldine Page, Rip Torn, Karen Black, Julie Harris and Elizabeth Hartman. He died in Athens in 2007, aged 72.", "score": "1.3094747" } ]
[ "Philip H. Lathrop\n\tPoint Blank (1967) Director of Photography •\tI Love You, Alice B. Toklas! (1968) Director of Photography •\tFinian’s Rainbow (1968) Director of Photography •\tThe Illustrated Man (1969) Director of Photography •\tThe Gypsy Moths (1969) as Philip Lathrop •\tThey Shoot Horses, Don’t They? (1969) Director of Photography •\tThe Hawaiians (1970) Director of Photography •\tThe Traveling Executioner (1970) Director of Photography •\tRabbit, Run (1970) •\tWild Rovers (1971) Director of Photography •\tEvery Little Crook and Nanny (1972) as Philip Lathrop •\tPortnoy’s Complaint (1972) as Philip Lathrop •\tLolly-Madonna XXX (1973) as Philip Lathrop ", "Philip H. Lathrop\n (TV Series: 1 episode, 1963) Director of Photography •\tTwilight of Honor (1963) Director of Photography •\tSoldier in the Rain (1963) Director of Photography •\tThe Pink Panther (1963) Director of Photography •\tThe Americanization of Emily (1964) as Philip Lathrop •\t36 Hours (1964) •\tGirl Happy (1965) Director of Photography •\tThe Cincinnati Kid (1965) Director of Photography •\tNever Too Late (1965) as Philip Lathrop •\tWhat Did You Do in the War, Daddy? (1966) Director of Photography •\tThe Happening (1967) Director of Photography •\tDon't Make Waves (1967) •\tGunn (1967) Director of Photography ", "David Myers (cinematographer)\n In 1957 he directed a documentary film Ansel Adams, Photographer, written by Nancy Newhall and narrated by Beaumont Newhall. He then directed the documentary short Ask Me, Don't Tell Me (1961) with the support of photographer Imogen Cunningham, and continued his career shooting documentaries for both National Geographic and the United Nations through the 1960s, requiring much international travel. His first major credit was co-photography with Didier Tarot on Agnes Varda's short Oncle Yanco ( 'Uncle Yanco', 1967), made in San Francisco about one of her relatives who was a painter leading a hippie life on a barge. At fifty-six, his contribution as one of five camera operators on the landmark rock concert documentary Woodstock (1970) brought an Oscar and established his reputation as a filmmaker in ", "The Photographer (1974 film)\n The Photographer is a 1974 American thriller film written and directed by William Byron Hillman. The film stars Michael Callan, Barbara Nichols, Harold J. Stone, Edward Andrews, Jed Allan and Spencer Milligan. The film was released on December 5, 1974, by Embassy Pictures.", "Robert E. Gilka\n staff of the National Geographic in 1958 and, after a stint as a picture editor, was named director of photography in 1963. In that role, he was responsible for making the photographic assignments for all the Society’s books and magazines. He pioneered a summer intern program for university students who sought careers in photojournalism. Scores went through the program. Some became staff members; others are on newspaper staffs scattered around the country. He also nurtured and hired photographers he met as a member of the University of Missouri photojournalism workshop faculty for nearly 50 years. For 17 years he was in charge of the Hearst annual photojournalism contest.", "Hal Buell\n Hal Buell was the former head of the Photography Service (photography director) at the Associated Press for twenty-five years where he supervised an international staff of 300 photographers. He is also the author of Moments: The Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photographs and Uncommon Valor, Common Virtue, a book about war photographer Joe Rosenthal.", "C. M. Battey\n Cornelius Marion Battey (August 26, 1873 – March 14, 1927) was an American photographer who shot photographic portraits of black Americans in a pictorialist style. His photograph of black leaders appeared on the cover of the NAACP's magazine The Crisis beginning in the 1910s. He later founded and headed up the photography department at the Tuskegee Institute. ", "Robert E. Gilka\n Robert E. Gilka (July 12, 1916 – June 25, 2013) was an American photojournalist best known for being an editor and director of photography at National Geographic for 27 years (1958–1985).", "Stefan Lorant\n and Marilyn Monroe. He gave advice to Life founder Henry Luce around the time of that magazine's startup in 1936, and he edited the works of many leading photographers while in Europe, including Felix Man, Kurt Hutton, Alfred Eisenstaedt, and Robert Capa. Lorant also edited the works of a notable British photojournalist for Picture Post, Bert Hardy, though Hardy's early work for that magazine was not attributed to him, even in the purchase, apparently because the agency he worked for did not allow freelancing. More about Lorant's late life and work can be found in Michael Hallet's book: Stefan Lorant: Godfather of Photojournalism", "Christopher Morris (photographer)\n In 2007, for The New York Times, Morris directed the short film The Gentle Shepherd about the pastor Terry Fox at the Wild West World theme park in Wichita. For Time LightBox, in 2013, Morris directed, edited and produced the short film Conclave about people waiting, in St. Peter's Square, for the announcement of the new Pope. In 2016, he introduced a new way to film the United States presidential candidates’ rallies using a high-speed camera, his short movies being played back in slow-motion.", "Edward Steichen\n In the summer of 1929, Museum of Modern Art director Alfred H. Barr, Jr. had included a department devoted to photography in a plan presented to the Trustees. Though not put in place until 1940, it became the first department of photography in a museum devoted to twentieth-century art and was headed by Beaumont Newhall. On the strength of attendances of his propaganda exhibitions Road to Victory and Power in the Pacific, and precipitating curator Newhall's resignation along with most of his staff, in 1947 Steichen was appointed Director of Photography until 1962, later assisted by Grace M. Mayer. His appointment was protested by ", "Gordon Parks\n Gordon Roger Alexander Buchanan Parks (November 30, 1912 – March 7, 2006) was an American photographer, musician, writer and film director, who became prominent in U.S. documentary photojournalism in the 1940s through 1970s—particularly in issues of civil rights, poverty and African-Americans—and in glamour photography. Parks was the first African American to produce and direct major motion pictures—developing films relating the experience of slaves and struggling black Americans, and creating the \"blaxploitation\" genre. He is best remembered for his iconic photos of poor Americans during the 1940s (taken for a federal government project), for his photographic essays for Life magazine, and as the director of the 1971 film Shaft. Parks also was an author, poet and composer.", "Ernst Haas\n Haas was a respected stills photographer for many films, including The Misfits, Little Big Man, Moby Dick, Hello Dolly, West Side Story, and Heaven's Gate. John Huston employed Haas as a second-unit director for his 1966 film The Bible: In the Beginning (a.k.a. The Bible), to visualize the section devoted to creation. In addition to editorial journalism and unit stills work, Haas was also highly regarded for advertising photography, contributing groundbreaking campaigns for Volkswagen automobiles and Marlboro cigarettes, among other clients.", "Edward Steichen\n who saw him as anti art photography, one of the most vocal being Ansel Adams who on April 29, 1946, wrote a letter to Stephen Clark (copied to Newhall) to express his disappointment over Steichen's hiring for the new position of director; “To supplant Beaumont Newhall, who has made such a great contribution to the art through his vast knowledge and sympathy for the medium, with a regime which is inevitably favorable to the spectacular and 'popular' is indeed a body blow to the progress of creative photography.” Nevertheless, Ansel Adams' image Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico was first published in U.S. Camera Annual 1943, ", "New York University Press\nArthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "Kenneth Alexander (photographer)\n Kenneth Alexander (March 3, 1887 – January 24, 1975) was a photographer for United Artists, 20th Century Studios and Samuel Goldwyn Productions. He was known for his celebrity portraiture, photographing such stars as Marlene Dietrich, Lillian Gish, Betty Blythe, and Vilma Bánky.", "Beata Bergström\nBergman in Focus – Nobel Laureates Find a Director, 21 September 2008 to 18 January 2009, Photographers K.G. Kristoffersson, Lennart Nilsson, Beata Bergström, Bo-Erik Gyberg, Per Adolphson, Arne Carlsson and Bengt Wanselius. ; Photo, 19 April 2013 to 6 January 2014, Beata Bergström, Music and Theatre Museum, Stockholm. ", "John G. Morris\n PM. Morris graduated in 1938, then obtained a job in the mailroom of Time-Life publications before moving up to a role as Life’s Hollywood correspondent, working for the weekly picture magazine throughout World War II and becoming Life's London picture editor. There, he was responsible for the coverage of the invasion of France on June 6, 1944 – D-Day, and edited the historic photographs of Robert Capa. After the war he became successively the picture editor of the U.S. monthly Ladies' Home Journal, executive editor of Magnum Photos, assistant managing editor for graphics of The Washington Post in the 1960s and picture editor of The New York Times from ", "Matthew Leifheit\n After graduating RISD, Leifheit was hired as photo-editor by Vice. While a photo-editor at Vice, Leifheit put a photograph by Robert Mapplethorpe on the cover of the 2014 fashion issue. In 2016, he wrote an article featuring the work of Neil Winokur, highlighting an \"overlooked\" photographer with work in many museum collections including Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.", "Vassilis Photopoulos\n Vassilis Photopoulos (Βασίλης Φωτόπουλος) (1934, Kalamata – January 14, 2007, Athens, Greece) was an influential Greek painter, film director, art director and set designer. He was an Academy Award winner for the film Zorba the Greek for art direction. Vassilis Photopoulos was born in Kalamata and studied painting at a very young age under Vangelis Drakos. He appeared for the first time on the Art scene as the stage designer for play \"Servant Lady\", in the Athens Opera House. He also worked for the National Greek Theatre, the Public Theatre of Northern Greece, and the Liberal Theatre. In 1966, he worked with Francis Ford Coppola in the film You're a Big Boy Now, which starred Geraldine Page, Rip Torn, Karen Black, Julie Harris and Elizabeth Hartman. He died in Athens in 2007, aged 72." ]
Who was the director of Bingo?
[ "Jean-Claude Lord" ]
director
Bingo (1974 film)
2,208,013
94
[ { "id": "32828797", "title": "Mecca Bingo", "text": " Eric Morley, British TV host and founder of the Miss World pageant, is accredited with popularising the game of bingo in the United Kingdom during the early sixties, as a tactic to fill the UK’s dance halls. In 1952, he was Mecca's general manager of dancing, and was made a director in 1953. With Mecca, Morley helped to popularise bingo which was played at Mecca venues throughout the United Kingdom. He changed the company from a small catering and dancing firm into a leading entertainment and catering company in the UK. A director of the company from 1953 up until 1978, Morley left the ", "score": "1.530141" }, { "id": "1852107", "title": "Bingo (Better Call Saul)", "text": " This was the second episode written by supervising producer Gennifer Hutchison for the series. It was directed by Larysa Kondracki.", "score": "1.5085955" }, { "id": "13746550", "title": "Bingo (1998 film)", "text": " Bingo is a 1998 computer-animated short film directed by Chris Landreth. The short is based on the stage play Disregard This Play by the theater troupe The Neo Futurists. It uses surrealistic imagery and dialogue to tell the story of an ordinary man who is surrounded by characters who insist that he is someone named \"Bingo the Clown\" even though he is not. Eventually, the man is worn down by their unwavering insistence and comes to believe that he is Bingo the Clown. At the time of Bingo's creation, Landreth was employed as an animator at AliasWavefront, and the film was used to demonstrate the capabilities of the company's new Maya animation software.", "score": "1.4607775" }, { "id": "7361509", "title": "Bingo (British version)", "text": " on a successful search\". But it definitely gained its initial surge of popularity with the first modern version of the game appearing at carnivals and fairs in the 1920s, and is attributed to a Hugh J. Ward, who for marketing reasons most probably took the name from pre-existing slang. The patent for a modern bingo card design went to Erwin S. Lowe in 1942. The introduction of the Betting and Gaming Act 1960 on 1 January 1961 saw large cash-prizes legalised and the launch of Mecca Bingo by Mecca Leisure Group, led by Eric Morley, who had a large chain of dancehalls and introduced bingo into 60 of them, including the Lyceum Ballroom. Circuit Management Association who managed the cinemas and dancehalls of The Rank Organisation was the other large operator at the time, including hosting bingo at their largest cinema, the Blackpool Odeon.", "score": "1.4261615" }, { "id": "13746551", "title": "Bingo (1998 film)", "text": " The film opens with a live-action footage of the Neo-Futurists performing the excerpt of Disregard This Play before a live audience. A man in a strange hat greets a man sitting in a chair and addresses him as \"Bingo\". When the man in the chair denies being named Bingo, the man in the hat insists that he was, in fact, \"Bingo the Clown-o\". As the man in the chair tries to correct him, the man in the hat continues to address him more loudly from cutting off the protests. This was removed from a Vimeo upload by the film’s director. After the footage, it opens the scene in computer-generated imagery. A man, \"Dave,\" ", "score": "1.4227225" }, { "id": "13989136", "title": "Edwin S. Lowe", "text": " Edwin S. Lowe (1910 – February 23, 1986) was a U.S. salesman, toymaker, game entrepreneur and real estate developer whose promotion of a game he renamed Bingo made it popular as a national pastime and fundraising activity for churches and schools. His company the E. S. Lowe Company produced bingo games and materials in addition to plastic toys and the dice game Yahtzee. He later worked in film and stage production, including the Broadway 1981 play A Talent for Murder, featuring Claudette Colbert. Lowe also opened the Tallyho hotel on the Las Vegas Strip in 1962.", "score": "1.4125311" }, { "id": "13612627", "title": "The Bingo Club", "text": " The Bingo Club is one of five specially commissioned one-hour plays which were screened in January 2004 on BBC One. Starring Paula Wilcox and John McArdle, The Bingo Tales relates the story of three women facing romantic hardship and growing old. During production in October 2003, Clive Mantle fell on his face while shooting a fencing scene and was rushed to Selly Oak Hospital with a ruptured ligament in his leg.", "score": "1.410078" }, { "id": "1852103", "title": "Bingo (Better Call Saul)", "text": " \"Bingo\" is the seventh episode of the first season of the AMC television series Better Call Saul, the spinoff series of Breaking Bad. The episode aired on March 16, 2015 on AMC in the United States. Outside of the United States, the episode premiered on streaming service Netflix in several countries.", "score": "1.4094067" }, { "id": "25158148", "title": "Bingo (nickname)", "text": "William Bingo Bingham (1885–?), baseball player in the Negro leagues ; Elwood Bingo DeMoss (1889–1965), baseball player and manager in the Negro leagues ; Rudolph Kampman (1914–1987), Canadian National Hockey League player ; Gene \"Bingo\" O Driscoll, a former Gaelic footballer from the 1980s to the 2000s ; Robert Bingo Smith (born 1946), American retired National Basketball Association player ; John Patrick \"Bingo\" Walsh (est 2017), younger brother of Paige Marie Walsh, American Baby published 2017 Bingo is a nickname for: ", "score": "1.4055712" }, { "id": "26507295", "title": "Bingo (play)", "text": " Bingo: Scenes of Money and Death is a 1973 play by English playwright Edward Bond. It depicts an ageing William Shakespeare at his Warwickshire home in 1615 and 1616, suffering pangs of conscience in part because he signed a contract which protected his landholdings, on the condition that he would not interfere with an enclosure of common lands that would hurt the local peasant farmers. Although the play is fictional, this contract has a factual basis. Bingo is a political drama heavily influenced by Bertolt Brecht and Epic theatre. Some have praised Bond’s portrayal of Shakespeare while others have criticized it.", "score": "1.4036791" }, { "id": "1918962", "title": "David Stupich", "text": " Stupich was the central figure in a scandal since known as Bingogate. In the late 1950s, Stupich set up and controlled the Nanaimo Commonwealth Holding Society (NCHS), which raised funds on behalf of the NDP. But after a tip that something was amiss from the head of the Nanaimo Commonwealth Bingo Association, the RCMP launched an investigation. It found Stupich ran kickback schemes in which donations to charities were refunded to NCHS. In 1999, Stupich, then 77, faced 64 charges, including theft, fraud, forgery and breach of trust. He pleaded guilty that year to fraud and running an illegal lottery, involving the misappropriation of about $1 million from the NCHS. He was ", "score": "1.3991569" }, { "id": "26507306", "title": "Bingo (play)", "text": "Shakespeare – Bob Peck ; Old Man – Paul Jesson ; Son – David Howey ; William Combe – David Roper ; Ben Jonson – Rhys McConnochie ; Old Woman – Joanna Tope ; Judith – Sue Cox ; Young Woman – Yvonne Edgell Bingo was first presented at the Northcott Theatre, Devon on 14 November 1973. It was directed by Jane Howell and John Dove, with the following cast: The play opened at the Royal Court Theatre on 14 August 1974, again directed by Jane Howell and John Dove; this time with John Gielgud (Shakespeare), John Barrett (Old man), Gillian Martell (Judith) and Arthur Lowe (Ben Jonson). ", "score": "1.3988194" }, { "id": "33071241", "title": "Tennessee Secretary of State", "text": " was given the responsibility for issuing and administering bingo licenses. An investigation into irregularities in the issuance of these licenses (Operation Rocky Top) resulted in several indictments and the suicide of then-Secretary of State Gentry Crowell. As a result, bingo was made illegal in Tennessee, which it remains, except that it has been legal as an annual fundraising event for a recognized 501c(19) war veteran's organization since a 2014 amendment to the state constitution. The current secretary of state, Tre Hargett, has served since January 2009. He had previously served as Minority Leader in the Tennessee House of Representatives.", "score": "1.3984864" }, { "id": "5645214", "title": "Craig Wilde", "text": " Drinks Industry and Licensed Leisure operators, before opening Bar Warhol in 2006, on Glasgow's Bath Street. Relocating to Newcastle to work with the city's leisure operators in 2006. Most notable was the reinvention of the Powerhouse club venue From 2010 onwards Craig has Presented live Streaming Bingo Web TV Channel Bingo Studio Live. As Creative Director Craig has worked with a number of Television personalities, notably Channel 4 show 'Britain's Benefit Tenants' stars, and Millionaire Property personalities – Andrew Dyke and Alan Lee Ogden, developing vehicles for their careers, as Writer and Producer, principally of their Web Tv show ", "score": "1.39585" }, { "id": "11682751", "title": "Harriet Miers Supreme Court nomination", "text": " From 1995 to 2000, Miers chaired the Texas Lottery Commission (having been appointed by Bush when he was Governor of Texas). In 1997, the Commission hired Lawrence Littwin as the lottery's executive director; five months later, he was fired. Littwin brought suit over his firing, alleging that the lottery contractor, GTech Corporation, had influenced the Commission to fire him for improper reasons. GTech settled the case by paying him $300,000, with Littwin agreeing not to discuss the case or the settlement.", "score": "1.393145" }, { "id": "9161212", "title": "William Brashler", "text": "The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings (1973) ; City Dogs (1976) ; The Don: The Life and Death of Sam Giancana (1977) ; Josh Gibson: A Life in the Negro Leagues (1978) ; The Chosen Prey (1982) ; Traders (1989) ; The Story of Negro League Baseball (1994) ", "score": "1.387481" }, { "id": "26603441", "title": "The Banana Splits", "text": " film). Voiced by Paul Winchell (1968–1972), Bill Farmer (2008), Eric Bauza (2019 film), and Paul F. Tompkins (in Jellystone!). ; Bingo – A nasal-voiced orange ape wearing white sunglasses and a yellow vest. In the show's first season, Bingo had no act of his own, but other appeared alongside Fleegle and Drooper; the second season rectified this by giving him an exercise program as Coach Bingo. One of the most common setups was to have Bingo make a wish on Fleegle's robot, Mildred, with disastrous results. Suit performed by Terence H. Winkless (1968), Casey Hadfield (2008), and Buntu Plam (2019 film). ", "score": "1.3869951" }, { "id": "27404872", "title": "Bingo: The King of the Mornings", "text": " Bingo: The King of the Mornings (Bingo: O Rei das Manhãs) is a 2017 Brazilian biographical drama film directed by Academy Awards nominee Daniel Rezende in his directorial debut. Written by Luiz Bolognesi, the screenplay is inspired in the life of Arlindo Barreto, one of many actors who played Bozo the Clown in Brazil. However, to avoid copyrights claim and preserve its creative freedom, the production does not use either the name of Bozo or Arlindo, adopting the fictional names of Bingo and Augusto, respectively. The film was released in Brazil on August 24, 2017. On September 15, it was selected as the Brazilian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.", "score": "1.3839402" }, { "id": "25001074", "title": "The Bingo Palace", "text": " The Bingo Palace is a novel written by Louise Erdrich published in 1994, with three chapters appearing in the Georgia Review, The New Yorker, and Granta. It is the fourth novel in Erdrich's Love Medicine series, and it follows Lipsha Morrissey as he is summoned home by his grandmother Lulu Lamartine. He returns home to the reservation for the first time in years and finds himself in rapture of a woman named Shawnee Ray. The novel discusses themes of family and identity from an Anishinaabe perspective.", "score": "1.3822904" }, { "id": "14249579", "title": "Keith Allen (ice hockey)", "text": " Courtney Keith \"Bingo\" Allen (August 21, 1923 – February 4, 2014) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman and National Hockey League (NHL) head coach and general manager. He was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. He was the executive vice-president of the Philadelphia Flyers, a position he held from 1980 for the rest of his life.", "score": "1.3807122" } ]
[ "Mecca Bingo\n Eric Morley, British TV host and founder of the Miss World pageant, is accredited with popularising the game of bingo in the United Kingdom during the early sixties, as a tactic to fill the UK’s dance halls. In 1952, he was Mecca's general manager of dancing, and was made a director in 1953. With Mecca, Morley helped to popularise bingo which was played at Mecca venues throughout the United Kingdom. He changed the company from a small catering and dancing firm into a leading entertainment and catering company in the UK. A director of the company from 1953 up until 1978, Morley left the ", "Bingo (Better Call Saul)\n This was the second episode written by supervising producer Gennifer Hutchison for the series. It was directed by Larysa Kondracki.", "Bingo (1998 film)\n Bingo is a 1998 computer-animated short film directed by Chris Landreth. The short is based on the stage play Disregard This Play by the theater troupe The Neo Futurists. It uses surrealistic imagery and dialogue to tell the story of an ordinary man who is surrounded by characters who insist that he is someone named \"Bingo the Clown\" even though he is not. Eventually, the man is worn down by their unwavering insistence and comes to believe that he is Bingo the Clown. At the time of Bingo's creation, Landreth was employed as an animator at AliasWavefront, and the film was used to demonstrate the capabilities of the company's new Maya animation software.", "Bingo (British version)\n on a successful search\". But it definitely gained its initial surge of popularity with the first modern version of the game appearing at carnivals and fairs in the 1920s, and is attributed to a Hugh J. Ward, who for marketing reasons most probably took the name from pre-existing slang. The patent for a modern bingo card design went to Erwin S. Lowe in 1942. The introduction of the Betting and Gaming Act 1960 on 1 January 1961 saw large cash-prizes legalised and the launch of Mecca Bingo by Mecca Leisure Group, led by Eric Morley, who had a large chain of dancehalls and introduced bingo into 60 of them, including the Lyceum Ballroom. Circuit Management Association who managed the cinemas and dancehalls of The Rank Organisation was the other large operator at the time, including hosting bingo at their largest cinema, the Blackpool Odeon.", "Bingo (1998 film)\n The film opens with a live-action footage of the Neo-Futurists performing the excerpt of Disregard This Play before a live audience. A man in a strange hat greets a man sitting in a chair and addresses him as \"Bingo\". When the man in the chair denies being named Bingo, the man in the hat insists that he was, in fact, \"Bingo the Clown-o\". As the man in the chair tries to correct him, the man in the hat continues to address him more loudly from cutting off the protests. This was removed from a Vimeo upload by the film’s director. After the footage, it opens the scene in computer-generated imagery. A man, \"Dave,\" ", "Edwin S. Lowe\n Edwin S. Lowe (1910 – February 23, 1986) was a U.S. salesman, toymaker, game entrepreneur and real estate developer whose promotion of a game he renamed Bingo made it popular as a national pastime and fundraising activity for churches and schools. His company the E. S. Lowe Company produced bingo games and materials in addition to plastic toys and the dice game Yahtzee. He later worked in film and stage production, including the Broadway 1981 play A Talent for Murder, featuring Claudette Colbert. Lowe also opened the Tallyho hotel on the Las Vegas Strip in 1962.", "The Bingo Club\n The Bingo Club is one of five specially commissioned one-hour plays which were screened in January 2004 on BBC One. Starring Paula Wilcox and John McArdle, The Bingo Tales relates the story of three women facing romantic hardship and growing old. During production in October 2003, Clive Mantle fell on his face while shooting a fencing scene and was rushed to Selly Oak Hospital with a ruptured ligament in his leg.", "Bingo (Better Call Saul)\n \"Bingo\" is the seventh episode of the first season of the AMC television series Better Call Saul, the spinoff series of Breaking Bad. The episode aired on March 16, 2015 on AMC in the United States. Outside of the United States, the episode premiered on streaming service Netflix in several countries.", "Bingo (nickname)\nWilliam Bingo Bingham (1885–?), baseball player in the Negro leagues ; Elwood Bingo DeMoss (1889–1965), baseball player and manager in the Negro leagues ; Rudolph Kampman (1914–1987), Canadian National Hockey League player ; Gene \"Bingo\" O Driscoll, a former Gaelic footballer from the 1980s to the 2000s ; Robert Bingo Smith (born 1946), American retired National Basketball Association player ; John Patrick \"Bingo\" Walsh (est 2017), younger brother of Paige Marie Walsh, American Baby published 2017 Bingo is a nickname for: ", "Bingo (play)\n Bingo: Scenes of Money and Death is a 1973 play by English playwright Edward Bond. It depicts an ageing William Shakespeare at his Warwickshire home in 1615 and 1616, suffering pangs of conscience in part because he signed a contract which protected his landholdings, on the condition that he would not interfere with an enclosure of common lands that would hurt the local peasant farmers. Although the play is fictional, this contract has a factual basis. Bingo is a political drama heavily influenced by Bertolt Brecht and Epic theatre. Some have praised Bond’s portrayal of Shakespeare while others have criticized it.", "David Stupich\n Stupich was the central figure in a scandal since known as Bingogate. In the late 1950s, Stupich set up and controlled the Nanaimo Commonwealth Holding Society (NCHS), which raised funds on behalf of the NDP. But after a tip that something was amiss from the head of the Nanaimo Commonwealth Bingo Association, the RCMP launched an investigation. It found Stupich ran kickback schemes in which donations to charities were refunded to NCHS. In 1999, Stupich, then 77, faced 64 charges, including theft, fraud, forgery and breach of trust. He pleaded guilty that year to fraud and running an illegal lottery, involving the misappropriation of about $1 million from the NCHS. He was ", "Bingo (play)\nShakespeare – Bob Peck ; Old Man – Paul Jesson ; Son – David Howey ; William Combe – David Roper ; Ben Jonson – Rhys McConnochie ; Old Woman – Joanna Tope ; Judith – Sue Cox ; Young Woman – Yvonne Edgell Bingo was first presented at the Northcott Theatre, Devon on 14 November 1973. It was directed by Jane Howell and John Dove, with the following cast: The play opened at the Royal Court Theatre on 14 August 1974, again directed by Jane Howell and John Dove; this time with John Gielgud (Shakespeare), John Barrett (Old man), Gillian Martell (Judith) and Arthur Lowe (Ben Jonson). ", "Tennessee Secretary of State\n was given the responsibility for issuing and administering bingo licenses. An investigation into irregularities in the issuance of these licenses (Operation Rocky Top) resulted in several indictments and the suicide of then-Secretary of State Gentry Crowell. As a result, bingo was made illegal in Tennessee, which it remains, except that it has been legal as an annual fundraising event for a recognized 501c(19) war veteran's organization since a 2014 amendment to the state constitution. The current secretary of state, Tre Hargett, has served since January 2009. He had previously served as Minority Leader in the Tennessee House of Representatives.", "Craig Wilde\n Drinks Industry and Licensed Leisure operators, before opening Bar Warhol in 2006, on Glasgow's Bath Street. Relocating to Newcastle to work with the city's leisure operators in 2006. Most notable was the reinvention of the Powerhouse club venue From 2010 onwards Craig has Presented live Streaming Bingo Web TV Channel Bingo Studio Live. As Creative Director Craig has worked with a number of Television personalities, notably Channel 4 show 'Britain's Benefit Tenants' stars, and Millionaire Property personalities – Andrew Dyke and Alan Lee Ogden, developing vehicles for their careers, as Writer and Producer, principally of their Web Tv show ", "Harriet Miers Supreme Court nomination\n From 1995 to 2000, Miers chaired the Texas Lottery Commission (having been appointed by Bush when he was Governor of Texas). In 1997, the Commission hired Lawrence Littwin as the lottery's executive director; five months later, he was fired. Littwin brought suit over his firing, alleging that the lottery contractor, GTech Corporation, had influenced the Commission to fire him for improper reasons. GTech settled the case by paying him $300,000, with Littwin agreeing not to discuss the case or the settlement.", "William Brashler\nThe Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings (1973) ; City Dogs (1976) ; The Don: The Life and Death of Sam Giancana (1977) ; Josh Gibson: A Life in the Negro Leagues (1978) ; The Chosen Prey (1982) ; Traders (1989) ; The Story of Negro League Baseball (1994) ", "The Banana Splits\n film). Voiced by Paul Winchell (1968–1972), Bill Farmer (2008), Eric Bauza (2019 film), and Paul F. Tompkins (in Jellystone!). ; Bingo – A nasal-voiced orange ape wearing white sunglasses and a yellow vest. In the show's first season, Bingo had no act of his own, but other appeared alongside Fleegle and Drooper; the second season rectified this by giving him an exercise program as Coach Bingo. One of the most common setups was to have Bingo make a wish on Fleegle's robot, Mildred, with disastrous results. Suit performed by Terence H. Winkless (1968), Casey Hadfield (2008), and Buntu Plam (2019 film). ", "Bingo: The King of the Mornings\n Bingo: The King of the Mornings (Bingo: O Rei das Manhãs) is a 2017 Brazilian biographical drama film directed by Academy Awards nominee Daniel Rezende in his directorial debut. Written by Luiz Bolognesi, the screenplay is inspired in the life of Arlindo Barreto, one of many actors who played Bozo the Clown in Brazil. However, to avoid copyrights claim and preserve its creative freedom, the production does not use either the name of Bozo or Arlindo, adopting the fictional names of Bingo and Augusto, respectively. The film was released in Brazil on August 24, 2017. On September 15, it was selected as the Brazilian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.", "The Bingo Palace\n The Bingo Palace is a novel written by Louise Erdrich published in 1994, with three chapters appearing in the Georgia Review, The New Yorker, and Granta. It is the fourth novel in Erdrich's Love Medicine series, and it follows Lipsha Morrissey as he is summoned home by his grandmother Lulu Lamartine. He returns home to the reservation for the first time in years and finds himself in rapture of a woman named Shawnee Ray. The novel discusses themes of family and identity from an Anishinaabe perspective.", "Keith Allen (ice hockey)\n Courtney Keith \"Bingo\" Allen (August 21, 1923 – February 4, 2014) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman and National Hockey League (NHL) head coach and general manager. He was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. He was the executive vice-president of the Philadelphia Flyers, a position he held from 1980 for the rest of his life." ]
Who was the director of Big Dreams Little Tokyo?
[ "Dave Boyle" ]
director
Big Dreams Little Tokyo
3,498,114
87
[ { "id": "8584323", "title": "Big Dreams Little Tokyo", "text": " Big Dreams Little Tokyo is a 2006 feature-length motion picture written and directed by Dave Boyle. The film premiered November 2, 2006 at the AFI Festival in Hollywood, California and is released on DVD through Echo Bridge on July 22, 2008.", "score": "2.1888041" }, { "id": "8584325", "title": "Big Dreams Little Tokyo", "text": " The film was the feature debut of Boyle who conceived the idea while living in the Japantown area of Sydney, Australia. Many of the characters in the film were based on people he met and interacted with while there. It was shot in the summer of 2005 in San Jose and San Francisco, California as well as Salt Lake City, Utah. Big Dreams Little Tokyo was produced by Duane Andersen and Megan Boyle.", "score": "2.1342266" }, { "id": "8584324", "title": "Big Dreams Little Tokyo", "text": " Boyd is an American with an uncanny ability to speak Japanese. He aspires to succeed in the world of Japanese business but finds himself mostly on the outside looking in. Meanwhile, his roommate Jerome is a Japanese American who has always felt too American to be Japanese but too Japanese to be American. He aspires to be a sumo wrestler but finds his weight and blood pressure are thwarting his dreams. Together they struggle to find their place in a world where cultural identity is seldom what it seems.", "score": "1.8090634" }, { "id": "3424059", "title": "Showdown in Little Tokyo", "text": " Showdown in Little Tokyo is a 1991 American buddy cop action film directed by Mark L. Lester and produced by Lester and Martin E. Caan. The film stars Dolph Lundgren and Brandon Lee; it was the latter's first American film role. The film was released in the United States on August 23, 1991. Showdown in Little Tokyo was Dolph Lundgren's last Warner Bros Pictures film until 2018's Creed II.", "score": "1.6868522" }, { "id": "3424068", "title": "Showdown in Little Tokyo", "text": " Stuart Baird, another editor who would often re-edit original cuts of Warner Bros. movies when they were displeased with them was also hired to re-edit Showdown in Little Tokyo, but he is uncredited in the movie. Director Mark L. Lester's final cut came in at 90 minutes, but Warners didn't like the film, and cut it down to 79 minutes.", "score": "1.6070254" }, { "id": "8219201", "title": "Little Tokyo, U.S.A.", "text": " Little Tokyo, U.S.A. is a 1942 American film. Produced in the period just after the United States entered World War II, it was meant to alert Americans to the dangers of foreign agents. It is now controversial for its largely negative portrayal of Japanese-Americans.", "score": "1.5976961" }, { "id": "3424072", "title": "Showdown in Little Tokyo", "text": " The movie faced largely negative reviews from critics. Vincent Canby of The New York Times described it as \"violent, but spiritless.\" It holds a rating of 33% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 9 reviews, with an average score of 4.3/10.", "score": "1.585541" }, { "id": "3424066", "title": "Showdown in Little Tokyo", "text": " An earlier draft of the script (104 pages) by Steve Sharon had a more serious tone to it, less tongue in cheek, and a slightly different outline. The shooting script was 95 pages and included a longer opening scene that was filmed, featuring Kenner's former Japanese partner Eddie Yosuto. There was also an omitted chase scene that was not shot, after the Japanese bath scene where Dolph and Brandon go after the fleeing yakuza, it ended up in an action scene set in a shopping mall.", "score": "1.5711402" }, { "id": "8433399", "title": "Yōichi Higashi", "text": " Yōichi Higashi (東陽一) is a Japanese film director. He began his career working on documentaries at Iwanami Productions but, after going independent, turned to fiction film. He won the Directors Guild of Japan New Directors Award for Yasashii Nipponjin in 1971, and then the award for Best Director at the 17th Hochi Film Awards for The River with No Bridge. In 1996, he won the Silver Bear for an outstanding single achievement at the 46th Berlin International Film Festival for the film Village of Dreams.", "score": "1.5684519" }, { "id": "10458683", "title": "Mak Chun Kit", "text": " International Film Festival 2012, and the Gold Kahuna Award for Documentary Film at the Honolulu Film Awards 2012. Jennie Kermode of Eye For Film wrote, \"For a film that contains so much suffering, with so many of its protagonists living grim lives, it's impressively buoyant.\" His second film, Little People Big Dreams (2014), about a little people theme park in China, was regional broadcaster Channel NewsAsia's first original feature film production. The documentary was selected for the Sundance Institute Documentary Film Program | CNEX Workshop and Documentary Summit 2014, and won the Best Pitch Award at CNEX Chinese Doc Forum 2014. It made its world premiere at the acclaimed CPH:DOX Copenhagen International Documentary Film ", "score": "1.56161" }, { "id": "3424067", "title": "Showdown in Little Tokyo", "text": " Showdown in Little Tokyo is set and filmed in Los Angeles and Long Beach, California in 53 days, from January 14 to March 8, 1991. Editor Michael Eliot was brought in by Warner Bros. for substantial re-editing to make the film faster after WB were unhappy with an early cut. He had performed the same job on Warner's other 1991 action film, Out for Justice. Scenes cut included a different introduction to Kenner, and his former partner Yosuto, more of the Nelson character, played by Ernie Lively, more dramatic scenes between Lundgren and Lee and a scene after the opening gunfight at the underground boxing match where Kenner is chewed out by his superiors for all the mayhem he has caused. Kenner's training scene before final showdown was originally in the deleted, possibly 10 minutes longer opening. Theatrical trailer shows some extra shots from this scene.", "score": "1.5583544" }, { "id": "31972804", "title": "Little Tokyo, Los Angeles", "text": " Night Project. Musicians such as AJ Rafael, Jane Lui, MC Jin and more have long relationships with Kollaboration since before the \"youtube-boom\" that saw many AAPI artists and musicians find an internet based audience. Little Tokyo continues to be a major convening point for AAPI artists in the entertainment industry, and a central incubator for the nation having twice before hosted the National Asian American Theatre Conference and Festival put on by the Consortium of Asian American Theatre Artists. Little Tokyo has also seen the rise of many adjacent movements in the AAPI entertainment world such as Asian American theater companies Teada, Lodestone Theatre, Artists at Play, Hereandnow Theatre, Asian AF Comedy shows, and the Comedy Comedy Festival.", "score": "1.5540285" }, { "id": "6532284", "title": "Dan Kwong", "text": " Little Tokyo past and present, ranging in age from 97 to 17. After transcribing and editing hundreds of their stories, he selected approx. 30 to create a portrait of the community through the decades, showing its significance to people over generations. It was presented as a reading with veteran Nisei actress Takayo Fischer at JANM's Democracy Forum at the end of July. Tales of Little Tokyo is still being developed to incorporate more stories and a multimedia component. It was presented in this latest form in January 2020 with Takayo Fischer and the addition of actress Hanna-Lee Sakakibara, once again at the Tateuchi Democracy Forum at JANM.", "score": "1.5519431" }, { "id": "8219204", "title": "Little Tokyo, U.S.A.", "text": " Filmed in the months immediately following Pearl Harbor, Twentieth Century Fox's Little Tokyo U.S.A. was termed \"63 minutes' worth of speculation about prewar Japanese espionage activities\" by The New York Times. The movie used a quasi-documentary style of filming. Twentieth Century Fox sent its cameramen to the Japanese quarter of Los Angeles to shoot the actual evacuation. However, after the evacuation, night shots were difficult in the deserted \"Little Tokyo\". Night scenes were filmed in Chinatown in Los Angeles instead.", "score": "1.5508134" }, { "id": "6532283", "title": "Dan Kwong", "text": " Tales of Little Tokyo - In summer of 2018, Kwong was one of four artists selected (with filmmaker Tina Takemoto, painter Susu Attar, calligrapher Kuni Yoshida) for the inaugural +LAB Artist Residency, sponsored by the Little Tokyo Service Center. For 3 months the artists lived in the historic old Daimaru Hotel on First Street and created community-based art projects on the theme of \"Self-determination and Community Control\" for Little Tokyo—a 134-year-old community now threatened by gentrification. Each artist was partnered with a local organization for their project, Dan being paired with the Japanese American National Museum. For his project Dan interviewed over 50 people with various relationships ", "score": "1.5482069" }, { "id": "5025230", "title": "Screaming Mad George", "text": " George began as a punk rock musician and played with the late 1970s band The Mad. His gory music videos led to a job in the film industry, where he worked on special make-up effects. His early work includes effects on Big Trouble in Little China (1986), Predator (1987), A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987), the cockroach scene in A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988), and Arena (1989). In 1989 he returned to his home country of Japan to direct the special effects for Tokyo: The Last War, a big budget follow up to the dark fantasy blockbuster Tokyo: The ", "score": "1.5479631" }, { "id": "7712958", "title": "The Little House (film)", "text": " The Little House (小さいおうち) is a 2014 Japanese drama film directed by Yoji Yamada and based on a novel by Kyoko Nakajima. It was released in Japan on 25 January 2014.", "score": "1.5424347" }, { "id": "7712959", "title": "The Little House (film)", "text": " The film is set in the 1930s and 1940s in Japan. It is narrated from the memoirs of Taki Nunomiya as an old woman. In 1930, she left Yamagata for Tokyo as an indentured servant to work as a housemaid.", "score": "1.5424142" }, { "id": "12537896", "title": "Frances Hashimoto", "text": " Nagoya. Hashimoto served as the President of Little Tokyo Business Association (LTBA) from 1994 to 2008. She actively sought to preserve the character of Little Tokyo and oversaw the redevelopment of the neighborhood, including signage, housing, and security. Los Angeles City Councilwoman Jan Perry later noted that, \"She worked very hard to protect the history, integrity and identity of Little Tokyo as the largest Japantown in California.\" She was also a member of the boards of several Japanese American organizations, including the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center (JACCC) and the Japanese Chamber of Commerce of Southern California. Hashimoto also served as the vice president of the ", "score": "1.5405979" }, { "id": "3363740", "title": "Kenji Nakamura", "text": "Kindaichi Case Files (1998, production assistance) ; Shinzo (2000, assistant director) ; The SoulTaker (2001, episode director) ; Yobarete Tobidete Akubi-chan (2002, episode director) ; The Big O (2003, episode director) ; Ayakashi: Samurai Horror Tales (2006, storyboard, episode director) ; Kemonozume (2006, script, storyboard, episode director) ; Mononoke (2007, series director) ; Hakaba Kitarō (2008, storyboard and unit director for OP, ED) ; Trapeze (2009, series director) ; C - Control (2011, series director) ; Tsuritama (2012, series director) ; Gatchaman Crowds (2013, series director) ; Gatchaman Crowds Insight (2015, series director) ", "score": "1.5329313" } ]
[ "Big Dreams Little Tokyo\n Big Dreams Little Tokyo is a 2006 feature-length motion picture written and directed by Dave Boyle. The film premiered November 2, 2006 at the AFI Festival in Hollywood, California and is released on DVD through Echo Bridge on July 22, 2008.", "Big Dreams Little Tokyo\n The film was the feature debut of Boyle who conceived the idea while living in the Japantown area of Sydney, Australia. Many of the characters in the film were based on people he met and interacted with while there. It was shot in the summer of 2005 in San Jose and San Francisco, California as well as Salt Lake City, Utah. Big Dreams Little Tokyo was produced by Duane Andersen and Megan Boyle.", "Big Dreams Little Tokyo\n Boyd is an American with an uncanny ability to speak Japanese. He aspires to succeed in the world of Japanese business but finds himself mostly on the outside looking in. Meanwhile, his roommate Jerome is a Japanese American who has always felt too American to be Japanese but too Japanese to be American. He aspires to be a sumo wrestler but finds his weight and blood pressure are thwarting his dreams. Together they struggle to find their place in a world where cultural identity is seldom what it seems.", "Showdown in Little Tokyo\n Showdown in Little Tokyo is a 1991 American buddy cop action film directed by Mark L. Lester and produced by Lester and Martin E. Caan. The film stars Dolph Lundgren and Brandon Lee; it was the latter's first American film role. The film was released in the United States on August 23, 1991. Showdown in Little Tokyo was Dolph Lundgren's last Warner Bros Pictures film until 2018's Creed II.", "Showdown in Little Tokyo\n Stuart Baird, another editor who would often re-edit original cuts of Warner Bros. movies when they were displeased with them was also hired to re-edit Showdown in Little Tokyo, but he is uncredited in the movie. Director Mark L. Lester's final cut came in at 90 minutes, but Warners didn't like the film, and cut it down to 79 minutes.", "Little Tokyo, U.S.A.\n Little Tokyo, U.S.A. is a 1942 American film. Produced in the period just after the United States entered World War II, it was meant to alert Americans to the dangers of foreign agents. It is now controversial for its largely negative portrayal of Japanese-Americans.", "Showdown in Little Tokyo\n The movie faced largely negative reviews from critics. Vincent Canby of The New York Times described it as \"violent, but spiritless.\" It holds a rating of 33% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 9 reviews, with an average score of 4.3/10.", "Showdown in Little Tokyo\n An earlier draft of the script (104 pages) by Steve Sharon had a more serious tone to it, less tongue in cheek, and a slightly different outline. The shooting script was 95 pages and included a longer opening scene that was filmed, featuring Kenner's former Japanese partner Eddie Yosuto. There was also an omitted chase scene that was not shot, after the Japanese bath scene where Dolph and Brandon go after the fleeing yakuza, it ended up in an action scene set in a shopping mall.", "Yōichi Higashi\n Yōichi Higashi (東陽一) is a Japanese film director. He began his career working on documentaries at Iwanami Productions but, after going independent, turned to fiction film. He won the Directors Guild of Japan New Directors Award for Yasashii Nipponjin in 1971, and then the award for Best Director at the 17th Hochi Film Awards for The River with No Bridge. In 1996, he won the Silver Bear for an outstanding single achievement at the 46th Berlin International Film Festival for the film Village of Dreams.", "Mak Chun Kit\n International Film Festival 2012, and the Gold Kahuna Award for Documentary Film at the Honolulu Film Awards 2012. Jennie Kermode of Eye For Film wrote, \"For a film that contains so much suffering, with so many of its protagonists living grim lives, it's impressively buoyant.\" His second film, Little People Big Dreams (2014), about a little people theme park in China, was regional broadcaster Channel NewsAsia's first original feature film production. The documentary was selected for the Sundance Institute Documentary Film Program | CNEX Workshop and Documentary Summit 2014, and won the Best Pitch Award at CNEX Chinese Doc Forum 2014. It made its world premiere at the acclaimed CPH:DOX Copenhagen International Documentary Film ", "Showdown in Little Tokyo\n Showdown in Little Tokyo is set and filmed in Los Angeles and Long Beach, California in 53 days, from January 14 to March 8, 1991. Editor Michael Eliot was brought in by Warner Bros. for substantial re-editing to make the film faster after WB were unhappy with an early cut. He had performed the same job on Warner's other 1991 action film, Out for Justice. Scenes cut included a different introduction to Kenner, and his former partner Yosuto, more of the Nelson character, played by Ernie Lively, more dramatic scenes between Lundgren and Lee and a scene after the opening gunfight at the underground boxing match where Kenner is chewed out by his superiors for all the mayhem he has caused. Kenner's training scene before final showdown was originally in the deleted, possibly 10 minutes longer opening. Theatrical trailer shows some extra shots from this scene.", "Little Tokyo, Los Angeles\n Night Project. Musicians such as AJ Rafael, Jane Lui, MC Jin and more have long relationships with Kollaboration since before the \"youtube-boom\" that saw many AAPI artists and musicians find an internet based audience. Little Tokyo continues to be a major convening point for AAPI artists in the entertainment industry, and a central incubator for the nation having twice before hosted the National Asian American Theatre Conference and Festival put on by the Consortium of Asian American Theatre Artists. Little Tokyo has also seen the rise of many adjacent movements in the AAPI entertainment world such as Asian American theater companies Teada, Lodestone Theatre, Artists at Play, Hereandnow Theatre, Asian AF Comedy shows, and the Comedy Comedy Festival.", "Dan Kwong\n Little Tokyo past and present, ranging in age from 97 to 17. After transcribing and editing hundreds of their stories, he selected approx. 30 to create a portrait of the community through the decades, showing its significance to people over generations. It was presented as a reading with veteran Nisei actress Takayo Fischer at JANM's Democracy Forum at the end of July. Tales of Little Tokyo is still being developed to incorporate more stories and a multimedia component. It was presented in this latest form in January 2020 with Takayo Fischer and the addition of actress Hanna-Lee Sakakibara, once again at the Tateuchi Democracy Forum at JANM.", "Little Tokyo, U.S.A.\n Filmed in the months immediately following Pearl Harbor, Twentieth Century Fox's Little Tokyo U.S.A. was termed \"63 minutes' worth of speculation about prewar Japanese espionage activities\" by The New York Times. The movie used a quasi-documentary style of filming. Twentieth Century Fox sent its cameramen to the Japanese quarter of Los Angeles to shoot the actual evacuation. However, after the evacuation, night shots were difficult in the deserted \"Little Tokyo\". Night scenes were filmed in Chinatown in Los Angeles instead.", "Dan Kwong\n Tales of Little Tokyo - In summer of 2018, Kwong was one of four artists selected (with filmmaker Tina Takemoto, painter Susu Attar, calligrapher Kuni Yoshida) for the inaugural +LAB Artist Residency, sponsored by the Little Tokyo Service Center. For 3 months the artists lived in the historic old Daimaru Hotel on First Street and created community-based art projects on the theme of \"Self-determination and Community Control\" for Little Tokyo—a 134-year-old community now threatened by gentrification. Each artist was partnered with a local organization for their project, Dan being paired with the Japanese American National Museum. For his project Dan interviewed over 50 people with various relationships ", "Screaming Mad George\n George began as a punk rock musician and played with the late 1970s band The Mad. His gory music videos led to a job in the film industry, where he worked on special make-up effects. His early work includes effects on Big Trouble in Little China (1986), Predator (1987), A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987), the cockroach scene in A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988), and Arena (1989). In 1989 he returned to his home country of Japan to direct the special effects for Tokyo: The Last War, a big budget follow up to the dark fantasy blockbuster Tokyo: The ", "The Little House (film)\n The Little House (小さいおうち) is a 2014 Japanese drama film directed by Yoji Yamada and based on a novel by Kyoko Nakajima. It was released in Japan on 25 January 2014.", "The Little House (film)\n The film is set in the 1930s and 1940s in Japan. It is narrated from the memoirs of Taki Nunomiya as an old woman. In 1930, she left Yamagata for Tokyo as an indentured servant to work as a housemaid.", "Frances Hashimoto\n Nagoya. Hashimoto served as the President of Little Tokyo Business Association (LTBA) from 1994 to 2008. She actively sought to preserve the character of Little Tokyo and oversaw the redevelopment of the neighborhood, including signage, housing, and security. Los Angeles City Councilwoman Jan Perry later noted that, \"She worked very hard to protect the history, integrity and identity of Little Tokyo as the largest Japantown in California.\" She was also a member of the boards of several Japanese American organizations, including the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center (JACCC) and the Japanese Chamber of Commerce of Southern California. Hashimoto also served as the vice president of the ", "Kenji Nakamura\nKindaichi Case Files (1998, production assistance) ; Shinzo (2000, assistant director) ; The SoulTaker (2001, episode director) ; Yobarete Tobidete Akubi-chan (2002, episode director) ; The Big O (2003, episode director) ; Ayakashi: Samurai Horror Tales (2006, storyboard, episode director) ; Kemonozume (2006, script, storyboard, episode director) ; Mononoke (2007, series director) ; Hakaba Kitarō (2008, storyboard and unit director for OP, ED) ; Trapeze (2009, series director) ; C - Control (2011, series director) ; Tsuritama (2012, series director) ; Gatchaman Crowds (2013, series director) ; Gatchaman Crowds Insight (2015, series director) " ]
Who was the director of A Rowboat Romance?
[ "Roscoe Arbuckle", "Fatty Arbuckle", "Roscoe Conkling Arbuckle", "William Goodrich" ]
director
A Rowboat Romance
3,199,880
73
[ { "id": "10162706", "title": "A Rowboat Romance", "text": " A Rowboat Romance is a 1914 American short comedy film directed by and starring Fatty Arbuckle.", "score": "1.7306056" }, { "id": "27533544", "title": "Jeraldine Saunders", "text": " Jeraldine Saunders (born Geraldine Loretta Glynn; September 3, 1923 – February 26, 2019) was an American writer and lecturer, best known as the creator of The Love Boat, an ABC Television series and its associated made-for-TV films portraying the humorous and romantic adventures of various itinerant passengers. Saunders had worked as a model, an astrologer, an numerologist and palm reader. The program was based on her 1974 book, The Love Boats, her anecdotal account of her time employed as the first full-time female cruise director. From 2003 until her death Saunders was the author of Omarr's Astrological Forecast. The nationally syndicated horoscope column, read by hundreds of thousands worldwide, was originally created by Sydney Omarr, to whom she had been briefly married to, in 1966. In 1968 Saunders discovered her fiancé, the actor Albert Dekker, dead in his Hollywood home. The death was ruled to be accidental.", "score": "1.5564772" }, { "id": "6579404", "title": "Ted Lange", "text": " In 1977, he wrote the screenplay for the 1977 drama Passing Through, starring Cora Lee Day and Marla Gibbs. During the run of The Love Boat, Lange also served as director and screenwriter of several episodes of the series. In 1999, Lange directed two episodes of Love Boat: The Next Wave, the UPN series based on The Love Boat. He also directed episodes of Moesha, Dharma & Greg, and Eve. In 2008, he directed the drama For Love of Amy. Lange has also done extensive theater work as playwright and stage director. He has penned 17 plays, including George Washington's Boy, a historical drama about the relationship between the first president and his favorite slave, along with the comedy Lemon Meringue Facade. Lange remained close to ", "score": "1.5341225" }, { "id": "10279786", "title": "The Love Boat", "text": " Jeraldine Saunders, a real-life cruise director for a passenger cruise-ship line. Saunders was also partly inspired by the German cruise ship MV Aurora. The TV movie was followed by two more (titled The Love Boat II and The New Love Boat), all of which aired before the series began in September 1977. The executive producer for the series was Aaron Spelling, who produced several television series for Four Star Television and ABC from the 1960s into the 1990s. In 1987, the episode with segment titles \"Hidden Treasure\", \"Picture from the Past\", and \"Ace's Salary\" (Season 9, Episode 3) was ranked No. 82 on [[TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time|TV Guide Every episode contained several storylines, each written by a different set of writers working on one group of guest ", "score": "1.5276089" }, { "id": "1612210", "title": "Celine and Julie Go Boating", "text": " Luc Béraud was assistant director on the movie. Marilù Parolini worked as the set photographer.", "score": "1.4865568" }, { "id": "14275950", "title": "Show Boat (1951 film)", "text": " When the Cotton Blossom, Cap'n Andy Hawks's show boat, arrives in a Mississippi town to give a performance, a fistfight breaks out between leading man Steve Baker and Pete, the boat's engineer who has been making passes at Steve's wife, leading lady Julie La Verne. Cap'n Andy pretends to the assembled crowd that the two were really previewing a scene from one of the boat's melodramas. But Pete knows a dark secret about Julie, and he runs off to tell the local sheriff. Riverboat gambler Gaylord Ravenal has gambled away a boat ticket, so he drops by the Cotton Blossom pretending to be an actor ", "score": "1.4826272" }, { "id": "9215710", "title": "Nancy Savoca", "text": " After film school, Savoca worked as a storyboard artist and assistant editor on an independent film. Her first professional experience was as a production assistant to John Sayles on his film The Brother From Another Planet, and as an assistant auditor for Jonathan Demme on two of his films: Something Wild (1986), and Married to the Mob (1988). In 1989, she directed her first full-length movie, the privately funded True Love, about Italian-American marriage rituals in the Bronx. It won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. The movie, starring Annabella Sciorra and Ron Eldard, both making their film debuts, was praised as one of the best films of the year by both Janet Maslin and Vincent Canby of the New York Times. Savoca ", "score": "1.4692764" }, { "id": "10162707", "title": "A Rowboat Romance", "text": "Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle ; Slim Summerville ; Mack Swain ; Josef Swickard ", "score": "1.4665331" }, { "id": "15068780", "title": "Oh, Kay! (film)", "text": " her departure from the studio Colleen called Richard Rowland and asked that LeRoy be allowed to direct another film. Richard assured her he would. It was not until Oh Kay! came along that Colleen had the opportunity to be directed by her friend LeRoy. In her book Silent Star, Colleen wrote that while in the vicinity of Catalina Island for shooting scenes of Oh Kay!, she had gone to a movie on the island and seen a handsome actor she recommended to her husband to play the lead in Lilac Time. The actor was Gary Cooper. The play would later be revived.", "score": "1.4648346" }, { "id": "26481600", "title": "Curtis Harrington", "text": " He began his career as a film critic, writing a book on Josef von Sternberg in 1948. He directed several avant-garde short films in the 1940s and '50s, including Fragment of Seeking, Picnic, and The Wormwood Star (a film study of the artwork of Marjorie Cameron which was filmed at the home of multi-millionaire art collector Edward James). Cameron also co-starred in his subsequent film Night Tide (1961) with Dennis Hopper. Harrington worked with Kenneth Anger, serving as a cinematographer on Anger's Puce Moment and acting in Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954) (he played Cesare, the somnambulist). Harrington had links to Thelema shared with his close associates Kenneth Anger and Marjorie Cameron who frequently ", "score": "1.4622838" }, { "id": "32355173", "title": "Ashley Miller (director)", "text": "An Island Comedy (1911) ; The House of Fear (1915) ; The Quest of Life (1916) ; Infidelity (1917) ; The Princess of Park Row (1917) ; The Marriage Speculation (1917) ", "score": "1.4606776" }, { "id": "12461598", "title": "Fiona Weir", "text": " Fiona Weir is a British casting director. In 2006, she received a Primetime Emmy nomination for the television film The Girl in the Café, directed by David Yates with whom she worked with on the Harry Potter film franchise, her most notable credit. Other works include Love Actually (2003), Boy A (2007), The Golden Compass (2007) The Boat That Rocked (2009), and Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them (2016).", "score": "1.4563875" }, { "id": "25123470", "title": "Robert Montgomery (actor)", "text": " cruiser USS Columbia (CL-56); as an assistant naval attache at the U.S. Embassy, London; and as the Executive Officer of Motor Torpedo Boat 5 (PT-5). In 1945, Montgomery returned to Hollywood, co-starring and making his uncredited directing debut in They Were Expendable, where he directed some of the PT boat scenes when director John Ford was unable to work for health reasons. Montgomery's first credited film as director and his final film for MGM was the film noir Lady in the Lake (1947), adapted from Raymond Chandler's detective novel, in which he starred as Chandler's most famous character, Phillip Marlowe. It was filmed ", "score": "1.4555311" }, { "id": "7388752", "title": "Houseboat (film)", "text": " later shows up in a small rowboat with an Italian girl, Cinzia (Sophia Loren), who seeks to experience America up close and personal. They land at a nearby carnival, where they eat pizza, dance, and \"win\" a harmonica. Later, she brings Robert home to a worried Tom. The next day, he hires her as maid to care for the children while he is away. What follows are a series of misadventures as Tom attempts to move Cinzia and the kids away from Washington to a house in the country but wind up the inhabitants of a leaky, rotting houseboat. ", "score": "1.4471529" }, { "id": "13259475", "title": "Sex comedy", "text": " Producer/director Kenneth F. Rowles made a copycat cash-in with his The Ups and Downs of a Handyman. His next movie, Take an Easy Ride, purports to be a public information film warning of the dangers of hitchhiking but is actually a sexploitation film showing young girls being sexually assaulted and murdered (although Rowles says he had to add those scenes on request of the movie's distributor). Films like Dreams of Thirteen, The Younger the Better, Geilermanns Töchter - Wenn Mädchen mündig werden, Erika's Hot Summer, Mrs. Stone's Thing, and Come Play With Me played in Soho and elsewhere, but with the arrival of the Margaret Thatcher government in 1979 the Eady Levy was abolished in 1985, killing off the genre.", "score": "1.446254" }, { "id": "4972309", "title": "Sam Davis (producer)", "text": " Sam Davis (born 1964 in New York City, New York) is a German-American film producer. He is the founder of Cologne, Germany-based production company Rowboat Film- und Fernsehproduktion, and lives and works in Cologne.", "score": "1.4460464" }, { "id": "4972311", "title": "Sam Davis (producer)", "text": " From 2004 until 2009, Sam took charge of the German Fiction department of Endemol Germany where he was responsible for TV movie and series productions such as \"Liebe ohne Rückfahrschein\", \"Mr. Nanny - Ein Mann für Mama\" and the two-part \"London, Liebe, Taubenschlag\". In January 2010, Sam Davis co-founded and became CEO of Rowboat Film- und Fernsehproduktion. Rowboat's first TV movie A Day for a Miracle premiered at the Hamburg Film Festival in 2011. It was broadcast January 18, 2012 on ORF and, with over one million viewers, the highest rated film of the year. On March 5, 2012 A Day for a Miracle was also successfully broadcast on ZDF with 5.8 million viewers. In 2012 Sam won the ROMY prize in Austria ", "score": "1.444129" }, { "id": "3865646", "title": "Row Your Boat", "text": " Row Your Boat is a drama about a recently released ex-convict trying to correct his life written and directed by Sollace Mitchel. It was released in 1998, and in 2001 on home video. The film stars Jon Bon Jovi of rock fame, Bai Ling, and William Forsythe. Its title is taken from the English nursery rhyme \"Row, Row, Row Your Boat\". Bon Jovi plays Jamey Meadows, a man newly released from prison who has found himself homeless on the crazy streets of New York City. Slowly, he must build his life up from the gutter. Resisting constant offers from his brother, played by William Forsythe (Dick Tracy, The Rock, Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo) to rejoin the insidious world of crime, Meadows takes a menial job as a door to door census worker.", "score": "1.4438745" }, { "id": "15461052", "title": "The Bargee", "text": "Harry H. Corbett as Hemel Pike ; Hugh Griffith as Joe Turnbull ; Eric Sykes as the Mariner ; Ronnie Barker as Ronnie ; Julia Foster as Christine Turnbull ; Miriam Karlin as Nellie Marsh ; Eric Barker as Mr Parkes, the Foreman ; Derek Nimmo as Dr. Scott ; Norman Bird as Albert Williams, the Waterways Supervisor ; Richard Briers as Tomkins ; Brian Wilde as Policeman ; Ronnie Brody as Ted Croxley ; George A. Cooper as Mr Williams, Office Official ; Ed Devereaux as Boat Man ; Wally Patch as Bargee ; Michael Robbins as Bargee ; Jo Rowbottom (credited as Jo Rowbotham) as Cynthia ; Una Stubbs as Bridesmaid ; Eileen Way as Onlooker ; Rita Webb as Onlooker ; Patricia Hayes as Onlooker ; Godfrey Winn as Announcer ; Edwin Apps as George the Barman ", "score": "1.4428431" }, { "id": "10590845", "title": "Sailing Along", "text": " A rich owner of a fleet of three-masted barges operating on the River Thames in central London has a prospective step-daughter, Kay (Jessie Matthews). She falls in love with the son of one of his barge masters, who has been put to work on a barge at the bottom of the ladder. She initially wants to gives up her chance of stardom as a singer to be with him. Ultimately everyone supports her singing career.", "score": "1.4394581" } ]
[ "A Rowboat Romance\n A Rowboat Romance is a 1914 American short comedy film directed by and starring Fatty Arbuckle.", "Jeraldine Saunders\n Jeraldine Saunders (born Geraldine Loretta Glynn; September 3, 1923 – February 26, 2019) was an American writer and lecturer, best known as the creator of The Love Boat, an ABC Television series and its associated made-for-TV films portraying the humorous and romantic adventures of various itinerant passengers. Saunders had worked as a model, an astrologer, an numerologist and palm reader. The program was based on her 1974 book, The Love Boats, her anecdotal account of her time employed as the first full-time female cruise director. From 2003 until her death Saunders was the author of Omarr's Astrological Forecast. The nationally syndicated horoscope column, read by hundreds of thousands worldwide, was originally created by Sydney Omarr, to whom she had been briefly married to, in 1966. In 1968 Saunders discovered her fiancé, the actor Albert Dekker, dead in his Hollywood home. The death was ruled to be accidental.", "Ted Lange\n In 1977, he wrote the screenplay for the 1977 drama Passing Through, starring Cora Lee Day and Marla Gibbs. During the run of The Love Boat, Lange also served as director and screenwriter of several episodes of the series. In 1999, Lange directed two episodes of Love Boat: The Next Wave, the UPN series based on The Love Boat. He also directed episodes of Moesha, Dharma & Greg, and Eve. In 2008, he directed the drama For Love of Amy. Lange has also done extensive theater work as playwright and stage director. He has penned 17 plays, including George Washington's Boy, a historical drama about the relationship between the first president and his favorite slave, along with the comedy Lemon Meringue Facade. Lange remained close to ", "The Love Boat\n Jeraldine Saunders, a real-life cruise director for a passenger cruise-ship line. Saunders was also partly inspired by the German cruise ship MV Aurora. The TV movie was followed by two more (titled The Love Boat II and The New Love Boat), all of which aired before the series began in September 1977. The executive producer for the series was Aaron Spelling, who produced several television series for Four Star Television and ABC from the 1960s into the 1990s. In 1987, the episode with segment titles \"Hidden Treasure\", \"Picture from the Past\", and \"Ace's Salary\" (Season 9, Episode 3) was ranked No. 82 on [[TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time|TV Guide Every episode contained several storylines, each written by a different set of writers working on one group of guest ", "Celine and Julie Go Boating\n Luc Béraud was assistant director on the movie. Marilù Parolini worked as the set photographer.", "Show Boat (1951 film)\n When the Cotton Blossom, Cap'n Andy Hawks's show boat, arrives in a Mississippi town to give a performance, a fistfight breaks out between leading man Steve Baker and Pete, the boat's engineer who has been making passes at Steve's wife, leading lady Julie La Verne. Cap'n Andy pretends to the assembled crowd that the two were really previewing a scene from one of the boat's melodramas. But Pete knows a dark secret about Julie, and he runs off to tell the local sheriff. Riverboat gambler Gaylord Ravenal has gambled away a boat ticket, so he drops by the Cotton Blossom pretending to be an actor ", "Nancy Savoca\n After film school, Savoca worked as a storyboard artist and assistant editor on an independent film. Her first professional experience was as a production assistant to John Sayles on his film The Brother From Another Planet, and as an assistant auditor for Jonathan Demme on two of his films: Something Wild (1986), and Married to the Mob (1988). In 1989, she directed her first full-length movie, the privately funded True Love, about Italian-American marriage rituals in the Bronx. It won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. The movie, starring Annabella Sciorra and Ron Eldard, both making their film debuts, was praised as one of the best films of the year by both Janet Maslin and Vincent Canby of the New York Times. Savoca ", "A Rowboat Romance\nRoscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle ; Slim Summerville ; Mack Swain ; Josef Swickard ", "Oh, Kay! (film)\n her departure from the studio Colleen called Richard Rowland and asked that LeRoy be allowed to direct another film. Richard assured her he would. It was not until Oh Kay! came along that Colleen had the opportunity to be directed by her friend LeRoy. In her book Silent Star, Colleen wrote that while in the vicinity of Catalina Island for shooting scenes of Oh Kay!, she had gone to a movie on the island and seen a handsome actor she recommended to her husband to play the lead in Lilac Time. The actor was Gary Cooper. The play would later be revived.", "Curtis Harrington\n He began his career as a film critic, writing a book on Josef von Sternberg in 1948. He directed several avant-garde short films in the 1940s and '50s, including Fragment of Seeking, Picnic, and The Wormwood Star (a film study of the artwork of Marjorie Cameron which was filmed at the home of multi-millionaire art collector Edward James). Cameron also co-starred in his subsequent film Night Tide (1961) with Dennis Hopper. Harrington worked with Kenneth Anger, serving as a cinematographer on Anger's Puce Moment and acting in Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954) (he played Cesare, the somnambulist). Harrington had links to Thelema shared with his close associates Kenneth Anger and Marjorie Cameron who frequently ", "Ashley Miller (director)\nAn Island Comedy (1911) ; The House of Fear (1915) ; The Quest of Life (1916) ; Infidelity (1917) ; The Princess of Park Row (1917) ; The Marriage Speculation (1917) ", "Fiona Weir\n Fiona Weir is a British casting director. In 2006, she received a Primetime Emmy nomination for the television film The Girl in the Café, directed by David Yates with whom she worked with on the Harry Potter film franchise, her most notable credit. Other works include Love Actually (2003), Boy A (2007), The Golden Compass (2007) The Boat That Rocked (2009), and Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them (2016).", "Robert Montgomery (actor)\n cruiser USS Columbia (CL-56); as an assistant naval attache at the U.S. Embassy, London; and as the Executive Officer of Motor Torpedo Boat 5 (PT-5). In 1945, Montgomery returned to Hollywood, co-starring and making his uncredited directing debut in They Were Expendable, where he directed some of the PT boat scenes when director John Ford was unable to work for health reasons. Montgomery's first credited film as director and his final film for MGM was the film noir Lady in the Lake (1947), adapted from Raymond Chandler's detective novel, in which he starred as Chandler's most famous character, Phillip Marlowe. It was filmed ", "Houseboat (film)\n later shows up in a small rowboat with an Italian girl, Cinzia (Sophia Loren), who seeks to experience America up close and personal. They land at a nearby carnival, where they eat pizza, dance, and \"win\" a harmonica. Later, she brings Robert home to a worried Tom. The next day, he hires her as maid to care for the children while he is away. What follows are a series of misadventures as Tom attempts to move Cinzia and the kids away from Washington to a house in the country but wind up the inhabitants of a leaky, rotting houseboat. ", "Sex comedy\n Producer/director Kenneth F. Rowles made a copycat cash-in with his The Ups and Downs of a Handyman. His next movie, Take an Easy Ride, purports to be a public information film warning of the dangers of hitchhiking but is actually a sexploitation film showing young girls being sexually assaulted and murdered (although Rowles says he had to add those scenes on request of the movie's distributor). Films like Dreams of Thirteen, The Younger the Better, Geilermanns Töchter - Wenn Mädchen mündig werden, Erika's Hot Summer, Mrs. Stone's Thing, and Come Play With Me played in Soho and elsewhere, but with the arrival of the Margaret Thatcher government in 1979 the Eady Levy was abolished in 1985, killing off the genre.", "Sam Davis (producer)\n Sam Davis (born 1964 in New York City, New York) is a German-American film producer. He is the founder of Cologne, Germany-based production company Rowboat Film- und Fernsehproduktion, and lives and works in Cologne.", "Sam Davis (producer)\n From 2004 until 2009, Sam took charge of the German Fiction department of Endemol Germany where he was responsible for TV movie and series productions such as \"Liebe ohne Rückfahrschein\", \"Mr. Nanny - Ein Mann für Mama\" and the two-part \"London, Liebe, Taubenschlag\". In January 2010, Sam Davis co-founded and became CEO of Rowboat Film- und Fernsehproduktion. Rowboat's first TV movie A Day for a Miracle premiered at the Hamburg Film Festival in 2011. It was broadcast January 18, 2012 on ORF and, with over one million viewers, the highest rated film of the year. On March 5, 2012 A Day for a Miracle was also successfully broadcast on ZDF with 5.8 million viewers. In 2012 Sam won the ROMY prize in Austria ", "Row Your Boat\n Row Your Boat is a drama about a recently released ex-convict trying to correct his life written and directed by Sollace Mitchel. It was released in 1998, and in 2001 on home video. The film stars Jon Bon Jovi of rock fame, Bai Ling, and William Forsythe. Its title is taken from the English nursery rhyme \"Row, Row, Row Your Boat\". Bon Jovi plays Jamey Meadows, a man newly released from prison who has found himself homeless on the crazy streets of New York City. Slowly, he must build his life up from the gutter. Resisting constant offers from his brother, played by William Forsythe (Dick Tracy, The Rock, Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo) to rejoin the insidious world of crime, Meadows takes a menial job as a door to door census worker.", "The Bargee\nHarry H. Corbett as Hemel Pike ; Hugh Griffith as Joe Turnbull ; Eric Sykes as the Mariner ; Ronnie Barker as Ronnie ; Julia Foster as Christine Turnbull ; Miriam Karlin as Nellie Marsh ; Eric Barker as Mr Parkes, the Foreman ; Derek Nimmo as Dr. Scott ; Norman Bird as Albert Williams, the Waterways Supervisor ; Richard Briers as Tomkins ; Brian Wilde as Policeman ; Ronnie Brody as Ted Croxley ; George A. Cooper as Mr Williams, Office Official ; Ed Devereaux as Boat Man ; Wally Patch as Bargee ; Michael Robbins as Bargee ; Jo Rowbottom (credited as Jo Rowbotham) as Cynthia ; Una Stubbs as Bridesmaid ; Eileen Way as Onlooker ; Rita Webb as Onlooker ; Patricia Hayes as Onlooker ; Godfrey Winn as Announcer ; Edwin Apps as George the Barman ", "Sailing Along\n A rich owner of a fleet of three-masted barges operating on the River Thames in central London has a prospective step-daughter, Kay (Jessie Matthews). She falls in love with the son of one of his barge masters, who has been put to work on a barge at the bottom of the ladder. She initially wants to gives up her chance of stardom as a singer to be with him. Ultimately everyone supports her singing career." ]
Who was the director of Young People?
[ "Luis Alcoriza", "Luis Alcoriza de la Vega" ]
director
Young People (1961 film)
6,232,250
91
[ { "id": "15524943", "title": "Young People's Theatre", "text": "Susan Douglas Rubes (1966-1979) ; Richard Ouzounian (1979-1980) ; Peter Moss (1980-1991) ; Maja Ardal (1991-1998) ; Pierre Tetrault (1998-2002) ; Allen MacInnis (2002-present) ", "score": "1.5810186" }, { "id": "2834619", "title": "Young People (1972 film)", "text": " Young People is a 1972 Hong Kong coming-of-age action drama film directed by Chang Cheh and starring David Chiang, Ti Lung, Chen Kuan-tai, Irene Chan and pop singer Agnes Chan, the younger sister of Irene Chan, in her debut film role.", "score": "1.5706892" }, { "id": "14451014", "title": "Young People (1940 film)", "text": " Young People is a 1940 American musical drama film directed by Allan Dwan and starring Shirley Temple and Jack Oakie.", "score": "1.5458659" }, { "id": "15524938", "title": "Young People's Theatre", "text": " Young People's Theatre (YPT) is a Canadian producer of theatre for youth and Toronto's oldest not-for-profit theatre company. Founded in 1966 by Susan Douglas Rubeš, YPT originally operated out of the now-demolished Colonnade Theatre on Bloor Street. Since its 1977-78 season, the company has resided in a renovated heritage building in downtown Toronto. YPT operates two performance spaces in the building at 165 Front Street East; the Susan Douglas Rubes Theatre and the Nathan Cohen Studio. It stages an average of eight productions each year. The current Artistic Director is Allen MacInnis and the current Executive Director Nancy J. Webster.", "score": "1.5307641" }, { "id": "32201461", "title": "Gerald Chapman (director)", "text": " Gay Sweatshop. This later became one of the best known gay theatre companies in the UK, with former members including Antony Sher, Simon Callow, Tom Robinson and Miriam Margolyes. In the mid-1970s Chapman was appointed to the Royal Court Theatre, London, in charge of the Young People's Theatre Scheme. This had originally been set up in 1966 to develop and produce the best new writing by young people under 25, encouraging writers from all sections of society to find their voice. In 1976, as part of a drive to invigorate the group, Chapman developed the YPTS idea and held a competition to give the group a shorter and snappier name. The winning name ", "score": "1.527421" }, { "id": "4789209", "title": "Elyse Dodgson", "text": " Dodgson was hired in 1985 by Max Stafford-Clark to become Director of the Royal Court Young People’s Theatre. Here she created plays with young actors including Sophie Okonedo (Women and Sisters by Sandra Agard, A Rock in Water by Winsome Pinnock), as well as working with young writers such as Shaun Duggan and Jonathan Harvey, selecting and producing plays for the Royal Court Young Writers’ Festival, which ran from 1986 to 1991.", "score": "1.5202281" }, { "id": "30115417", "title": "National Youth Theatre", "text": " Richardson agreeing to become the first President of what Croft called The Youth Theatre. The organisation evolved rapidly throughout the United Kingdom, involving young people on a national basis. Croft died in 1986 and was succeeded by Edward Wilson as Director. Building on Croft's vision, Wilson took the company forward into new territory, increasing its range of activities and reinforcing its approach to technical production values. Wilson also recognised the opportunity to extend the organisation to more disadvantaged young people, and started the first Outreach department in 1989, working initially with young offenders and gradually widening the opportunities to other socially excluded groups. Wilson also secured the organisation's current ", "score": "1.5139458" }, { "id": "15524941", "title": "Young People's Theatre", "text": " youth. In the spring of 2001, the theatre was renamed Lorraine Kimsa Theatre for Young People after a donation of $1.5 million from Kevin Kimsa in honour of his mother. In March 2011, the theatre announced a change back to its original name: Young People's Theatre. The Slaight family's 2015 donation of $3 million will result in the creation of the Ada Slaight Education Centre at YPT. At the time it was the largest non-capital gift received by a Toronto theatre company. In 2016 YPT was one of a number of theatres offering free tickets to newly arrived Syrian refugees.", "score": "1.5074327" }, { "id": "13835535", "title": "Young People (1961 film)", "text": " Young People (Los jóvenes) is a 1961 Mexican crime film directed by Luis Alcoriza. It was entered into the 11th Berlin International Film Festival.", "score": "1.5073054" }, { "id": "5602586", "title": "Some People (film)", "text": " A youth worker (played by Kenneth More) tries to help a group of teenagers in Bristol, by encouraging positive social development.", "score": "1.503246" }, { "id": "25177787", "title": "Young Vic", "text": "Frank Dunlop (1968–1971, also Administrative Director) ; Michael Bogdanov (1971–1973) ; David Thacker ; Julia Bardsley and Tim Supple (jointly) (1991–1994) ; Tim Supple (1994–2000) ; David Lan (2000–2018) ; Kwame Kwei-Armah (2018–present) ", "score": "1.486076" }, { "id": "26172453", "title": "Cincinnati Young People's Theatre", "text": " Cincinnati Young People's Theatre (CYPT) is a summer youth theatre organization in Cincinnati, OH. All participants must be between 13 and 19. It is administered by the Cincinnati Landmark Productions. CYPT was founded by Tim Perrino. Performances were held at Westwood Town Hall, but in 2002 performances moved to the new Covedale Center for the Performing Arts.", "score": "1.480721" }, { "id": "29841654", "title": "Colin Young (film educator)", "text": " Colin Young (5 April 1927 – 27 November 2021) was a British film educator, chairman of the School of Theater, Film and Television at UCLA, founder of the film program at Rice University, Houston, Texas, and the first director of the British National Film and Television School. He was awarded a BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award, the highest honor of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, in 1993.", "score": "1.4741046" }, { "id": "15524942", "title": "Young People's Theatre", "text": " Young People Theatre's current home is a renovated 1887 heritage building in Toronto, Ontario. This site was a three-story stable for the horses that pulled Toronto Street Railways horsecars in the late 19th century, as well as an electrical generating plant and a Toronto Transit Commission warehouse. The warehouse sat empty for much of the 20th century and was ready for demolition before it was chosen by YPT as its home. The building was renovated in 1977 by Zeidler Partnership Architects to contain a large main stage (the current day Susan Douglas Rubes Theatre) and a smaller studio (the Nathan Cohen Studio). YPT was given an Award of Merit by the Toronto Historical Board in 1979, \"for its imaginative and sympathetic treatment of a landmark that might otherwise have been destroyed\".", "score": "1.4739469" }, { "id": "4618531", "title": "Jude Kelly", "text": " Kelly founded Solent People's Theatre, a touring company, in 1976, and was artistic director of the Battersea Arts Centre from 1980 to 1985. She became the founding director of the West Yorkshire Playhouse from 1990 to 2002, where as Artistic Director and then CEO she established it as an acknowledged centre for excellence. As the Artistic Director, she sat on the National Advisory Committee for Culture, Creativity and Education (NACCCE), led by Ken Robinson, that in 1999 wrote the All Our Futures report, which led to significant government investment in young people's creative and cultural education. She has directed more than 100 productions, including for ", "score": "1.4533825" }, { "id": "1668499", "title": "Young People's Teen Musical Theatre Company", "text": " The founder and original director of YPTMTC was Diane Price. Mrs. Price (née Berman) was herself an actress who performed at The Purple Onion, the Opera Ring, Bimbo's 365 Club, The Hungry i, and the Sea Witch, all in San Francisco. She was director of the group from 1984 to her retirement in 2009. Anne Marie Ullman (née Bookwalter), an alumnus of the YPTMTC, was the director from 2005 through 2007. Anne Marie is currently the theatre director and drama teacher at San Francisco's Jewish Community High School. Nicola Bosco-Alvarez took over as Director & Choreographer in 2007 after 12 years as an Artist in-Residence and Choreographer with the San Francisco Arts Education Project. Nicola has an Associate Credential of the Cecchetti ISTD (Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing) and has studied professionally in Florence, Italy.", "score": "1.4476525" }, { "id": "1607526", "title": "John G. Young", "text": " John G. Young is an American director, producer and writer. He graduated from the State University of New York at Purchase (SUNY Purchase)where he now teaches and is Chair of Film Conservatory. His feature films include Parallel Sons in 1995, The Reception in 2005, Rivers Wash Over Me in 2009, and bwoy in 2016, starring RENT's Anthony Rapp. He also produced Garden in 2004. Much of his work deals with the intersections of race and sexuality. John G. Young was also a VP of Production and Editorial Director for Human Relations Media (HRM) for almost two decades, having created over one hundred award-winning programs for the company. He has also supervised a series of shorts entitled Amazing Kids of Character, Profiles in Courage and Portraits of Empathy with Human Relations Media in collaboration with Anson Schloat.", "score": "1.4452596" }, { "id": "1895491", "title": "Young People's Learning Agency", "text": " It was a non-departmental public body of the Department for Education.", "score": "1.4433583" }, { "id": "25599595", "title": "Young People (1937 Japanese film)", "text": " Young People (若い人) is a 1937 Japanese drama film directed by Shirō Toyoda. It is based on the novel of the same name by Yōjirō Ishizaka.", "score": "1.4423752" }, { "id": "6684590", "title": "Neil McPherson (artistic director)", "text": " He trained as an actor at the Central School of Speech and Drama and was a member of the National Youth Theatre for seven years. His acting roles included John Osborne in A Better Class of Person for Thames TV.", "score": "1.4415829" } ]
[ "Young People's Theatre\nSusan Douglas Rubes (1966-1979) ; Richard Ouzounian (1979-1980) ; Peter Moss (1980-1991) ; Maja Ardal (1991-1998) ; Pierre Tetrault (1998-2002) ; Allen MacInnis (2002-present) ", "Young People (1972 film)\n Young People is a 1972 Hong Kong coming-of-age action drama film directed by Chang Cheh and starring David Chiang, Ti Lung, Chen Kuan-tai, Irene Chan and pop singer Agnes Chan, the younger sister of Irene Chan, in her debut film role.", "Young People (1940 film)\n Young People is a 1940 American musical drama film directed by Allan Dwan and starring Shirley Temple and Jack Oakie.", "Young People's Theatre\n Young People's Theatre (YPT) is a Canadian producer of theatre for youth and Toronto's oldest not-for-profit theatre company. Founded in 1966 by Susan Douglas Rubeš, YPT originally operated out of the now-demolished Colonnade Theatre on Bloor Street. Since its 1977-78 season, the company has resided in a renovated heritage building in downtown Toronto. YPT operates two performance spaces in the building at 165 Front Street East; the Susan Douglas Rubes Theatre and the Nathan Cohen Studio. It stages an average of eight productions each year. The current Artistic Director is Allen MacInnis and the current Executive Director Nancy J. Webster.", "Gerald Chapman (director)\n Gay Sweatshop. This later became one of the best known gay theatre companies in the UK, with former members including Antony Sher, Simon Callow, Tom Robinson and Miriam Margolyes. In the mid-1970s Chapman was appointed to the Royal Court Theatre, London, in charge of the Young People's Theatre Scheme. This had originally been set up in 1966 to develop and produce the best new writing by young people under 25, encouraging writers from all sections of society to find their voice. In 1976, as part of a drive to invigorate the group, Chapman developed the YPTS idea and held a competition to give the group a shorter and snappier name. The winning name ", "Elyse Dodgson\n Dodgson was hired in 1985 by Max Stafford-Clark to become Director of the Royal Court Young People’s Theatre. Here she created plays with young actors including Sophie Okonedo (Women and Sisters by Sandra Agard, A Rock in Water by Winsome Pinnock), as well as working with young writers such as Shaun Duggan and Jonathan Harvey, selecting and producing plays for the Royal Court Young Writers’ Festival, which ran from 1986 to 1991.", "National Youth Theatre\n Richardson agreeing to become the first President of what Croft called The Youth Theatre. The organisation evolved rapidly throughout the United Kingdom, involving young people on a national basis. Croft died in 1986 and was succeeded by Edward Wilson as Director. Building on Croft's vision, Wilson took the company forward into new territory, increasing its range of activities and reinforcing its approach to technical production values. Wilson also recognised the opportunity to extend the organisation to more disadvantaged young people, and started the first Outreach department in 1989, working initially with young offenders and gradually widening the opportunities to other socially excluded groups. Wilson also secured the organisation's current ", "Young People's Theatre\n youth. In the spring of 2001, the theatre was renamed Lorraine Kimsa Theatre for Young People after a donation of $1.5 million from Kevin Kimsa in honour of his mother. In March 2011, the theatre announced a change back to its original name: Young People's Theatre. The Slaight family's 2015 donation of $3 million will result in the creation of the Ada Slaight Education Centre at YPT. At the time it was the largest non-capital gift received by a Toronto theatre company. In 2016 YPT was one of a number of theatres offering free tickets to newly arrived Syrian refugees.", "Young People (1961 film)\n Young People (Los jóvenes) is a 1961 Mexican crime film directed by Luis Alcoriza. It was entered into the 11th Berlin International Film Festival.", "Some People (film)\n A youth worker (played by Kenneth More) tries to help a group of teenagers in Bristol, by encouraging positive social development.", "Young Vic\nFrank Dunlop (1968–1971, also Administrative Director) ; Michael Bogdanov (1971–1973) ; David Thacker ; Julia Bardsley and Tim Supple (jointly) (1991–1994) ; Tim Supple (1994–2000) ; David Lan (2000–2018) ; Kwame Kwei-Armah (2018–present) ", "Cincinnati Young People's Theatre\n Cincinnati Young People's Theatre (CYPT) is a summer youth theatre organization in Cincinnati, OH. All participants must be between 13 and 19. It is administered by the Cincinnati Landmark Productions. CYPT was founded by Tim Perrino. Performances were held at Westwood Town Hall, but in 2002 performances moved to the new Covedale Center for the Performing Arts.", "Colin Young (film educator)\n Colin Young (5 April 1927 – 27 November 2021) was a British film educator, chairman of the School of Theater, Film and Television at UCLA, founder of the film program at Rice University, Houston, Texas, and the first director of the British National Film and Television School. He was awarded a BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award, the highest honor of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, in 1993.", "Young People's Theatre\n Young People Theatre's current home is a renovated 1887 heritage building in Toronto, Ontario. This site was a three-story stable for the horses that pulled Toronto Street Railways horsecars in the late 19th century, as well as an electrical generating plant and a Toronto Transit Commission warehouse. The warehouse sat empty for much of the 20th century and was ready for demolition before it was chosen by YPT as its home. The building was renovated in 1977 by Zeidler Partnership Architects to contain a large main stage (the current day Susan Douglas Rubes Theatre) and a smaller studio (the Nathan Cohen Studio). YPT was given an Award of Merit by the Toronto Historical Board in 1979, \"for its imaginative and sympathetic treatment of a landmark that might otherwise have been destroyed\".", "Jude Kelly\n Kelly founded Solent People's Theatre, a touring company, in 1976, and was artistic director of the Battersea Arts Centre from 1980 to 1985. She became the founding director of the West Yorkshire Playhouse from 1990 to 2002, where as Artistic Director and then CEO she established it as an acknowledged centre for excellence. As the Artistic Director, she sat on the National Advisory Committee for Culture, Creativity and Education (NACCCE), led by Ken Robinson, that in 1999 wrote the All Our Futures report, which led to significant government investment in young people's creative and cultural education. She has directed more than 100 productions, including for ", "Young People's Teen Musical Theatre Company\n The founder and original director of YPTMTC was Diane Price. Mrs. Price (née Berman) was herself an actress who performed at The Purple Onion, the Opera Ring, Bimbo's 365 Club, The Hungry i, and the Sea Witch, all in San Francisco. She was director of the group from 1984 to her retirement in 2009. Anne Marie Ullman (née Bookwalter), an alumnus of the YPTMTC, was the director from 2005 through 2007. Anne Marie is currently the theatre director and drama teacher at San Francisco's Jewish Community High School. Nicola Bosco-Alvarez took over as Director & Choreographer in 2007 after 12 years as an Artist in-Residence and Choreographer with the San Francisco Arts Education Project. Nicola has an Associate Credential of the Cecchetti ISTD (Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing) and has studied professionally in Florence, Italy.", "John G. Young\n John G. Young is an American director, producer and writer. He graduated from the State University of New York at Purchase (SUNY Purchase)where he now teaches and is Chair of Film Conservatory. His feature films include Parallel Sons in 1995, The Reception in 2005, Rivers Wash Over Me in 2009, and bwoy in 2016, starring RENT's Anthony Rapp. He also produced Garden in 2004. Much of his work deals with the intersections of race and sexuality. John G. Young was also a VP of Production and Editorial Director for Human Relations Media (HRM) for almost two decades, having created over one hundred award-winning programs for the company. He has also supervised a series of shorts entitled Amazing Kids of Character, Profiles in Courage and Portraits of Empathy with Human Relations Media in collaboration with Anson Schloat.", "Young People's Learning Agency\n It was a non-departmental public body of the Department for Education.", "Young People (1937 Japanese film)\n Young People (若い人) is a 1937 Japanese drama film directed by Shirō Toyoda. It is based on the novel of the same name by Yōjirō Ishizaka.", "Neil McPherson (artistic director)\n He trained as an actor at the Central School of Speech and Drama and was a member of the National Youth Theatre for seven years. His acting roles included John Osborne in A Better Class of Person for Thames TV." ]
Who was the director of The Kiss?
[ "Dell Henderson" ]
director
The Kiss (1916 film)
1,424,994
96
[ { "id": "6061582", "title": "The Kiss (2003 film)", "text": " The Kiss is a 2003 direct-to-video film starring Francoise Surel, Eliza Dushku, Terence Stamp, and Billy Zane. It tells the story of a book editor (Surel) who is entranced by a certain old manuscript about a romance. Unfortunately, she discovers that the story is unfinished, so with her roommate (Dushku) she attempts to find the author, only to be disappointed that he (Stamp) is nothing more than a broken man after his wife's death. The editor forms a close friendship with him, and they find the meaning of true love.", "score": "1.5288229" }, { "id": "12619845", "title": "Kiss (1963 film)", "text": " Kiss is a 1963 silent American experimental film directed by Andy Warhol, which runs 50 minutes and features various couples – man and woman, woman and woman, man and man – kissing for 3½ minutes each. The film features Naomi Levine, Barbara Rubin, Gerard Malanga, Rufus Collins, Johnny Dodd, Ed Sanders, Mark Lancaster, Fred Herko, Baby Jane Holzer, Robert Indiana, Andrew Meyer, John Palmer, Pierre Restany, Harold Stevenson, Philip van Rensselaer, Charlotte Gilbertson, Marisol, Steven Holden, and unidentified others. In 1964, La Monte Young provided a loud minimalist drone soundtrack to Kiss when shown as small TV-sized projections at the entrance lobby to the third New York Film Festival held at Lincoln Center. Kiss was followed by Eat (1963), Sleep (1964), Blow Job (1963) and Blue Movie (1969). This was one of the first films Warhol made at The Factory in New York City.", "score": "1.5227948" }, { "id": "26690703", "title": "Ulysses Davis", "text": " Ulysses Davis (November 5, 1872 – October 1, 1924), was an American film director. He directed 86 films between 1911 and 1916, some at Champion Film Company. He is probably best remembered today for having directed The Kiss, a 1914 film starring Margaret Gibson and William Desmond Taylor. He was born in South Amboy, New Jersey, United States. He died in Chicago and is buried at Waldheim Jewish Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois.", "score": "1.5128853" }, { "id": "1471121", "title": "The Kiss (1988 film)", "text": " The screenplay for The Kiss was written by Stephen Volk, who had previously written Gothic (1986) for Ken Russell, and would follow The Kiss with William Friedkin's The Guardian (1990). Though set in Albany, New York, the film was shot on location in Montreal, Québec, Canada. Describing the film, director Pen Densham described it as \"somewhere between The Exorcist and Poltergeist.\" The film had the working title The Host.", "score": "1.5091794" }, { "id": "25594887", "title": "The Kiss (1958 film)", "text": " The Kiss is a 1958 short film written and produced by John Hayes. It was the first major film by Hayes, who would go on to find fame as the writer, producer, and director of B-movie genre films such as Garden of the Dead. The film was nominated for the 1958 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film but lost to Disney's Grand Canyon.", "score": "1.5045104" }, { "id": "1471114", "title": "The Kiss (1988 film)", "text": " The Kiss is a 1988 supernatural horror film directed by Pen Densham and starring Joanna Pacula and Meredith Salenger. The plot follows two young women who find themselves haunted by an ancient parasitic curse that was passed on to one of them by a kiss. Film critic Harry M. Benshoff has claimed the film to be an allegory of the AIDS epidemic of the late 1980s.", "score": "1.5019414" }, { "id": "8961488", "title": "John Hayes (director)", "text": " John Patrick Hayes (March 1, 1930 – August 21, 2000) was an American film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor. He began his career as a screenwriter, writing 1959's The Kiss, which earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Short Film. Hayes is best known for directing low-budget B-movie features and later, exploitation films.", "score": "1.4873856" }, { "id": "4753308", "title": "Gary Fleder", "text": " several artists who have become recurring collaborators, including production designer/art director Nelson Coates, costume designer Abigail Murray, script supervisor Elizabeth Ludwick, and composer Steve Weisberg. Since then, Fleder has directed a series of thrillers, including Kiss the Girls (1997), starring Ashley Judd and Morgan Freeman; Don't Say a Word (2001), featuring Brittany Murphy and Michael Douglas; Impostor (2002), a sci-fi thriller based on a Philip K. Dick short story, starring Gary Sinise, Madeleine Stowe, and Vincent D’Onofrio; and Runaway Jury (2003), starring John Cusack and Academy Award winners Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman, and based on the novel by John Grisham. The ", "score": "1.4806628" }, { "id": "4529789", "title": "Bill Aucoin", "text": " Born in 1943 in Ayer, Massachusetts, Aucoin attended Northeastern University and graduated with a degree in film. He worked at WGBH in Boston during his college years and after. Aucoin later worked at Teletape Productions as a cinematographer. Credited with discovering Kiss, Aucoin managed the group for nearly a decade. He was fired in 1982 due to a dispute about the band's appearance plus his drug abuse, but later worked with the band on various DVD projects. Aucoin produced a television show called Supermarket Sweep in the early 1970s. From 2005 to 2007, Aucoin went into the Broadway business with a staging of The Who's Quadrophenia, which showed intermittently for two years in Anaheim and Los Angeles. Aucoin had reentered the management business with his company Aucoin Globe Entertainment, at the time of his death of surgical complications from prostate cancer. He was survived by partner Roman Fernandez and sisters Betty Britton and Janet Bankowski. A statement from Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons described him as \"our irreplaceable original manager, mentor and dear friend… Words cannot convey his impact on us or those close to him.\"", "score": "1.4533141" }, { "id": "1471122", "title": "The Kiss (1988 film)", "text": " Principal photography began in Montreal on August 25, 1987. The church sequences were filmed at St. Martin's Church in Westmount. Its special effects team was made up of Charles Carter, and Chris Walas, who supplied the special effects on Gremlins (1984) and David Cronenberg's The Fly (1986).", "score": "1.4421923" }, { "id": "2622582", "title": "Howard Kissel", "text": " Howard William Kissel (October 29, 1942 – February 24, 2012) was an American theater critic based in New York City. Before serving as the chief theatre critic for the Daily News for twenty years, Kissel was the arts editor for Women's Wear Daily. He also wrote a column for The Huffington Post. Kissel also authored a biography on theater producer David Merrick, entitled David Merrick, the Abominable Showman, which was published in 1993. Kissel was born on October 29, 1942 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and attended Shorewood High School. He graduated from Columbia University in 1964 and obtained his master's from Northwestern University. He was married to Christine Buck from 1974 until her death in 2006. Kissel died in Manhattan on February 24, 2012, aged 69. According to his sister, he had been suffering from health complications following a liver transplant in 2010.", "score": "1.4383261" }, { "id": "2541211", "title": "The Kiss (Modern Family)", "text": " \"The Kiss\" was written by Abraham Higginbotham and directed by Scott Ellis. It is Abraham Higginbotham's first writing credit as he is part of the new writers who joined at the beginning of the production season. The episode guest starred Aaron Sanders as Jeremy, the boy Alex likes. Abraham had previously worked with Jesse Tyler Ferguson on the short lived sitcom, Do Not Disturb. The episode was also the fourth episode made and was filmed during late-August. The episode originally aired September 29, 2010. The episode deals with some criticism from some quarters for the first season's portrayal of Cameron and Mitchell as not being physically affectionate with each other. The criticism spawned a Facebook campaign to demand Mitchell and Cameron be allowed to kiss. It was also criticized by ", "score": "1.4286073" }, { "id": "8008458", "title": "Jeffery Kissoon", "text": " A regular director of theatre, Kissoon is a member of the board of directors of the Shared Experience company and the Warehouse Theatre in Croydon, London. He has tutored younger actors, writers and directors, and values the rehearsal process. He played the lead role in the Mark Norfolk film Ham and the Piper (2012), and also directed Norfolk's theatre productions Knock Down Ginger, staged in 2003, Naked Soldiers, 2010 and Where The Flowers Grow, 2011, at the Warehouse Theatre. He reprised his role as Antony in Suzman's production of Antony and Cleopatra, appearing opposite Kim Cattrall as Cleopatra, at the Liverpool Playhouse in 2010.", "score": "1.4241319" }, { "id": "3366294", "title": "Judas Kiss (2011 film)", "text": " Failed filmmaker Zach Wells is asked by his friend and hotshot director, Topher Shadoe, to take his place as judge in the annual Keystone Film Festival, held in Zach's alma mater, Keystone Summit University. Zach is initially reluctant, as it brings memories of the festival defining his life for the worse: he won the festival 15 years ago, which convinced him to drop out of college and move to Hollywood, where his career struggled. The night before the judging, Zach goes to a gay bar where he has sex with a younger patron. To his shock, Zach finds out that the patron is a ", "score": "1.4159381" }, { "id": "6108700", "title": "David Grant (producer)", "text": "Love Variations (1969, director as ‘Terry Gould’) ; Sex, Love and Marriage (1970, director as ‘Terry Gould’) ; Sinderella (1972, co-producer, writer) ; Au Pair Girls (1972, story) ; Snow White and the Seven Perverts (1973, co-producer, writer) ; Secrets of a Door-to-Door Salesman (1973, producer) ; The Over-Amorous Artist a.k.a. Just One More Time (1974, producer) ; The Great McGonagall (1974, producer) ; Pink Orgasm (1975, uncompleted, footage later edited into ‘Who Bears Sins’ (1987)) ; Girls Come First (1975, co-producer) ; Dear Marjorie Boobs (1976, producer) ; The Office Party (1976, director,producer, writer) ; Escape to Entebbe (1976 co-director,producer) ; Under the Bed (1977, director, co-producer) ; Submission (1977, director) ; Over Exposed (1977, footage later edited into ‘Who Bears Sins’ (1987)) ; The Kiss (1977, co-producer) ; End of Term (1978, producer) ; Marcia (1977, script/co-director) ; You’re Driving Me Crazy (1978, director, co-writer) ; Love is Beautiful (1978, unfilmed) ; The London Programme (1979, TV, Interviewee) ; Electric Blue 001 (1980, video, includes Grant's Snow White and the Seven Perverts, no other Grant involvement) ; Who Bears Sins (1987, director, video compilation) ", "score": "1.415555" }, { "id": "11722339", "title": "Alexander Kiss", "text": " Alexander Nikolaevich Kiss (Александр Николаевич Кисс; October 2, 1921 - November 18, 1990) was a Soviet circus artist, juggler, director, People's Artist of the RSFSR.", "score": "1.4071394" }, { "id": "27860001", "title": "The Kiss (1914 film)", "text": " The Kiss is a 1914 Vitagraph silent drama short motion picture starring Margaret Gibson, George Holt, William Desmond Taylor, and Myrtle Gonzalez. Directed by Ulysses Davis, the screenplay was based on a story by Marc Edmund Jones. Long thought to have been a lost film, a copy was found and put on YouTube. The film is the only known surviving film in which director William Desmond Taylor appears as an actor. In 1964 Taylor's co-star Margaret Gibson, shortly before her death, reportedly confessed to having murdered him in 1922.", "score": "1.40503" }, { "id": "1471124", "title": "The Kiss (1988 film)", "text": " The film received mixed reviews from critics, and holds a 41% rating on internet review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. Janet Maslin of The New York Times called the film \"rich in disgusting special effects and poor in every other regard,\" and remarked its unimpressive performances. Time Out called the film a \"daft and derivative possession pic,\" noting Mimi Kuzyk as providing \"the only shred of credible humanity.\" LA Weekly described the film as a \"still, regurgitated mess of genre stew.\" Variety criticized the film for lacking development in its supernatural plot, adding, \"if the setups were hokier, they might have been funny.\" Roger Hurlburt of the Sun-Sentinel noted: \"The Kiss has ", "score": "1.4034152" }, { "id": "11257408", "title": "Black Kiss", "text": " The series is set in Los Angeles in the 1980s and opens with Dagmar Laine, a transsexual prostitute and lover to former 1950s film star Beverly Grove, searching for a reel of film taken from the Vatican's collection of pornography. The reel has been sent to Father Frank Murtaugh by his brother who is a Cardinal in the Vatican. Laine tries to grab the reel from Father Murtaugh but the reel is stolen by a nun. Laine and Grove then get Cass Pollack, a jazz musician and ex-heroin addict who is on the run from the Mafia, to steal the reel in return for them providing Pollack with an alibi. Pollack ", "score": "1.401634" }, { "id": "471797", "title": "Killer's Kiss", "text": " When released, the staff at Variety magazine gave the film a mixed review, and wrote, \"Ex-Look photographer Stanley Kubrick turned out Killer's Kiss on the proverbial shoestring. Kiss was more than a warm-up for Kubrick's talents, for not only did he co-produce but he directed, photographed and edited the venture from his own screenplay [originally written by Howard Sackler] and original story...Kubrick's low-key lensing occasionally catches the flavor of the seamy side of Gotham life. His scenes of tawdry Broadway, gloomy tenements and grotesque brick-and-stone structures that make up Manhattan's downtown eastside loft district help offset the script's deficiencies.\" More recently, New York Times film critic Janet Maslin reviewed the film, and wrote, \"Killer's Kiss brought ", "score": "1.3992982" } ]
[ "The Kiss (2003 film)\n The Kiss is a 2003 direct-to-video film starring Francoise Surel, Eliza Dushku, Terence Stamp, and Billy Zane. It tells the story of a book editor (Surel) who is entranced by a certain old manuscript about a romance. Unfortunately, she discovers that the story is unfinished, so with her roommate (Dushku) she attempts to find the author, only to be disappointed that he (Stamp) is nothing more than a broken man after his wife's death. The editor forms a close friendship with him, and they find the meaning of true love.", "Kiss (1963 film)\n Kiss is a 1963 silent American experimental film directed by Andy Warhol, which runs 50 minutes and features various couples – man and woman, woman and woman, man and man – kissing for 3½ minutes each. The film features Naomi Levine, Barbara Rubin, Gerard Malanga, Rufus Collins, Johnny Dodd, Ed Sanders, Mark Lancaster, Fred Herko, Baby Jane Holzer, Robert Indiana, Andrew Meyer, John Palmer, Pierre Restany, Harold Stevenson, Philip van Rensselaer, Charlotte Gilbertson, Marisol, Steven Holden, and unidentified others. In 1964, La Monte Young provided a loud minimalist drone soundtrack to Kiss when shown as small TV-sized projections at the entrance lobby to the third New York Film Festival held at Lincoln Center. Kiss was followed by Eat (1963), Sleep (1964), Blow Job (1963) and Blue Movie (1969). This was one of the first films Warhol made at The Factory in New York City.", "Ulysses Davis\n Ulysses Davis (November 5, 1872 – October 1, 1924), was an American film director. He directed 86 films between 1911 and 1916, some at Champion Film Company. He is probably best remembered today for having directed The Kiss, a 1914 film starring Margaret Gibson and William Desmond Taylor. He was born in South Amboy, New Jersey, United States. He died in Chicago and is buried at Waldheim Jewish Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois.", "The Kiss (1988 film)\n The screenplay for The Kiss was written by Stephen Volk, who had previously written Gothic (1986) for Ken Russell, and would follow The Kiss with William Friedkin's The Guardian (1990). Though set in Albany, New York, the film was shot on location in Montreal, Québec, Canada. Describing the film, director Pen Densham described it as \"somewhere between The Exorcist and Poltergeist.\" The film had the working title The Host.", "The Kiss (1958 film)\n The Kiss is a 1958 short film written and produced by John Hayes. It was the first major film by Hayes, who would go on to find fame as the writer, producer, and director of B-movie genre films such as Garden of the Dead. The film was nominated for the 1958 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film but lost to Disney's Grand Canyon.", "The Kiss (1988 film)\n The Kiss is a 1988 supernatural horror film directed by Pen Densham and starring Joanna Pacula and Meredith Salenger. The plot follows two young women who find themselves haunted by an ancient parasitic curse that was passed on to one of them by a kiss. Film critic Harry M. Benshoff has claimed the film to be an allegory of the AIDS epidemic of the late 1980s.", "John Hayes (director)\n John Patrick Hayes (March 1, 1930 – August 21, 2000) was an American film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor. He began his career as a screenwriter, writing 1959's The Kiss, which earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Short Film. Hayes is best known for directing low-budget B-movie features and later, exploitation films.", "Gary Fleder\n several artists who have become recurring collaborators, including production designer/art director Nelson Coates, costume designer Abigail Murray, script supervisor Elizabeth Ludwick, and composer Steve Weisberg. Since then, Fleder has directed a series of thrillers, including Kiss the Girls (1997), starring Ashley Judd and Morgan Freeman; Don't Say a Word (2001), featuring Brittany Murphy and Michael Douglas; Impostor (2002), a sci-fi thriller based on a Philip K. Dick short story, starring Gary Sinise, Madeleine Stowe, and Vincent D’Onofrio; and Runaway Jury (2003), starring John Cusack and Academy Award winners Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman, and based on the novel by John Grisham. The ", "Bill Aucoin\n Born in 1943 in Ayer, Massachusetts, Aucoin attended Northeastern University and graduated with a degree in film. He worked at WGBH in Boston during his college years and after. Aucoin later worked at Teletape Productions as a cinematographer. Credited with discovering Kiss, Aucoin managed the group for nearly a decade. He was fired in 1982 due to a dispute about the band's appearance plus his drug abuse, but later worked with the band on various DVD projects. Aucoin produced a television show called Supermarket Sweep in the early 1970s. From 2005 to 2007, Aucoin went into the Broadway business with a staging of The Who's Quadrophenia, which showed intermittently for two years in Anaheim and Los Angeles. Aucoin had reentered the management business with his company Aucoin Globe Entertainment, at the time of his death of surgical complications from prostate cancer. He was survived by partner Roman Fernandez and sisters Betty Britton and Janet Bankowski. A statement from Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons described him as \"our irreplaceable original manager, mentor and dear friend… Words cannot convey his impact on us or those close to him.\"", "The Kiss (1988 film)\n Principal photography began in Montreal on August 25, 1987. The church sequences were filmed at St. Martin's Church in Westmount. Its special effects team was made up of Charles Carter, and Chris Walas, who supplied the special effects on Gremlins (1984) and David Cronenberg's The Fly (1986).", "Howard Kissel\n Howard William Kissel (October 29, 1942 – February 24, 2012) was an American theater critic based in New York City. Before serving as the chief theatre critic for the Daily News for twenty years, Kissel was the arts editor for Women's Wear Daily. He also wrote a column for The Huffington Post. Kissel also authored a biography on theater producer David Merrick, entitled David Merrick, the Abominable Showman, which was published in 1993. Kissel was born on October 29, 1942 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and attended Shorewood High School. He graduated from Columbia University in 1964 and obtained his master's from Northwestern University. He was married to Christine Buck from 1974 until her death in 2006. Kissel died in Manhattan on February 24, 2012, aged 69. According to his sister, he had been suffering from health complications following a liver transplant in 2010.", "The Kiss (Modern Family)\n \"The Kiss\" was written by Abraham Higginbotham and directed by Scott Ellis. It is Abraham Higginbotham's first writing credit as he is part of the new writers who joined at the beginning of the production season. The episode guest starred Aaron Sanders as Jeremy, the boy Alex likes. Abraham had previously worked with Jesse Tyler Ferguson on the short lived sitcom, Do Not Disturb. The episode was also the fourth episode made and was filmed during late-August. The episode originally aired September 29, 2010. The episode deals with some criticism from some quarters for the first season's portrayal of Cameron and Mitchell as not being physically affectionate with each other. The criticism spawned a Facebook campaign to demand Mitchell and Cameron be allowed to kiss. It was also criticized by ", "Jeffery Kissoon\n A regular director of theatre, Kissoon is a member of the board of directors of the Shared Experience company and the Warehouse Theatre in Croydon, London. He has tutored younger actors, writers and directors, and values the rehearsal process. He played the lead role in the Mark Norfolk film Ham and the Piper (2012), and also directed Norfolk's theatre productions Knock Down Ginger, staged in 2003, Naked Soldiers, 2010 and Where The Flowers Grow, 2011, at the Warehouse Theatre. He reprised his role as Antony in Suzman's production of Antony and Cleopatra, appearing opposite Kim Cattrall as Cleopatra, at the Liverpool Playhouse in 2010.", "Judas Kiss (2011 film)\n Failed filmmaker Zach Wells is asked by his friend and hotshot director, Topher Shadoe, to take his place as judge in the annual Keystone Film Festival, held in Zach's alma mater, Keystone Summit University. Zach is initially reluctant, as it brings memories of the festival defining his life for the worse: he won the festival 15 years ago, which convinced him to drop out of college and move to Hollywood, where his career struggled. The night before the judging, Zach goes to a gay bar where he has sex with a younger patron. To his shock, Zach finds out that the patron is a ", "David Grant (producer)\nLove Variations (1969, director as ‘Terry Gould’) ; Sex, Love and Marriage (1970, director as ‘Terry Gould’) ; Sinderella (1972, co-producer, writer) ; Au Pair Girls (1972, story) ; Snow White and the Seven Perverts (1973, co-producer, writer) ; Secrets of a Door-to-Door Salesman (1973, producer) ; The Over-Amorous Artist a.k.a. Just One More Time (1974, producer) ; The Great McGonagall (1974, producer) ; Pink Orgasm (1975, uncompleted, footage later edited into ‘Who Bears Sins’ (1987)) ; Girls Come First (1975, co-producer) ; Dear Marjorie Boobs (1976, producer) ; The Office Party (1976, director,producer, writer) ; Escape to Entebbe (1976 co-director,producer) ; Under the Bed (1977, director, co-producer) ; Submission (1977, director) ; Over Exposed (1977, footage later edited into ‘Who Bears Sins’ (1987)) ; The Kiss (1977, co-producer) ; End of Term (1978, producer) ; Marcia (1977, script/co-director) ; You’re Driving Me Crazy (1978, director, co-writer) ; Love is Beautiful (1978, unfilmed) ; The London Programme (1979, TV, Interviewee) ; Electric Blue 001 (1980, video, includes Grant's Snow White and the Seven Perverts, no other Grant involvement) ; Who Bears Sins (1987, director, video compilation) ", "Alexander Kiss\n Alexander Nikolaevich Kiss (Александр Николаевич Кисс; October 2, 1921 - November 18, 1990) was a Soviet circus artist, juggler, director, People's Artist of the RSFSR.", "The Kiss (1914 film)\n The Kiss is a 1914 Vitagraph silent drama short motion picture starring Margaret Gibson, George Holt, William Desmond Taylor, and Myrtle Gonzalez. Directed by Ulysses Davis, the screenplay was based on a story by Marc Edmund Jones. Long thought to have been a lost film, a copy was found and put on YouTube. The film is the only known surviving film in which director William Desmond Taylor appears as an actor. In 1964 Taylor's co-star Margaret Gibson, shortly before her death, reportedly confessed to having murdered him in 1922.", "The Kiss (1988 film)\n The film received mixed reviews from critics, and holds a 41% rating on internet review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. Janet Maslin of The New York Times called the film \"rich in disgusting special effects and poor in every other regard,\" and remarked its unimpressive performances. Time Out called the film a \"daft and derivative possession pic,\" noting Mimi Kuzyk as providing \"the only shred of credible humanity.\" LA Weekly described the film as a \"still, regurgitated mess of genre stew.\" Variety criticized the film for lacking development in its supernatural plot, adding, \"if the setups were hokier, they might have been funny.\" Roger Hurlburt of the Sun-Sentinel noted: \"The Kiss has ", "Black Kiss\n The series is set in Los Angeles in the 1980s and opens with Dagmar Laine, a transsexual prostitute and lover to former 1950s film star Beverly Grove, searching for a reel of film taken from the Vatican's collection of pornography. The reel has been sent to Father Frank Murtaugh by his brother who is a Cardinal in the Vatican. Laine tries to grab the reel from Father Murtaugh but the reel is stolen by a nun. Laine and Grove then get Cass Pollack, a jazz musician and ex-heroin addict who is on the run from the Mafia, to steal the reel in return for them providing Pollack with an alibi. Pollack ", "Killer's Kiss\n When released, the staff at Variety magazine gave the film a mixed review, and wrote, \"Ex-Look photographer Stanley Kubrick turned out Killer's Kiss on the proverbial shoestring. Kiss was more than a warm-up for Kubrick's talents, for not only did he co-produce but he directed, photographed and edited the venture from his own screenplay [originally written by Howard Sackler] and original story...Kubrick's low-key lensing occasionally catches the flavor of the seamy side of Gotham life. His scenes of tawdry Broadway, gloomy tenements and grotesque brick-and-stone structures that make up Manhattan's downtown eastside loft district help offset the script's deficiencies.\" More recently, New York Times film critic Janet Maslin reviewed the film, and wrote, \"Killer's Kiss brought " ]
Who was the director of Indizienbeweis?
[ "Georg Jacoby" ]
director
Circumstantial Evidence (1929 film)
4,558,283
71
[ { "id": "2607482", "title": "Elfi von Dassanowsky", "text": " camera as a vocal coach for director/producer Otto Preminger. In 1962, she became a naturalized citizen of the United States. A successful Los Angeles businesswoman, in 1999, she re-established Belvedere Film as a Los Angeles/Vienna-based production company with her son, Robert. She was executive producer of the award-winning dramatic short film, Semmelweis (2001), the spy-comedy, Wilson Chance (2005), and several works in progress at the time of her death, including the documentary Felix Austria! aka The Archduke and Herbert Hinkel (2013), and a screen adaptation (with her son) of the antiwar Austrian novel, Mars im Widder by Alexander Lernet-Holenia. Recognized internationally for her unique work as ", "score": "1.4409988" }, { "id": "31239712", "title": "Munich Kammerspiele", "text": " One famous producing-director (Intendant) of the Münchner Kammerspiele was Falckenberg (1917–1944). Known as an expert in Expressionism in Germany during the Weimar Republic, he was credited with producing or directing many celebrated productions at the company, including Brecht’s first staged play, Drums in the Night, in 1922, as well as works by Wedekind, August Strindberg, and William Shakespeare. Since the end of World War II in 1945, artistic leadership has been in the hands of Erich Engel (1945–1947), Hans Schweikart (1947–1963), August Everding (1963–1973), Hans-Reinhard Müller (1973–1983), Dieter Dorn (1983–2001), and Frank Baumbauer (2001–2009). In 2010, Johan Simons was appointed artistic director.", "score": "1.440088" }, { "id": "4998663", "title": "Michaela Klarwein", "text": " as an assistant director on tours in Argentina, Brazil and Chile. After her stay in South America she was engaged in Nuremberg and then went to the Theater Oberhausen in 1968. This was followed by firm and individual contracts in Hamburg, Hanover, Munich, Bern, Stuttgart, Krefeld, Bregenz, Bonn, Nuremberg, Cologne and Düsseldorf. She was part of several tour productions and took part in the summer games in Wunsiedel and Feuchtwangen. On television she had guest appearances in Lindenstraße, Der Fahnder, Die Anrheiner, 7 Tage Glück and in the feature film Engel & Joe. She also synchronizes and speaks radio commercials.", "score": "1.4272994" }, { "id": "28244954", "title": "Deutscher Entwicklungsdienst", "text": " Dr. Jürgen Wilhelm was the last Director General. They worked primarily in the following areas: Promotion of Economic and employment promotion, Promotion of democracy, Rural development and conservation of resources, Water, Civil conflict management and promotion of peace, and Health.", "score": "1.4245838" }, { "id": "29482852", "title": "Wien-Film", "text": "Friedrich Merten, Chief Executive of Film-Finanz, Berlin ; Dr. Josef Joham, board member of the Creditanstalt, Vienna ; Willi Forst, film director, Vienna ; Carl Froelich, film director and president of the Reichsfilmkammer, Berlin ; Dr. Karl Ott, Ministerialdirektor, Berlin ; Hermann Burmeister, Ministerialrat, Berlin ; Heinrich Post, bank director, Berlin The first directors of Wien-Film were general director Fritz Hirt, Paul Hach and the Viennese film director Karl Hartl, who also remained chief of production right to the end. The making of cultural films was under the direction of Dr. Josef Lebzelter of the former Selenophon-Film company. Overall control of film productions – from the initial idea to the screening - was the responsibility of the Reichsfilmdramaturg and later the Reichsfilmintendant. The first board meeting took place on 16 December 1938, at which the advisers were also appointed. These were: The stars of Wien-Film until ", "score": "1.4242743" }, { "id": "15559138", "title": "Bülent Akinci", "text": " Bülent Akıncı (born 10 March 1967) is a Turkish–German director and script writer. Since 1970 he lives in Berlin. In his youth he earned his money as musician, security guard and by selling insurances while he was finishing his graduation certificate from high-school. After high-school he registered to study philosophy, art history, theatre sciences at Free University of Berlin. Then he was taken to study directing at Kaskeline Film School, which was founded 1926 in Berlin by German filmmaker Wolfgang Kaskeline. In 1996 Akıncı changed to DFFB Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin to finish his studies. After shooting some short films, he finally won the F. W. Murnau prize in 2002 for his short film A short story (2001), starring actress Gudrun Landgrebe. His first feature named Der Lebensversicherer was produced in 2006 and shown at the 56th Berlin International Film Festival. It later won a prize at the 28th Moscow International Film Festival.", "score": "1.4131193" }, { "id": "6718720", "title": "Auschwitz Erkennungsdienst", "text": " Established by Rudolf Höss in December 1940 or January 1941, the Erkennungsdienst was based on the ground floor of block 26 in Auschwitz I, where there was a studio and darkroom. Bernhard Walter was director of the Erkennungsdienst. He was born on 27 April 1911 in Fürth, Bavaria, and joined the SS when he was 22, on 2 May 1933 (serial number 104168). He was assigned to the 2nd Brandenburg Totenkopf regiment at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, where he worked with Höss and ran the camp's Erkennungsdienst. Transferred to Auschwitz in 1941, he ran the Auschwitz Erkennungsdienst from 1 January 1941 until 18 January 1945. After Auschwitz, he was transferred to the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp. Ernst Hofmann became deputy director of the Erkennungsdienst on 16 May 1941. Other staff members included SS-Unterscharführer Alfred Schmidt and SS-Rottenführer Wenzel Leneis.", "score": "1.4070623" }, { "id": "4137391", "title": "Wolfgang Becker (director, born 1954)", "text": " Becker studied Germanistics, History and American Studies at the Free University in Berlin. He followed this with a job at a sound studio in 1980 and then began studies at the German Film and Television Academy (dffb). He started working as a freelance cameraman in 1983 and graduated from the dffb in 1986 with Schmetterlinge (Butterflies), which won the Student Academy Award in 1988, the Golden Leopard at the Locarno International Film Festival, and the Saarland Prime-Minister's Award at the 1988 Filmfestival Max Ophüls Preis Saarbrücken. He directed an episode of the television drama Tatort, titled \"Blutwurstwalzer\", before making his second feature Kinderspiele (Child's Play, 1992) and the documentary Celibidache (1992). In 1994, he co-founded the production company \"X Filme Creative Pool\" with Tom Tykwer, Stefan Arndt, and Dani Levy. From there he worked with Tykwer on the Berlinale competition feature Das Leben ist eine Baustelle (Life is All You Get, 1997). He was a member of the jury at the Venice Film Festival in 2004.", "score": "1.40006" }, { "id": "29054380", "title": "Dasein ohne Leben", "text": " The director was Hermann Schwenninger, one of the three managing directors of Gemeinnützige Krankentransport (\"Charitable Ambulance\"), a front company of Aktion T4, the central institution for the mass murder of patients in the Third Reich. Schwenninger also wrote parts of the screenplay of Ich klage an. The contract for the film came from Hitler's Chancellery, and was produced by Tobis Film. For the filmmaking, Schwenninger shot the complete course of the NS euthanasia program, including the transport of the frightened patients to the killing institutions, and through an observation window the murder in a gas chamber of the center Pirna-Sonnenstein. During the one and a half year of production, the film team visited 20 to 30 institutions throughout Nazi Germany.", "score": "1.3998055" }, { "id": "32373851", "title": "Ercan Özçelik", "text": "1990: Pfarrerin Lenau (SDR) ; 1993: Motzki (ARD), director: Thomas Nennstiel ; 1995: 1/2 Minuten (Studio Hamburg, ZDF), director: Rolf Schübel ; 1997: Reise in die Nacht (Eikon Media, ZDF), director: Matti Geschonneck ; 1998-1996: OP ruft Dr. Bruckner (Phoenix Film, RTL), director: Bielawa, Weber, Siebenmann, Bohn, u.a. ; 1999: Off Road (Berengar Pfahl Film, ARD), director: Michael Zenz ; 1999: Die Straßen von Berlin (Nova Film, ProSieben), director: Werner Masten ; 2000: Ein Vater im Alleingang (Calypso Film, Sat.1), director: Diethard Küster ; 2000-1999: Drehkreuz Airport (Nova Film, ZDF), director: Werner Masten ; 2001: Das Teufelsweib (Moovie Entertainment, Sat.1), director: ", "score": "1.3988347" }, { "id": "7212896", "title": "Egon Seefehlner", "text": " International. He also served as assistant director of the Wiener Staatsoper from 1954 to 1961. In addition, he was the cultural advisor of the federal party management of the Austrian People's Party from 1945 to 1963 and general secretary of the Austrian Cultural Association, which he co-founded. In 1961 he moved back to Berlin to become assistant director of the Deutsche Oper. From 1972 to 1976 he served as general director. From 1976 to 1982 and 1984 to 1986 he was director of the Vienna State Opera. He was buried in an honorary grave at Neustift cemetery (group N, row 1, number 44).", "score": "1.3941226" }, { "id": "11610", "title": "Schottengymnasium", "text": "Franz Wild (1791–1860), opera singer ; Johann Nestroy (1801–1862), actor, playwright ; Eduard von Bauernfeld (1802–1890), poet ; Nikolaus Lenau (1802–1850), poet ; Moritz von Schwind (1804–1871), painter ; Friedrich Halm (1806–1871), poet, playwright ; Anastasius Grün (1806–1876), poet ; Gustav von Franck (1807–1860), writer ; Alexander von Bensa (1820–1902), artist ; Ferdinand Kürnberger (1821–1879), writer ; Johann Strauss II (1825–1899), composer ; Josef Strauss (1827–1870), composer ; Robert Hamerling (1830–1889), poet ; Karl Julius Ebersberg (1831–1876), writer ; Franz von Jauner (1831–1900), actor, theatre director ; Otto Bach (1833–1893), church musician, director of the Mozarteum ; Ferdinand von Saar (1833–1906), writer ; Josef von Doblhoff-Dier (1844–1928), writer, diplomat ; Alfred von Berger (1853–1912), dramaturge, director of the Burgtheater (Imperial Court Theatre) ; Max von Ferstel (1859–1936), architect ; Max Kurzweil (1867–1916), artist ; Maximilian Liebenwein (1869–1926), artist ; Leopold Andrian (1875–1951), writer, diplomat ; Alfred Neugebauer (1888–1957), ", "score": "1.393599" }, { "id": "12652255", "title": "Jahrhundertring", "text": " Festival director Wolfgang Wagner selected the composer Pierre Boulez as the conductor for the centenary celebration of Wagner's most complex work, which had been first performed at the first Bayreuth festival. The conductor's first choice for a stage director was Ingmar Bergman. When he refused, Boulez recommended as stage director Patrice Chéreau. Chéreau brought in the team of stage designer Richard Peduzzi, costume designer Jacques Schmidt and lighting designer André Diot, with whom he had collaborated already in his first theatre, the Public-Theatre in the Parisian suburb of Sartrouville, from 1966. The French team revolutionised the understanding of Wagner in Germany, as music critic Eleonore Büning wrote in the Frankfurter Allgemeine ", "score": "1.3930708" }, { "id": "9388728", "title": "Paul Wiens", "text": " onwards, he was a freelance writer and wrote mainly poetry and texts for mass songs. Wiens also wrote screenplays, for example for Frank Vogel's film ... und deine Liebe auch (1962), which justifies the Berlin Wall, and for Konrad Wolf's Sonnensucher (1958). The film deals with the production battles in the uranium mining of Soviet-German Joint Stock Company Wismut and, because of its thematic connection to the production of nuclear weapons, was not premiered until 1972 due to a veto by the Soviet Union at the time. Furthermore, he translated works by Pablo Neruda, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Nazim Hikmet and others into German. Wiens was co-editor of the poetry series \"Antwortet uns\" (Answer us) and editor-in-chief of the influential literary ", "score": "1.3892851" }, { "id": "11116217", "title": "Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein", "text": " Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein (born 1939 in Königs Wusterhausen, Germany) is a German cinematographer. He has collaborated with director Werner Herzog on a number of projects. Among his many collaborations with other directors, Schmidt-Reitwein is known for shooting Alan Greenberg's acclaimed 1982 documentary about Jamaica and death of Bob Marley, Land of Look Behind.", "score": "1.3876183" }, { "id": "31037991", "title": "Kurt Joachim Fischer", "text": " Liebe 47, Wer fuhr den grauen Ford?, and Bernhard Wicki's debut film Warum sind sie gegen uns?. In 1952, he became the founding director of the Mannheim Cultural and Documentary Film Week, which later became the International Filmfestival Mannheim-Heidelberg and served in that capacity until 1960. During his time there he was instrumental in getting the East German film company DEFA to participate in the festival. Later in his career he made television documentaries on the theatre directors Fritz Kortner and Erwin Piscator and served as a consultant on film funding to the German Interior Ministry. Fischer died in Stuttgart at the age of 67.", "score": "1.3875663" }, { "id": "2629024", "title": "Continental Films", "text": " The director of Continental Film was the German producer Alfred Greven, who was born in 1897 in Elberfeld and died in 1973 in Cologne. After leaving the Gymnasium he volunteered in September 1914 for the German Army. He fought at the Western Front in the infantry and was severely wounded. In 1917, he fought in the Luftstreitkräfte and was awarded the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd class. After the war he started to work in the movie business in 1920, joining the Nazi Party in 1931. In 1934, he was head of the committee for film production in the Reichsfilmkammer. Some of the films he produced were The Old and the Young King, The Green Domino and The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes. In 1940, Goebbels appointed him managing director of the newly established Continental Film, his direct superior being Max Winkler. Films Greven produced after the war include Bonjour Kathrin.", "score": "1.3863168" }, { "id": "2225593", "title": "Hans Hartleb (director)", "text": " Born in Kassel, Hartleb first engaged in theatre studies at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and received his doctorate there in 1936. In 1935 he became head director at the Volksoper in Berlin. From 1947 to 1956 he worked in a similar position at the Grillo-Theater in Essen, from 1956 to 1961 at the Oper Frankfurt and from 1961 to 1967 at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich. He then worked as a freelance director. Hartleb's special domain was modern opera as well as the Italian repertoire. He was the director of the national premieres of Berg's Lulu in Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden. In 1967, he directed the world premiere of Eli by Walter Steffens at the Opernhaus Dortmund. He translated several operas from Italian, French, English and Czech into German.", "score": "1.3860312" }, { "id": "11882280", "title": "Oskar Karlweis", "text": " as a recording artist and acted in more than a dozen German light comedy and musical films, most famously as one of Lilian Harvey's suitors in the hugely successful operetta film The Three from the Filling Station. With Hitler's rise to power in 1933, Karlweis, who was Jewish, returned to the Austrian stage; but with the Nazi Anschluss in 1938 he was again forced to flee, first to Switzerland and then Paris where, at both locations, he took to the stage with fellow Austrian law school dropout, writer/director, and cabaret performer Karl Farkas. When German forces took Paris in 1940, Karlweis, along with ", "score": "1.384624" }, { "id": "13643854", "title": "Hans Schweikart", "text": " Hans Schweikart (1 October 1895 – 1 December 1975) was a German film director, actor and screenwriter. He directed 28 films between 1938 and 1968. He wrote for the film The Marriage of Mr. Mississippi, which was entered into the 11th Berlin International Film Festival.", "score": "1.3824155" } ]
[ "Elfi von Dassanowsky\n camera as a vocal coach for director/producer Otto Preminger. In 1962, she became a naturalized citizen of the United States. A successful Los Angeles businesswoman, in 1999, she re-established Belvedere Film as a Los Angeles/Vienna-based production company with her son, Robert. She was executive producer of the award-winning dramatic short film, Semmelweis (2001), the spy-comedy, Wilson Chance (2005), and several works in progress at the time of her death, including the documentary Felix Austria! aka The Archduke and Herbert Hinkel (2013), and a screen adaptation (with her son) of the antiwar Austrian novel, Mars im Widder by Alexander Lernet-Holenia. Recognized internationally for her unique work as ", "Munich Kammerspiele\n One famous producing-director (Intendant) of the Münchner Kammerspiele was Falckenberg (1917–1944). Known as an expert in Expressionism in Germany during the Weimar Republic, he was credited with producing or directing many celebrated productions at the company, including Brecht’s first staged play, Drums in the Night, in 1922, as well as works by Wedekind, August Strindberg, and William Shakespeare. Since the end of World War II in 1945, artistic leadership has been in the hands of Erich Engel (1945–1947), Hans Schweikart (1947–1963), August Everding (1963–1973), Hans-Reinhard Müller (1973–1983), Dieter Dorn (1983–2001), and Frank Baumbauer (2001–2009). In 2010, Johan Simons was appointed artistic director.", "Michaela Klarwein\n as an assistant director on tours in Argentina, Brazil and Chile. After her stay in South America she was engaged in Nuremberg and then went to the Theater Oberhausen in 1968. This was followed by firm and individual contracts in Hamburg, Hanover, Munich, Bern, Stuttgart, Krefeld, Bregenz, Bonn, Nuremberg, Cologne and Düsseldorf. She was part of several tour productions and took part in the summer games in Wunsiedel and Feuchtwangen. On television she had guest appearances in Lindenstraße, Der Fahnder, Die Anrheiner, 7 Tage Glück and in the feature film Engel & Joe. She also synchronizes and speaks radio commercials.", "Deutscher Entwicklungsdienst\n Dr. Jürgen Wilhelm was the last Director General. They worked primarily in the following areas: Promotion of Economic and employment promotion, Promotion of democracy, Rural development and conservation of resources, Water, Civil conflict management and promotion of peace, and Health.", "Wien-Film\nFriedrich Merten, Chief Executive of Film-Finanz, Berlin ; Dr. Josef Joham, board member of the Creditanstalt, Vienna ; Willi Forst, film director, Vienna ; Carl Froelich, film director and president of the Reichsfilmkammer, Berlin ; Dr. Karl Ott, Ministerialdirektor, Berlin ; Hermann Burmeister, Ministerialrat, Berlin ; Heinrich Post, bank director, Berlin The first directors of Wien-Film were general director Fritz Hirt, Paul Hach and the Viennese film director Karl Hartl, who also remained chief of production right to the end. The making of cultural films was under the direction of Dr. Josef Lebzelter of the former Selenophon-Film company. Overall control of film productions – from the initial idea to the screening - was the responsibility of the Reichsfilmdramaturg and later the Reichsfilmintendant. The first board meeting took place on 16 December 1938, at which the advisers were also appointed. These were: The stars of Wien-Film until ", "Bülent Akinci\n Bülent Akıncı (born 10 March 1967) is a Turkish–German director and script writer. Since 1970 he lives in Berlin. In his youth he earned his money as musician, security guard and by selling insurances while he was finishing his graduation certificate from high-school. After high-school he registered to study philosophy, art history, theatre sciences at Free University of Berlin. Then he was taken to study directing at Kaskeline Film School, which was founded 1926 in Berlin by German filmmaker Wolfgang Kaskeline. In 1996 Akıncı changed to DFFB Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin to finish his studies. After shooting some short films, he finally won the F. W. Murnau prize in 2002 for his short film A short story (2001), starring actress Gudrun Landgrebe. His first feature named Der Lebensversicherer was produced in 2006 and shown at the 56th Berlin International Film Festival. It later won a prize at the 28th Moscow International Film Festival.", "Auschwitz Erkennungsdienst\n Established by Rudolf Höss in December 1940 or January 1941, the Erkennungsdienst was based on the ground floor of block 26 in Auschwitz I, where there was a studio and darkroom. Bernhard Walter was director of the Erkennungsdienst. He was born on 27 April 1911 in Fürth, Bavaria, and joined the SS when he was 22, on 2 May 1933 (serial number 104168). He was assigned to the 2nd Brandenburg Totenkopf regiment at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, where he worked with Höss and ran the camp's Erkennungsdienst. Transferred to Auschwitz in 1941, he ran the Auschwitz Erkennungsdienst from 1 January 1941 until 18 January 1945. After Auschwitz, he was transferred to the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp. Ernst Hofmann became deputy director of the Erkennungsdienst on 16 May 1941. Other staff members included SS-Unterscharführer Alfred Schmidt and SS-Rottenführer Wenzel Leneis.", "Wolfgang Becker (director, born 1954)\n Becker studied Germanistics, History and American Studies at the Free University in Berlin. He followed this with a job at a sound studio in 1980 and then began studies at the German Film and Television Academy (dffb). He started working as a freelance cameraman in 1983 and graduated from the dffb in 1986 with Schmetterlinge (Butterflies), which won the Student Academy Award in 1988, the Golden Leopard at the Locarno International Film Festival, and the Saarland Prime-Minister's Award at the 1988 Filmfestival Max Ophüls Preis Saarbrücken. He directed an episode of the television drama Tatort, titled \"Blutwurstwalzer\", before making his second feature Kinderspiele (Child's Play, 1992) and the documentary Celibidache (1992). In 1994, he co-founded the production company \"X Filme Creative Pool\" with Tom Tykwer, Stefan Arndt, and Dani Levy. From there he worked with Tykwer on the Berlinale competition feature Das Leben ist eine Baustelle (Life is All You Get, 1997). He was a member of the jury at the Venice Film Festival in 2004.", "Dasein ohne Leben\n The director was Hermann Schwenninger, one of the three managing directors of Gemeinnützige Krankentransport (\"Charitable Ambulance\"), a front company of Aktion T4, the central institution for the mass murder of patients in the Third Reich. Schwenninger also wrote parts of the screenplay of Ich klage an. The contract for the film came from Hitler's Chancellery, and was produced by Tobis Film. For the filmmaking, Schwenninger shot the complete course of the NS euthanasia program, including the transport of the frightened patients to the killing institutions, and through an observation window the murder in a gas chamber of the center Pirna-Sonnenstein. During the one and a half year of production, the film team visited 20 to 30 institutions throughout Nazi Germany.", "Ercan Özçelik\n1990: Pfarrerin Lenau (SDR) ; 1993: Motzki (ARD), director: Thomas Nennstiel ; 1995: 1/2 Minuten (Studio Hamburg, ZDF), director: Rolf Schübel ; 1997: Reise in die Nacht (Eikon Media, ZDF), director: Matti Geschonneck ; 1998-1996: OP ruft Dr. Bruckner (Phoenix Film, RTL), director: Bielawa, Weber, Siebenmann, Bohn, u.a. ; 1999: Off Road (Berengar Pfahl Film, ARD), director: Michael Zenz ; 1999: Die Straßen von Berlin (Nova Film, ProSieben), director: Werner Masten ; 2000: Ein Vater im Alleingang (Calypso Film, Sat.1), director: Diethard Küster ; 2000-1999: Drehkreuz Airport (Nova Film, ZDF), director: Werner Masten ; 2001: Das Teufelsweib (Moovie Entertainment, Sat.1), director: ", "Egon Seefehlner\n International. He also served as assistant director of the Wiener Staatsoper from 1954 to 1961. In addition, he was the cultural advisor of the federal party management of the Austrian People's Party from 1945 to 1963 and general secretary of the Austrian Cultural Association, which he co-founded. In 1961 he moved back to Berlin to become assistant director of the Deutsche Oper. From 1972 to 1976 he served as general director. From 1976 to 1982 and 1984 to 1986 he was director of the Vienna State Opera. He was buried in an honorary grave at Neustift cemetery (group N, row 1, number 44).", "Schottengymnasium\nFranz Wild (1791–1860), opera singer ; Johann Nestroy (1801–1862), actor, playwright ; Eduard von Bauernfeld (1802–1890), poet ; Nikolaus Lenau (1802–1850), poet ; Moritz von Schwind (1804–1871), painter ; Friedrich Halm (1806–1871), poet, playwright ; Anastasius Grün (1806–1876), poet ; Gustav von Franck (1807–1860), writer ; Alexander von Bensa (1820–1902), artist ; Ferdinand Kürnberger (1821–1879), writer ; Johann Strauss II (1825–1899), composer ; Josef Strauss (1827–1870), composer ; Robert Hamerling (1830–1889), poet ; Karl Julius Ebersberg (1831–1876), writer ; Franz von Jauner (1831–1900), actor, theatre director ; Otto Bach (1833–1893), church musician, director of the Mozarteum ; Ferdinand von Saar (1833–1906), writer ; Josef von Doblhoff-Dier (1844–1928), writer, diplomat ; Alfred von Berger (1853–1912), dramaturge, director of the Burgtheater (Imperial Court Theatre) ; Max von Ferstel (1859–1936), architect ; Max Kurzweil (1867–1916), artist ; Maximilian Liebenwein (1869–1926), artist ; Leopold Andrian (1875–1951), writer, diplomat ; Alfred Neugebauer (1888–1957), ", "Jahrhundertring\n Festival director Wolfgang Wagner selected the composer Pierre Boulez as the conductor for the centenary celebration of Wagner's most complex work, which had been first performed at the first Bayreuth festival. The conductor's first choice for a stage director was Ingmar Bergman. When he refused, Boulez recommended as stage director Patrice Chéreau. Chéreau brought in the team of stage designer Richard Peduzzi, costume designer Jacques Schmidt and lighting designer André Diot, with whom he had collaborated already in his first theatre, the Public-Theatre in the Parisian suburb of Sartrouville, from 1966. The French team revolutionised the understanding of Wagner in Germany, as music critic Eleonore Büning wrote in the Frankfurter Allgemeine ", "Paul Wiens\n onwards, he was a freelance writer and wrote mainly poetry and texts for mass songs. Wiens also wrote screenplays, for example for Frank Vogel's film ... und deine Liebe auch (1962), which justifies the Berlin Wall, and for Konrad Wolf's Sonnensucher (1958). The film deals with the production battles in the uranium mining of Soviet-German Joint Stock Company Wismut and, because of its thematic connection to the production of nuclear weapons, was not premiered until 1972 due to a veto by the Soviet Union at the time. Furthermore, he translated works by Pablo Neruda, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Nazim Hikmet and others into German. Wiens was co-editor of the poetry series \"Antwortet uns\" (Answer us) and editor-in-chief of the influential literary ", "Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein\n Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein (born 1939 in Königs Wusterhausen, Germany) is a German cinematographer. He has collaborated with director Werner Herzog on a number of projects. Among his many collaborations with other directors, Schmidt-Reitwein is known for shooting Alan Greenberg's acclaimed 1982 documentary about Jamaica and death of Bob Marley, Land of Look Behind.", "Kurt Joachim Fischer\n Liebe 47, Wer fuhr den grauen Ford?, and Bernhard Wicki's debut film Warum sind sie gegen uns?. In 1952, he became the founding director of the Mannheim Cultural and Documentary Film Week, which later became the International Filmfestival Mannheim-Heidelberg and served in that capacity until 1960. During his time there he was instrumental in getting the East German film company DEFA to participate in the festival. Later in his career he made television documentaries on the theatre directors Fritz Kortner and Erwin Piscator and served as a consultant on film funding to the German Interior Ministry. Fischer died in Stuttgart at the age of 67.", "Continental Films\n The director of Continental Film was the German producer Alfred Greven, who was born in 1897 in Elberfeld and died in 1973 in Cologne. After leaving the Gymnasium he volunteered in September 1914 for the German Army. He fought at the Western Front in the infantry and was severely wounded. In 1917, he fought in the Luftstreitkräfte and was awarded the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd class. After the war he started to work in the movie business in 1920, joining the Nazi Party in 1931. In 1934, he was head of the committee for film production in the Reichsfilmkammer. Some of the films he produced were The Old and the Young King, The Green Domino and The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes. In 1940, Goebbels appointed him managing director of the newly established Continental Film, his direct superior being Max Winkler. Films Greven produced after the war include Bonjour Kathrin.", "Hans Hartleb (director)\n Born in Kassel, Hartleb first engaged in theatre studies at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and received his doctorate there in 1936. In 1935 he became head director at the Volksoper in Berlin. From 1947 to 1956 he worked in a similar position at the Grillo-Theater in Essen, from 1956 to 1961 at the Oper Frankfurt and from 1961 to 1967 at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich. He then worked as a freelance director. Hartleb's special domain was modern opera as well as the Italian repertoire. He was the director of the national premieres of Berg's Lulu in Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden. In 1967, he directed the world premiere of Eli by Walter Steffens at the Opernhaus Dortmund. He translated several operas from Italian, French, English and Czech into German.", "Oskar Karlweis\n as a recording artist and acted in more than a dozen German light comedy and musical films, most famously as one of Lilian Harvey's suitors in the hugely successful operetta film The Three from the Filling Station. With Hitler's rise to power in 1933, Karlweis, who was Jewish, returned to the Austrian stage; but with the Nazi Anschluss in 1938 he was again forced to flee, first to Switzerland and then Paris where, at both locations, he took to the stage with fellow Austrian law school dropout, writer/director, and cabaret performer Karl Farkas. When German forces took Paris in 1940, Karlweis, along with ", "Hans Schweikart\n Hans Schweikart (1 October 1895 – 1 December 1975) was a German film director, actor and screenwriter. He directed 28 films between 1938 and 1968. He wrote for the film The Marriage of Mr. Mississippi, which was entered into the 11th Berlin International Film Festival." ]
Who was the director of Accident?
[ "Sergiu Nicolaescu", "Sergiu Nicolaiescu", "Sergiu Florin Nicolaescu" ]
director
Accident (1976 film)
3,216,989
98
[ { "id": "12127083", "title": "Happy Accidents (film)", "text": " Happy Accidents is a 2000 American science fiction romantic comedy film starring Marisa Tomei and Vincent D'Onofrio. The film follows Ruby Weaver, a New York City woman with a string of failed relationships, and Sam Deed, a man who claims to be from the year 2470. The film was shot almost entirely in Brooklyn, New York.", "score": "1.4826012" }, { "id": "12450056", "title": "Accident (1967 film)", "text": " Accident is Harold Pinter's 1967 British dramatic film adaptation of the 1965 novel by Nicholas Mosley. It is the third of four collaborations between Pinter and director Joseph Losey; the others are The Servant (1963), Modesty Blaise (1966) and The Go-Between (1971) At the 1967 Cannes Film Festival, Accident won the Grand Prix Spécial du Jury award. It also won the prestigious Grand Prix of the Belgian Film Critics Association.", "score": "1.4518844" }, { "id": "8749660", "title": "Christine Oestreicher", "text": " Christine Oestreicher (born 29 October 1940) is a British film producer and director who was awarded an Oscar in 1983 for the film A Shocking Accident, a 1982 short film based on a story by Graham Greene.", "score": "1.4161364" }, { "id": "6178950", "title": "The Accident (film)", "text": "Georges Rivière as Julien ; Magali Noël as Andréa ; Danik Patisson as Françoise Cassel ; Roland Lesaffre as The Goualec ; Jean Combal as police inspector ", "score": "1.4139168" }, { "id": "1245092", "title": "Der Todestunnel", "text": " The film opens up as a young prosecutor is handed her toughest assignment: a truck driver charged with reckless driving. She has to prove that he was negligent and kept falling asleep at the wheel. After crashing his semi into a sports car, his rig turns over, gas starts leaking out and a fire ensues, shutting down the lights in the long tunnel. Unfortunately, due to the long size of the tunnel, or tube as it is known, it was impossible for rescue personnel to get in the tunnel to give adequate medical attention to the people seriously injured. There are several flashbacks, where survivors recall the accident, including a grieving father named Giuseppe Paoletti, portrayed by Flavio Insinna, an Italian family man who is driving his wife and son to Austria, who emotionally describes his account of what happened after the accident. There are several twists and turns throughout the story.", "score": "1.4128801" }, { "id": "12074001", "title": "Los Alfaques disaster", "text": " The accident is featured in the 2007 German film Day of Disaster, directed by Peter Keglevic. However, the film is loosely based on real facts, and contains blunders and factual errors, such as cars or registration plates which could only have appeared years later, or the driver spending the night before at home with the already (over)loaded tanker parked in front of his house.", "score": "1.4031893" }, { "id": "6178949", "title": "The Accident (film)", "text": " The Accident (French: L'accident) is a 1963 French crime drama film directed by Edmond T. Gréville and starring Georges Rivière, Magali Noël and Danik Patisson. The film's sets were designed by the art director Sydney Bettex.", "score": "1.4012308" }, { "id": "26778373", "title": "Accident (2012 film)", "text": " Accident is a 2012 Bengali film directed by Nandita Roy & Shiboprosad Mukherjee. The story of the film deals with road accident and its consequences in Kolkata. The director duo got motivated by Keshtopur road incident in April 2008 where at least 20 people were killed and nearly 40 were injured.", "score": "1.4011159" }, { "id": "10080859", "title": "List of film and television accidents", "text": " down in his car on the way home. ; Back to the Future Part II (1989). During a \"hoverboard\" stunt scene, stuntwoman Cheryl Wheeler-Dixon was accidentally bounced off a pillar before falling thirty feet onto concrete, sustaining serious facial and wrist injuries. ; Cyborg (1989). While filming, Jackson \"Rock\" Pinckney lost an eye during filming when Jean-Claude Van Damme accidentally struck him in the eye with a prop knife. Pinckney sued Van Damme in a North Carolina court and was awarded $487,500. ; Gone in 60 Seconds 2 (1989, unfinished). Director/actor H. B. Halicki was killed in Buffalo, New York, when a ", "score": "1.3962971" }, { "id": "33159348", "title": "Twilight Zone accident", "text": " and acquitted on charges of manslaughter in a nine-month trial in 1986 and 1987. Morrow's family settled within a year; the children's families collected millions of dollars from several civil lawsuits. As a result of the accident, second assistant director Andy House had his name removed from the credits of Twilight Zone: The Movie and replaced with the pseudonym \"Alan Smithee.\" It was the first time that a director was charged due to a fatality on a set. The trial was described as \"long, controversial and bitterly divisive\". Screen Actors Guild (SAG) spokesman Mark Locher said at the conclusion of the trial: \"The entire ordeal has shaken ", "score": "1.3913707" }, { "id": "1805666", "title": "The Accident Group", "text": " The Accident Group was a Manchester-based personal injury claims management company that went into administration in May 2003. The firm gained notoriety for firing 2,400 workers by text message, which, according to BBC reports, led to the firm's offices being emptied of computer equipment by disgruntled staff. The business was placed in to administration the day before staff were due their monthly salaries.", "score": "1.39011" }, { "id": "15313971", "title": "Alaska Public Safety Commissioner dismissal", "text": " Daily News he had met once with Wooten's supervisor, Colonel Audie Holloway, to give her pictures of Wooten driving a snowmobile when he was out on a worker's compensation claim. Diane Kiesel, Alaska state personnel director, also called Holloway about the snowmobile incident. On November 19, 2007, a meeting was called by Mike Tibbles, at the time Palin's chief of staff, to discuss the process of how Wooten had returned to work after a worker's compensation injury. Present were Kevin Brooks, the deputy commissioner of the Department of Administration, Nicki Neal, director of the Personnel Division, and Diane Kiesel, former director of Personnel ", "score": "1.389997" }, { "id": "2439170", "title": "Benoît Ramampy", "text": "L'accident [The accident], 1972. Short film. ; Dahalo, Dahalo..., 1984. Feature film. ; The Price of Peace / Le Prix de la paix, 1987. Feature film. ", "score": "1.3837588" }, { "id": "6158570", "title": "Accident Man", "text": " In March 2019, Jesse V. Johnson confirmed that Sony approved the development of Accident Man 2 and that Stu Smalls was writing a script. The directors of Accident Man 2 are George Kirby and Harry Kirby. The second part of this film will be directed by George Kirby and Harry Kirby.", "score": "1.3831545" }, { "id": "14133937", "title": "Railway Safety Agency", "text": " The Director is the executive officer of the Agency and responsible for its ordinary management. The director is appointed by the Governing Council. The director of the agency is Pedro M. Lekuona García, since 2017. The first directo of the agency was Carlos Díez Arroyo, who served from 2015 to 2017.", "score": "1.3816038" }, { "id": "10080911", "title": "List of film and television accidents", "text": " that she was rescued. Some footage of this scene was kept in the film. ; Kick-Ass 2 (2013). While filming a fight scene, Chloë Grace Moretz's stunt double suffered a head injury when she was thrown into a wall by Olga Kurkulina. ; Lone Operator (2013, unaired). During filming of this planned Discovery Channel series, cameraman Darren Rydstrom, cast member Michael Donatelli, and pilot David Gibbs were killed in a helicopter crash in Acton, California. Gibbs was not authorized by the FAA to fly during the morning hours, and he had his pilot's license suspended twice prior to the accident. ; The ", "score": "1.3799305" }, { "id": "13925099", "title": "John Howard (NIOSH director)", "text": " Linda Rosenstock resigned in November 2000 as the director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. The position was not filled until July 15, 2002, when Tommy Thompson, Health and Human Services Secretary placed John Howard in the post. The gap between Rosenstock and Howard was the longest between directors in the agency's 31-year history. The appointment was immediately praised by several organizations including the American Industrial Hygiene Association and AFL-CIO.", "score": "1.3780038" }, { "id": "9767990", "title": "John Finklea", "text": " Finklea took over as director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health in April, 1975. He replaced Dr. Marcus M. Key, the Institute’s first director. Following Key's resignation, deputy director Edward Baier had served as acting director and many within the Institute expected Baier to be appointed to the post. Finklea took over NIOSH in the midst of Congressional complaints that NIOSH was too soft on industry, industry claims that NIOSH's research was sloppy, and organized labor accusations that NIOSH was overly slow in sharing important health data. Finklea worked to accelerate health hazard research, especially in the chemical industry. Over Finklea's tenure, NIOSH identified 65 potentially dangerous ", "score": "1.3723457" }, { "id": "16153642", "title": "1967 in film", "text": "Accident, directed by Joseph Losey, starring Dirk Bogarde and Stanley Baker – (U.K.) ; The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin, starring Roddy McDowall, Suzanne Pleshette, and Karl Malden ; The Ambushers, starring Dean Martin (as Matt Helm) ; The Andromeda Nebula – (USSR) ; Anna Karenina – (USSR) ", "score": "1.3714646" }, { "id": "26310188", "title": "Birmingham Accident Hospital", "text": " In 1960, Professor Gissane became honorary director of the Road Injuries Research Group, which investigated and analysed accidents on the newly opened M1 motorway at a time before seat belts were mandatory. Gissane believed risks of accidents occurring were lower on motorways but the consequences were more serious. A further study of \"all deaths from road accidents in certain areas and periods\" suggested lorries were the main cause of car fatalities on Motorways and Link roads and that seatbelts provided little protection available for the car occupants. UK lorries are now fitted with an impact absorbing rear barrier, meeting one of the recommendations. Investigation techniques included interviews with police, hospitals, survivors and coroners to study ways in which vehicle design could be changed to avoid accidents in the first place and to mitigate the injuries caused. Speaking in 2002, the former director of the hospital's research unit, Dr John Bull credited the unit with calling for mandatory seatbelt installation in new vehicles and compulsory wearing of motorbike crash helmets. The AA provided some money for research.", "score": "1.371177" } ]
[ "Happy Accidents (film)\n Happy Accidents is a 2000 American science fiction romantic comedy film starring Marisa Tomei and Vincent D'Onofrio. The film follows Ruby Weaver, a New York City woman with a string of failed relationships, and Sam Deed, a man who claims to be from the year 2470. The film was shot almost entirely in Brooklyn, New York.", "Accident (1967 film)\n Accident is Harold Pinter's 1967 British dramatic film adaptation of the 1965 novel by Nicholas Mosley. It is the third of four collaborations between Pinter and director Joseph Losey; the others are The Servant (1963), Modesty Blaise (1966) and The Go-Between (1971) At the 1967 Cannes Film Festival, Accident won the Grand Prix Spécial du Jury award. It also won the prestigious Grand Prix of the Belgian Film Critics Association.", "Christine Oestreicher\n Christine Oestreicher (born 29 October 1940) is a British film producer and director who was awarded an Oscar in 1983 for the film A Shocking Accident, a 1982 short film based on a story by Graham Greene.", "The Accident (film)\nGeorges Rivière as Julien ; Magali Noël as Andréa ; Danik Patisson as Françoise Cassel ; Roland Lesaffre as The Goualec ; Jean Combal as police inspector ", "Der Todestunnel\n The film opens up as a young prosecutor is handed her toughest assignment: a truck driver charged with reckless driving. She has to prove that he was negligent and kept falling asleep at the wheel. After crashing his semi into a sports car, his rig turns over, gas starts leaking out and a fire ensues, shutting down the lights in the long tunnel. Unfortunately, due to the long size of the tunnel, or tube as it is known, it was impossible for rescue personnel to get in the tunnel to give adequate medical attention to the people seriously injured. There are several flashbacks, where survivors recall the accident, including a grieving father named Giuseppe Paoletti, portrayed by Flavio Insinna, an Italian family man who is driving his wife and son to Austria, who emotionally describes his account of what happened after the accident. There are several twists and turns throughout the story.", "Los Alfaques disaster\n The accident is featured in the 2007 German film Day of Disaster, directed by Peter Keglevic. However, the film is loosely based on real facts, and contains blunders and factual errors, such as cars or registration plates which could only have appeared years later, or the driver spending the night before at home with the already (over)loaded tanker parked in front of his house.", "The Accident (film)\n The Accident (French: L'accident) is a 1963 French crime drama film directed by Edmond T. Gréville and starring Georges Rivière, Magali Noël and Danik Patisson. The film's sets were designed by the art director Sydney Bettex.", "Accident (2012 film)\n Accident is a 2012 Bengali film directed by Nandita Roy & Shiboprosad Mukherjee. The story of the film deals with road accident and its consequences in Kolkata. The director duo got motivated by Keshtopur road incident in April 2008 where at least 20 people were killed and nearly 40 were injured.", "List of film and television accidents\n down in his car on the way home. ; Back to the Future Part II (1989). During a \"hoverboard\" stunt scene, stuntwoman Cheryl Wheeler-Dixon was accidentally bounced off a pillar before falling thirty feet onto concrete, sustaining serious facial and wrist injuries. ; Cyborg (1989). While filming, Jackson \"Rock\" Pinckney lost an eye during filming when Jean-Claude Van Damme accidentally struck him in the eye with a prop knife. Pinckney sued Van Damme in a North Carolina court and was awarded $487,500. ; Gone in 60 Seconds 2 (1989, unfinished). Director/actor H. B. Halicki was killed in Buffalo, New York, when a ", "Twilight Zone accident\n and acquitted on charges of manslaughter in a nine-month trial in 1986 and 1987. Morrow's family settled within a year; the children's families collected millions of dollars from several civil lawsuits. As a result of the accident, second assistant director Andy House had his name removed from the credits of Twilight Zone: The Movie and replaced with the pseudonym \"Alan Smithee.\" It was the first time that a director was charged due to a fatality on a set. The trial was described as \"long, controversial and bitterly divisive\". Screen Actors Guild (SAG) spokesman Mark Locher said at the conclusion of the trial: \"The entire ordeal has shaken ", "The Accident Group\n The Accident Group was a Manchester-based personal injury claims management company that went into administration in May 2003. The firm gained notoriety for firing 2,400 workers by text message, which, according to BBC reports, led to the firm's offices being emptied of computer equipment by disgruntled staff. The business was placed in to administration the day before staff were due their monthly salaries.", "Alaska Public Safety Commissioner dismissal\n Daily News he had met once with Wooten's supervisor, Colonel Audie Holloway, to give her pictures of Wooten driving a snowmobile when he was out on a worker's compensation claim. Diane Kiesel, Alaska state personnel director, also called Holloway about the snowmobile incident. On November 19, 2007, a meeting was called by Mike Tibbles, at the time Palin's chief of staff, to discuss the process of how Wooten had returned to work after a worker's compensation injury. Present were Kevin Brooks, the deputy commissioner of the Department of Administration, Nicki Neal, director of the Personnel Division, and Diane Kiesel, former director of Personnel ", "Benoît Ramampy\nL'accident [The accident], 1972. Short film. ; Dahalo, Dahalo..., 1984. Feature film. ; The Price of Peace / Le Prix de la paix, 1987. Feature film. ", "Accident Man\n In March 2019, Jesse V. Johnson confirmed that Sony approved the development of Accident Man 2 and that Stu Smalls was writing a script. The directors of Accident Man 2 are George Kirby and Harry Kirby. The second part of this film will be directed by George Kirby and Harry Kirby.", "Railway Safety Agency\n The Director is the executive officer of the Agency and responsible for its ordinary management. The director is appointed by the Governing Council. The director of the agency is Pedro M. Lekuona García, since 2017. The first directo of the agency was Carlos Díez Arroyo, who served from 2015 to 2017.", "List of film and television accidents\n that she was rescued. Some footage of this scene was kept in the film. ; Kick-Ass 2 (2013). While filming a fight scene, Chloë Grace Moretz's stunt double suffered a head injury when she was thrown into a wall by Olga Kurkulina. ; Lone Operator (2013, unaired). During filming of this planned Discovery Channel series, cameraman Darren Rydstrom, cast member Michael Donatelli, and pilot David Gibbs were killed in a helicopter crash in Acton, California. Gibbs was not authorized by the FAA to fly during the morning hours, and he had his pilot's license suspended twice prior to the accident. ; The ", "John Howard (NIOSH director)\n Linda Rosenstock resigned in November 2000 as the director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. The position was not filled until July 15, 2002, when Tommy Thompson, Health and Human Services Secretary placed John Howard in the post. The gap between Rosenstock and Howard was the longest between directors in the agency's 31-year history. The appointment was immediately praised by several organizations including the American Industrial Hygiene Association and AFL-CIO.", "John Finklea\n Finklea took over as director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health in April, 1975. He replaced Dr. Marcus M. Key, the Institute’s first director. Following Key's resignation, deputy director Edward Baier had served as acting director and many within the Institute expected Baier to be appointed to the post. Finklea took over NIOSH in the midst of Congressional complaints that NIOSH was too soft on industry, industry claims that NIOSH's research was sloppy, and organized labor accusations that NIOSH was overly slow in sharing important health data. Finklea worked to accelerate health hazard research, especially in the chemical industry. Over Finklea's tenure, NIOSH identified 65 potentially dangerous ", "1967 in film\nAccident, directed by Joseph Losey, starring Dirk Bogarde and Stanley Baker – (U.K.) ; The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin, starring Roddy McDowall, Suzanne Pleshette, and Karl Malden ; The Ambushers, starring Dean Martin (as Matt Helm) ; The Andromeda Nebula – (USSR) ; Anna Karenina – (USSR) ", "Birmingham Accident Hospital\n In 1960, Professor Gissane became honorary director of the Road Injuries Research Group, which investigated and analysed accidents on the newly opened M1 motorway at a time before seat belts were mandatory. Gissane believed risks of accidents occurring were lower on motorways but the consequences were more serious. A further study of \"all deaths from road accidents in certain areas and periods\" suggested lorries were the main cause of car fatalities on Motorways and Link roads and that seatbelts provided little protection available for the car occupants. UK lorries are now fitted with an impact absorbing rear barrier, meeting one of the recommendations. Investigation techniques included interviews with police, hospitals, survivors and coroners to study ways in which vehicle design could be changed to avoid accidents in the first place and to mitigate the injuries caused. Speaking in 2002, the former director of the hospital's research unit, Dr John Bull credited the unit with calling for mandatory seatbelt installation in new vehicles and compulsory wearing of motorbike crash helmets. The AA provided some money for research." ]
Who was the director of Fingers?
[ "Herbert Mason", "Samuel George Herbert Mason" ]
director
Fingers (1941 film)
4,108,797
59
[ { "id": "2190953", "title": "Fingers (1978 film)", "text": " Fingers is a 1978 American crime drama film directed by James Toback. The film is about a troubled young man being pulled between his mob father and his mentally disturbed pianist mother.", "score": "1.562393" }, { "id": "2190954", "title": "Fingers (1978 film)", "text": " Jimmy \"Fingers\" Angelelli (Harvey Keitel) is a brilliant young pianist who also works as a debt collector for his father Ben (Michael V. Gazzo), a local loan shark. Wherever Jimmy goes, he always carries a stereo with him, playing classic rock from the 1950s and 1960s. While trying to concentrate on an upcoming recital interview at Carnegie Hall, Jimmy loses focus when he falls for a woman named Carol (Tisa Farrow). He gets further sidetracked when collecting a large debt from a mafioso named Riccamonza (Tony Sirico), who eventually threatens Ben's life. This forces Jimmy to seek retribution.", "score": "1.5144458" }, { "id": "5555174", "title": "20 Fingers (film)", "text": " 20 Angosht, released in English-speaking markets as 20 Fingers, is a 2004 Iranian film directed by Mania Akbari. It stars the director herself and producer Bijan Daneshmand as a couple (or possibly different couples) discussing their relationship and arguing in seven vignettes shot in several long takes on a DV camera. The film deals with controversial topics such as divorce and homosexuality and has not yet received permission to be shown uncut in its native country. It has achieved mild international success, winning Best Digital Film at the 61st Venice International Film Festival in 2004, where it premiered.", "score": "1.486624" }, { "id": "5555175", "title": "20 Fingers (film)", "text": "Winner of the Best feature film in Venezia Cinema Digital Section (Venice, Italy - 2004) ; The Grand jury prize for the spirit of freedom in Bahamas International Film Festival (Bahamas - 2004) ; Special Mention Femina International Women's Film Festival (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 2005) ; Winner of Best Director and Best Actress Digital International Barcelona Film Festival (Barcelona, Spain - 2005) ; Winner of the Most Innovative film Award Wine Country International Film Festival (California, USA - 2005) ", "score": "1.4490156" }, { "id": "15713786", "title": "Fingertips '93", "text": " The music video was Roxette's first collaboration with director Jonas Åkerlund, who would go on to direct a total of twelve music videos for the duo.", "score": "1.4476521" }, { "id": "2190956", "title": "Fingers (1978 film)", "text": " James Toback said he originally wanted Robert de Niro to play the lead, but then decided to use de Niro's best friend Harvey Keitel. \"Harvey agreed to play Jimmy and quickly began to astonish me by taking the character into dimensions of darkness well beyond my original imagining\", wrote Toback.", "score": "1.4438568" }, { "id": "574197", "title": "Green Fingers", "text": " Green Fingers is a 1947 British drama film directed by John Harlow and starring Robert Beatty, Carol Raye and Nova Pilbeam. The film title does not use the term green fingers in its normal context, alluding to an untaught and natural skill at growing plants, but rather applies it to the world of alternative medicine and the ancient concept of individuals being natural \"healers\".", "score": "1.4248761" }, { "id": "8512833", "title": "Terry Hands", "text": " Terence David Hands (9 January 1941 – 4 February 2020 ) was an English theatre director. He founded the Liverpool Everyman Theatre and ran the Royal Shakespeare Company for thirteen years during one of the company's most successful periods; he spent 25 years in all with the RSC. He also saved Clwyd Theatr Cymru from closure and turned it into the most successful theatre in Wales in his seventeen years as Artistic Director. He received several Olivier, Tony and Molière awards and nominations for directing and lighting.", "score": "1.4148526" }, { "id": "28608308", "title": "Max Winkler (director)", "text": "Ten Fingers (short film, executive producer, 2010) ; Cat Run (executive producer, 2011) ; It's Not You It's Me (2012) ", "score": "1.4123198" }, { "id": "15392136", "title": "Five Fingers (2006 film)", "text": " Five Fingers is a 2006 American drama-thriller film directed by Laurence Malkin, and written by Chad Thumann and Malkin. The film had ten producers, including actor Laurence Fishburne, who stars in it alongside Ryan Phillippe, Gina Torres, Touriya Haoud, Saïd Taghmaoui and Colm Meaney. Five Fingers was filmed in the Netherlands, Morocco, and Louisiana in 2004.", "score": "1.4057764" }, { "id": "1596683", "title": "Fingers Inc.", "text": " Fingers Inc. was an American music group from Chicago, Illinois. It consisted of producer Larry Heard and vocalists Robert Owens and Ron Wilson. AllMusic called it the \"top early Chicago house group\".", "score": "1.4011595" }, { "id": "4946821", "title": "The Addams Family (1992 TV series)", "text": " \"Fingers\" (voiced by Jim Cummings) – A spy for RumpCo and an underwear hitman. He is large, bold, and very intimidating, though somewhat dimwitted. ; RumpCo CEO \"H.Q.\" (voiced by Jim Cummings) – The owner of RumpCo. RumpCo had a lot of success with their prize in every pair gig. The prizes in their underwear were shoes. ; Mr. Limp (voiced by Ernest Harada) – A health inspector and a friend of Mr. Normanmeyer. He is seduced by Grandmama. ; Mrs. Quaint (voiced by Susan Silo) – A red-haired guest at the Addams residence, she turns out to be a criminal who is sought in nine states ", "score": "1.4008783" }, { "id": "3137383", "title": "Bobby Finger", "text": " Robert \"Bobby\" Finger (born April 22, 1986) is an American journalist, podcaster, and pop culture critic, best known as the co-creator and host of the Who? Weekly podcast alongside friend and fellow writer Lindsey Weber. He previously was a regular contributing writer for the US culture website Jezebel from 2015 until 2018.", "score": "1.3970988" }, { "id": "26923302", "title": "Alexander Parsonage (theatre director)", "text": " Parsonage is a founder and artistic director of the UK-based theatre company Finger in the Pie. Productions by Finger in the Pie which Parsonage has directed include Vote, Vote, Vote for Nigel Barton (2005), Cenerentola (2007), The Snow Queen (2008) and Red Hot Riding Hood (2008). Sweeney Todd: His Life, Times and Execution! (2009) a devised piece conceived and directed by Parsonage, which conceived of Todd as a silent \"clown in the tradition of Buster Keaton\" played at Jacksons Lane in Spring 2009 and toured to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Sweeney Todd: His Life, Times and Execution! was nominated for a Total Theatre Award for 'Best Emerging Artist/Company 2009'. Parsonage is also an established cabaret promoter: he has been running Finger in the Pie Cabaret Showcase in London's Madame Jojo's since February 2006. The event is listed as being 'London’s largest showcase of new Variety, Vaudeville and Burlesque' In 2008 Finger in the Pie Cabaret was included in Time Out's guide to 'London's Rising Talent'. In 2006 Parsonage founded the Artists Anonymous Theatre Network an organisation for fostering creative links throughout the UK theatre community.", "score": "1.389748" }, { "id": "27685833", "title": "Allan Salisbury", "text": " an agent to represent him, recommending Sol Shifrin. Shifrin agreed to represent him but suggested he develop a strip with dialogue. As a result, Salisbury created Fingers and Toes (sub-titled The Little League of Disorganised Crime), an American gangster strip set in the 1930s. It became the first Australian comic strip to be purchased by a US syndicate, Publishers-Hall, without being published in Australia. The strip debuted in March 1974, appearing in the Chicago Sun-Times, Dallas News, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Miami Herald, Vancouver Sun and Winnipeg Tribune. Fingers and Toes, however, encountered a number of problems with its US publishers, including its portrayal of a drunken judge, occasional muggings ", "score": "1.3837745" }, { "id": "2190958", "title": "Fingers (1978 film)", "text": " Two notable pieces from the film are \"Angel of the Morning\" by Merrilee Rush and \"Summertime, Summertime\" by The Jamies. Director Toback initially wanted to use the song \"Summertime\" because the movie had \"a summertime feel to it\", and they wanted to shoot it during the summer months. The whole film, however, is framed by the music of Johann Sebastian Bach's Toccata in E minor (BWV 914), which Keitel's character plays throughout the film, including during his audition at Carnegie Hall.", "score": "1.3812363" }, { "id": "1295200", "title": "Captain Fingers", "text": "Jerry Schoenbaum – executive producer ; Lee Ritenour – producer ; Skip Drinkwater – producer ; Tommy Vicari – engineering, remixing ; Linda Tyler – engineering ; Bernie Grundman – mastering ; Joe Gastwirt – remastering ; Don Murray – remixing ; John Mills – remixing ", "score": "1.3765038" }, { "id": "5157633", "title": "Bill Finger", "text": " Milton Finger (February 8, 1914 – January 18, 1974), known professionally and personally as Bill Finger, was an American comic strip, comic book, film and television writer who was the co-creator (with Bob Kane) of the DC Comics superhero character Batman. Despite making major (sometimes, signature) contributions as an innovative writer, visionary mythos/world builder and illustration architect, Finger (and other creators of his era) was often relegated to ghostwriter status on many comics—including Batman, and Green Lantern (the original, Alan Scott version). While Kane privately admitted in a 1980s audio interview with his autobiographer that Finger was responsible for \"50–75% of all the creativity in Batman,\" for decades he publicly ", "score": "1.3748493" }, { "id": "6523441", "title": "Kevin Lima", "text": " After directing his first live action film, he went on to direct two TV films starring Julie Andrews, Eloise at the Plaza and Eloise at Christmastime. Since 2000, Lima had wanted to make the film Enchanted, but he was repeatedly turned down because of the script being too dark, and that he was not \"funny enough to do this film\". The toned down script finally got green-lit, and in 2007 Enchanted was released to a positive critical reception. Since directing Enchanted, Lima has been set to direct several projects including a live-action feature adaptation of the classic tale of Tom Thumb entitled Thumb, ", "score": "1.3690822" }, { "id": "1596684", "title": "Fingers Inc.", "text": " Fingers Inc. was formed in Chicago, Illinois in 1985 by producer Larry Heard and vocalists Robert Owens and Ron Wilson. In 1988, the group released a studio album, Another Side. The group did not release the second studio album, in part because Owens relocated to New York City, New York. However, in a 2016 interview, Heard stated that there are some unreleased collaborative songs. He added that he hopes to release these songs through his own record label Alleviated Records.", "score": "1.3674214" } ]
[ "Fingers (1978 film)\n Fingers is a 1978 American crime drama film directed by James Toback. The film is about a troubled young man being pulled between his mob father and his mentally disturbed pianist mother.", "Fingers (1978 film)\n Jimmy \"Fingers\" Angelelli (Harvey Keitel) is a brilliant young pianist who also works as a debt collector for his father Ben (Michael V. Gazzo), a local loan shark. Wherever Jimmy goes, he always carries a stereo with him, playing classic rock from the 1950s and 1960s. While trying to concentrate on an upcoming recital interview at Carnegie Hall, Jimmy loses focus when he falls for a woman named Carol (Tisa Farrow). He gets further sidetracked when collecting a large debt from a mafioso named Riccamonza (Tony Sirico), who eventually threatens Ben's life. This forces Jimmy to seek retribution.", "20 Fingers (film)\n 20 Angosht, released in English-speaking markets as 20 Fingers, is a 2004 Iranian film directed by Mania Akbari. It stars the director herself and producer Bijan Daneshmand as a couple (or possibly different couples) discussing their relationship and arguing in seven vignettes shot in several long takes on a DV camera. The film deals with controversial topics such as divorce and homosexuality and has not yet received permission to be shown uncut in its native country. It has achieved mild international success, winning Best Digital Film at the 61st Venice International Film Festival in 2004, where it premiered.", "20 Fingers (film)\nWinner of the Best feature film in Venezia Cinema Digital Section (Venice, Italy - 2004) ; The Grand jury prize for the spirit of freedom in Bahamas International Film Festival (Bahamas - 2004) ; Special Mention Femina International Women's Film Festival (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 2005) ; Winner of Best Director and Best Actress Digital International Barcelona Film Festival (Barcelona, Spain - 2005) ; Winner of the Most Innovative film Award Wine Country International Film Festival (California, USA - 2005) ", "Fingertips '93\n The music video was Roxette's first collaboration with director Jonas Åkerlund, who would go on to direct a total of twelve music videos for the duo.", "Fingers (1978 film)\n James Toback said he originally wanted Robert de Niro to play the lead, but then decided to use de Niro's best friend Harvey Keitel. \"Harvey agreed to play Jimmy and quickly began to astonish me by taking the character into dimensions of darkness well beyond my original imagining\", wrote Toback.", "Green Fingers\n Green Fingers is a 1947 British drama film directed by John Harlow and starring Robert Beatty, Carol Raye and Nova Pilbeam. The film title does not use the term green fingers in its normal context, alluding to an untaught and natural skill at growing plants, but rather applies it to the world of alternative medicine and the ancient concept of individuals being natural \"healers\".", "Terry Hands\n Terence David Hands (9 January 1941 – 4 February 2020 ) was an English theatre director. He founded the Liverpool Everyman Theatre and ran the Royal Shakespeare Company for thirteen years during one of the company's most successful periods; he spent 25 years in all with the RSC. He also saved Clwyd Theatr Cymru from closure and turned it into the most successful theatre in Wales in his seventeen years as Artistic Director. He received several Olivier, Tony and Molière awards and nominations for directing and lighting.", "Max Winkler (director)\nTen Fingers (short film, executive producer, 2010) ; Cat Run (executive producer, 2011) ; It's Not You It's Me (2012) ", "Five Fingers (2006 film)\n Five Fingers is a 2006 American drama-thriller film directed by Laurence Malkin, and written by Chad Thumann and Malkin. The film had ten producers, including actor Laurence Fishburne, who stars in it alongside Ryan Phillippe, Gina Torres, Touriya Haoud, Saïd Taghmaoui and Colm Meaney. Five Fingers was filmed in the Netherlands, Morocco, and Louisiana in 2004.", "Fingers Inc.\n Fingers Inc. was an American music group from Chicago, Illinois. It consisted of producer Larry Heard and vocalists Robert Owens and Ron Wilson. AllMusic called it the \"top early Chicago house group\".", "The Addams Family (1992 TV series)\n \"Fingers\" (voiced by Jim Cummings) – A spy for RumpCo and an underwear hitman. He is large, bold, and very intimidating, though somewhat dimwitted. ; RumpCo CEO \"H.Q.\" (voiced by Jim Cummings) – The owner of RumpCo. RumpCo had a lot of success with their prize in every pair gig. The prizes in their underwear were shoes. ; Mr. Limp (voiced by Ernest Harada) – A health inspector and a friend of Mr. Normanmeyer. He is seduced by Grandmama. ; Mrs. Quaint (voiced by Susan Silo) – A red-haired guest at the Addams residence, she turns out to be a criminal who is sought in nine states ", "Bobby Finger\n Robert \"Bobby\" Finger (born April 22, 1986) is an American journalist, podcaster, and pop culture critic, best known as the co-creator and host of the Who? Weekly podcast alongside friend and fellow writer Lindsey Weber. He previously was a regular contributing writer for the US culture website Jezebel from 2015 until 2018.", "Alexander Parsonage (theatre director)\n Parsonage is a founder and artistic director of the UK-based theatre company Finger in the Pie. Productions by Finger in the Pie which Parsonage has directed include Vote, Vote, Vote for Nigel Barton (2005), Cenerentola (2007), The Snow Queen (2008) and Red Hot Riding Hood (2008). Sweeney Todd: His Life, Times and Execution! (2009) a devised piece conceived and directed by Parsonage, which conceived of Todd as a silent \"clown in the tradition of Buster Keaton\" played at Jacksons Lane in Spring 2009 and toured to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Sweeney Todd: His Life, Times and Execution! was nominated for a Total Theatre Award for 'Best Emerging Artist/Company 2009'. Parsonage is also an established cabaret promoter: he has been running Finger in the Pie Cabaret Showcase in London's Madame Jojo's since February 2006. The event is listed as being 'London’s largest showcase of new Variety, Vaudeville and Burlesque' In 2008 Finger in the Pie Cabaret was included in Time Out's guide to 'London's Rising Talent'. In 2006 Parsonage founded the Artists Anonymous Theatre Network an organisation for fostering creative links throughout the UK theatre community.", "Allan Salisbury\n an agent to represent him, recommending Sol Shifrin. Shifrin agreed to represent him but suggested he develop a strip with dialogue. As a result, Salisbury created Fingers and Toes (sub-titled The Little League of Disorganised Crime), an American gangster strip set in the 1930s. It became the first Australian comic strip to be purchased by a US syndicate, Publishers-Hall, without being published in Australia. The strip debuted in March 1974, appearing in the Chicago Sun-Times, Dallas News, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Miami Herald, Vancouver Sun and Winnipeg Tribune. Fingers and Toes, however, encountered a number of problems with its US publishers, including its portrayal of a drunken judge, occasional muggings ", "Fingers (1978 film)\n Two notable pieces from the film are \"Angel of the Morning\" by Merrilee Rush and \"Summertime, Summertime\" by The Jamies. Director Toback initially wanted to use the song \"Summertime\" because the movie had \"a summertime feel to it\", and they wanted to shoot it during the summer months. The whole film, however, is framed by the music of Johann Sebastian Bach's Toccata in E minor (BWV 914), which Keitel's character plays throughout the film, including during his audition at Carnegie Hall.", "Captain Fingers\nJerry Schoenbaum – executive producer ; Lee Ritenour – producer ; Skip Drinkwater – producer ; Tommy Vicari – engineering, remixing ; Linda Tyler – engineering ; Bernie Grundman – mastering ; Joe Gastwirt – remastering ; Don Murray – remixing ; John Mills – remixing ", "Bill Finger\n Milton Finger (February 8, 1914 – January 18, 1974), known professionally and personally as Bill Finger, was an American comic strip, comic book, film and television writer who was the co-creator (with Bob Kane) of the DC Comics superhero character Batman. Despite making major (sometimes, signature) contributions as an innovative writer, visionary mythos/world builder and illustration architect, Finger (and other creators of his era) was often relegated to ghostwriter status on many comics—including Batman, and Green Lantern (the original, Alan Scott version). While Kane privately admitted in a 1980s audio interview with his autobiographer that Finger was responsible for \"50–75% of all the creativity in Batman,\" for decades he publicly ", "Kevin Lima\n After directing his first live action film, he went on to direct two TV films starring Julie Andrews, Eloise at the Plaza and Eloise at Christmastime. Since 2000, Lima had wanted to make the film Enchanted, but he was repeatedly turned down because of the script being too dark, and that he was not \"funny enough to do this film\". The toned down script finally got green-lit, and in 2007 Enchanted was released to a positive critical reception. Since directing Enchanted, Lima has been set to direct several projects including a live-action feature adaptation of the classic tale of Tom Thumb entitled Thumb, ", "Fingers Inc.\n Fingers Inc. was formed in Chicago, Illinois in 1985 by producer Larry Heard and vocalists Robert Owens and Ron Wilson. In 1988, the group released a studio album, Another Side. The group did not release the second studio album, in part because Owens relocated to New York City, New York. However, in a 2016 interview, Heard stated that there are some unreleased collaborative songs. He added that he hopes to release these songs through his own record label Alleviated Records." ]
Who was the director of The Girl in Mourning?
[ "Manuel Summers Rivero", "Manuel Summers" ]
director
The Girl in Mourning
5,928,583
58
[ { "id": "32914979", "title": "The Girl in Mourning", "text": " The Girl in Mourning (La niña de luto) is a 1964 Spanish comedy film directed by Manuel Summers. It was entered into the 1964 Cannes Film Festival. The film was also selected as the Spanish entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 37th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.", "score": "1.6735575" }, { "id": "5227516", "title": "The Girl (2012 TV film)", "text": " (widow of James H. Brown, first assistant director on The Birds and Marnie, who knew Hitchcock for several years) said that her husband would not have endorsed The Girls interpretation of events and the film's portrayal of Hitchcock would have saddened him. Gwyneth Hughes interviewed James Brown as part of her background research for the film, but he died before the film was completed. In October 2012, Nora Brown told The Daily Telegraph that she had written to Hughes expressing her anger. Hughes has said that James H. Brown backed up Hedren's claims of sexual harassment. Tony Lee Moral, author of two books about the making of the Hitchcock films in ", "score": "1.5112683" }, { "id": "6920691", "title": "The Dead Girl", "text": " The Dead Girl is a 2006 American drama thriller film written and directed by Karen Moncrieff, starring Brittany Murphy, Toni Collette, Rose Byrne and Marcia Gay Harden. The film was nominated for several 2007 Independent Spirit Awards including Best Feature and Best Director. It is the story of a young woman's death and the people linked to her murder. It also features Mary Beth Hurt, Kerry Washington, James Franco, Giovanni Ribisi, Josh Brolin, Mary Steenburgen and Piper Laurie. The film was premiered at the AFI Film Festival (7 November 2006), and was given a limited US theatrical release on 29 December 2006. It was generally well received. It only ran for two weeks in US first-run theaters, and earned nearly all its revenue from overseas release.", "score": "1.4990923" }, { "id": "8349078", "title": "G. W. Pabst", "text": " Pabst began his career as a film director at the behest of Carl Froelich who hired Pabst as an assistant director. He directed his first film, The Treasure, in 1923. He developed a talent for \"discovering\" and developing the talents of actresses, including Greta Garbo, Asta Nielsen, Louise Brooks, and Leni Riefenstahl. Pabst's best known films concern the plight of women, including The Joyless Street (1925) with Greta Garbo and Asta Nielsen, Secrets of a Soul (1926) with Lili Damita, The Loves of Jeanne Ney (1927) with Brigitte Helm, Pandora's Box (1929), and Diary of a Lost Girl (1929) with American actress Louise Brooks. He also co-directed with Arnold Fanck a mountain film entitled The White Hell of Pitz Palu (1929) starring Leni ", "score": "1.4681027" }, { "id": "25335257", "title": "Alfonso Gomez-Rejon", "text": " Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, which he directed, was a selection for the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. It won the award as well as the US drama audience prize. Gomez-Rejon was attached to direct Will Smith in the New York-set indie drama Collateral Beauty, scripted by Allan Loeb. However, he later dropped out of the project due to creative differences. Gomez-Rejon directed the historical drama The Current War.", "score": "1.4680054" }, { "id": "1725810", "title": "Professional mourning", "text": "The Indian film Rudaali (1993), directed by Kalpana Lajmi and set in Rajasthan, is about the life of a professional mourner, or Rudaali. ; The short documentary Tabaki (2001), directed by Bahman Kiarostami, follows the lives of \"mourners for hire\". ; The Philippine film Crying Ladies (2003), directed by Mark Meily, follows the lives of three women who work as professional mourners, set in the Philippines. ; The Japanese film Miewoharu (2016), directed by Akiyo Fujumura. It is centered around Eriko, a woman that comes back to her home town to mourn her sister. After spending 10 years in Tokyo pursuing an acting career she then discovers her vocation as professional mourner. ; The British spy movie Funeral In Berlin (1966), directed by Guy Hamilton and starring Michael Caine, has a \"mourner for hire\" as part of the plot to exfiltrate a defector from East Berlin. ", "score": "1.4455054" }, { "id": "14272480", "title": "Gordon Hessler", "text": " Hessler wrote and directed The Girl in a Swing (1988) starring Meg Tilly, an adaptation of Richard Adams's novel. His later films include Out on Bail (1989) and Journey of Honor (1990). Hessler died in his sleep on 19 January 2014.", "score": "1.4382045" }, { "id": "15156348", "title": "Mourning for Anna", "text": " Mourning for Anna (Trois temps après la mort d'Anna, ) is a Canadian drama film, directed by Catherine Martin and released in 2010. The film stars Guylaine Tremblay as Françoise, a woman struggling to recover emotionally after the murder of her daughter Anna. The film's cast also includes Denis Bernard, Paule Baillargeon, François Papineau and Gilles Renaud.", "score": "1.4311556" }, { "id": "1603978", "title": "The Girl in the Park", "text": " The Girl in the Park is a 2007 drama film by David Auburn, who makes his directorial debut here after having written the films Proof in 2005 and The Lake House in 2006. It stars Sigourney Weaver, Kate Bosworth and Keri Russell, among others.", "score": "1.4253757" }, { "id": "26327591", "title": "Marielle Heller", "text": " Marielle Stiles Heller (born October 1, 1979) is an American writer, director, and actress. She is best known for directing the films The Diary of a Teenage Girl (2015), Can You Ever Forgive Me? (2018), and A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (2019), as well as acting in The Queen’s Gambit (2020).", "score": "1.4181923" }, { "id": "32886808", "title": "The Girl in the Book", "text": " In June 2013, it was announced Emily VanCamp, and Michael Nyqvist had joined the cast of the film, with Marya Cohn making her directorial debut. Production on the film began in mid-June of that same year, in New York City. It was filmed during a five-week gap VanCamp had between seasons on Revenge.", "score": "1.417981" }, { "id": "31641099", "title": "The Girl in the Green Sweater", "text": " In Darkness (W ciemności), a 2011 Polish drama film written by David F. Shamoon and directed by Agnieszka Holland, and nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 84th Academy Awards, is based on true events during German occupation of Poland, from the perspective Leopold Socha, a sewer worker in Lwów. He used his knowledge of the city's sewer system to shelter a group of Jews who had escaped from the Lwów Ghetto during the Holocaust in Poland. Chiger was not consulted during the filming, as the director, Agnieszka Holland, did not know that there were any survivors.", "score": "1.4127648" }, { "id": "6247600", "title": "The Girl from St. Agnes", "text": " Gillian Breslin served as head writer, whilst Catharine Cooke and Cindy Lee co-directed the series. Producer Harriet Gavshon drew upon her own real-life experiences at boarding school for inspiration. Moonyeenn Lee was in charge of casting.", "score": "1.4092548" }, { "id": "8612800", "title": "Deidre Rubenstein", "text": "The Girl Who Came Late (1991), directed by Kathy Mueller ; The Inner Sanctuary (1996), directed by Chris Clarke ; Siam Sunset (1999), directed by John Polson ; Josh Jarman (2004), directed by Pip Mushin ", "score": "1.4088228" }, { "id": "32042962", "title": "The Girl in the Photographs", "text": " The Girl in the Photographs is a 2015 American horror thriller film written and directed by Nick Simon and executive produced by Wes Craven. The film stars Kal Penn, Claudia Lee, Kenny Wormald, Miranda Rae Mayo, Luke Baines, Christy Carlson Romano, Katharine Isabelle, and Mitch Pileggi. Filming began in April 2015 in Victoria, British Columbia. It was an official selection at Toronto International Film Festival 2015 in the Midnight Madness category. The film was released on April 1, 2016, in a limited release and through video on demand, by Vertical Entertainment. The Girl in the Photographs is the last film Wes Craven produced before his death on August 30, 2015.", "score": "1.4072095" }, { "id": "5073466", "title": "A Girl of Yesterday", "text": " Resident Scholar Cari Beauchamp in writing at the \"Mary Pickford Foundation\", described the loss of A Girl of Yesterday as particularly poignant. \"...one of her “lost” films – 'A Girl of Yesterday' from 1915 – that is particularly missed because there were so many things about it that made it special.\" The film brought together many old friends. \"Mickey Neilan, a friend of Jack Pickford’s who had been working in films for several years, but wanted to direct. (Many filmographies credit Mary with writing the story, but in his memoirs, Mickey Neilan claims that Frances [Marion] wrote it).\" Further, \"All those close inner connections simmering in the cast and crew could have wreaked havoc, ", "score": "1.4069968" }, { "id": "30865079", "title": "Doane Harrison", "text": " Harrison's and Wilder's notable director-editor collaboration (as editor, editorial supervisor or advisor) had extended over ten films, from The Major and the Minor (1942) through Sabrina (1954). While he was working with Wilder, Harrison also edited more films by other directors; his final editing credit, for The Girl Most Likely (1958), was a reunion with director Mitchell Leisen. He acted as a consultant to Mike Nichols on Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), which was the first film Nichols directed. Harrison was nominated three times for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for three films directed by Wilder: Five Graves to Cairo (1943), The Lost Weekend (1945), and Sunset Boulevard (with Arthur P. Schmidt, 1950). Harrison died in 1968 in Riverside, California, aged 74.", "score": "1.3993785" }, { "id": "31002274", "title": "The Girl in the News", "text": " The film was based on a bestselling novel by Roy Vickers. It was the first of several collaborations between the director Carol Reed and the writer Sidney Gilliat. Gilliat later recalled: \"He [Reed] seemed to be an interpreter rather than a creator; he followed the screenplay quite closely rather than bringing forth original ideas of his own. I felt he was not at all interested in The Girl in the News, which I think was a pallid job. The chief obstacle was Carol's stage background - the couldn't really believe in the screenwriter. He needed close collaboration with a writer.\" The film was originally meant to star Margaret Lockwood and Michael Redgrave, who had just appeared together in The Lady Vanishes. It was one of several films Lockwood made with Reed. It marks the film debut of Michael Hordern, who has one line, during a court scene, as a junior counsel to the senior counsel played by Felix Aylmer.", "score": "1.3976197" }, { "id": "32914980", "title": "The Girl in Mourning", "text": "María José Alfonso - Rocío Vázquez Romero ; Alfredo Landa - Rafael Castroviejo ; Pilar Gómez Ferrer - Madre de Rocío ; Vicente Llosa ; José Vicente Cerrudo ; Carmen Santonja ; Doris Kent - (as Doris Ken) ; Mercedes Huete ; Manuel Ayuso ; Manuel Guitián - (as Manuel Guitian) ; Salvador Cortés ; Emilio García Domenech - (as Emilio G. Domenech) ; Diego Rañón ; Francisco Summers ; Pascual Costafreda - (as Pascual de Costafreda) ", "score": "1.3975732" }, { "id": "3451436", "title": "Mourning Grave", "text": " Mourning Grave (lit. \"Girl Ghost Story\" ) is a 2014 South Korean mystery horror film starring Kang Ha-neul and Kim So-eun.", "score": "1.3933878" } ]
[ "The Girl in Mourning\n The Girl in Mourning (La niña de luto) is a 1964 Spanish comedy film directed by Manuel Summers. It was entered into the 1964 Cannes Film Festival. The film was also selected as the Spanish entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 37th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.", "The Girl (2012 TV film)\n (widow of James H. Brown, first assistant director on The Birds and Marnie, who knew Hitchcock for several years) said that her husband would not have endorsed The Girls interpretation of events and the film's portrayal of Hitchcock would have saddened him. Gwyneth Hughes interviewed James Brown as part of her background research for the film, but he died before the film was completed. In October 2012, Nora Brown told The Daily Telegraph that she had written to Hughes expressing her anger. Hughes has said that James H. Brown backed up Hedren's claims of sexual harassment. Tony Lee Moral, author of two books about the making of the Hitchcock films in ", "The Dead Girl\n The Dead Girl is a 2006 American drama thriller film written and directed by Karen Moncrieff, starring Brittany Murphy, Toni Collette, Rose Byrne and Marcia Gay Harden. The film was nominated for several 2007 Independent Spirit Awards including Best Feature and Best Director. It is the story of a young woman's death and the people linked to her murder. It also features Mary Beth Hurt, Kerry Washington, James Franco, Giovanni Ribisi, Josh Brolin, Mary Steenburgen and Piper Laurie. The film was premiered at the AFI Film Festival (7 November 2006), and was given a limited US theatrical release on 29 December 2006. It was generally well received. It only ran for two weeks in US first-run theaters, and earned nearly all its revenue from overseas release.", "G. W. Pabst\n Pabst began his career as a film director at the behest of Carl Froelich who hired Pabst as an assistant director. He directed his first film, The Treasure, in 1923. He developed a talent for \"discovering\" and developing the talents of actresses, including Greta Garbo, Asta Nielsen, Louise Brooks, and Leni Riefenstahl. Pabst's best known films concern the plight of women, including The Joyless Street (1925) with Greta Garbo and Asta Nielsen, Secrets of a Soul (1926) with Lili Damita, The Loves of Jeanne Ney (1927) with Brigitte Helm, Pandora's Box (1929), and Diary of a Lost Girl (1929) with American actress Louise Brooks. He also co-directed with Arnold Fanck a mountain film entitled The White Hell of Pitz Palu (1929) starring Leni ", "Alfonso Gomez-Rejon\n Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, which he directed, was a selection for the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. It won the award as well as the US drama audience prize. Gomez-Rejon was attached to direct Will Smith in the New York-set indie drama Collateral Beauty, scripted by Allan Loeb. However, he later dropped out of the project due to creative differences. Gomez-Rejon directed the historical drama The Current War.", "Professional mourning\nThe Indian film Rudaali (1993), directed by Kalpana Lajmi and set in Rajasthan, is about the life of a professional mourner, or Rudaali. ; The short documentary Tabaki (2001), directed by Bahman Kiarostami, follows the lives of \"mourners for hire\". ; The Philippine film Crying Ladies (2003), directed by Mark Meily, follows the lives of three women who work as professional mourners, set in the Philippines. ; The Japanese film Miewoharu (2016), directed by Akiyo Fujumura. It is centered around Eriko, a woman that comes back to her home town to mourn her sister. After spending 10 years in Tokyo pursuing an acting career she then discovers her vocation as professional mourner. ; The British spy movie Funeral In Berlin (1966), directed by Guy Hamilton and starring Michael Caine, has a \"mourner for hire\" as part of the plot to exfiltrate a defector from East Berlin. ", "Gordon Hessler\n Hessler wrote and directed The Girl in a Swing (1988) starring Meg Tilly, an adaptation of Richard Adams's novel. His later films include Out on Bail (1989) and Journey of Honor (1990). Hessler died in his sleep on 19 January 2014.", "Mourning for Anna\n Mourning for Anna (Trois temps après la mort d'Anna, ) is a Canadian drama film, directed by Catherine Martin and released in 2010. The film stars Guylaine Tremblay as Françoise, a woman struggling to recover emotionally after the murder of her daughter Anna. The film's cast also includes Denis Bernard, Paule Baillargeon, François Papineau and Gilles Renaud.", "The Girl in the Park\n The Girl in the Park is a 2007 drama film by David Auburn, who makes his directorial debut here after having written the films Proof in 2005 and The Lake House in 2006. It stars Sigourney Weaver, Kate Bosworth and Keri Russell, among others.", "Marielle Heller\n Marielle Stiles Heller (born October 1, 1979) is an American writer, director, and actress. She is best known for directing the films The Diary of a Teenage Girl (2015), Can You Ever Forgive Me? (2018), and A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (2019), as well as acting in The Queen’s Gambit (2020).", "The Girl in the Book\n In June 2013, it was announced Emily VanCamp, and Michael Nyqvist had joined the cast of the film, with Marya Cohn making her directorial debut. Production on the film began in mid-June of that same year, in New York City. It was filmed during a five-week gap VanCamp had between seasons on Revenge.", "The Girl in the Green Sweater\n In Darkness (W ciemności), a 2011 Polish drama film written by David F. Shamoon and directed by Agnieszka Holland, and nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 84th Academy Awards, is based on true events during German occupation of Poland, from the perspective Leopold Socha, a sewer worker in Lwów. He used his knowledge of the city's sewer system to shelter a group of Jews who had escaped from the Lwów Ghetto during the Holocaust in Poland. Chiger was not consulted during the filming, as the director, Agnieszka Holland, did not know that there were any survivors.", "The Girl from St. Agnes\n Gillian Breslin served as head writer, whilst Catharine Cooke and Cindy Lee co-directed the series. Producer Harriet Gavshon drew upon her own real-life experiences at boarding school for inspiration. Moonyeenn Lee was in charge of casting.", "Deidre Rubenstein\nThe Girl Who Came Late (1991), directed by Kathy Mueller ; The Inner Sanctuary (1996), directed by Chris Clarke ; Siam Sunset (1999), directed by John Polson ; Josh Jarman (2004), directed by Pip Mushin ", "The Girl in the Photographs\n The Girl in the Photographs is a 2015 American horror thriller film written and directed by Nick Simon and executive produced by Wes Craven. The film stars Kal Penn, Claudia Lee, Kenny Wormald, Miranda Rae Mayo, Luke Baines, Christy Carlson Romano, Katharine Isabelle, and Mitch Pileggi. Filming began in April 2015 in Victoria, British Columbia. It was an official selection at Toronto International Film Festival 2015 in the Midnight Madness category. The film was released on April 1, 2016, in a limited release and through video on demand, by Vertical Entertainment. The Girl in the Photographs is the last film Wes Craven produced before his death on August 30, 2015.", "A Girl of Yesterday\n Resident Scholar Cari Beauchamp in writing at the \"Mary Pickford Foundation\", described the loss of A Girl of Yesterday as particularly poignant. \"...one of her “lost” films – 'A Girl of Yesterday' from 1915 – that is particularly missed because there were so many things about it that made it special.\" The film brought together many old friends. \"Mickey Neilan, a friend of Jack Pickford’s who had been working in films for several years, but wanted to direct. (Many filmographies credit Mary with writing the story, but in his memoirs, Mickey Neilan claims that Frances [Marion] wrote it).\" Further, \"All those close inner connections simmering in the cast and crew could have wreaked havoc, ", "Doane Harrison\n Harrison's and Wilder's notable director-editor collaboration (as editor, editorial supervisor or advisor) had extended over ten films, from The Major and the Minor (1942) through Sabrina (1954). While he was working with Wilder, Harrison also edited more films by other directors; his final editing credit, for The Girl Most Likely (1958), was a reunion with director Mitchell Leisen. He acted as a consultant to Mike Nichols on Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), which was the first film Nichols directed. Harrison was nominated three times for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for three films directed by Wilder: Five Graves to Cairo (1943), The Lost Weekend (1945), and Sunset Boulevard (with Arthur P. Schmidt, 1950). Harrison died in 1968 in Riverside, California, aged 74.", "The Girl in the News\n The film was based on a bestselling novel by Roy Vickers. It was the first of several collaborations between the director Carol Reed and the writer Sidney Gilliat. Gilliat later recalled: \"He [Reed] seemed to be an interpreter rather than a creator; he followed the screenplay quite closely rather than bringing forth original ideas of his own. I felt he was not at all interested in The Girl in the News, which I think was a pallid job. The chief obstacle was Carol's stage background - the couldn't really believe in the screenwriter. He needed close collaboration with a writer.\" The film was originally meant to star Margaret Lockwood and Michael Redgrave, who had just appeared together in The Lady Vanishes. It was one of several films Lockwood made with Reed. It marks the film debut of Michael Hordern, who has one line, during a court scene, as a junior counsel to the senior counsel played by Felix Aylmer.", "The Girl in Mourning\nMaría José Alfonso - Rocío Vázquez Romero ; Alfredo Landa - Rafael Castroviejo ; Pilar Gómez Ferrer - Madre de Rocío ; Vicente Llosa ; José Vicente Cerrudo ; Carmen Santonja ; Doris Kent - (as Doris Ken) ; Mercedes Huete ; Manuel Ayuso ; Manuel Guitián - (as Manuel Guitian) ; Salvador Cortés ; Emilio García Domenech - (as Emilio G. Domenech) ; Diego Rañón ; Francisco Summers ; Pascual Costafreda - (as Pascual de Costafreda) ", "Mourning Grave\n Mourning Grave (lit. \"Girl Ghost Story\" ) is a 2014 South Korean mystery horror film starring Kang Ha-neul and Kim So-eun." ]
Who was the director of September?
[ "Tian Zhuangzhuang", "Zhuangzhuang Tian", "T‘ien Chuang-chuang", "T‘ien, Chuang-chuang", "Chuang-chuang T‘ien" ]
director
September (1984 film)
5,720,063
64
[ { "id": "31418129", "title": "September Films", "text": " September Films, a UK independent television and film production company, is a division of UK independent production and distribution group DCD Media. It specialises in factual entertainment, documentaries and features, reality programming and entertainment formats. It was founded in 1992 by feature film director David Green, who devised the groundbreaking Hollywood Women series that launched the company, and was acquired in August 2007 by DCD Media. Having produced over 2,000 hours of primetime television since its creation, September has offices in London and Los Angeles. In recent years, September Films has expanded into all non-fiction genres and formats with the appointment of a new generation of creative executives.", "score": "1.6999938" }, { "id": "12917947", "title": "Irson Kudikova", "text": "\"September Rain\" (Ost fikm Dangerous tour (Command Performance)), director Feodor Bondarchuk (2006) ; \"Space\" (in a leading role of Dolph Lundgren), director Yury Grymov (2006) ; \"Shoppingtherepy\", director Ekaterina Grohovsky (2008) ; \"Whether you, whether he\" (feat. Andrey Zvonky), director Pavel Khudyakov (2010) ; \"I will make everything as you want\" (2011) ", "score": "1.5789583" }, { "id": "32628065", "title": "September (2007 film)", "text": " September is a 2007 Australian drama film, directed by Peter Carstairs and produced by John Polson. Set in Western Australia's wheatbelt in 1968 (though filmed at Harden, New South Wales), it stars Xavier Samuel and Clarence John Ryan as two teenagers whose interracial friendship struggles to withstand the expectations of their community. The film sensitively documents the disparity and discrimination faced by the country's Aboriginal people.", "score": "1.5546179" }, { "id": "12887238", "title": "September (2003 film)", "text": " September is a 2003 German drama film directed by Max Färberböck. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival. The subject matter is the effect of the September 11 attacks.", "score": "1.5540485" }, { "id": "9766791", "title": "Douglas September", "text": "(1999) The Runner, directed by Ron Moler, compositions for scene and closing credits (The Search, The Light) ; (2004) Malcontents, directed by Maurey Loeffler, scoring and composition for short film. ; (2006–2008) Douglas September Videos on YouTube ; (2008) Sundays in Television, Podcast ", "score": "1.5529249" }, { "id": "2603434", "title": "The September Issue", "text": " The September Issue is a 2009 American documentary film directed by R.J. Cutler about the behind-the-scenes drama that follows editor-in-head Anna Wintour and her staff during the production of the September 2007 issue of American Vogue magazine. The film was released in Australia on August 20, 2009, after being screened at numerous film festivals including Sundance, Zurich, Silverdocs, and Sheffield Doc/Fest. It was released in select theaters in the United States on August 28, 2009, by Roadside Attractions.", "score": "1.5418" }, { "id": "13584514", "title": "September Tapes", "text": " September Tapes is a faux-documentary feature film co-written and directed by Christian Johnston in his feature debut. An early review of the film's promotional trailer noted that the footage looked \"more real than network news footage\".", "score": "1.5268579" }, { "id": "33000258", "title": "September (1984 film)", "text": " September is a 1984 Chinese film directed by the fifth generation filmmaker Tian Zhuangzhuang. Though not his first film as director, September is considered Tian's first major feature. The film is also known by the title In September. The film tells the story about a young teacher in the first seventeen years of the People's Republic of China who approaches the teaching of her students with a humanistic philosophy, an approach which leads to problems with authorities.", "score": "1.5224098" }, { "id": "6278904", "title": "Kevin Macdonald (director)", "text": " Macdonald began his career with a biography of his grandfather, The Life and Death of a Screenwriter (1994), which he turned into the documentary The Making of an Englishman (1995). After making a series of biographical documentaries, Macdonald directed One Day in September (1999), about the murder of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. Possibly the most striking feature of this film was the lengthy interview with Jamal Al-Gashey, the last known survivor of the Munich terrorists (it has been suggested recently in Aaron Klein's book Striking Back that another, Mohammed Safady, might also still be alive). Macdonald found ", "score": "1.5126407" }, { "id": "4562600", "title": "September 12 (film)", "text": " September 12 (12 Eylül) is a 2010 German-Turkish documentary film, written, produced and directed by Özlem Sulak, which documents the accounts of survivors of the 1980 Turkish coup d'état. The film was selected for the 16th Festival on Wheels and the 63rd Locarno International Film Festival, where it premiered.", "score": "1.5065863" }, { "id": "11137812", "title": "Chiara Tilesi", "text": " documentary film about the life of Franco Califano \"We, People of September\", which was selected for the Rome Film Festival. Chiara Tilesi is Board of Director member of L-Nutra, the leading nutri-technology company developing an innovative portfolio of Fasting Mimicking Diets FMD', founded by Valter Longo, director of the USC Longevity Institute and The Program on Longevity and Cancer at IFOM in Milan. Chiara and Longo are co-producers of the documentary The Longevity Revolution. She is founder of Globunity, a global cultural event and digital media platform that focuses on creativity and arts. She holds the position of Event Vice Chair of Rock ", "score": "1.5051024" }, { "id": "10937818", "title": "David New", "text": " David New is a Canadian film editor. New won a Gemini Award for \"Best Editing in a Comedy, Variety or Performing Arts Program or Series\" in 1997 for his work on September Songs –The Music of Kurt Weill and won the award again in 2002 for his work on Ravel’s Brain. New is a five-time Gemini Award nominee.", "score": "1.4977406" }, { "id": "32628069", "title": "September (2007 film)", "text": " Carstairs was the inaugural winner of the Tropfest Feature Program in 2006 for his screenplay for September. The prize included a A$1 million grant funded by The Movie Network, which went toward the film's total budget of $2.4 million. September premiered at the 2007 Melbourne International Film Festival, and went on to screen at the Toronto and Berlin International Film Festivals of the same year. In 2008, the film was nominated for the ASSG Feature Film Soundtrack of the Year award. It also won for Jules O'Loughlin the IF Award for Best Cinematography, as well as a nomination for Sam Hobbs (Best Production Design).", "score": "1.4885983" }, { "id": "30556282", "title": "Scott Brothers Global", "text": "High September (in production) ", "score": "1.4780998" }, { "id": "15152087", "title": "September (novel)", "text": " September was made into a mini-series film in 1996, and starred Edward Fox, Michael York, Mariel Hemingway, and Jacqueline Bisset, Jenny Agutter (as Isobel Balmerino), Judy Parfitt (as Verena Steynton).", "score": "1.4725292" }, { "id": "324497", "title": "Deborah Warner", "text": " Warner directed the 1999 film The Last September, starring Michael Gambon and Maggie Smith.", "score": "1.4715714" }, { "id": "30595899", "title": "September (2013 film)", "text": " September is a 2013 Greek drama film directed by Penny Panayotopoulou. It was screened in the City to City section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.", "score": "1.4674567" }, { "id": "4189729", "title": "A Few Days in September", "text": " A Few Days in September (Quelques jours en septembre) is the first film directed by Santiago Amigorena. The film premiered out of competition at the 2006 Venice Film Festival and received a special screening at the 2006 Toronto Film Festival.", "score": "1.4644184" }, { "id": "13857646", "title": "One Day in September", "text": " One Day in September is a 1999 documentary film directed by Kevin Macdonald examining the 5 September 1972 murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany. Michael Douglas provides the sparse narration throughout the film. The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 72nd Academy Awards, on 26 March 2000.", "score": "1.4591776" }, { "id": "6278902", "title": "Kevin Macdonald (director)", "text": " Kevin Macdonald (born 28 October 1967) is a Scottish director. His films include One Day in September (1999), a documentary about the 1972 murder of 11 Israeli athletes, which won him the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, the climbing documentary Touching the Void (2003), the drama The Last King of Scotland (2006), the political thriller State of Play (2009), the Bob Marley documentary Marley (2012), the post-apocalyptic drama How I Live Now (2013), the thriller Black Sea (2014), the Whitney Houston documentary Whitney (2018), and the legal drama film The Mauritanian (2021).", "score": "1.4584234" } ]
[ "September Films\n September Films, a UK independent television and film production company, is a division of UK independent production and distribution group DCD Media. It specialises in factual entertainment, documentaries and features, reality programming and entertainment formats. It was founded in 1992 by feature film director David Green, who devised the groundbreaking Hollywood Women series that launched the company, and was acquired in August 2007 by DCD Media. Having produced over 2,000 hours of primetime television since its creation, September has offices in London and Los Angeles. In recent years, September Films has expanded into all non-fiction genres and formats with the appointment of a new generation of creative executives.", "Irson Kudikova\n\"September Rain\" (Ost fikm Dangerous tour (Command Performance)), director Feodor Bondarchuk (2006) ; \"Space\" (in a leading role of Dolph Lundgren), director Yury Grymov (2006) ; \"Shoppingtherepy\", director Ekaterina Grohovsky (2008) ; \"Whether you, whether he\" (feat. Andrey Zvonky), director Pavel Khudyakov (2010) ; \"I will make everything as you want\" (2011) ", "September (2007 film)\n September is a 2007 Australian drama film, directed by Peter Carstairs and produced by John Polson. Set in Western Australia's wheatbelt in 1968 (though filmed at Harden, New South Wales), it stars Xavier Samuel and Clarence John Ryan as two teenagers whose interracial friendship struggles to withstand the expectations of their community. The film sensitively documents the disparity and discrimination faced by the country's Aboriginal people.", "September (2003 film)\n September is a 2003 German drama film directed by Max Färberböck. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival. The subject matter is the effect of the September 11 attacks.", "Douglas September\n(1999) The Runner, directed by Ron Moler, compositions for scene and closing credits (The Search, The Light) ; (2004) Malcontents, directed by Maurey Loeffler, scoring and composition for short film. ; (2006–2008) Douglas September Videos on YouTube ; (2008) Sundays in Television, Podcast ", "The September Issue\n The September Issue is a 2009 American documentary film directed by R.J. Cutler about the behind-the-scenes drama that follows editor-in-head Anna Wintour and her staff during the production of the September 2007 issue of American Vogue magazine. The film was released in Australia on August 20, 2009, after being screened at numerous film festivals including Sundance, Zurich, Silverdocs, and Sheffield Doc/Fest. It was released in select theaters in the United States on August 28, 2009, by Roadside Attractions.", "September Tapes\n September Tapes is a faux-documentary feature film co-written and directed by Christian Johnston in his feature debut. An early review of the film's promotional trailer noted that the footage looked \"more real than network news footage\".", "September (1984 film)\n September is a 1984 Chinese film directed by the fifth generation filmmaker Tian Zhuangzhuang. Though not his first film as director, September is considered Tian's first major feature. The film is also known by the title In September. The film tells the story about a young teacher in the first seventeen years of the People's Republic of China who approaches the teaching of her students with a humanistic philosophy, an approach which leads to problems with authorities.", "Kevin Macdonald (director)\n Macdonald began his career with a biography of his grandfather, The Life and Death of a Screenwriter (1994), which he turned into the documentary The Making of an Englishman (1995). After making a series of biographical documentaries, Macdonald directed One Day in September (1999), about the murder of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. Possibly the most striking feature of this film was the lengthy interview with Jamal Al-Gashey, the last known survivor of the Munich terrorists (it has been suggested recently in Aaron Klein's book Striking Back that another, Mohammed Safady, might also still be alive). Macdonald found ", "September 12 (film)\n September 12 (12 Eylül) is a 2010 German-Turkish documentary film, written, produced and directed by Özlem Sulak, which documents the accounts of survivors of the 1980 Turkish coup d'état. The film was selected for the 16th Festival on Wheels and the 63rd Locarno International Film Festival, where it premiered.", "Chiara Tilesi\n documentary film about the life of Franco Califano \"We, People of September\", which was selected for the Rome Film Festival. Chiara Tilesi is Board of Director member of L-Nutra, the leading nutri-technology company developing an innovative portfolio of Fasting Mimicking Diets FMD', founded by Valter Longo, director of the USC Longevity Institute and The Program on Longevity and Cancer at IFOM in Milan. Chiara and Longo are co-producers of the documentary The Longevity Revolution. She is founder of Globunity, a global cultural event and digital media platform that focuses on creativity and arts. She holds the position of Event Vice Chair of Rock ", "David New\n David New is a Canadian film editor. New won a Gemini Award for \"Best Editing in a Comedy, Variety or Performing Arts Program or Series\" in 1997 for his work on September Songs –The Music of Kurt Weill and won the award again in 2002 for his work on Ravel’s Brain. New is a five-time Gemini Award nominee.", "September (2007 film)\n Carstairs was the inaugural winner of the Tropfest Feature Program in 2006 for his screenplay for September. The prize included a A$1 million grant funded by The Movie Network, which went toward the film's total budget of $2.4 million. September premiered at the 2007 Melbourne International Film Festival, and went on to screen at the Toronto and Berlin International Film Festivals of the same year. In 2008, the film was nominated for the ASSG Feature Film Soundtrack of the Year award. It also won for Jules O'Loughlin the IF Award for Best Cinematography, as well as a nomination for Sam Hobbs (Best Production Design).", "Scott Brothers Global\nHigh September (in production) ", "September (novel)\n September was made into a mini-series film in 1996, and starred Edward Fox, Michael York, Mariel Hemingway, and Jacqueline Bisset, Jenny Agutter (as Isobel Balmerino), Judy Parfitt (as Verena Steynton).", "Deborah Warner\n Warner directed the 1999 film The Last September, starring Michael Gambon and Maggie Smith.", "September (2013 film)\n September is a 2013 Greek drama film directed by Penny Panayotopoulou. It was screened in the City to City section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.", "A Few Days in September\n A Few Days in September (Quelques jours en septembre) is the first film directed by Santiago Amigorena. The film premiered out of competition at the 2006 Venice Film Festival and received a special screening at the 2006 Toronto Film Festival.", "One Day in September\n One Day in September is a 1999 documentary film directed by Kevin Macdonald examining the 5 September 1972 murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany. Michael Douglas provides the sparse narration throughout the film. The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 72nd Academy Awards, on 26 March 2000.", "Kevin Macdonald (director)\n Kevin Macdonald (born 28 October 1967) is a Scottish director. His films include One Day in September (1999), a documentary about the 1972 murder of 11 Israeli athletes, which won him the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, the climbing documentary Touching the Void (2003), the drama The Last King of Scotland (2006), the political thriller State of Play (2009), the Bob Marley documentary Marley (2012), the post-apocalyptic drama How I Live Now (2013), the thriller Black Sea (2014), the Whitney Houston documentary Whitney (2018), and the legal drama film The Mauritanian (2021)." ]
Who was the director of The Return?
[ "Antun Vrdoljak" ]
director
The Return (1979 film)
5,951,427
98
[ { "id": "6069285", "title": "Return (2011 film)", "text": " Return is a 2011 independent film about an American reservist, wife and mother returning home from her tour of duty in the Middle East. The film was written and directed by Liza Johnson, and stars Linda Cardellini, Michael Shannon and John Slattery. It is Johnson's first feature-length film, and received good reviews at its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight. Linda Cardellini was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead for her performance in the film.", "score": "1.5768318" }, { "id": "14007257", "title": "The Return (2006 film)", "text": " The Return is a 2006 American psychological horror film directed by Asif Kapadia and starring Sarah Michelle Gellar, Kate Beahan, Peter O'Brien, and Sam Shepard. It was released theatrically on November 10, 2006, and on DVD on February 27, 2007. The Blu-ray was released on October 6, 2009.", "score": "1.5284674" }, { "id": "7450297", "title": "Return (1985 film)", "text": " Return was based on the 1972 novel Some Other Place. The Right Place. by Donald Harington. The film was shot in Los Angeles and Massachusetts, and was released in theaters January 24, 1986. It was released on VHS in 1988, with an \"R\" rating.", "score": "1.472686" }, { "id": "6069291", "title": "Return (2011 film)", "text": " Return was the sole U.S. film selected for the 25-film 2011 Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight. Following its premiere at the festival, The Boston Globe reviewer Wesley Morris wrote, \"I like Johnson's delicacy and discretion. She trusts Cardellini's natural, easygoing performance to show us what goes untold. The movie is modest, too, and its small emotional scale works. Without asking for pity or outrage, it's another movie about the unaccountable, unending drain of war.\" On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 83% based on 41 reviews, with an average rating of 6.53/10. The website's critics consensus reads: \"Powered by a compelling central performance by Linda Cardellini, Return offers a painfully compelling look at the emotional struggles faced by war veterans.\" On ", "score": "1.4581228" }, { "id": "25256988", "title": "The Returning", "text": " The Returning is a 1990 Australia-New Zealand horror film directed by John Day.", "score": "1.4524666" }, { "id": "8713600", "title": "David Tomblin", "text": " Having worked on The Return of a Man Called Horse, directed by Irvin Kershner, when the production unit filmed for a few days in England, Tomblin was invited by Kershner to be first assistant director on The Empire Strikes Back. He subsequently worked as first assistant director for Lucasfilm on Return of the Jedi and the first three Indiana Jones films Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. During production of Return of the Jedi, Tomblin directed Return of the Ewok, a short, never-finished film about Warwick Davis who played the Ewok ", "score": "1.4500874" }, { "id": "30598461", "title": "The Return (1979 film)", "text": " The Return (Povratak) is a 1979 Croatian film directed by Antun Vrdoljak, starring Boris Dvornik, Fabijan Šovagović and Rade Šerbedžija.", "score": "1.4499202" }, { "id": "3718449", "title": "The Returned (American TV series)", "text": " The Returned is an American supernatural drama television series developed by Carlton Cuse as an adaptation of the 2012 French series Les Revenants, which was broadcast internationally as The Returned. The American adapted series follows residents in a small town whose lives are disrupted when people who have been dead for many years begin reappearing. Cuse wrote the pilot episode and executive produced the series alongside Raelle Tucker. The series premiered on March 9, 2015 and was cancelled by A&E after one season, on June 15, 2015.", "score": "1.4496775" }, { "id": "3131436", "title": "The Returned (2013 film)", "text": " The Returned (Retornados) is a 2013 Spanish-Canadian thriller film directed by Manuel Carballo, written by Hatem Khraiche, and starring Emily Hampshire, Kris Holden-Ried, Shawn Doyle, and Claudia Bassols. When a rare and difficult to obtain medicine that requires daily doses to stave off the effects of a zombie infection runs low, a physician (Hampshire) and her infected husband (Holden-Ried) go on the run to avoid angry demonstrators.", "score": "1.4494387" }, { "id": "11795058", "title": "The Return (The Office)", "text": " \"The Return\" was written by Michael Schur, Lee Eisenberg, and Gene Stupnitsky, while series creator and executive producer Greg Daniels directed and Dean Holland edited. The original title of this episode was \"Oscar's Return\", a reference to the reappearance of actor Oscar Nunez, who had temporarily left the series after the season premiere. Nunez spent the interim working on the Comedy Central series Halfway Home. It was the last episode Daniels filmed before the Thanksgiving holiday, the start of an eight-week break for the cast and crew. Then-president of NBC Entertainment Kevin Reilly played Dwight's first interviewer. Ed Helms noted in the audio commentary that his mother had trouble watching a string of episodes that included \"The Return\" because ", "score": "1.4445999" }, { "id": "32206158", "title": "Robert Mandel", "text": " Festival at Lincoln Center. Mandel went on to become a successful film director, as well as a television series director, having directed Lost, Nash Bridges and The Practice. He was the director of the pilot for The X-Files and the sixth episode of Prison Break. Mandel was the original director hired on for what was then titled Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry but quickly left the production over \"creative differences.\" Katt Shea took over as director for the film, which was eventually released as The Rage: Carrie 2. Mandel was the dean of AFI Conservatory for nine years from 2005 to 2014. He was the first alumnus of the program to be selected a dean.", "score": "1.4369864" }, { "id": "7450294", "title": "Return (1985 film)", "text": " Return, also known as Return: A Case of Passion, is a 1985 independent mystery film, written, directed and co-produced by Andrew Silver. It was Silver's debut theatrical work.", "score": "1.422653" }, { "id": "11263012", "title": "History of Blake's 7", "text": " whom to focus his vendetta against the Liberator crew. The only director to return for Series Three was Vere Lorrimer. The other directors appointed were George Spenton-Foster, Jonathan Wright Miller and Derek Martinus. Because of the difficulties caused by the use of strike filming, Series Two was recorded using block filming. This filming method involved a month of location filming for the first six episodes before the studio videotape recording of those episodes, each director being assigned to work on two episodes. The process was repeated for the next six episodes and the final episode would be recorded on its own.", "score": "1.4175026" }, { "id": "6069289", "title": "Return (2011 film)", "text": " awarded the Adrienne Shelly Women Filmmakers Grant for production of Return, and in 2010 received a grant from film philanthropic group Cinereach. In 2010, Johnson said, \"Over the summer, we decided to move the production upstate [New York] in Newburgh, Beacon and New Windsor. That area reminds me a lot of the town where I grew up, an Ohio river town that has been greatly affected by the economy.\" \"On our last day of the shoot in Newburgh, a water main broke and the water started coming out brown. We looked around and it seemed like a sign that we shot in the right place.\" The film was shot in Super 16, distributed in DCP. The film was executive produced by Abigail Disney, Meredith Vieira and Amy Rapp, and was the first feature film production for Meredith Vieira Productions.", "score": "1.4006891" }, { "id": "32257711", "title": "Superman Returns", "text": " Director, screenwriter and producer Bryan Singer conceived the storyline of \"Superman returning to Earth after a five-year absence\" during the filming of X2 (2003). He presented the idea to X-Men (2000) and X2 producer Lauren Shuler Donner and her husband Richard Donner, director of Superman (1978). Donner greeted Singer's idea with positive feedback. In March 2004, Warner Bros. Pictures was commencing pre-production on Superman: Flyby, which had a target theatrical release date of June 2006. McG was signed to direct with a script by J. J. Abrams, but dropped out in June 2004. That same month, Singer was approached by Warner Bros. to pitch his idea for Superman Returns, as he was preparing to leave for Hawaii on a short vacation with his X2 ", "score": "1.3998582" }, { "id": "6069288", "title": "Return (2011 film)", "text": " Johnson explained that her impetus to start the project came from \"talking to my male friend about his experiences. It was through talking with him about his divorce and stuff, that was sort of my first point of interest. He introduced me to a lot of his colleagues. Through him and through other means, I did meet a lot of women soldiers. We did a lot of research with women who have been deployed. Linda [Cardellini] did her own research in L.A. at the VA hospital, through other contacts and friends.\" Johnson was selected to attend the 2008 Sundance Institute Feature Film Program, where some scenes for Return were workshopped. The film project was also selected for the International Film Festival Rotterdam CineMart in 2008, which connects filmmakers with co-production and film marketers. Following the Sundance Lab program, she ", "score": "1.394794" }, { "id": "5996284", "title": "David Cronenberg", "text": " of big-budget, mainstream Hollywood filmmaking, although he has had occasional near misses. At one stage he was considered by George Lucas as a possible director for Return of the Jedi (1983) but was passed over. Cronenberg also worked for nearly a year on a version of Total Recall (1990), but experienced \"creative differences\" with producers Dino De Laurentiis and Ronald Shusett; a different version of the film was eventually made by Paul Verhoeven. A fan of Philip K. Dick's, author of \"We Can Remember it For You Wholesale\", the short story upon which the film was based, Cronenberg related in ", "score": "1.3943541" }, { "id": "26606958", "title": "Richard Lester", "text": " Lester directed the comedy Finders Keepers (1984), starring Michael O'Keefe, Louis Gossett Jr., and Beverly D'Angelo. The film was a flop, and it is notable as one of the early films featuring Jim Carrey. In 1988, Lester reunited most of the Three Musketeers cast to film The Return of the Musketeers, released the following year. During filming in Spain, actor Roy Kinnear, a close friend of Lester, died after falling from a horse. Lester finished the film, then returned only to direct Paul McCartney's concert film Get Back (1991). In 1993, he presented Hollywood U.K., a five-part series on British cinema in the 1960s for the BBC. Director Steven Soderbergh is among many who have called for a reappraisal of Lester's work and ", "score": "1.381243" }, { "id": "3131442", "title": "The Returned (2013 film)", "text": " The Returned began filming on 24 September 2012. Shooting took place in Toronto and Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, and post-production took place in Spain.", "score": "1.370785" }, { "id": "27397645", "title": "Return to the Land of Wonders", "text": " Return to the Land of Wonders is a documentary film made almost single-handedly by Maysoon Pachachi in 2003–04. Pachachi went returned to Iraq after an absence of 30 years when her father, Adnan Pachachi, was appointed to the Iraqi Governing Council in the aftermath of the invasion of Iraq. She brought a video camera with her to document conditions in Iraq and her father's participation in the drafting of Iraq's interim constitution.", "score": "1.3707645" } ]
[ "Return (2011 film)\n Return is a 2011 independent film about an American reservist, wife and mother returning home from her tour of duty in the Middle East. The film was written and directed by Liza Johnson, and stars Linda Cardellini, Michael Shannon and John Slattery. It is Johnson's first feature-length film, and received good reviews at its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight. Linda Cardellini was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead for her performance in the film.", "The Return (2006 film)\n The Return is a 2006 American psychological horror film directed by Asif Kapadia and starring Sarah Michelle Gellar, Kate Beahan, Peter O'Brien, and Sam Shepard. It was released theatrically on November 10, 2006, and on DVD on February 27, 2007. The Blu-ray was released on October 6, 2009.", "Return (1985 film)\n Return was based on the 1972 novel Some Other Place. The Right Place. by Donald Harington. The film was shot in Los Angeles and Massachusetts, and was released in theaters January 24, 1986. It was released on VHS in 1988, with an \"R\" rating.", "Return (2011 film)\n Return was the sole U.S. film selected for the 25-film 2011 Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight. Following its premiere at the festival, The Boston Globe reviewer Wesley Morris wrote, \"I like Johnson's delicacy and discretion. She trusts Cardellini's natural, easygoing performance to show us what goes untold. The movie is modest, too, and its small emotional scale works. Without asking for pity or outrage, it's another movie about the unaccountable, unending drain of war.\" On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 83% based on 41 reviews, with an average rating of 6.53/10. The website's critics consensus reads: \"Powered by a compelling central performance by Linda Cardellini, Return offers a painfully compelling look at the emotional struggles faced by war veterans.\" On ", "The Returning\n The Returning is a 1990 Australia-New Zealand horror film directed by John Day.", "David Tomblin\n Having worked on The Return of a Man Called Horse, directed by Irvin Kershner, when the production unit filmed for a few days in England, Tomblin was invited by Kershner to be first assistant director on The Empire Strikes Back. He subsequently worked as first assistant director for Lucasfilm on Return of the Jedi and the first three Indiana Jones films Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. During production of Return of the Jedi, Tomblin directed Return of the Ewok, a short, never-finished film about Warwick Davis who played the Ewok ", "The Return (1979 film)\n The Return (Povratak) is a 1979 Croatian film directed by Antun Vrdoljak, starring Boris Dvornik, Fabijan Šovagović and Rade Šerbedžija.", "The Returned (American TV series)\n The Returned is an American supernatural drama television series developed by Carlton Cuse as an adaptation of the 2012 French series Les Revenants, which was broadcast internationally as The Returned. The American adapted series follows residents in a small town whose lives are disrupted when people who have been dead for many years begin reappearing. Cuse wrote the pilot episode and executive produced the series alongside Raelle Tucker. The series premiered on March 9, 2015 and was cancelled by A&E after one season, on June 15, 2015.", "The Returned (2013 film)\n The Returned (Retornados) is a 2013 Spanish-Canadian thriller film directed by Manuel Carballo, written by Hatem Khraiche, and starring Emily Hampshire, Kris Holden-Ried, Shawn Doyle, and Claudia Bassols. When a rare and difficult to obtain medicine that requires daily doses to stave off the effects of a zombie infection runs low, a physician (Hampshire) and her infected husband (Holden-Ried) go on the run to avoid angry demonstrators.", "The Return (The Office)\n \"The Return\" was written by Michael Schur, Lee Eisenberg, and Gene Stupnitsky, while series creator and executive producer Greg Daniels directed and Dean Holland edited. The original title of this episode was \"Oscar's Return\", a reference to the reappearance of actor Oscar Nunez, who had temporarily left the series after the season premiere. Nunez spent the interim working on the Comedy Central series Halfway Home. It was the last episode Daniels filmed before the Thanksgiving holiday, the start of an eight-week break for the cast and crew. Then-president of NBC Entertainment Kevin Reilly played Dwight's first interviewer. Ed Helms noted in the audio commentary that his mother had trouble watching a string of episodes that included \"The Return\" because ", "Robert Mandel\n Festival at Lincoln Center. Mandel went on to become a successful film director, as well as a television series director, having directed Lost, Nash Bridges and The Practice. He was the director of the pilot for The X-Files and the sixth episode of Prison Break. Mandel was the original director hired on for what was then titled Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry but quickly left the production over \"creative differences.\" Katt Shea took over as director for the film, which was eventually released as The Rage: Carrie 2. Mandel was the dean of AFI Conservatory for nine years from 2005 to 2014. He was the first alumnus of the program to be selected a dean.", "Return (1985 film)\n Return, also known as Return: A Case of Passion, is a 1985 independent mystery film, written, directed and co-produced by Andrew Silver. It was Silver's debut theatrical work.", "History of Blake's 7\n whom to focus his vendetta against the Liberator crew. The only director to return for Series Three was Vere Lorrimer. The other directors appointed were George Spenton-Foster, Jonathan Wright Miller and Derek Martinus. Because of the difficulties caused by the use of strike filming, Series Two was recorded using block filming. This filming method involved a month of location filming for the first six episodes before the studio videotape recording of those episodes, each director being assigned to work on two episodes. The process was repeated for the next six episodes and the final episode would be recorded on its own.", "Return (2011 film)\n awarded the Adrienne Shelly Women Filmmakers Grant for production of Return, and in 2010 received a grant from film philanthropic group Cinereach. In 2010, Johnson said, \"Over the summer, we decided to move the production upstate [New York] in Newburgh, Beacon and New Windsor. That area reminds me a lot of the town where I grew up, an Ohio river town that has been greatly affected by the economy.\" \"On our last day of the shoot in Newburgh, a water main broke and the water started coming out brown. We looked around and it seemed like a sign that we shot in the right place.\" The film was shot in Super 16, distributed in DCP. The film was executive produced by Abigail Disney, Meredith Vieira and Amy Rapp, and was the first feature film production for Meredith Vieira Productions.", "Superman Returns\n Director, screenwriter and producer Bryan Singer conceived the storyline of \"Superman returning to Earth after a five-year absence\" during the filming of X2 (2003). He presented the idea to X-Men (2000) and X2 producer Lauren Shuler Donner and her husband Richard Donner, director of Superman (1978). Donner greeted Singer's idea with positive feedback. In March 2004, Warner Bros. Pictures was commencing pre-production on Superman: Flyby, which had a target theatrical release date of June 2006. McG was signed to direct with a script by J. J. Abrams, but dropped out in June 2004. That same month, Singer was approached by Warner Bros. to pitch his idea for Superman Returns, as he was preparing to leave for Hawaii on a short vacation with his X2 ", "Return (2011 film)\n Johnson explained that her impetus to start the project came from \"talking to my male friend about his experiences. It was through talking with him about his divorce and stuff, that was sort of my first point of interest. He introduced me to a lot of his colleagues. Through him and through other means, I did meet a lot of women soldiers. We did a lot of research with women who have been deployed. Linda [Cardellini] did her own research in L.A. at the VA hospital, through other contacts and friends.\" Johnson was selected to attend the 2008 Sundance Institute Feature Film Program, where some scenes for Return were workshopped. The film project was also selected for the International Film Festival Rotterdam CineMart in 2008, which connects filmmakers with co-production and film marketers. Following the Sundance Lab program, she ", "David Cronenberg\n of big-budget, mainstream Hollywood filmmaking, although he has had occasional near misses. At one stage he was considered by George Lucas as a possible director for Return of the Jedi (1983) but was passed over. Cronenberg also worked for nearly a year on a version of Total Recall (1990), but experienced \"creative differences\" with producers Dino De Laurentiis and Ronald Shusett; a different version of the film was eventually made by Paul Verhoeven. A fan of Philip K. Dick's, author of \"We Can Remember it For You Wholesale\", the short story upon which the film was based, Cronenberg related in ", "Richard Lester\n Lester directed the comedy Finders Keepers (1984), starring Michael O'Keefe, Louis Gossett Jr., and Beverly D'Angelo. The film was a flop, and it is notable as one of the early films featuring Jim Carrey. In 1988, Lester reunited most of the Three Musketeers cast to film The Return of the Musketeers, released the following year. During filming in Spain, actor Roy Kinnear, a close friend of Lester, died after falling from a horse. Lester finished the film, then returned only to direct Paul McCartney's concert film Get Back (1991). In 1993, he presented Hollywood U.K., a five-part series on British cinema in the 1960s for the BBC. Director Steven Soderbergh is among many who have called for a reappraisal of Lester's work and ", "The Returned (2013 film)\n The Returned began filming on 24 September 2012. Shooting took place in Toronto and Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, and post-production took place in Spain.", "Return to the Land of Wonders\n Return to the Land of Wonders is a documentary film made almost single-handedly by Maysoon Pachachi in 2003–04. Pachachi went returned to Iraq after an absence of 30 years when her father, Adnan Pachachi, was appointed to the Iraqi Governing Council in the aftermath of the invasion of Iraq. She brought a video camera with her to document conditions in Iraq and her father's participation in the drafting of Iraq's interim constitution." ]
Who was the director of Vanity?
[ "Adrian Brunel", "Adrian Hope Brunel" ]
director
Vanity (1935 film)
311,014
54
[ { "id": "4794483", "title": "Vanity (1935 film)", "text": " Vanity is a 1935 British comedy film directed by Adrian Brunel and starring Jane Cain, Percy Marmont and John Counsell. The plot concerns a conceited actress, convinced of the general adoration in which she is held, faking her own death in order to gratify herself by observing the depth of grief caused by her demise. However the actual reactions to the \"news\" prove to be far from what she had expected.", "score": "1.5065199" }, { "id": "10597097", "title": "The Vanity Pool", "text": " The Vanity Pool is a lost 1918 American silent film drama directed by Ida May Park and starring Mary MacLaren, Anna Q. Nilsson, and Thomas Holding. The script was based on a short story by Nalbro Bartley that was originally published in Young's Magazine. The film was produced and distributed by Universal Film Manufacturing Company. The film centered around a female lobbyist who becomes involved in political intrigue when she begins lobbying for the election of her friend's husband.", "score": "1.449697" }, { "id": "27794293", "title": "Vanity (singer)", "text": "1982: \"Nasty Girl\", \"He's So Dull\", and \"Drive Me Wild\" ; 1984: \"Pretty Mess\" ; 1985: \"7th Heaven\" (video clips were from the movie The Last Dragon) ; 1986: \"Under the Influence\" ; 1988: \"He Turned Me Out\", a song performed by The Pointer Sisters from the soundtrack of Action Jackson. Vanity's co-star in the movie, Carl Weathers, appears alongside her in the video. Vanity appeared in seven released music videos: ", "score": "1.4411335" }, { "id": "400873", "title": "Kenelm Foss", "text": " Kenelm Foss (13 December 1885 – 28 November 1963) was a British actor, theatre director, author, screenwriter and film director. He was born in Croydon, Surrey and studied art at the Wellesley School of Art and in Paris. He was, however, more interested in theatre and in 1903 made his first appearance on the London stage at the Royal Court Theatre. He then spent four years at the Glasgow Repertory Theatre producing plays and acting before returning to London to manage the Lyric Theatre in the Strand. He directed the play Magic by G.K.Chesterton, which had been written specially for him in 1913, and which title was the caption to the Vanity ", "score": "1.4270041" }, { "id": "4976773", "title": "Vanity (1947 film)", "text": " Vanity (Italian:Vanità) is a 1947 Italian historical melodrama film directed by Giorgio Pastina and starring Walter Chiari, Liliana Laine and Dina Galli. The film is based on a play by Carlo Bertolazzi. Chiari was awarded a Nastro d'Argento for best debut performance. It was made at the Icet Studios in Milan. The film is set in nineteenth century Milan.", "score": "1.4248884" }, { "id": "29904058", "title": "Vanity (1927 film)", "text": "Leatrice Joy as Barbara Fiske ; Charles Ray as Lt. Lloyd Van Courtland ; Alan Hale as 'Happy' Dan Morgan ; Mayme Kelso as Mrs. Fiske ; Noble Johnson as Bimbo, ship's cook ; Helen Lee Worthing as Tess Ramsay ; Louis Payne as Butler ", "score": "1.4178212" }, { "id": "29904057", "title": "Vanity (1927 film)", "text": " Vanity is a 1927, American silent drama film directed by Donald Crisp and starring Leatrice Joy. The film was written by Douglas Doty, produced by DeMille Pictures Corporation and distributed by Producers Distributing Corporation.", "score": "1.4147143" }, { "id": "29526996", "title": "Purple Rain (film)", "text": " disliked Blinn's script for lacking \"truth\", and was then hired to direct and edit after delivering a pitch on the spot to Cavallo. Prince intended to cast Vanity, leader of the girl group Vanity 6, but she left the group before filming began. Her role was initially offered to Jennifer Beals (who turned it down because she wanted to concentrate on college) before going to Kotero, who was then virtually unknown. Prince had seen her appearance on the February 1983 episode of Tales of the Gold Monkey, in which she played a saucy island girl (inspired by Jamie Muller, the only ", "score": "1.4142869" }, { "id": "10415240", "title": "Colin Graham", "text": "Benjamin Britten, The Golden Vanity ; Richard Rodney Bennett, Penny for a Song ; Stephen Paulus, The Postman Always Rings Twice, 1982 ; Minoru Miki, Jōruri ; Minoru Miki, The Tale of Genji, 1999 ; Bright Sheng, Madame Mao, 2003 ; David Carlson, Anna Karenina, 2007 Colin Graham OBE (22 September 1931 in Hove, England – 6 April 2007 in St. Louis, Missouri) was a stage director of opera, theatre, and television. Graham was educated at Northaw School (Hertfordshire), Stowe School and RADA. Early in his career, he began a long association with Benjamin Britten, for whom he directed all but one of the composer's stage works, including ", "score": "1.4053428" }, { "id": "27106401", "title": "Vanity Fair (novel)", "text": "Vanity Fair (1911), directed by Charles Kent ; Vanity Fair (1915), directed by Charles Brabin ; Vanity Fair (1922), directed by W. Courtney Rowden ; Vanity Fair (1923), directed by Hugo Ballin ", "score": "1.403126" }, { "id": "27106402", "title": "Vanity Fair (novel)", "text": "Vanity Fair (1932), directed by Chester M. Franklin and starring Myrna Loy, updating the story to make Becky Sharp a social-climbing governess ; Becky Sharp (1935), starring Miriam Hopkins and Frances Dee, the first feature film shot in full-spectrum Technicolor ; Vanity Fair (2004), directed by Mira Nair and starring Reese Witherspoon as Becky Sharp and Natasha Little, who had played Becky Sharp in the earlier television miniseries of Vanity Fair, as Lady Jane Sheepshanks ", "score": "1.3850992" }, { "id": "4794485", "title": "Vanity (1935 film)", "text": " The film was a quota quickie production, made at Nettlefold Studios in Walton-on-Thames for distribution by Columbia Pictures. It was based on a play by Ernest Denny. It is now considered to be a lost film. The film is the only known screen credit of Cain, who went on to achieve a degree of immortality in British culture after being chosen as \"the girl with the golden voice\", becoming the original voice of the speaking clock in the United Kingdom between 1936 and 1963.", "score": "1.3818942" }, { "id": "10360991", "title": "List of film director and editor collaborations", "text": " (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ", "score": "1.3803005" }, { "id": "781786", "title": "Simon Dormandy", "text": " Simon Dormandy was, as an actor, known largely for his work with the Royal Shakespeare Company between 1988 and 1995. Over the period he worked with many well known directors, including Adrian Noble, Sam Mendes, Deborah Warner, Katie Mitchell and Max Stafford-Clark. He also took part in several films and television series. He was perhaps best known for his performances in Little Dorrit (as Sparkler) and Vanity Fair (as Dobbin). He was also known for his work with the theatre company Cheek By Jowl. He taught Drama and English at Eton College for fifteen years from 1997 to 2012, where he was Director of Drama and Head of ", "score": "1.3793244" }, { "id": "27794291", "title": "Vanity (singer)", "text": "Vanity 6 (1982) ", "score": "1.3741848" }, { "id": "29904059", "title": "Vanity (1927 film)", "text": " Leatrice Joy had impulsively cut her hair short in 1926, and Cecil B. DeMille, whom Joy had followed when he set up Producers Distributing Corporation, was publicly angry as it prevented her from portraying traditional feminine roles. The studio developed projects with roles suitable for her “Leatrice Joy bob”, and Vanity was the final of five films shot before she regrew her hair. Despite this, a professional dispute would end the Joy / Demille partnership in 1928.", "score": "1.3723826" }, { "id": "27554059", "title": "Vanity 6", "text": "Vanity 6 (1982) ", "score": "1.3719182" }, { "id": "27794294", "title": "Vanity (singer)", "text": "1985: The Last Dragon; \"7th Heaven\" ; 1988: Action Jackson; \"Undress\", \"Faraway Eyes\", and \"Shotgun\" with David Koz and featuring vocalist Kareem ", "score": "1.3681457" }, { "id": "4794484", "title": "Vanity (1935 film)", "text": "Jane Cain as Vanity Faire ; Percy Marmont as Jefferson Brown ; H.F. Maltby as Lord Cazalet ; John Counsell as Dick Broderick ", "score": "1.3604276" }, { "id": "15402879", "title": "Vanity Fair (1911 film)", "text": " The Moving Picture World reported in October 1911 that the film was nearly completed. The film was directed by Charles Kent.", "score": "1.3563703" } ]
[ "Vanity (1935 film)\n Vanity is a 1935 British comedy film directed by Adrian Brunel and starring Jane Cain, Percy Marmont and John Counsell. The plot concerns a conceited actress, convinced of the general adoration in which she is held, faking her own death in order to gratify herself by observing the depth of grief caused by her demise. However the actual reactions to the \"news\" prove to be far from what she had expected.", "The Vanity Pool\n The Vanity Pool is a lost 1918 American silent film drama directed by Ida May Park and starring Mary MacLaren, Anna Q. Nilsson, and Thomas Holding. The script was based on a short story by Nalbro Bartley that was originally published in Young's Magazine. The film was produced and distributed by Universal Film Manufacturing Company. The film centered around a female lobbyist who becomes involved in political intrigue when she begins lobbying for the election of her friend's husband.", "Vanity (singer)\n1982: \"Nasty Girl\", \"He's So Dull\", and \"Drive Me Wild\" ; 1984: \"Pretty Mess\" ; 1985: \"7th Heaven\" (video clips were from the movie The Last Dragon) ; 1986: \"Under the Influence\" ; 1988: \"He Turned Me Out\", a song performed by The Pointer Sisters from the soundtrack of Action Jackson. Vanity's co-star in the movie, Carl Weathers, appears alongside her in the video. Vanity appeared in seven released music videos: ", "Kenelm Foss\n Kenelm Foss (13 December 1885 – 28 November 1963) was a British actor, theatre director, author, screenwriter and film director. He was born in Croydon, Surrey and studied art at the Wellesley School of Art and in Paris. He was, however, more interested in theatre and in 1903 made his first appearance on the London stage at the Royal Court Theatre. He then spent four years at the Glasgow Repertory Theatre producing plays and acting before returning to London to manage the Lyric Theatre in the Strand. He directed the play Magic by G.K.Chesterton, which had been written specially for him in 1913, and which title was the caption to the Vanity ", "Vanity (1947 film)\n Vanity (Italian:Vanità) is a 1947 Italian historical melodrama film directed by Giorgio Pastina and starring Walter Chiari, Liliana Laine and Dina Galli. The film is based on a play by Carlo Bertolazzi. Chiari was awarded a Nastro d'Argento for best debut performance. It was made at the Icet Studios in Milan. The film is set in nineteenth century Milan.", "Vanity (1927 film)\nLeatrice Joy as Barbara Fiske ; Charles Ray as Lt. Lloyd Van Courtland ; Alan Hale as 'Happy' Dan Morgan ; Mayme Kelso as Mrs. Fiske ; Noble Johnson as Bimbo, ship's cook ; Helen Lee Worthing as Tess Ramsay ; Louis Payne as Butler ", "Vanity (1927 film)\n Vanity is a 1927, American silent drama film directed by Donald Crisp and starring Leatrice Joy. The film was written by Douglas Doty, produced by DeMille Pictures Corporation and distributed by Producers Distributing Corporation.", "Purple Rain (film)\n disliked Blinn's script for lacking \"truth\", and was then hired to direct and edit after delivering a pitch on the spot to Cavallo. Prince intended to cast Vanity, leader of the girl group Vanity 6, but she left the group before filming began. Her role was initially offered to Jennifer Beals (who turned it down because she wanted to concentrate on college) before going to Kotero, who was then virtually unknown. Prince had seen her appearance on the February 1983 episode of Tales of the Gold Monkey, in which she played a saucy island girl (inspired by Jamie Muller, the only ", "Colin Graham\nBenjamin Britten, The Golden Vanity ; Richard Rodney Bennett, Penny for a Song ; Stephen Paulus, The Postman Always Rings Twice, 1982 ; Minoru Miki, Jōruri ; Minoru Miki, The Tale of Genji, 1999 ; Bright Sheng, Madame Mao, 2003 ; David Carlson, Anna Karenina, 2007 Colin Graham OBE (22 September 1931 in Hove, England – 6 April 2007 in St. Louis, Missouri) was a stage director of opera, theatre, and television. Graham was educated at Northaw School (Hertfordshire), Stowe School and RADA. Early in his career, he began a long association with Benjamin Britten, for whom he directed all but one of the composer's stage works, including ", "Vanity Fair (novel)\nVanity Fair (1911), directed by Charles Kent ; Vanity Fair (1915), directed by Charles Brabin ; Vanity Fair (1922), directed by W. Courtney Rowden ; Vanity Fair (1923), directed by Hugo Ballin ", "Vanity Fair (novel)\nVanity Fair (1932), directed by Chester M. Franklin and starring Myrna Loy, updating the story to make Becky Sharp a social-climbing governess ; Becky Sharp (1935), starring Miriam Hopkins and Frances Dee, the first feature film shot in full-spectrum Technicolor ; Vanity Fair (2004), directed by Mira Nair and starring Reese Witherspoon as Becky Sharp and Natasha Little, who had played Becky Sharp in the earlier television miniseries of Vanity Fair, as Lady Jane Sheepshanks ", "Vanity (1935 film)\n The film was a quota quickie production, made at Nettlefold Studios in Walton-on-Thames for distribution by Columbia Pictures. It was based on a play by Ernest Denny. It is now considered to be a lost film. The film is the only known screen credit of Cain, who went on to achieve a degree of immortality in British culture after being chosen as \"the girl with the golden voice\", becoming the original voice of the speaking clock in the United Kingdom between 1936 and 1963.", "List of film director and editor collaborations\n (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ", "Simon Dormandy\n Simon Dormandy was, as an actor, known largely for his work with the Royal Shakespeare Company between 1988 and 1995. Over the period he worked with many well known directors, including Adrian Noble, Sam Mendes, Deborah Warner, Katie Mitchell and Max Stafford-Clark. He also took part in several films and television series. He was perhaps best known for his performances in Little Dorrit (as Sparkler) and Vanity Fair (as Dobbin). He was also known for his work with the theatre company Cheek By Jowl. He taught Drama and English at Eton College for fifteen years from 1997 to 2012, where he was Director of Drama and Head of ", "Vanity (singer)\nVanity 6 (1982) ", "Vanity (1927 film)\n Leatrice Joy had impulsively cut her hair short in 1926, and Cecil B. DeMille, whom Joy had followed when he set up Producers Distributing Corporation, was publicly angry as it prevented her from portraying traditional feminine roles. The studio developed projects with roles suitable for her “Leatrice Joy bob”, and Vanity was the final of five films shot before she regrew her hair. Despite this, a professional dispute would end the Joy / Demille partnership in 1928.", "Vanity 6\nVanity 6 (1982) ", "Vanity (singer)\n1985: The Last Dragon; \"7th Heaven\" ; 1988: Action Jackson; \"Undress\", \"Faraway Eyes\", and \"Shotgun\" with David Koz and featuring vocalist Kareem ", "Vanity (1935 film)\nJane Cain as Vanity Faire ; Percy Marmont as Jefferson Brown ; H.F. Maltby as Lord Cazalet ; John Counsell as Dick Broderick ", "Vanity Fair (1911 film)\n The Moving Picture World reported in October 1911 that the film was nearly completed. The film was directed by Charles Kent." ]
Who was the director of Ghost?
[ "Hossein Shahabi" ]
director
Ghost (1998 film)
1,398,875
85
[ { "id": "16392131", "title": "Ghost Dad", "text": " Early in development, John Badham was slated to direct the film with Steve Martin as Elliot Hopper. Badham and Martin left the project for unknown reasons, and Universal hired Sidney Poitier and Bill Cosby to be their respective replacements.", "score": "1.5423181" }, { "id": "393450", "title": "Ghost (1990 film)", "text": " Ghost was the first film Jerry Zucker directed on his own. He had previously been part of the Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker directing team, known for their screwball comedies. Zucker stated that his decision to direct Ghost was not made to distance himself from comedies or to mark a new chapter in his career, but was merely “just looking for a good film to direct.\" Harrison Ford, Michael J. Fox, Paul Hogan, Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, Kevin Kline, Alec Baldwin and Tom Cruise were considered for the role of Sam Wheat. Bruce Willis turned down the role of Sam Wheat as he did not understand the script and later called himself a \"knucklehead\" for turning it down. Michelle Pfeiffer, Molly Ringwald, Meg Ryan, Julia Roberts and Nicole Kidman were considered for the role of Molly Jensen. Tina Turner and Oprah Winfrey auditioned for the role ", "score": "1.5324287" }, { "id": "5802468", "title": "The Ghost (1963 film)", "text": " The Ghost was shot in Rome. It is a Gothic re-imagining of the film Les Diaboliques (1955). The Italian production crew are credited by aliases. The music score is credited to \"Franck Wallace\", whom Italian magazine Bianco e Nero and the Monthly Film Bulletin claim is a pseudonym for Franco Mannino. When Beat Records re-released the score, they found the tapes credited to Francesco De Masi who is not credited in the film. Riccardo Freda had directed Barbara Steele in the horror film The Horrible Dr. Hichcock the previous year. In that film Steele's character was also married to a Doctor Hichcock, but neither character had any connection with those in The Ghost.", "score": "1.498575" }, { "id": "208411", "title": "Ghost (1998 film)", "text": "cinematography: Hamid Angaji ; Sound Recorder: Souroosh Kevan ; Costume Designer: Nina Tabrizi ; Makeup designer: Mohammad Baghban ; Music: Hossein Shahabi ; Production manager: karim Nobakht ; producer: Hossein Shahabi ; produced in Baran film house iran 1998 ", "score": "1.4881766" }, { "id": "27738382", "title": "Steven-Charles Jaffe", "text": " Steven-Charles Jaffe (born 1951) is an American film producer, director, and screenwriter known for his work on such films as Motel Hell (1980), Near Dark (1987), Strange Days (1995), and the Best Picture-nominated romantic fantasy film Ghost. He is a long-time friend and collaborator of directors Nicholas Meyer and Kathryn Bigelow, and has worked with them on films like Time After Time (1979), Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991), and K-19: The Widowmaker (2002). He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.", "score": "1.4781435" }, { "id": "5802462", "title": "The Ghost (1963 film)", "text": " The Ghost (Italian title: Lo Spettro) is a 1963 Italian horror film directed by Riccardo Freda, using the pseudonym \"Robert Hampton\". The film stars Barbara Steele and Peter Baldwin. Other titles for the film include The Spectre and Lo Spettro del Dr. Hichcock.", "score": "1.474063" }, { "id": "10140350", "title": "Ghost Story (1974 film)", "text": " Ghost Story is a 1974 British mystery film directed by Stephen Weeks and starring Marianne Faithfull, Leigh Lawson, Larry Dann and Anthony Bate. Although set in England, the film was almost entirely shot on location in India, much of it at Bangalore Palace, owned by the Maharajah of Mysore. The film features a rare performance from actor Vivian MacKerrell, who was later the inspiration for Withnail in Bruce Robinson's Withnail and I. The story and screenplay are by Philip Norman, Rosemary Sutcliff and Stephen Weeks and music is composed by Ron Geesin. In a 2017 interview for \"The Bill Podcast\", actor Larry Dann revealed he has never been paid for his work on the film.", "score": "1.4673817" }, { "id": "28043833", "title": "Happy Ghost III", "text": " Happy Ghost III was the first film director Johnnie To had worked for Cinema City and his first film since The Enigmatic Case (1980). To had previously been working in television after the box office failure of The Enigmatic Case. To found the film easy to approach as he did not have to write the script and was told he was not allowed to change it by Cinema City's rules. Tsui Hark appears in the film as the Godfather and also provides the film with the special effects.", "score": "1.4620318" }, { "id": "5464753", "title": "A Ghost Story", "text": " A Ghost Story is a 2017 American supernatural drama film written and directed by David Lowery. It stars Casey Affleck, Rooney Mara, Will Oldham, Sonia Acevedo, Rob Zabrecky, Liz Franke and Kesha. Affleck plays a man who becomes a ghost and remains in the house he shares with his wife (Mara). The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2017, and was released by A24 on July 7, 2017. A Ghost Story received positive reviews from critics.", "score": "1.4543347" }, { "id": "28295362", "title": "Tombstone (film)", "text": " crew members (most famously with cinematographer William Fraker). Meanwhile, Kurt Russell worked quickly with producer James Jacks to pare down Jarre's sprawling script, deleting subplots and emphasizing the relationship between Wyatt and Doc. Russell has stated that it was he, and not Cosmatos, who actually directed the film, as Jarre's departure led to the studio's request. Russell stated that Cosmatos was brought in as a \"ghost director\" as a front man because Russell did not want it to be known that he was directing. Co-star Val Kilmer has supported Russell's statements about working heavily behind the scenes and stating that Russell \"essentially\" directed the film, but stopped short of saying that Russell did the ", "score": "1.4527872" }, { "id": "26888108", "title": "The Ghost and the Darkness", "text": " The Ghost and the Darkness is a 1996 American historical adventure film directed by Stephen Hopkins and starring Val Kilmer and Michael Douglas. The screenplay, written by William Goldman, is a fictionalized account of the Tsavo man-eaters, a pair of male lions that terrorized workers in and around Tsavo, Kenya during the building of the Uganda-Mombasa Railway in East Africa in 1898. The film received mixed reviews and was considered a box office disappointment, having grossed only $75 million against a production budget of $55 million. It won the Academy Award for Best Sound Editing for supervising sound editor Bruce Stambler.", "score": "1.4519181" }, { "id": "9388075", "title": "Ghost (2020 film)", "text": " Principal photography for Ghost took place in London over a period of two weeks in February 2018 using two iPhone 8 smartphones with FiLMiC Pro app, Moondog Labs anamorphic adapters, and DJI Osmo gimbal. Inspired by John Cassavetes, James followed the DIY guerrilla filmmaking style and improvisation-based Mumblecore tradition, describing the process as \"extremely collaborative and creatively liberating\".", "score": "1.4479735" }, { "id": "4974272", "title": "Kim Young-tak", "text": " Kim Young-tak (born 1976) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Kim wrote and directed the comedy film Hello Ghost (2010). The comedy was a local hit - the 9th highest grossing Korean film in 2010, and won him the Best New Director (Film) at the 47th Baeksang Arts Awards in 2011.", "score": "1.4429007" }, { "id": "10976252", "title": "Ghost Dance (film)", "text": "Producer - Ken McMullen ; Writer - Ken McMullen ; Cinematographer - Peter Harvey ; Music - David Cunningham, Michael Giles and Jamie Muir ", "score": "1.4379468" }, { "id": "7881339", "title": "The Ghost of Yotsuya", "text": " Director Nobuo Nakgawa directed over 100 films by the time of his death in 1984, and about eight horror films, most of which were shot between 1956 and 1960 at Shintoho studios with tight deadlines and low budgets.", "score": "1.437388" }, { "id": "16392123", "title": "Ghost Dad", "text": " Ghost Dad is a 1990 American fantasy comedy film directed by Sidney Poitier and starring Bill Cosby, in which a widower's spirit is able to communicate with his children after his death. It was critically panned and remains Poitier's last directorial effort. The film was nominated for three Young Artist Awards.", "score": "1.4359076" }, { "id": "3526892", "title": "George Marshall (director)", "text": " Paramount were delighted with The Ghost Breakers and offered Marshall a long-term contract. He did The Forest Rangers (1942) with Goddard and Fred MacMurray and directed the studio's all-star Star Spangled Rhythm (1942). Marshall was among the studio's leading directors by now. He worked with Dorothy Lamour and Dick Powell in Riding High (1943), and Mary Martin in True to Life (1943). He did And the Angels Sing (1944) with Lamour, MacMurray and the new star Betty Hutton, then did a comedy with MacMurray Murder, He Says (1945). Marshall did a biopic of Texas Guinan starring Hutton, Incendiary Blonde (1945), then a comedy with Eddie Bracken and Veronica Lake, Hold That Blonde (1945). Marshall ", "score": "1.432901" }, { "id": "10805879", "title": "Satoru Kobayashi (director)", "text": " debut, Kobayashi directed several films in that genre. He directed early big-bust AV performer Natsuko Kayama's Big Tit Against Big Tit, Rubbing! (巨乳VS巨乳 こする!) (1990) for Excess, Nikkatsu's post-Roman Porno line of theatrical softcore pornography. Kobayashi also directed prominent post-Kimiko Matsuzaka era big-bust performer Shinobu Hosokawa in two films, Big Tit Soap, Come in the Valley! (巨乳ソープ 谷間でイって!) (1996) and Big Tit Rape, Forced Paizuri (巨乳レイプ 強制パイズリ) (1997). He produced and directed prominent AV idol Nao Saejima in her theatrical release, Erotic Ghost Story: Female Ghost in Heat (色欲怪談 発情女ゆうれい) (1995). When Kobayashi's mentor, Teruo Ishii, planned his 1999 remake of Nobuo Nakagawa's Jigoku (1960), Kobayashi served as producer. Together ", "score": "1.4302515" }, { "id": "7308651", "title": "Kevin Foxe", "text": "The Ghost Experiment (3D film) (2012) (director, writer, producer) ; Life At Large (2012) (webseries) (actor, co-producer) ; Jackson Horn (2011) (TV) (director, executive producer) ; Orphans of Apollo (2008) (documentary) (co-producer) ; Open 24 Hours (short) (2010-2011) (executive producer) ; Beat The Street (2007) (executive producer) ; Movies That Shook The World (2005) (TV documentary) (actor; himself) ; How to Draw a Bunny (2002) (associate producer) ; American Adobo (2001) (executive producer) ; In The Eye Of The Storm (2001) (producer) ; Miracle Boy and Nyquist (2001) (executive producer) ; Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (2000) (associate producer) ; The Blair Witch Project (1999) (executive producer) ; Nowhere to Go (1998) (producer) ; \"Ancestors\" (1997) (mini) TV Series (producer) ; Eliza and I (1997) (assistant director) ; Rivalen des Glücks - The Contenders (1993) (producer) ; \"The Stand\" (1994) (mini) TV Series (location manager) ; Homicide (1991) (location manager) ; Valmont (1989) (post-production supervisor) ; Lip Service (1988) (TV) (assistant editor) ; Impure Thoughts (1986) (as Kevin Foxe) .... St. Jude Student ", "score": "1.4225601" }, { "id": "14203383", "title": "The Ghost Ship", "text": " effects were worked out ahead of time in order to not only keep the film under budget but also help achieve suspense on such a low budget. Dr. Jared Criswell, former pastor of the Fifth Avenue Spiritualist Church of New York City, served as a technical consultant on the film regarding psychic phenomena. The picture's final fight scene between the Finn, Pollo, and the mad Captain was shot on a dimly lit set to heighten the suspense and keep the audience from guessing who the victor might be, similar to the way Jacques Tourneur and Lewton had shot a similar scene in Cat People.", "score": "1.4206979" } ]
[ "Ghost Dad\n Early in development, John Badham was slated to direct the film with Steve Martin as Elliot Hopper. Badham and Martin left the project for unknown reasons, and Universal hired Sidney Poitier and Bill Cosby to be their respective replacements.", "Ghost (1990 film)\n Ghost was the first film Jerry Zucker directed on his own. He had previously been part of the Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker directing team, known for their screwball comedies. Zucker stated that his decision to direct Ghost was not made to distance himself from comedies or to mark a new chapter in his career, but was merely “just looking for a good film to direct.\" Harrison Ford, Michael J. Fox, Paul Hogan, Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, Kevin Kline, Alec Baldwin and Tom Cruise were considered for the role of Sam Wheat. Bruce Willis turned down the role of Sam Wheat as he did not understand the script and later called himself a \"knucklehead\" for turning it down. Michelle Pfeiffer, Molly Ringwald, Meg Ryan, Julia Roberts and Nicole Kidman were considered for the role of Molly Jensen. Tina Turner and Oprah Winfrey auditioned for the role ", "The Ghost (1963 film)\n The Ghost was shot in Rome. It is a Gothic re-imagining of the film Les Diaboliques (1955). The Italian production crew are credited by aliases. The music score is credited to \"Franck Wallace\", whom Italian magazine Bianco e Nero and the Monthly Film Bulletin claim is a pseudonym for Franco Mannino. When Beat Records re-released the score, they found the tapes credited to Francesco De Masi who is not credited in the film. Riccardo Freda had directed Barbara Steele in the horror film The Horrible Dr. Hichcock the previous year. In that film Steele's character was also married to a Doctor Hichcock, but neither character had any connection with those in The Ghost.", "Ghost (1998 film)\ncinematography: Hamid Angaji ; Sound Recorder: Souroosh Kevan ; Costume Designer: Nina Tabrizi ; Makeup designer: Mohammad Baghban ; Music: Hossein Shahabi ; Production manager: karim Nobakht ; producer: Hossein Shahabi ; produced in Baran film house iran 1998 ", "Steven-Charles Jaffe\n Steven-Charles Jaffe (born 1951) is an American film producer, director, and screenwriter known for his work on such films as Motel Hell (1980), Near Dark (1987), Strange Days (1995), and the Best Picture-nominated romantic fantasy film Ghost. He is a long-time friend and collaborator of directors Nicholas Meyer and Kathryn Bigelow, and has worked with them on films like Time After Time (1979), Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991), and K-19: The Widowmaker (2002). He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.", "The Ghost (1963 film)\n The Ghost (Italian title: Lo Spettro) is a 1963 Italian horror film directed by Riccardo Freda, using the pseudonym \"Robert Hampton\". The film stars Barbara Steele and Peter Baldwin. Other titles for the film include The Spectre and Lo Spettro del Dr. Hichcock.", "Ghost Story (1974 film)\n Ghost Story is a 1974 British mystery film directed by Stephen Weeks and starring Marianne Faithfull, Leigh Lawson, Larry Dann and Anthony Bate. Although set in England, the film was almost entirely shot on location in India, much of it at Bangalore Palace, owned by the Maharajah of Mysore. The film features a rare performance from actor Vivian MacKerrell, who was later the inspiration for Withnail in Bruce Robinson's Withnail and I. The story and screenplay are by Philip Norman, Rosemary Sutcliff and Stephen Weeks and music is composed by Ron Geesin. In a 2017 interview for \"The Bill Podcast\", actor Larry Dann revealed he has never been paid for his work on the film.", "Happy Ghost III\n Happy Ghost III was the first film director Johnnie To had worked for Cinema City and his first film since The Enigmatic Case (1980). To had previously been working in television after the box office failure of The Enigmatic Case. To found the film easy to approach as he did not have to write the script and was told he was not allowed to change it by Cinema City's rules. Tsui Hark appears in the film as the Godfather and also provides the film with the special effects.", "A Ghost Story\n A Ghost Story is a 2017 American supernatural drama film written and directed by David Lowery. It stars Casey Affleck, Rooney Mara, Will Oldham, Sonia Acevedo, Rob Zabrecky, Liz Franke and Kesha. Affleck plays a man who becomes a ghost and remains in the house he shares with his wife (Mara). The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2017, and was released by A24 on July 7, 2017. A Ghost Story received positive reviews from critics.", "Tombstone (film)\n crew members (most famously with cinematographer William Fraker). Meanwhile, Kurt Russell worked quickly with producer James Jacks to pare down Jarre's sprawling script, deleting subplots and emphasizing the relationship between Wyatt and Doc. Russell has stated that it was he, and not Cosmatos, who actually directed the film, as Jarre's departure led to the studio's request. Russell stated that Cosmatos was brought in as a \"ghost director\" as a front man because Russell did not want it to be known that he was directing. Co-star Val Kilmer has supported Russell's statements about working heavily behind the scenes and stating that Russell \"essentially\" directed the film, but stopped short of saying that Russell did the ", "The Ghost and the Darkness\n The Ghost and the Darkness is a 1996 American historical adventure film directed by Stephen Hopkins and starring Val Kilmer and Michael Douglas. The screenplay, written by William Goldman, is a fictionalized account of the Tsavo man-eaters, a pair of male lions that terrorized workers in and around Tsavo, Kenya during the building of the Uganda-Mombasa Railway in East Africa in 1898. The film received mixed reviews and was considered a box office disappointment, having grossed only $75 million against a production budget of $55 million. It won the Academy Award for Best Sound Editing for supervising sound editor Bruce Stambler.", "Ghost (2020 film)\n Principal photography for Ghost took place in London over a period of two weeks in February 2018 using two iPhone 8 smartphones with FiLMiC Pro app, Moondog Labs anamorphic adapters, and DJI Osmo gimbal. Inspired by John Cassavetes, James followed the DIY guerrilla filmmaking style and improvisation-based Mumblecore tradition, describing the process as \"extremely collaborative and creatively liberating\".", "Kim Young-tak\n Kim Young-tak (born 1976) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Kim wrote and directed the comedy film Hello Ghost (2010). The comedy was a local hit - the 9th highest grossing Korean film in 2010, and won him the Best New Director (Film) at the 47th Baeksang Arts Awards in 2011.", "Ghost Dance (film)\nProducer - Ken McMullen ; Writer - Ken McMullen ; Cinematographer - Peter Harvey ; Music - David Cunningham, Michael Giles and Jamie Muir ", "The Ghost of Yotsuya\n Director Nobuo Nakgawa directed over 100 films by the time of his death in 1984, and about eight horror films, most of which were shot between 1956 and 1960 at Shintoho studios with tight deadlines and low budgets.", "Ghost Dad\n Ghost Dad is a 1990 American fantasy comedy film directed by Sidney Poitier and starring Bill Cosby, in which a widower's spirit is able to communicate with his children after his death. It was critically panned and remains Poitier's last directorial effort. The film was nominated for three Young Artist Awards.", "George Marshall (director)\n Paramount were delighted with The Ghost Breakers and offered Marshall a long-term contract. He did The Forest Rangers (1942) with Goddard and Fred MacMurray and directed the studio's all-star Star Spangled Rhythm (1942). Marshall was among the studio's leading directors by now. He worked with Dorothy Lamour and Dick Powell in Riding High (1943), and Mary Martin in True to Life (1943). He did And the Angels Sing (1944) with Lamour, MacMurray and the new star Betty Hutton, then did a comedy with MacMurray Murder, He Says (1945). Marshall did a biopic of Texas Guinan starring Hutton, Incendiary Blonde (1945), then a comedy with Eddie Bracken and Veronica Lake, Hold That Blonde (1945). Marshall ", "Satoru Kobayashi (director)\n debut, Kobayashi directed several films in that genre. He directed early big-bust AV performer Natsuko Kayama's Big Tit Against Big Tit, Rubbing! (巨乳VS巨乳 こする!) (1990) for Excess, Nikkatsu's post-Roman Porno line of theatrical softcore pornography. Kobayashi also directed prominent post-Kimiko Matsuzaka era big-bust performer Shinobu Hosokawa in two films, Big Tit Soap, Come in the Valley! (巨乳ソープ 谷間でイって!) (1996) and Big Tit Rape, Forced Paizuri (巨乳レイプ 強制パイズリ) (1997). He produced and directed prominent AV idol Nao Saejima in her theatrical release, Erotic Ghost Story: Female Ghost in Heat (色欲怪談 発情女ゆうれい) (1995). When Kobayashi's mentor, Teruo Ishii, planned his 1999 remake of Nobuo Nakagawa's Jigoku (1960), Kobayashi served as producer. Together ", "Kevin Foxe\nThe Ghost Experiment (3D film) (2012) (director, writer, producer) ; Life At Large (2012) (webseries) (actor, co-producer) ; Jackson Horn (2011) (TV) (director, executive producer) ; Orphans of Apollo (2008) (documentary) (co-producer) ; Open 24 Hours (short) (2010-2011) (executive producer) ; Beat The Street (2007) (executive producer) ; Movies That Shook The World (2005) (TV documentary) (actor; himself) ; How to Draw a Bunny (2002) (associate producer) ; American Adobo (2001) (executive producer) ; In The Eye Of The Storm (2001) (producer) ; Miracle Boy and Nyquist (2001) (executive producer) ; Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (2000) (associate producer) ; The Blair Witch Project (1999) (executive producer) ; Nowhere to Go (1998) (producer) ; \"Ancestors\" (1997) (mini) TV Series (producer) ; Eliza and I (1997) (assistant director) ; Rivalen des Glücks - The Contenders (1993) (producer) ; \"The Stand\" (1994) (mini) TV Series (location manager) ; Homicide (1991) (location manager) ; Valmont (1989) (post-production supervisor) ; Lip Service (1988) (TV) (assistant editor) ; Impure Thoughts (1986) (as Kevin Foxe) .... St. Jude Student ", "The Ghost Ship\n effects were worked out ahead of time in order to not only keep the film under budget but also help achieve suspense on such a low budget. Dr. Jared Criswell, former pastor of the Fifth Avenue Spiritualist Church of New York City, served as a technical consultant on the film regarding psychic phenomena. The picture's final fight scene between the Finn, Pollo, and the mad Captain was shot on a dimly lit set to heighten the suspense and keep the audience from guessing who the victor might be, similar to the way Jacques Tourneur and Lewton had shot a similar scene in Cat People." ]
Who was the director of One of Those?
[ "Aldo Fabrizi", "Aldo Fabbrizi" ]
director
One of Those
2,941,210
81
[ { "id": "28537224", "title": "Robert Altman", "text": " As director", "score": "1.3889871" }, { "id": "32206158", "title": "Robert Mandel", "text": " Festival at Lincoln Center. Mandel went on to become a successful film director, as well as a television series director, having directed Lost, Nash Bridges and The Practice. He was the director of the pilot for The X-Files and the sixth episode of Prison Break. Mandel was the original director hired on for what was then titled Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry but quickly left the production over \"creative differences.\" Katt Shea took over as director for the film, which was eventually released as The Rage: Carrie 2. Mandel was the dean of AFI Conservatory for nine years from 2005 to 2014. He was the first alumnus of the program to be selected a dean.", "score": "1.384599" }, { "id": "9170684", "title": "New York University Press", "text": "Arthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "score": "1.3746197" }, { "id": "26431129", "title": "Director (2009 film)", "text": " Director is a 2009 action film directed by Aleks Rosenberg, produced by Alex Cohen, and starring Claudia Davilla, Stephane Kay, Mike Paris and Wu-Tang Clan-affiliated group's Prodigal Sunn. The film is set in Miami, Florida.", "score": "1.3696481" }, { "id": "26023814", "title": "John C. Zak", "text": "Coordinating Producer (1989) ; Producer (1989-1996) ; Supervising Producer (1996-1999) ; Director (1990's) Director (1986) Director (1980's) Lighting Director (1976-1982) ; Director (1987-1988) Director (2004-2005) Director (1980's) Director (1984-1985) Director (2001) Director (1980's) The Bold and the Beautiful Capitol Days of Our Lives General Hospital One Life to Live Rituals Santa Barbara Spyder Games The Young and the Restless", "score": "1.3650398" }, { "id": "2932748", "title": "Armondo Linus Acosta", "text": "Touch of Evil (1958), Orson Welles, director ; Two Women or La Ciociara (1960), Vittorio De Sica, director ; El Cid (1961), Anthony Mann, director ; Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), Stanley Kramer, director ; Days of Wine and Roses (1962), Blake Edwards, director ; Experiment in Terror (1962), Blake Edwards, director ; Lawrence of Arabia (1962), David Lean, director ; The Connection (1962), Shirley Clarke, director ; What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), Robert Aldrich, director ; War Hunt (1962), Denis Sanders, director ; \"The Soldier\" (1962), from the PSALMS ; \"Wonder\" (1962), from the PSALMS ; Gay Purr-ee (1962), animated film, Abe Levitow, director ; The Lord is My Shepherd (1962) from the PSALMS ; \"The Escape\" (1962) from the PSALMS ; The Young Racers (1963), Roger Corman, director ; The Haunted Palace (1963), Roger Corman, director ; The Birds (1963), Alfred Hitchcock, director ; It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) Stanley Kramer, director ; The Pink Panther (1963), Blake Edwards, director ; Battle Beyond the Sun (1967), Roger Corman, director ", "score": "1.3578352" }, { "id": "10360991", "title": "List of film director and editor collaborations", "text": " (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ", "score": "1.3461192" }, { "id": "27840506", "title": "Peter Mandelson", "text": " In 1985, the Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock appointed him as the party's Director of Communications. As Director, he was one of the first people in Britain to whom the term \"spin doctor\" was applied; he was thus called \"the Prince of Darkness\". In 1986 Mandelson ran the campaign at the Fulham by-election in which Labour defeated the Conservative Party. For the 1987 election campaign, Mandelson commissioned film director Hugh Hudson, whose Chariots of Fire (1981) had won an Oscar as Best Picture, to make a party political broadcast promoting Neil Kinnock as a potential prime minister. Tagged \"Kinnock – the Movie\", it led ", "score": "1.3449943" }, { "id": "3526914", "title": "George Marshall (director)", "text": " director ; Texas (1941) – director ; Star Spangled Rhythm (1942) – director ; Valley of the Sun (1942) – director ; The Forest Rangers (1942) – director ; True to Life (1943) – director ; Riding High (1943) – director ; And the Angels Sing (1944) – director ; Murder, He Says (1945) – director ; Hold That Blonde (1945) – director ; Incendiary Blonde (1945) – director ; The Blue Dahlia (1946) – director ; Monsieur Beaucaire (1946) – director ; The Perils of Pauline (1947) – director ; Variety Girl (1947) – director, cameo ; Hazard (1948) – director ", "score": "1.3411663" }, { "id": "14947161", "title": "Peter Brinckerhoff", "text": "Director (1989) Director (1983) Director (1984) Director (entire run, 1999–2008) Director (1991–1993) Stage Manager (1980) Director (entire run, 2001) Director (entire run, 1997–1999) Director (1993–2009) Director (all eps of season two) Director (December 23, 2008–present) Director (May 5, 2009–present) Another World As the World Turns Capitol Passions Santa Barbara Search for Tomorrow Spyder Games Sunset Beach General Hospital General Hospital: Night Shift Days of Our Lives The Young and the Restless", "score": "1.3393548" }, { "id": "4093862", "title": "Irving Lerner", "text": " unit director) (uncredited) ; Valley Town (1940) (second unit director) ; One Third of a Nation (1939) (second unit director) (uncredited) Hay que matar a B. (1975) ; On Camera (1 episode, 1955) ; Pie in the Sky (1935) The Savage Eye (1960) (technical advisor) ; God's Little Acre (1958) (associate to director) ; Robot Monster (1953) (production associate) New York, New York (1977) (supervising editor) ; Executive Action (1973) (associate editor) Men in War (1957) (production supervisor) The Land (1942) New York, New York (1977) (our gratitude and respect to) As Director As Producer As Editor As Second Unit Director or Assistant Director As Actor As Miscellaneous Crew Editing Department Production Manager As Cinematographer Dedicatee", "score": "1.3377615" }, { "id": "15401256", "title": "Norman Dyhrenfurth", "text": " Dyhrenfurth was second unit director and technical advisor for the 1982 film Five Days One Summer, starring Sean Connery.", "score": "1.3359554" }, { "id": "1107086", "title": "The Director (novel)", "text": " The Director (ISBN: 0-380-00669-3) is a novel by United States author Henry Denker, published in 1971. The novel is about an ambitious young film director, named Jock Finley, who uses two prominent film stars Carr and Daisy Donnel (ostensibly based on John Wayne and Marilyn Monroe) to rebuild his already damaged career. The novel is laced with sharp dialogue and explicit sexual encounters in line with the counterculture of the 1970s. The Underlying theme of the novel is the clash of generations as of values.", "score": "1.3350691" }, { "id": "10011892", "title": "Aaron Director", "text": " Aaron Director (September 21, 1901 – September 11, 2004) was a Russian-born American economist and academic who played a central role in the development of the field Law and Economics and the Chicago school of economics. Director was a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, and together with his brother-in-law, Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, Director influenced some of the next generation of jurists, including Robert Bork, Richard Posner, Antonin Scalia and Chief Justice William Rehnquist.", "score": "1.3327312" }, { "id": "9163596", "title": "One of Those", "text": " One of Those (Una di quelle, also known as Totò, Peppino e... una di quelle) is a 1953 Italian comedy-drama film produced, written, directed and starred by Aldo Fabrizi.", "score": "1.3326781" }, { "id": "14735658", "title": "James A. Baffico", "text": "Occasional Director (2004, 2005) ; Director (1993-1998; 2000-2004) executive producer (1981-1982) Producer/Director (1981-1985) Director (1998-1999) Director (1989; 2006- August 16, 2007) ; Occasional Director (2004, 2005, 2006) ; Occasional Script Writer (2003) All My Children The Doctors Another World As the World Turns Days of Our Lives", "score": "1.3306724" }, { "id": "3048765", "title": "William P. Cartlidge", "text": "The Adventurers (1970), assistant director ; Fragment of Fear (1970), assistant director ; The Last Valley (1971), assistant director ; Friends (1971), assistant director ; Nearest and Dearest (1972), assistant director ; Young Winston (1972), assistant director ; Phase IV (1974), assistant director ; That's Your Funeral (1974), assistant director ; Paul and Michelle (1974), associate producer ; Seven Nights in Japan (1976), associate producer ; The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), associate producer ; Moonraker (1979), associate producer ", "score": "1.3266459" }, { "id": "14550730", "title": "William Ludel", "text": "Director (1972-1974) Director (1994-present) Occasional Director (1990s) Another World General Hospital Days of Our Lives", "score": "1.326179" }, { "id": "32564150", "title": "Robin Duval", "text": " Robin Arthur Philip Duval (born 1941) was Director of the British Board of Film Classification, (the \"Film Censor\"), from 1999 to 2004. Duval was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham before reading history at University College London (UCL) during which he took part in the first series of University Challenge. He subsequently studied at the University of Michigan as a Fulbright Scholar. He began his career in BBC radio and as a TV advertisement writer and producer at J. Walter Thompson. In 1968 he joined the Central Office of Information (COI), eventually becoming their Head of Television and Film Production. He then became Deputy Director of Programmes at the Independent Television Commission before succeeding James Ferman as Director of the BBFC in 1999. His directorship was marked by his 2000 decision no longer to cut films for adults (unless they broke criminal law). He also abolished the '12' ", "score": "1.3252872" }, { "id": "32550821", "title": "Jack Kinney", "text": " (1945) ; Tiger Trouble (director) (1945) ; The Story of Menstruation (short documentary) (director) (uncredited; 1946) ; Goofy Gymnastics (director) (1949) ; Tennis Racquet (director) (1949) ; Hold That Pose (director) (1950) ; Motor Mania (director) (1950) ; The Brave Engineer (director) (1950) ; How to Ride a Horse (director) (1950) ; Lion Down (director) (1951) ; Father's Lion (director) (1951) ; No Smoking (director) (1951) ; Fathers Are People (director) (1951) ; Get Rich Quick (director) (1951) ; Tomorrow We Diet! (director) (1951) ; Cold War (1951) (director) ; Home Made Home (director) (1951) ; Cold Storage (director) (1951) ; How to Be a Detective (1952) ; Two Weeks Vacation (director) (1952) ; Teachers Are People (director) (1952) ; Two Gun Goofy ", "score": "1.3219333" } ]
[ "Robert Altman\n As director", "Robert Mandel\n Festival at Lincoln Center. Mandel went on to become a successful film director, as well as a television series director, having directed Lost, Nash Bridges and The Practice. He was the director of the pilot for The X-Files and the sixth episode of Prison Break. Mandel was the original director hired on for what was then titled Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry but quickly left the production over \"creative differences.\" Katt Shea took over as director for the film, which was eventually released as The Rage: Carrie 2. Mandel was the dean of AFI Conservatory for nine years from 2005 to 2014. He was the first alumnus of the program to be selected a dean.", "New York University Press\nArthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "Director (2009 film)\n Director is a 2009 action film directed by Aleks Rosenberg, produced by Alex Cohen, and starring Claudia Davilla, Stephane Kay, Mike Paris and Wu-Tang Clan-affiliated group's Prodigal Sunn. The film is set in Miami, Florida.", "John C. Zak\nCoordinating Producer (1989) ; Producer (1989-1996) ; Supervising Producer (1996-1999) ; Director (1990's) Director (1986) Director (1980's) Lighting Director (1976-1982) ; Director (1987-1988) Director (2004-2005) Director (1980's) Director (1984-1985) Director (2001) Director (1980's) The Bold and the Beautiful Capitol Days of Our Lives General Hospital One Life to Live Rituals Santa Barbara Spyder Games The Young and the Restless", "Armondo Linus Acosta\nTouch of Evil (1958), Orson Welles, director ; Two Women or La Ciociara (1960), Vittorio De Sica, director ; El Cid (1961), Anthony Mann, director ; Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), Stanley Kramer, director ; Days of Wine and Roses (1962), Blake Edwards, director ; Experiment in Terror (1962), Blake Edwards, director ; Lawrence of Arabia (1962), David Lean, director ; The Connection (1962), Shirley Clarke, director ; What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), Robert Aldrich, director ; War Hunt (1962), Denis Sanders, director ; \"The Soldier\" (1962), from the PSALMS ; \"Wonder\" (1962), from the PSALMS ; Gay Purr-ee (1962), animated film, Abe Levitow, director ; The Lord is My Shepherd (1962) from the PSALMS ; \"The Escape\" (1962) from the PSALMS ; The Young Racers (1963), Roger Corman, director ; The Haunted Palace (1963), Roger Corman, director ; The Birds (1963), Alfred Hitchcock, director ; It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) Stanley Kramer, director ; The Pink Panther (1963), Blake Edwards, director ; Battle Beyond the Sun (1967), Roger Corman, director ", "List of film director and editor collaborations\n (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ", "Peter Mandelson\n In 1985, the Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock appointed him as the party's Director of Communications. As Director, he was one of the first people in Britain to whom the term \"spin doctor\" was applied; he was thus called \"the Prince of Darkness\". In 1986 Mandelson ran the campaign at the Fulham by-election in which Labour defeated the Conservative Party. For the 1987 election campaign, Mandelson commissioned film director Hugh Hudson, whose Chariots of Fire (1981) had won an Oscar as Best Picture, to make a party political broadcast promoting Neil Kinnock as a potential prime minister. Tagged \"Kinnock – the Movie\", it led ", "George Marshall (director)\n director ; Texas (1941) – director ; Star Spangled Rhythm (1942) – director ; Valley of the Sun (1942) – director ; The Forest Rangers (1942) – director ; True to Life (1943) – director ; Riding High (1943) – director ; And the Angels Sing (1944) – director ; Murder, He Says (1945) – director ; Hold That Blonde (1945) – director ; Incendiary Blonde (1945) – director ; The Blue Dahlia (1946) – director ; Monsieur Beaucaire (1946) – director ; The Perils of Pauline (1947) – director ; Variety Girl (1947) – director, cameo ; Hazard (1948) – director ", "Peter Brinckerhoff\nDirector (1989) Director (1983) Director (1984) Director (entire run, 1999–2008) Director (1991–1993) Stage Manager (1980) Director (entire run, 2001) Director (entire run, 1997–1999) Director (1993–2009) Director (all eps of season two) Director (December 23, 2008–present) Director (May 5, 2009–present) Another World As the World Turns Capitol Passions Santa Barbara Search for Tomorrow Spyder Games Sunset Beach General Hospital General Hospital: Night Shift Days of Our Lives The Young and the Restless", "Irving Lerner\n unit director) (uncredited) ; Valley Town (1940) (second unit director) ; One Third of a Nation (1939) (second unit director) (uncredited) Hay que matar a B. (1975) ; On Camera (1 episode, 1955) ; Pie in the Sky (1935) The Savage Eye (1960) (technical advisor) ; God's Little Acre (1958) (associate to director) ; Robot Monster (1953) (production associate) New York, New York (1977) (supervising editor) ; Executive Action (1973) (associate editor) Men in War (1957) (production supervisor) The Land (1942) New York, New York (1977) (our gratitude and respect to) As Director As Producer As Editor As Second Unit Director or Assistant Director As Actor As Miscellaneous Crew Editing Department Production Manager As Cinematographer Dedicatee", "Norman Dyhrenfurth\n Dyhrenfurth was second unit director and technical advisor for the 1982 film Five Days One Summer, starring Sean Connery.", "The Director (novel)\n The Director (ISBN: 0-380-00669-3) is a novel by United States author Henry Denker, published in 1971. The novel is about an ambitious young film director, named Jock Finley, who uses two prominent film stars Carr and Daisy Donnel (ostensibly based on John Wayne and Marilyn Monroe) to rebuild his already damaged career. The novel is laced with sharp dialogue and explicit sexual encounters in line with the counterculture of the 1970s. The Underlying theme of the novel is the clash of generations as of values.", "Aaron Director\n Aaron Director (September 21, 1901 – September 11, 2004) was a Russian-born American economist and academic who played a central role in the development of the field Law and Economics and the Chicago school of economics. Director was a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, and together with his brother-in-law, Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, Director influenced some of the next generation of jurists, including Robert Bork, Richard Posner, Antonin Scalia and Chief Justice William Rehnquist.", "One of Those\n One of Those (Una di quelle, also known as Totò, Peppino e... una di quelle) is a 1953 Italian comedy-drama film produced, written, directed and starred by Aldo Fabrizi.", "James A. Baffico\nOccasional Director (2004, 2005) ; Director (1993-1998; 2000-2004) executive producer (1981-1982) Producer/Director (1981-1985) Director (1998-1999) Director (1989; 2006- August 16, 2007) ; Occasional Director (2004, 2005, 2006) ; Occasional Script Writer (2003) All My Children The Doctors Another World As the World Turns Days of Our Lives", "William P. Cartlidge\nThe Adventurers (1970), assistant director ; Fragment of Fear (1970), assistant director ; The Last Valley (1971), assistant director ; Friends (1971), assistant director ; Nearest and Dearest (1972), assistant director ; Young Winston (1972), assistant director ; Phase IV (1974), assistant director ; That's Your Funeral (1974), assistant director ; Paul and Michelle (1974), associate producer ; Seven Nights in Japan (1976), associate producer ; The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), associate producer ; Moonraker (1979), associate producer ", "William Ludel\nDirector (1972-1974) Director (1994-present) Occasional Director (1990s) Another World General Hospital Days of Our Lives", "Robin Duval\n Robin Arthur Philip Duval (born 1941) was Director of the British Board of Film Classification, (the \"Film Censor\"), from 1999 to 2004. Duval was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham before reading history at University College London (UCL) during which he took part in the first series of University Challenge. He subsequently studied at the University of Michigan as a Fulbright Scholar. He began his career in BBC radio and as a TV advertisement writer and producer at J. Walter Thompson. In 1968 he joined the Central Office of Information (COI), eventually becoming their Head of Television and Film Production. He then became Deputy Director of Programmes at the Independent Television Commission before succeeding James Ferman as Director of the BBFC in 1999. His directorship was marked by his 2000 decision no longer to cut films for adults (unless they broke criminal law). He also abolished the '12' ", "Jack Kinney\n (1945) ; Tiger Trouble (director) (1945) ; The Story of Menstruation (short documentary) (director) (uncredited; 1946) ; Goofy Gymnastics (director) (1949) ; Tennis Racquet (director) (1949) ; Hold That Pose (director) (1950) ; Motor Mania (director) (1950) ; The Brave Engineer (director) (1950) ; How to Ride a Horse (director) (1950) ; Lion Down (director) (1951) ; Father's Lion (director) (1951) ; No Smoking (director) (1951) ; Fathers Are People (director) (1951) ; Get Rich Quick (director) (1951) ; Tomorrow We Diet! (director) (1951) ; Cold War (1951) (director) ; Home Made Home (director) (1951) ; Cold Storage (director) (1951) ; How to Be a Detective (1952) ; Two Weeks Vacation (director) (1952) ; Teachers Are People (director) (1952) ; Two Gun Goofy " ]
Who was the director of The Key?
[ "Antun Vrdoljak" ]
director
The Key (1965 film)
2,665,518
94
[ { "id": "27581296", "title": "Keyworth Rugby Union Football Club", "text": " The current Director of Rugby, in charge of the selection and training of all teams is Cavan 'Towerblock' Keiran, a highly talented coaching prospect.", "score": "1.4631591" }, { "id": "9113707", "title": "Marcus M. Key", "text": " Marcus Malvin Key was a public health administrator and practitioner who served as the first director for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) in the U.S. government.", "score": "1.4624836" }, { "id": "14871154", "title": "John W. Keys", "text": " John Walton Keys III (March 25, 1942 – May 30, 2008) was the Commissioner of the United States Bureau of Reclamation from 2001 to 2006. He was also a college football official for 20 years in the Big Sky Conference.", "score": "1.4556491" }, { "id": "25160532", "title": "List of Quantico characters", "text": " Matthew Keyes (portrayed by Henry Czerny) is the director of the CIA who offered Alex Parrish a position within the organization. Shortly after the 2018 Hostage Crisis ended, it was revealed that he worked with Claire Haas in setting up the Presidential Covert Joint Task Force.", "score": "1.4405973" }, { "id": "14871156", "title": "John W. Keys", "text": " Keys first began working with the Bureau of Reclamation as a civil and hydraulic engineer in 1964. In 1986, he was appointed the Northwest Regional Director, overseeing operations in Washington state, Oregon, Idaho, and parts of Montana and Wyoming. He retired from that position in 1998. For the next three years, Keys spent most of his time flying his personal aircraft for humanitarian purposes. He returned to the bureau when he was confirmed as commissioner in July 2001. Keys left the position of commissioner in 2006, but was at times consulted by his successor, Bob Johnson. Keys was an American football official for 40 years, including 20 years officiating college football games in the Big Sky Conference. He was the referee of the 1998 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game between UMass and Georgia Southern. Keys died on May 30, 2008, when the Cessna 172 he was piloting crashed in the Four Corners area. He was a resident of Moab, Utah, at the time of his death.", "score": "1.4208925" }, { "id": "10154464", "title": "Geoffrey Key", "text": " Key's mother, Marion, worked as an illustrator, and encouraged him to draw. Key was educated at the Manchester High School of Art, whose headmaster, Ernest Goodman, established the Salford Art Club. After Goodman's death, its members chose Key as the Honorary President. In 1958, Key enrolled at the Manchester Regional College of Art. At the college, Key was tutored by sculptor Ted Roocroft and painter Harry Rutherford. After gaining the National Diploma of Design and the Diploma of Associateship of Manchester, the latter with distinction, Key took up a postgraduate scholarship in sculpture. His academic awards include the Heywood Medal in Fine Art and the Guthrie Bond Travelling Scholarship.", "score": "1.3931797" }, { "id": "31867443", "title": "John Key", "text": " to serve the newly established Cabinet National Security Committee. The Prime Minister assumed the new portfolio while the Attorney General Christopher Finlayson became Minister Responsible for the GCSB and Minister in Charge of the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service (NZSIS), portfolios which have traditionally been held by a prime minister. Key was elected Chairman of the International Democrat Union (IDU), an international alliance of centre-right political parties. The National Party was a founding member party in 1983. In April 2015, Key acknowledged that he had pulled a waitress' ponytail multiple times over several months; when Key learnt she had taken offence, ", "score": "1.393009" }, { "id": "29875687", "title": "David McK. Key", "text": " David McKendree Key (February 4, 1900 – July 15, 1988) of Tennessee, a descendant of David M. Key, served as United States Ambassador to Burma from April 1950 to October 1951, and later as the Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs of the State Department. He graduated from Harvard College.", "score": "1.3836406" }, { "id": "32190189", "title": "Ancel Keys", "text": " When Keys was hired at the Mayo Foundation in 1936, he hired Margaret Haney (1909–2006) as a medical technologist. In 1939 they married and had three children: Carrie D'Andrea, Henry Keys, and Martha McLain. Carrie became a clinical psychologist and Henry became a physician and cancer researcher. Both are well respected contributors to their fields. Martha was shot dead by a thief in 1991 when she was 42. Together, Margaret and Keys co-authored three books, two of them bestsellers. They earned enough royalties to build Minnelea, their villa in the seaside village of Pioppi, in the Cilento region on the southwest coast of Italy, where Keys lived and worked from 1963 to 1998. They also traveled the world, going to places like Japan and ", "score": "1.3807243" }, { "id": "5047033", "title": "Brent Key", "text": " Brent Key (born August 1, 1978) is an American college football coach and former player. Key is currently the Associate Head Coach and Run Game Coordinator along with coaching the Offensive Line at his alma mater, Georgia Tech. Key is widely regarded as one of the top assistant coaches in the country. While as an assistant at UCF, Key was selected to be the heir apparent to George O'Leary following his retirement. Following the 2013 season in which UCF won the Fiesta Bowl, Key reportedly declined the head coaching job at UAB to remain with the Knights. Prior to being hired at Georgia Tech, Key was the Offensive Line ", "score": "1.3752153" }, { "id": "26827000", "title": "The Key (1958 film)", "text": " uniforms of David's predecessors, and takes off the wedding ring. She also leaves her flat for the first time since Philip was killed. Finally, she asks David to marry her, and he gladly accepts. With the U.S. entry into the war, an American freighter becomes David's next assignment, even though it is Van Dam's turn. Its inexperienced crew sends out a continuous S.O.S., contrary to sealed orders, revealing the ship's position to the enemy. When David finds out the situation, he tries unsuccessfully to refuse what amounts to a suicide mission. Knowing his chances, he gives his key to the new captain of another tugboat, Chris's former mate, Kane (Kieron ", "score": "1.3711913" }, { "id": "6003610", "title": "John Paddy Carstairs", "text": " John Paddy Carstairs (born John Keys; 11 May 1910, in London – 12 December 1970, in London) was a British film director (1933–62) and television director (1962–64), usually of light-hearted subject matter. He was also a comic novelist and painter.", "score": "1.3687863" }, { "id": "1140549", "title": "George Key (politician)", "text": " Island, his predecessor Walter Shaw continued to serve as Leader of the Opposition. Key led the party into the 1970 election, in which the party won just five seats. Key himself was not elected to the legislature; as the party's assemblyman candidate in the electoral district of 2nd Prince, he lost by a margin of just eight votes to Joshua MacArthur, even as his co-candidate George Dewar won the district's council seat. MacArthur's victory was subsequently confirmed on a judicial recount. Since Key continued not to hold a seat in the legislature and Shaw had not stood for reelection in 1970, Dewar became the new leader of the opposition. Key announced his resignation as party leader in 1972, and was succeeded by Melvin McQuaid in early 1973. He died on July 3, 2005.", "score": "1.36819" }, { "id": "27460917", "title": "Steven Key", "text": " Steven Key (born May 14, 1968) is an American professional basketball coach and former professional player.", "score": "1.3681573" }, { "id": "29364511", "title": "Townsend Bell", "text": " (key)", "score": "1.366174" }, { "id": "31867415", "title": "John Key", "text": " Sir John Phillip Key (born 9 August 1961) is a New Zealand retired politician who served as the 38th prime minister of New Zealand from 2008 to 2016 and as Leader of the New Zealand National Party from 2006 to 2016. After resigning from both posts in December 2016 and leaving politics, Key was appointed to board of director and chairmanship roles in New Zealand corporations. Born in Auckland before moving to Christchurch when he was a child, Key attended the University of Canterbury and graduated in 1981 with a bachelor of commerce. He began a career in the foreign exchange market in New Zealand before moving overseas to work for Merrill Lynch, ", "score": "1.3645182" }, { "id": "13454021", "title": "David Key (American football)", "text": " Key was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1968. He attended Bishop Hartley High School in Columbus. He played football at Hartley and led the team to the Division IV state championship game in 1985. He also was a member of the track team and led the team to Division II state titles in 1985 and 1986.", "score": "1.3643056" }, { "id": "31258234", "title": "Jefery Levy", "text": " Levy's 2014 film adaption of the novel The Key by the japanese writer Junichiro Tanizaki premiered at the Real Experiment Film Festival at the Laemmle Music Hall Theater in Beverly Hills. The Key explores the twisted sexual life and marriage of a Los Angeles couple through their private journals in an explicit cinematic portrayal.", "score": "1.3593906" }, { "id": "5047034", "title": "Brent Key", "text": " at Alabama for 3 seasons. Key was hired at Alabama on February 15, 2016, replacing Mario Cristobal, who remained on staff as tight ends coach. Before his time at Alabama, Key was the offensive coordinator, assistant head coach, offensive line coach, and recruiting coordinator for the UCF Knights. Key played under former UCF head coach George O'Leary at Georgia Tech, where he later served as a graduate assistant before joining O'Leary at UCF. Key served as UCF's recruiting coordinator beginning in 2007 along with being UCF's Offensive Line Coach. After the 2012 season, Key was promoted to assistant head coach and then to offensive coordinator following the 2013 season.", "score": "1.3592131" }, { "id": "10937941", "title": "The Ring (Chuck)", "text": " was never actually in the room and Shaw was instead interacting with a sophisticated hologram. The Director therefore escaped the destruction of the facility when it was bombed shortly afterwards. In \"Chuck Versus the Other Guy,\" the Director is involved in a complex plot to turn Shaw to the Ring. He convinced Shaw that the government believed Eve had already been turned, and utilized Sarah to execute her before Evelyn proved she was a liability. The Director allowed Shaw to strengthen his position with the government by allowing him to capture the Ring's prototype for the Cipher and \"eliminate\" him. Shaw then met him in Paris where he turned over the Cipher and all government technical data on the Intersect. While Shaw was dealt with by Chuck, the Director attempted to escape with the Intersect data, but he was intercepted and apprehended by Casey.", "score": "1.3514729" } ]
[ "Keyworth Rugby Union Football Club\n The current Director of Rugby, in charge of the selection and training of all teams is Cavan 'Towerblock' Keiran, a highly talented coaching prospect.", "Marcus M. Key\n Marcus Malvin Key was a public health administrator and practitioner who served as the first director for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) in the U.S. government.", "John W. Keys\n John Walton Keys III (March 25, 1942 – May 30, 2008) was the Commissioner of the United States Bureau of Reclamation from 2001 to 2006. He was also a college football official for 20 years in the Big Sky Conference.", "List of Quantico characters\n Matthew Keyes (portrayed by Henry Czerny) is the director of the CIA who offered Alex Parrish a position within the organization. Shortly after the 2018 Hostage Crisis ended, it was revealed that he worked with Claire Haas in setting up the Presidential Covert Joint Task Force.", "John W. Keys\n Keys first began working with the Bureau of Reclamation as a civil and hydraulic engineer in 1964. In 1986, he was appointed the Northwest Regional Director, overseeing operations in Washington state, Oregon, Idaho, and parts of Montana and Wyoming. He retired from that position in 1998. For the next three years, Keys spent most of his time flying his personal aircraft for humanitarian purposes. He returned to the bureau when he was confirmed as commissioner in July 2001. Keys left the position of commissioner in 2006, but was at times consulted by his successor, Bob Johnson. Keys was an American football official for 40 years, including 20 years officiating college football games in the Big Sky Conference. He was the referee of the 1998 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game between UMass and Georgia Southern. Keys died on May 30, 2008, when the Cessna 172 he was piloting crashed in the Four Corners area. He was a resident of Moab, Utah, at the time of his death.", "Geoffrey Key\n Key's mother, Marion, worked as an illustrator, and encouraged him to draw. Key was educated at the Manchester High School of Art, whose headmaster, Ernest Goodman, established the Salford Art Club. After Goodman's death, its members chose Key as the Honorary President. In 1958, Key enrolled at the Manchester Regional College of Art. At the college, Key was tutored by sculptor Ted Roocroft and painter Harry Rutherford. After gaining the National Diploma of Design and the Diploma of Associateship of Manchester, the latter with distinction, Key took up a postgraduate scholarship in sculpture. His academic awards include the Heywood Medal in Fine Art and the Guthrie Bond Travelling Scholarship.", "John Key\n to serve the newly established Cabinet National Security Committee. The Prime Minister assumed the new portfolio while the Attorney General Christopher Finlayson became Minister Responsible for the GCSB and Minister in Charge of the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service (NZSIS), portfolios which have traditionally been held by a prime minister. Key was elected Chairman of the International Democrat Union (IDU), an international alliance of centre-right political parties. The National Party was a founding member party in 1983. In April 2015, Key acknowledged that he had pulled a waitress' ponytail multiple times over several months; when Key learnt she had taken offence, ", "David McK. Key\n David McKendree Key (February 4, 1900 – July 15, 1988) of Tennessee, a descendant of David M. Key, served as United States Ambassador to Burma from April 1950 to October 1951, and later as the Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs of the State Department. He graduated from Harvard College.", "Ancel Keys\n When Keys was hired at the Mayo Foundation in 1936, he hired Margaret Haney (1909–2006) as a medical technologist. In 1939 they married and had three children: Carrie D'Andrea, Henry Keys, and Martha McLain. Carrie became a clinical psychologist and Henry became a physician and cancer researcher. Both are well respected contributors to their fields. Martha was shot dead by a thief in 1991 when she was 42. Together, Margaret and Keys co-authored three books, two of them bestsellers. They earned enough royalties to build Minnelea, their villa in the seaside village of Pioppi, in the Cilento region on the southwest coast of Italy, where Keys lived and worked from 1963 to 1998. They also traveled the world, going to places like Japan and ", "Brent Key\n Brent Key (born August 1, 1978) is an American college football coach and former player. Key is currently the Associate Head Coach and Run Game Coordinator along with coaching the Offensive Line at his alma mater, Georgia Tech. Key is widely regarded as one of the top assistant coaches in the country. While as an assistant at UCF, Key was selected to be the heir apparent to George O'Leary following his retirement. Following the 2013 season in which UCF won the Fiesta Bowl, Key reportedly declined the head coaching job at UAB to remain with the Knights. Prior to being hired at Georgia Tech, Key was the Offensive Line ", "The Key (1958 film)\n uniforms of David's predecessors, and takes off the wedding ring. She also leaves her flat for the first time since Philip was killed. Finally, she asks David to marry her, and he gladly accepts. With the U.S. entry into the war, an American freighter becomes David's next assignment, even though it is Van Dam's turn. Its inexperienced crew sends out a continuous S.O.S., contrary to sealed orders, revealing the ship's position to the enemy. When David finds out the situation, he tries unsuccessfully to refuse what amounts to a suicide mission. Knowing his chances, he gives his key to the new captain of another tugboat, Chris's former mate, Kane (Kieron ", "John Paddy Carstairs\n John Paddy Carstairs (born John Keys; 11 May 1910, in London – 12 December 1970, in London) was a British film director (1933–62) and television director (1962–64), usually of light-hearted subject matter. He was also a comic novelist and painter.", "George Key (politician)\n Island, his predecessor Walter Shaw continued to serve as Leader of the Opposition. Key led the party into the 1970 election, in which the party won just five seats. Key himself was not elected to the legislature; as the party's assemblyman candidate in the electoral district of 2nd Prince, he lost by a margin of just eight votes to Joshua MacArthur, even as his co-candidate George Dewar won the district's council seat. MacArthur's victory was subsequently confirmed on a judicial recount. Since Key continued not to hold a seat in the legislature and Shaw had not stood for reelection in 1970, Dewar became the new leader of the opposition. Key announced his resignation as party leader in 1972, and was succeeded by Melvin McQuaid in early 1973. He died on July 3, 2005.", "Steven Key\n Steven Key (born May 14, 1968) is an American professional basketball coach and former professional player.", "Townsend Bell\n (key)", "John Key\n Sir John Phillip Key (born 9 August 1961) is a New Zealand retired politician who served as the 38th prime minister of New Zealand from 2008 to 2016 and as Leader of the New Zealand National Party from 2006 to 2016. After resigning from both posts in December 2016 and leaving politics, Key was appointed to board of director and chairmanship roles in New Zealand corporations. Born in Auckland before moving to Christchurch when he was a child, Key attended the University of Canterbury and graduated in 1981 with a bachelor of commerce. He began a career in the foreign exchange market in New Zealand before moving overseas to work for Merrill Lynch, ", "David Key (American football)\n Key was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1968. He attended Bishop Hartley High School in Columbus. He played football at Hartley and led the team to the Division IV state championship game in 1985. He also was a member of the track team and led the team to Division II state titles in 1985 and 1986.", "Jefery Levy\n Levy's 2014 film adaption of the novel The Key by the japanese writer Junichiro Tanizaki premiered at the Real Experiment Film Festival at the Laemmle Music Hall Theater in Beverly Hills. The Key explores the twisted sexual life and marriage of a Los Angeles couple through their private journals in an explicit cinematic portrayal.", "Brent Key\n at Alabama for 3 seasons. Key was hired at Alabama on February 15, 2016, replacing Mario Cristobal, who remained on staff as tight ends coach. Before his time at Alabama, Key was the offensive coordinator, assistant head coach, offensive line coach, and recruiting coordinator for the UCF Knights. Key played under former UCF head coach George O'Leary at Georgia Tech, where he later served as a graduate assistant before joining O'Leary at UCF. Key served as UCF's recruiting coordinator beginning in 2007 along with being UCF's Offensive Line Coach. After the 2012 season, Key was promoted to assistant head coach and then to offensive coordinator following the 2013 season.", "The Ring (Chuck)\n was never actually in the room and Shaw was instead interacting with a sophisticated hologram. The Director therefore escaped the destruction of the facility when it was bombed shortly afterwards. In \"Chuck Versus the Other Guy,\" the Director is involved in a complex plot to turn Shaw to the Ring. He convinced Shaw that the government believed Eve had already been turned, and utilized Sarah to execute her before Evelyn proved she was a liability. The Director allowed Shaw to strengthen his position with the government by allowing him to capture the Ring's prototype for the Cipher and \"eliminate\" him. Shaw then met him in Paris where he turned over the Cipher and all government technical data on the Intersect. While Shaw was dealt with by Chuck, the Director attempted to escape with the Intersect data, but he was intercepted and apprehended by Casey." ]
Who was the director of The Wolf?
[ "Michael Curtiz" ]
director
The Wolf (1916 film)
5,965,220
95
[ { "id": "16415439", "title": "Mary Hunter Wolf", "text": " Mary Hunter Wolf (December 4, 1904 – November 3, 2000), born Mary Hunter, was an American theater director and producer. She made her Broadway directorial debut on 4 April 1944 at the Bijou Theater with Only the Heart, the first play written by Horton Foote. She was director of the initial 1954 Broadway production of Jerome Robbins' version of Peter Pan, now the standard version on the American stage, and was founding executive director of the American Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford, Connecticut.", "score": "1.53224" }, { "id": "26552156", "title": "Julius Rosenthal Wolf", "text": " In the autumn of 1951, Wolf moved to New York City. From 1951 to 1962, he worked in publishing, public relations, and advertising. During that time he was also the assistant director of Edith Halpert's Downtown Gallery in New York City where he developed relationships with many American Modernist masters that were represented by the gallery. From 1962 to 1976, Wolf served various capacities with the second largest talent agency in the world, General Artists Corporation, ultimately becoming the agency's vice president. During his time with GAC, he became known as an early champion of African American talent in the film and theater industries. He also cast actress Susan Sarandon in one of her earliest made for television movies, F. Scott Fitzgerald and 'The Last of the Belles'. Throughout his career, Wolf was also a consultant for American Broadcast Company, and Public Broadcasting Service for which he cast The Adams Chronicles, Hogan's Goat, and June Moon.", "score": "1.5198812" }, { "id": "1853154", "title": "Cry Wolf (1947 film)", "text": " In April 1945 Warner Bros bought the film rights as a vehicle for Barbara Stanwyck. Catherine Turney was assigned to do the script and Dennis Morgan announced as co star. The film took a while to be made. In March 1946, Errol Flynn was announced as co star and Peter Godfrey as director. The movie was a \"Thomson Production\", i.e. made through Flynn's company at Warner Bros. Two of the supporting cast were from the New York stage, Geraldine Brooks and Richard Basehart, and had just been put under contract by Warner Bros. (Basehart had given an acclaimed stage performance in The Hasty Heart.)", "score": "1.5049763" }, { "id": "30157582", "title": "The Fury of the Wolfman", "text": " film differed from the earlier entries in the series in that 1) Daninsky is a college professor in this film, 2) the lycanthropy is caused by a Yeti's bite, and 3) Daninsky is married in this film. Naschy's friend Enrique Eguiluz started out to direct this film, but only managed to film Naschy's nightmare sequence near the beginning of the film. He left the project early and was replaced by Zabalza, whom Naschy said was an alcoholic and a very uncouth person. Due to the laziness of director Zabalza, this film wound up including a lot of stock footage from La Marca del Hombre Lobo (1968) to pad out its running time and a few carelessly mismatched werewolf scenes played by a stunt double he hired.", "score": "1.5026176" }, { "id": "31542032", "title": "Aaron Wolf (director)", "text": " Aaron Wolf is an American actor, writer and director best known for the feature documentary Restoring Tomorrow. He is the co-founder and President of Howling Wolf Productions based in Los Angeles, CA.", "score": "1.4925236" }, { "id": "25429075", "title": "The Dragon and the Wolf", "text": " \"The Dragon and the Wolf\" was directed by Jeremy Podeswa. He joined the series as a director in the fifth season, his first episode being \"Kill the Boy\", which was followed by \"Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken\", for which he was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series. He further directed two more episodes in the series' sixth season, and also directed the seventh season's premiere episode, \"Dragonstone\". This would be Podeswa's final episode as a director for the series, as he would later reveal that he would not be returning for the series' final season. In an interview with Variety, Podeswa described the tone in filming the ", "score": "1.4904306" }, { "id": "12152915", "title": "Wolf Rilla", "text": " Wolf Peter Rilla (16 March 1920 – 19 October 2005) was a film director and writer of German background, although he worked mainly in the United Kingdom. Rilla is known for directing Village of the Damned (1960). He wrote many books for students, such as The Writer and the Screen: On Writing for Film and Television and The A to Z of Movie Making.", "score": "1.4898574" }, { "id": "31506952", "title": "Wolf In der Maur", "text": " Wolf von In der Maur auf Strelberg und zu Freifeld, also known as Wolf In der Mauer or Wolf Indermaur, (March 2, 1924 – March 17, 2005) was an Austrian journalist, television director, news editor, and politician. After a career as an officer in the German military, he became a journalist and also held political office. In der maur served in the Landtag of Carinthia and was appointed by the Austrian parliament as the Federal Chancellor of the Commission for the Promotion of the Press. As a journalist, he was the editor of Wochenpresse and a radio director at ORF. In 1985 he was awarded the Decoration of Merit in Gold for the Republic of Austria.", "score": "1.4858898" }, { "id": "6296194", "title": "Budd Boetticher", "text": " At Monogram Pictures he directed Roddy McDowall in Black Midnight (1949) and Killer Shark (1950). In between he made The Wolf Hunters (1949). He began directing for television with Magnavox Theatre – a production of The Three Musketeers that was released theatrically in some markets as The Blade of the Musketeers.", "score": "1.4851112" }, { "id": "12196605", "title": "Wolf Koenig", "text": " Wolf Koenig (October 17, 1927 – June 26, 2014) was a Canadian film director, producer, animator, cinematographer, and a pioneer in Direct Cinema at the National Film Board of Canada.", "score": "1.4850917" }, { "id": "12672604", "title": "The Wolf Man (franchise)", "text": " hired to direct on 3 February 2008, and the film's shooting schedule and budget remained as intended. Johnston hired David Self to rewrite the script. Famed monster slayer Gabriel Van Helsing (Hugh Jackman) is dispatched to Transylvania to assist the last of the Valerious bloodline in defeating Count Dracula (Richard Roxburgh). Anna Valerious (Kate Beckinsale) reveals that Dracula has formed an unholy alliance with Dr. Frankenstein's monster (Shuler Hensley) and is hell-bent on exacting a centuries-old curse on her family. Together Anna and Van Helsing set out to destroy their common enemy, but uncover some unsettling secrets along the ", "score": "1.483391" }, { "id": "29398620", "title": "Time of the Wolf", "text": " Time of the Wolf (Le temps du loup) is a 2003 French dystopian post-apocalyptic drama film written and directed by Austrian director Michael Haneke. It was released theatrically in 2003. Set in France at an undisclosed time, the film follows the story of a family: Georges, Anne (Isabelle Huppert), and their two children, Eva (Anaïs Demoustier) and Ben (Lucas Biscombe). The film also stars Olivier Gourmet and Serge Riaboukine. The film takes its title from Völuspá, an ancient Norse poem which describes the time before the Ragnarök.", "score": "1.48129" }, { "id": "8440254", "title": "Wolf Totem (film)", "text": " with Jiamin, whom he had befriended. The filmmakers acquired wolves to raise and train in preparation for filming. The director worked on the first outline with writing partner Alain Godard, who died before they finished it. Annaud brought a draft to China in mid-2012. Chinese screenwriter Lu Wei wrote the second and third drafts of the screenplay. The draft was translated to French for Annaud to give feedback, and it was subsequently translated back to Chinese for Jiamin to revise. Preliminary filming of Wolf Totem began in July 2012. By 2013, Qiang had moved on to become vice president of China Film Group, which now backed the film. Bill Kong, CEO of Edko ", "score": "1.4810066" }, { "id": "5082031", "title": "Wolves at the Door", "text": " On May 8, 2015, John R. Leonetti, was announced as the director of Wolves at the Door for New Line Cinema, with Gary Dauberman as screenwriter and Peter Safran as producer. The script was loosely based on the Manson Family murders in 1969. Known as the Tate murders, the event saw members of the Charles Manson cult break into the home of Sharon Tate, eight-and-a-half months pregnant, and her new husband director Roman Polanski. The director was shooting in Europe at the time, but Tate was entertaining three friends. They were all stabbed and shot to death multiple times. The project was described as \"a home invasion thriller set in the 1960s but is not a retelling of the actual events, nor will it reference any Manson connection.\"", "score": "1.4759953" }, { "id": "391922", "title": "Dances with Wolves", "text": " Dances with Wolves is a 1990 American epic Western film starring, directed, and produced by Kevin Costner in his feature directorial debut. It is a film adaptation of the 1988 book of the same name by Michael Blake that tells the story of Union Army Lieutenant John J. Dunbar (Costner), who travels to the American frontier to find a military post, and of his dealings with a group of Lakota. Costner developed the film with an initial budget of $15 million. Much of the dialogue is spoken in Lakota with English subtitles. It was shot from July to November 1989 in South Dakota and Wyoming, and translated by Doris Leader Charge, of the Lakota Studies department at Sinte Gleska University. The film earned favorable reviews from critics and audiences, who praised Costner's directing, the performances, screenplay, and production values. The film was a ", "score": "1.4759188" }, { "id": "27643144", "title": "George Waggner", "text": " George Waggner (September 7, 1894 – December 11, 1984) was an American actor, director, producer and writer. He is best known for producing and directing the 1941 film The Wolf Man. For some unknown reason, Waggner sometimes configured his name in mostly lowercase letters but with his surname's two Gs capitalized (\"waGGner\"), including in the credits of some of the productions he directed.", "score": "1.4753561" }, { "id": "4767836", "title": "Moon of the Wolf", "text": " Moon of the Wolf is an American TV movie broadcast on September 26, 1972 on ABC Movie of the Week. It stars David Janssen, Barbara Rush, Geoffrey Lewis and Bradford Dillman, with a script by Alvin Sapinsley (based on Leslie H. Whitten's novel of the same name). The film was directed by Daniel Petrie and filmed on location in Burnside, Louisiana. All of the downtown footage was from Clinton, Louisiana.", "score": "1.4722459" }, { "id": "8673086", "title": "Wolf (2021 Irish-Polish film)", "text": " In February 2020, it was announced George MacKay and Lily-Rose Depp had joined the cast of the film, with Nathalie Biancheri directing from a screenplay she wrote. In September 2020, Paddy Considine, Eileen Walsh, Fionn O'Shea, Lola Petticrew and Senan Jennings joined the cast of the film. Principal photography began in August 2020. Production was initially set to begin in April 2020, but was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Principal photography ended by October 2020.", "score": "1.4700092" }, { "id": "31286905", "title": "The Day of the Wolves", "text": "Peter MacGregor-Scott ... Production Manager Incorrectly listed as Assistant Director in the credits, MacGregor-Scott went on to produce many major US films, including the Cheech and Chong movies, The Fugitive, Batman Forever, and, most recently, The Guardian. ; Ric Waite ... Cinematographer Emmy award-winning cinematographer who worked on many of the most successful films of the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s. He collaborated with Walter Hill on several films, including The Long Riders and 48 Hrs. ; Calmar Roberts ... Assistant Cameraman Principal cameraman on many major motion pictures, including the Lethal Weapon movies, Jurassic Park, and Basic Instinct. ; Mike Scott ... Grip Went on to become Camera Operator on many feature films including Die Hard, Speed, Speed 2, and Thelma & Louise. The Day of the Wolves was the first film for most of the film crew; several of those went onto achieve notable success in the Hollywood film industry:", "score": "1.4698043" }, { "id": "12672602", "title": "The Wolf Man (franchise)", "text": " Kevin Walker was attached to the screenplay, developing the original film's story to include additional characters as well as plot points that would take advantage of modern visual effects. Del Toro also looked towards Werewolf of London and The Curse of the Werewolf for inspiration. In February 2007, director Mark Romanek was attached to helm The Wolfman. Romanek's original vision was to \"infuse a balance of cinema in a popcorn movie scenario\", stating, \"When there’s a certain amount of money involved, these things make studios and producers a little nervous. They don’t necessarily understand it or they feel that the ", "score": "1.4668515" } ]
[ "Mary Hunter Wolf\n Mary Hunter Wolf (December 4, 1904 – November 3, 2000), born Mary Hunter, was an American theater director and producer. She made her Broadway directorial debut on 4 April 1944 at the Bijou Theater with Only the Heart, the first play written by Horton Foote. She was director of the initial 1954 Broadway production of Jerome Robbins' version of Peter Pan, now the standard version on the American stage, and was founding executive director of the American Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford, Connecticut.", "Julius Rosenthal Wolf\n In the autumn of 1951, Wolf moved to New York City. From 1951 to 1962, he worked in publishing, public relations, and advertising. During that time he was also the assistant director of Edith Halpert's Downtown Gallery in New York City where he developed relationships with many American Modernist masters that were represented by the gallery. From 1962 to 1976, Wolf served various capacities with the second largest talent agency in the world, General Artists Corporation, ultimately becoming the agency's vice president. During his time with GAC, he became known as an early champion of African American talent in the film and theater industries. He also cast actress Susan Sarandon in one of her earliest made for television movies, F. Scott Fitzgerald and 'The Last of the Belles'. Throughout his career, Wolf was also a consultant for American Broadcast Company, and Public Broadcasting Service for which he cast The Adams Chronicles, Hogan's Goat, and June Moon.", "Cry Wolf (1947 film)\n In April 1945 Warner Bros bought the film rights as a vehicle for Barbara Stanwyck. Catherine Turney was assigned to do the script and Dennis Morgan announced as co star. The film took a while to be made. In March 1946, Errol Flynn was announced as co star and Peter Godfrey as director. The movie was a \"Thomson Production\", i.e. made through Flynn's company at Warner Bros. Two of the supporting cast were from the New York stage, Geraldine Brooks and Richard Basehart, and had just been put under contract by Warner Bros. (Basehart had given an acclaimed stage performance in The Hasty Heart.)", "The Fury of the Wolfman\n film differed from the earlier entries in the series in that 1) Daninsky is a college professor in this film, 2) the lycanthropy is caused by a Yeti's bite, and 3) Daninsky is married in this film. Naschy's friend Enrique Eguiluz started out to direct this film, but only managed to film Naschy's nightmare sequence near the beginning of the film. He left the project early and was replaced by Zabalza, whom Naschy said was an alcoholic and a very uncouth person. Due to the laziness of director Zabalza, this film wound up including a lot of stock footage from La Marca del Hombre Lobo (1968) to pad out its running time and a few carelessly mismatched werewolf scenes played by a stunt double he hired.", "Aaron Wolf (director)\n Aaron Wolf is an American actor, writer and director best known for the feature documentary Restoring Tomorrow. He is the co-founder and President of Howling Wolf Productions based in Los Angeles, CA.", "The Dragon and the Wolf\n \"The Dragon and the Wolf\" was directed by Jeremy Podeswa. He joined the series as a director in the fifth season, his first episode being \"Kill the Boy\", which was followed by \"Unbowed, Unbent, Unbroken\", for which he was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series. He further directed two more episodes in the series' sixth season, and also directed the seventh season's premiere episode, \"Dragonstone\". This would be Podeswa's final episode as a director for the series, as he would later reveal that he would not be returning for the series' final season. In an interview with Variety, Podeswa described the tone in filming the ", "Wolf Rilla\n Wolf Peter Rilla (16 March 1920 – 19 October 2005) was a film director and writer of German background, although he worked mainly in the United Kingdom. Rilla is known for directing Village of the Damned (1960). He wrote many books for students, such as The Writer and the Screen: On Writing for Film and Television and The A to Z of Movie Making.", "Wolf In der Maur\n Wolf von In der Maur auf Strelberg und zu Freifeld, also known as Wolf In der Mauer or Wolf Indermaur, (March 2, 1924 – March 17, 2005) was an Austrian journalist, television director, news editor, and politician. After a career as an officer in the German military, he became a journalist and also held political office. In der maur served in the Landtag of Carinthia and was appointed by the Austrian parliament as the Federal Chancellor of the Commission for the Promotion of the Press. As a journalist, he was the editor of Wochenpresse and a radio director at ORF. In 1985 he was awarded the Decoration of Merit in Gold for the Republic of Austria.", "Budd Boetticher\n At Monogram Pictures he directed Roddy McDowall in Black Midnight (1949) and Killer Shark (1950). In between he made The Wolf Hunters (1949). He began directing for television with Magnavox Theatre – a production of The Three Musketeers that was released theatrically in some markets as The Blade of the Musketeers.", "Wolf Koenig\n Wolf Koenig (October 17, 1927 – June 26, 2014) was a Canadian film director, producer, animator, cinematographer, and a pioneer in Direct Cinema at the National Film Board of Canada.", "The Wolf Man (franchise)\n hired to direct on 3 February 2008, and the film's shooting schedule and budget remained as intended. Johnston hired David Self to rewrite the script. Famed monster slayer Gabriel Van Helsing (Hugh Jackman) is dispatched to Transylvania to assist the last of the Valerious bloodline in defeating Count Dracula (Richard Roxburgh). Anna Valerious (Kate Beckinsale) reveals that Dracula has formed an unholy alliance with Dr. Frankenstein's monster (Shuler Hensley) and is hell-bent on exacting a centuries-old curse on her family. Together Anna and Van Helsing set out to destroy their common enemy, but uncover some unsettling secrets along the ", "Time of the Wolf\n Time of the Wolf (Le temps du loup) is a 2003 French dystopian post-apocalyptic drama film written and directed by Austrian director Michael Haneke. It was released theatrically in 2003. Set in France at an undisclosed time, the film follows the story of a family: Georges, Anne (Isabelle Huppert), and their two children, Eva (Anaïs Demoustier) and Ben (Lucas Biscombe). The film also stars Olivier Gourmet and Serge Riaboukine. The film takes its title from Völuspá, an ancient Norse poem which describes the time before the Ragnarök.", "Wolf Totem (film)\n with Jiamin, whom he had befriended. The filmmakers acquired wolves to raise and train in preparation for filming. The director worked on the first outline with writing partner Alain Godard, who died before they finished it. Annaud brought a draft to China in mid-2012. Chinese screenwriter Lu Wei wrote the second and third drafts of the screenplay. The draft was translated to French for Annaud to give feedback, and it was subsequently translated back to Chinese for Jiamin to revise. Preliminary filming of Wolf Totem began in July 2012. By 2013, Qiang had moved on to become vice president of China Film Group, which now backed the film. Bill Kong, CEO of Edko ", "Wolves at the Door\n On May 8, 2015, John R. Leonetti, was announced as the director of Wolves at the Door for New Line Cinema, with Gary Dauberman as screenwriter and Peter Safran as producer. The script was loosely based on the Manson Family murders in 1969. Known as the Tate murders, the event saw members of the Charles Manson cult break into the home of Sharon Tate, eight-and-a-half months pregnant, and her new husband director Roman Polanski. The director was shooting in Europe at the time, but Tate was entertaining three friends. They were all stabbed and shot to death multiple times. The project was described as \"a home invasion thriller set in the 1960s but is not a retelling of the actual events, nor will it reference any Manson connection.\"", "Dances with Wolves\n Dances with Wolves is a 1990 American epic Western film starring, directed, and produced by Kevin Costner in his feature directorial debut. It is a film adaptation of the 1988 book of the same name by Michael Blake that tells the story of Union Army Lieutenant John J. Dunbar (Costner), who travels to the American frontier to find a military post, and of his dealings with a group of Lakota. Costner developed the film with an initial budget of $15 million. Much of the dialogue is spoken in Lakota with English subtitles. It was shot from July to November 1989 in South Dakota and Wyoming, and translated by Doris Leader Charge, of the Lakota Studies department at Sinte Gleska University. The film earned favorable reviews from critics and audiences, who praised Costner's directing, the performances, screenplay, and production values. The film was a ", "George Waggner\n George Waggner (September 7, 1894 – December 11, 1984) was an American actor, director, producer and writer. He is best known for producing and directing the 1941 film The Wolf Man. For some unknown reason, Waggner sometimes configured his name in mostly lowercase letters but with his surname's two Gs capitalized (\"waGGner\"), including in the credits of some of the productions he directed.", "Moon of the Wolf\n Moon of the Wolf is an American TV movie broadcast on September 26, 1972 on ABC Movie of the Week. It stars David Janssen, Barbara Rush, Geoffrey Lewis and Bradford Dillman, with a script by Alvin Sapinsley (based on Leslie H. Whitten's novel of the same name). The film was directed by Daniel Petrie and filmed on location in Burnside, Louisiana. All of the downtown footage was from Clinton, Louisiana.", "Wolf (2021 Irish-Polish film)\n In February 2020, it was announced George MacKay and Lily-Rose Depp had joined the cast of the film, with Nathalie Biancheri directing from a screenplay she wrote. In September 2020, Paddy Considine, Eileen Walsh, Fionn O'Shea, Lola Petticrew and Senan Jennings joined the cast of the film. Principal photography began in August 2020. Production was initially set to begin in April 2020, but was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Principal photography ended by October 2020.", "The Day of the Wolves\nPeter MacGregor-Scott ... Production Manager Incorrectly listed as Assistant Director in the credits, MacGregor-Scott went on to produce many major US films, including the Cheech and Chong movies, The Fugitive, Batman Forever, and, most recently, The Guardian. ; Ric Waite ... Cinematographer Emmy award-winning cinematographer who worked on many of the most successful films of the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s. He collaborated with Walter Hill on several films, including The Long Riders and 48 Hrs. ; Calmar Roberts ... Assistant Cameraman Principal cameraman on many major motion pictures, including the Lethal Weapon movies, Jurassic Park, and Basic Instinct. ; Mike Scott ... Grip Went on to become Camera Operator on many feature films including Die Hard, Speed, Speed 2, and Thelma & Louise. The Day of the Wolves was the first film for most of the film crew; several of those went onto achieve notable success in the Hollywood film industry:", "The Wolf Man (franchise)\n Kevin Walker was attached to the screenplay, developing the original film's story to include additional characters as well as plot points that would take advantage of modern visual effects. Del Toro also looked towards Werewolf of London and The Curse of the Werewolf for inspiration. In February 2007, director Mark Romanek was attached to helm The Wolfman. Romanek's original vision was to \"infuse a balance of cinema in a popcorn movie scenario\", stating, \"When there’s a certain amount of money involved, these things make studios and producers a little nervous. They don’t necessarily understand it or they feel that the " ]
Who was the director of Mates?
[ "Pieter Verhoeff" ]
director
Mates (film)
2,082,032
74
[ { "id": "32597656", "title": "Mates of State", "text": "The Rumperbutts (2015). Lead actors, producers, and composers. Starring alongside Josh Brener, Arian Moayed, and Vanessa Ray. Distributed by Mance Media. ; Two of Us (2004). Produced, directed, shot, and edited by Thadd Day. Released by Hooked on Sonics! ", "score": "1.7250422" }, { "id": "29584971", "title": "Mates (film)", "text": " Mates or Maten is a 1999 Dutch TV film directed by Pieter Verhoeff.", "score": "1.6956571" }, { "id": "5334522", "title": "James Mates", "text": " Mates was educated at Marlborough College, an independent school in the market town of Marlborough in Wiltshire. He left Marlborough at the age of 16 to take A-levels at Farnham College in Farnham in Surrey and then studied at the University of Leeds from which he graduated, in 1983, with a degree in International History and Politics. During that time he had spent his 1981 summer vacation working as a researcher for Republican Senator John Tower on the Senate Armed Services Committee.", "score": "1.626199" }, { "id": "25447822", "title": "Buddies (1983 film)", "text": " John Dingwall wrote the script and decided to produce it himself. He raised the money with the help of Rex Pilbeam, a former mayor of Rockhampton. Most of the money was raised in Queensland, including investment from the Queensland Film Corporation. Shooting took place on location in Emerald, Queensland and lasted six weeks.", "score": "1.6181879" }, { "id": "3097622", "title": "Mates by Irvine Sellars", "text": " Mates by Irvine Sellars was a British fashion retail chain founded by Irvine Sellar. Mates started with one shop is Soho's Carnaby Street and grew to become \"Britain’s second-biggest fashion chain\" with 90 shops in 1981, when it was sold to a South African investor. Sellar claimed that Mates was the first retail chain to sell men's and women's clothing under the same roof, and that they had 3,000 employees.", "score": "1.6074797" }, { "id": "29584972", "title": "Mates (film)", "text": "Kees Boot\t... \tTheo Pals ; Elsie de Brauw ; Hans Breetveld\t... \tSergeant Frank Houtman ; Erik de Bruyn ; Khaldoun Elmecky ; Thijs Feenstra ; Bert Geurkink ; Marc Hazewinkel ; Arend Jan Heerma van Voss ; Monic Hendrickx ; Marja Kok\t... \tMoeder Winters ; Merel Laseur ; Johan Leysen... \tOfficier Blaak ; Jacques Luijer ; Willem Nijholt\t... \tHoofdofficier Meesingh ; Roef Ragas\t... \tRob ; Victor Reinier ; Tjerk Risselada ; Ronald Top ; Wimie Wilhelm ; Helmert Woudenberg\t... \tVader Winters ", "score": "1.600544" }, { "id": "8535117", "title": "Frederick S. Mates", "text": " Frederick S. Mates, aka Frederic Mates, founded in August 1967 the Mates Investment Fund, a high-flying mutual fund during the 'Go-Go' 60s that later crashed in the bear market of the early 1970s. Mates ran his fund from an office he dubbed the \"kibbutz\" and with a young staff he called his \"flower children\". Mates put most of his fund into a letter stock known as Omega Equities. Mates in determining his funds assets assigned a value to the barely traded Omega of $16 a share, while having purchased the stock at $3.25 a share. Mates got into trouble over this practice which was routine in the 1960s and not uncommon even today, of accounting for letter stocks at a price different from what was paid for it. As a result, when confidence was lost in Mates' mutual fund and investors wanted to cash out, redemptions had to be suspended for a while, which the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission condoned. Mates was born in Brooklyn and graduated from Brooklyn College in 1954. According to a New York Times obituary, Mates died in Kansas City on December 25, 1982.", "score": "1.5951154" }, { "id": "14162421", "title": "Arthur J. Bressan Jr.", "text": " Buddies is Bressan's last project prior to his death in 1987. It follows reserved gay man David (David Schachter) who volunteers to be a ‘buddy’ for an AIDS patient through his gay center, who ends up being witty and strongly-opinionated Robert (Geoff Endholm). Although the two men are of vastly different temperaments, they grow a strong bond and are able to nurture each other's shortcomings. Buddies premiered at the Castro Theatre for the San Francisco International LGBTQ Film Festival (now the Frameline Film Festival) on September 12, 1985. It was shot over the course of nine days with a runtime of eighty-one minutes and a budget of around 27,000 ", "score": "1.594584" }, { "id": "9551236", "title": "Michael Mates", "text": " Mates was born on 9 June 1934 in Brentford, Middlesex, England. He was educated at Salisbury Cathedral School, Blundell's School and King's College, Cambridge, where he was a choral scholar.", "score": "1.5748382" }, { "id": "29146476", "title": "Graverobbers (film)", "text": " Graverobbers (also known as Dead Mate) is a 1988 American black comedy horror film written and directed by Straw Weisman, and starring Elizabeth Mannino, David Gregory, Lawrence Bockius, Jerry Rector, Judith Mayes, and Kelvin Keraga.", "score": "1.566408" }, { "id": "1191888", "title": "Match Mates", "text": " Match Mates was an Australian children's television game show that was broadcast afternoon on Nine Network Australia between 1981 and 1982. It was produced by the Grundy Organisation for Nine Network's Children's Programming. Actor David Waters was the emcee.", "score": "1.5594635" }, { "id": "4071463", "title": "Running Mates (2000 film)", "text": " Running Mates is a 2000 American made-for-television political comedy-drama film directed by Ron Lagomarsino and starring Tom Selleck. The film follows the presidential election campaign of James Pryce, a Democratic Party presidential candidate, who has a hard time deciding whom to pick as his vice-presidential running mate. Laura Linney, Nancy Travis, Faye Dunaway, and Teri Hatcher also star as Pryce's current or former love interests who have had a major influence on his success so far, but who also have a great deal of control over his decisions. Created for Turner Entertainment, Running Mates was initially aired on Turner Network Television on the night of August 13, 2000, and has since been broadcast in Australia, Hungary, Iceland, and Sweden. Faye Dunaway's performance in the film earned her a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television, which she lost to Vanessa Redgrave for her work in If These Walls Could Talk 2.", "score": "1.5588746" }, { "id": "29409527", "title": "Cathy Hopkins", "text": "Mates, Dates and Inflatable Bras (2001) ; Mates, Dates and Cosmic Kisses (2001) ; Mates, Dates and Portobello Princesses (US title Mates, Dates, and Designer Divas) (2001) ; Mates, Dates and Sleepover Secrets (2002) ; Mates, Dates and Sole Survivors (2002) ; Mates, Dates and Mad Mistakes (2003) ; Mates, Dates and Pulling Power (US title Mates, Dates, and Sequin Smiles) (2003) ; Mates, Dates and Tempting Trouble (2004) ; Mates, Dates and Great Escapes (2004) ; Mates, Dates and Chocolate Cheats (2005) ; Mates, Dates and Diamond Destiny (2005) ; Mates, Dates and Sizzling Summers (2007) ; Mates, Dates and Saving the Planet (2008) ; Mates, Dates and Flirting (2008) ; Mates, Dates: The Secret Story (2009) ; The Mates, Dates Guide to Life, Love and Looking Luscious (2005) ", "score": "1.556098" }, { "id": "5851946", "title": "Mates", "text": "James Mates (born 1964), British newsreader and journalist ; Michael Mates (born 1934), British politician ; Frederick S. Mates, founded the Mates Investment Fund in 1967 that crashed in the bear market of 1970 ; Benson Mates, American philosopher Mates is an English surname, and may refer to: ", "score": "1.5552199" }, { "id": "27849948", "title": "Mate (film)", "text": " Joon-ho (Shim Hee-Sub) first met Eun-ji (Jung Hye-sung) through a dating application and spent a night together. They later had another encounter when Joon-ho applies for a part-time photographing job at a magazine. The two developed feelings for each other, but they remained in an open relationship between friends and lovers. The term “mates” was coined because of their avoidance of commitment in the relationship.", "score": "1.5530201" }, { "id": "14878302", "title": "Top Mates", "text": " Top Mates is a 1979 Australian TV mini series.", "score": "1.5517974" }, { "id": "5334527", "title": "James Mates", "text": " in Nelson Mandela's inauguration as President. Mates was Washington correspondent between 1997 and 2001. In 2001 he was awarded the title of \"Senior Correspondent\" for ITV News. In 2001 Mates played a key role in ITV News coverage of the September 11 attacks, reporting from New York and Washington. In January 2012, Mates became \"Europe Editor\" for ITV News, focussing on the future of the EU and what it means to the UK. As of 2016, Mates continues as Europe Editor, is making regular appearances on the ITV Weekend News, and is an occasional relief presenter on the ITV Lunchtime News and the ITV Evening News.", "score": "1.5468087" }, { "id": "32597645", "title": "Mates of State", "text": " Mates of State are an American indie pop duo, active since 1997. The group is the husband-and-wife team of Kori Gardner (born June 16, 1974) (vocals, organ, synthesizer, piano, electric piano, and occasional guitar) and Jason Hammel (born February 1, 1976) (vocals, drums, percussion, and occasional synthesizer). As of 2015, the duo has released four EPs and seven full-length, studio albums. Their most recent album, Mountaintops, was released on September 13, 2011.", "score": "1.5445807" }, { "id": "9551235", "title": "Michael Mates", "text": " Michael John Mates (born 9 June 1934) is a Conservative Party politician who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for the constituency of East Hampshire from 1974 to 2010. He was a minister at the Northern Ireland Office from 1992 to 1993, resigning after his support for failed businessman Asil Nadir damaged his reputation. After his long career at Westminster, Mates lost the election for police commissioner in Hampshire in August 2012.", "score": "1.5386941" }, { "id": "2314845", "title": "Rex Pilbeam", "text": " Following his election defeat in 1982, Pilbeam teamed up with Rockhampton-born film maker John Dingwall to help raise the necessary money to produce the Australian film, Buddies, which was filmed on The Gemfields, west of Rockhampton. Although distributors were reluctant to release the film, Dingwall took the film around Australia himself where he showed the movie himself at special screenings. The film's premiere was in Rockhampton in 1983. The movie starred Colin Friels, Kris McQuade and Harold Hopkins with Pilbeam making a brief cameo appearance.", "score": "1.5364654" } ]
[ "Mates of State\nThe Rumperbutts (2015). Lead actors, producers, and composers. Starring alongside Josh Brener, Arian Moayed, and Vanessa Ray. Distributed by Mance Media. ; Two of Us (2004). Produced, directed, shot, and edited by Thadd Day. Released by Hooked on Sonics! ", "Mates (film)\n Mates or Maten is a 1999 Dutch TV film directed by Pieter Verhoeff.", "James Mates\n Mates was educated at Marlborough College, an independent school in the market town of Marlborough in Wiltshire. He left Marlborough at the age of 16 to take A-levels at Farnham College in Farnham in Surrey and then studied at the University of Leeds from which he graduated, in 1983, with a degree in International History and Politics. During that time he had spent his 1981 summer vacation working as a researcher for Republican Senator John Tower on the Senate Armed Services Committee.", "Buddies (1983 film)\n John Dingwall wrote the script and decided to produce it himself. He raised the money with the help of Rex Pilbeam, a former mayor of Rockhampton. Most of the money was raised in Queensland, including investment from the Queensland Film Corporation. Shooting took place on location in Emerald, Queensland and lasted six weeks.", "Mates by Irvine Sellars\n Mates by Irvine Sellars was a British fashion retail chain founded by Irvine Sellar. Mates started with one shop is Soho's Carnaby Street and grew to become \"Britain’s second-biggest fashion chain\" with 90 shops in 1981, when it was sold to a South African investor. Sellar claimed that Mates was the first retail chain to sell men's and women's clothing under the same roof, and that they had 3,000 employees.", "Mates (film)\nKees Boot\t... \tTheo Pals ; Elsie de Brauw ; Hans Breetveld\t... \tSergeant Frank Houtman ; Erik de Bruyn ; Khaldoun Elmecky ; Thijs Feenstra ; Bert Geurkink ; Marc Hazewinkel ; Arend Jan Heerma van Voss ; Monic Hendrickx ; Marja Kok\t... \tMoeder Winters ; Merel Laseur ; Johan Leysen... \tOfficier Blaak ; Jacques Luijer ; Willem Nijholt\t... \tHoofdofficier Meesingh ; Roef Ragas\t... \tRob ; Victor Reinier ; Tjerk Risselada ; Ronald Top ; Wimie Wilhelm ; Helmert Woudenberg\t... \tVader Winters ", "Frederick S. Mates\n Frederick S. Mates, aka Frederic Mates, founded in August 1967 the Mates Investment Fund, a high-flying mutual fund during the 'Go-Go' 60s that later crashed in the bear market of the early 1970s. Mates ran his fund from an office he dubbed the \"kibbutz\" and with a young staff he called his \"flower children\". Mates put most of his fund into a letter stock known as Omega Equities. Mates in determining his funds assets assigned a value to the barely traded Omega of $16 a share, while having purchased the stock at $3.25 a share. Mates got into trouble over this practice which was routine in the 1960s and not uncommon even today, of accounting for letter stocks at a price different from what was paid for it. As a result, when confidence was lost in Mates' mutual fund and investors wanted to cash out, redemptions had to be suspended for a while, which the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission condoned. Mates was born in Brooklyn and graduated from Brooklyn College in 1954. According to a New York Times obituary, Mates died in Kansas City on December 25, 1982.", "Arthur J. Bressan Jr.\n Buddies is Bressan's last project prior to his death in 1987. It follows reserved gay man David (David Schachter) who volunteers to be a ‘buddy’ for an AIDS patient through his gay center, who ends up being witty and strongly-opinionated Robert (Geoff Endholm). Although the two men are of vastly different temperaments, they grow a strong bond and are able to nurture each other's shortcomings. Buddies premiered at the Castro Theatre for the San Francisco International LGBTQ Film Festival (now the Frameline Film Festival) on September 12, 1985. It was shot over the course of nine days with a runtime of eighty-one minutes and a budget of around 27,000 ", "Michael Mates\n Mates was born on 9 June 1934 in Brentford, Middlesex, England. He was educated at Salisbury Cathedral School, Blundell's School and King's College, Cambridge, where he was a choral scholar.", "Graverobbers (film)\n Graverobbers (also known as Dead Mate) is a 1988 American black comedy horror film written and directed by Straw Weisman, and starring Elizabeth Mannino, David Gregory, Lawrence Bockius, Jerry Rector, Judith Mayes, and Kelvin Keraga.", "Match Mates\n Match Mates was an Australian children's television game show that was broadcast afternoon on Nine Network Australia between 1981 and 1982. It was produced by the Grundy Organisation for Nine Network's Children's Programming. Actor David Waters was the emcee.", "Running Mates (2000 film)\n Running Mates is a 2000 American made-for-television political comedy-drama film directed by Ron Lagomarsino and starring Tom Selleck. The film follows the presidential election campaign of James Pryce, a Democratic Party presidential candidate, who has a hard time deciding whom to pick as his vice-presidential running mate. Laura Linney, Nancy Travis, Faye Dunaway, and Teri Hatcher also star as Pryce's current or former love interests who have had a major influence on his success so far, but who also have a great deal of control over his decisions. Created for Turner Entertainment, Running Mates was initially aired on Turner Network Television on the night of August 13, 2000, and has since been broadcast in Australia, Hungary, Iceland, and Sweden. Faye Dunaway's performance in the film earned her a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television, which she lost to Vanessa Redgrave for her work in If These Walls Could Talk 2.", "Cathy Hopkins\nMates, Dates and Inflatable Bras (2001) ; Mates, Dates and Cosmic Kisses (2001) ; Mates, Dates and Portobello Princesses (US title Mates, Dates, and Designer Divas) (2001) ; Mates, Dates and Sleepover Secrets (2002) ; Mates, Dates and Sole Survivors (2002) ; Mates, Dates and Mad Mistakes (2003) ; Mates, Dates and Pulling Power (US title Mates, Dates, and Sequin Smiles) (2003) ; Mates, Dates and Tempting Trouble (2004) ; Mates, Dates and Great Escapes (2004) ; Mates, Dates and Chocolate Cheats (2005) ; Mates, Dates and Diamond Destiny (2005) ; Mates, Dates and Sizzling Summers (2007) ; Mates, Dates and Saving the Planet (2008) ; Mates, Dates and Flirting (2008) ; Mates, Dates: The Secret Story (2009) ; The Mates, Dates Guide to Life, Love and Looking Luscious (2005) ", "Mates\nJames Mates (born 1964), British newsreader and journalist ; Michael Mates (born 1934), British politician ; Frederick S. Mates, founded the Mates Investment Fund in 1967 that crashed in the bear market of 1970 ; Benson Mates, American philosopher Mates is an English surname, and may refer to: ", "Mate (film)\n Joon-ho (Shim Hee-Sub) first met Eun-ji (Jung Hye-sung) through a dating application and spent a night together. They later had another encounter when Joon-ho applies for a part-time photographing job at a magazine. The two developed feelings for each other, but they remained in an open relationship between friends and lovers. The term “mates” was coined because of their avoidance of commitment in the relationship.", "Top Mates\n Top Mates is a 1979 Australian TV mini series.", "James Mates\n in Nelson Mandela's inauguration as President. Mates was Washington correspondent between 1997 and 2001. In 2001 he was awarded the title of \"Senior Correspondent\" for ITV News. In 2001 Mates played a key role in ITV News coverage of the September 11 attacks, reporting from New York and Washington. In January 2012, Mates became \"Europe Editor\" for ITV News, focussing on the future of the EU and what it means to the UK. As of 2016, Mates continues as Europe Editor, is making regular appearances on the ITV Weekend News, and is an occasional relief presenter on the ITV Lunchtime News and the ITV Evening News.", "Mates of State\n Mates of State are an American indie pop duo, active since 1997. The group is the husband-and-wife team of Kori Gardner (born June 16, 1974) (vocals, organ, synthesizer, piano, electric piano, and occasional guitar) and Jason Hammel (born February 1, 1976) (vocals, drums, percussion, and occasional synthesizer). As of 2015, the duo has released four EPs and seven full-length, studio albums. Their most recent album, Mountaintops, was released on September 13, 2011.", "Michael Mates\n Michael John Mates (born 9 June 1934) is a Conservative Party politician who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for the constituency of East Hampshire from 1974 to 2010. He was a minister at the Northern Ireland Office from 1992 to 1993, resigning after his support for failed businessman Asil Nadir damaged his reputation. After his long career at Westminster, Mates lost the election for police commissioner in Hampshire in August 2012.", "Rex Pilbeam\n Following his election defeat in 1982, Pilbeam teamed up with Rockhampton-born film maker John Dingwall to help raise the necessary money to produce the Australian film, Buddies, which was filmed on The Gemfields, west of Rockhampton. Although distributors were reluctant to release the film, Dingwall took the film around Australia himself where he showed the movie himself at special screenings. The film's premiere was in Rockhampton in 1983. The movie starred Colin Friels, Kris McQuade and Harold Hopkins with Pilbeam making a brief cameo appearance." ]
Who was the director of The Valley?
[ "Ghassan Salhab" ]
director
The Valley (2014 film)
1,345,373
89
[ { "id": "6281652", "title": "The Valley (2017 film)", "text": " The Valley is a 2017 American drama film written and directed by Saila Kariat and starring Alyy Khan, Suchitra Pillai, Jake T. Austin, Samina Peerzada, Barry Corbin, Christa B. Allen, Agneeta Thacker and Salma Khan. The plot follows a distraught father as he searches for answers after his college-age daughter's suicide. The film released on March 2, 2018.", "score": "1.5274005" }, { "id": "25953769", "title": "Valley of Peace (film)", "text": " Valley of Peace (Dolina miru) is a 1956 Yugoslavian (Slovenian) war film directed by France Štiglic. It was in competition at the 1957 Cannes Film Festival, where John Kitzmiller received the Best Actor award for his role as Sgt. Jim. The film was selected for screening as part of the Cannes Classics section at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.", "score": "1.5210922" }, { "id": "2889220", "title": "In a Valley of Violence", "text": " In a Valley of Violence is a 2016 American Western film written and directed by Ti West. Jason Blum serves as producer through his production company Blumhouse Productions. The film stars Ethan Hawke, Taissa Farmiga, James Ransone, Karen Gillan, and John Travolta. It had its world premiere at South by Southwest on March 12, 2016, and was released in a limited release and through video on demand on October 21, 2016, by Focus World. It was a commercial failure grossing only $61,797, but received critical praise for the screenplay, direction, and the performances.", "score": "1.496961" }, { "id": "12868700", "title": "The Valley (2014 film)", "text": " The Valley (الوادي; al-wadi) is a 2014 Lebanese drama film written and directed by Ghassan Salhab. It was selected to be screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival and received its world premiere on 4 September 2014.", "score": "1.4949937" }, { "id": "27925028", "title": "Nigel Hinton", "text": "The Heart of the Valley (1986) ", "score": "1.483087" }, { "id": "1435358", "title": "Happy Valley (film)", "text": " The film narrates the event at The Pennsylvania State University, when in November 2011 the former long-time defensive coordinator of school's football team, Jerry Sandusky, was charged with 40 counts of child sex abuse, setting off a firestorm of accusations about who failed to protect the children.", "score": "1.4757719" }, { "id": "6281655", "title": "The Valley (2017 film)", "text": " In August 2015, Saila Kariat obtained all financing for The Valley and began forming a team. The crew was assembled mostly from the San Francisco Bay Area, while the cast was multi-national. The cast came from Pakistan, India, Los Angeles and New York City. Filming began in March 2016 in Silicon Valley, California, and was completed in early April. The entire production was completed in 21 days. Post-production was completed in February 2017, and The Valley premiered at Cinequest Film Festival in March 2017.", "score": "1.4750993" }, { "id": "25124113", "title": "Paul Michael Valley", "text": " Valley was born in Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin. When he was eight years old he moved with his family to Greenwich, Connecticut. In 1984 he moved to Washington, D.C., where he attended American University for two years, followed by a year as an apprentice to Michael Kahn, the artistic director of the Shakespeare Theatre Company. Valley then attended the Juilliard School in New York City, where he was a member of the drama division's Group 20 (1987–1991). After his third year at Juilliard, he left to take on roles in television soap operas.", "score": "1.4678888" }, { "id": "5122615", "title": "Valley of the Kings (film)", "text": " (Robert Pirosh) had no idea what he was doing; the head cameraman (Robert Surtees) was directing the film. Then the crew wasn't getting paid and our great cameraman told them that we were all going out on strike until everyone got paid. Believe me, the money showed up.\" The film's world premiere took place simultaneously on 21 July 1954 in Cairo and Alexandria (as well as New York City). It marked the first time an American film had a world premiere in Egypt. The film shows the Abu Simbel temples as they had existed for 3000 years, before they were relocated due to the construction of the Aswan High Dam.", "score": "1.4675105" }, { "id": "3632396", "title": "Valley of Saints (film)", "text": " Valley of Saints is a 2012 Indian film in Kashmiri language directed by Musa Syeed. Syeed's directorial debut is a romantic film set in Dal lake, Srinagar, which also raises an environmental issue surrounding the lake. It won the Sundance Film Festival World Dramatic Audience Award in 2012. It tied for the Alfred P. Sloan Prize with the American film Robot & Frank.", "score": "1.4661913" }, { "id": "30361306", "title": "Valley of Song", "text": " Filmed on location in Carmarthenshire in 1952, as well as at Elstree Studios, Valley of Song marks the first film appearance of Rachel Roberts and the first film credit of Kenneth Williams, both of whom worked together in Swansea repertory theatre in 1950 under the directorship of Clifford Evans, who also stars in the film.", "score": "1.4626954" }, { "id": "27126455", "title": "How Green Was My Valley (film)", "text": " The script was written by Philip Dunne. He later recalled reading the original novel \"in horror, turgid stuff, long speeches about Welsh coal miners on strike.\" William Wyler, the original director, saw the screen test of McDowall and chose him for the part. Wyler was replaced by John Ford. Fox wanted to shoot the movie in Wales in Technicolor, but it was impossible to do so during World War II. Instead, Ford had the studio build an 80-acre authentic replica of a Welsh mining town at Brent's Crags (subsequently Crags Country Club) in the Santa Monica Mountains near Malibu, California.", "score": "1.459583" }, { "id": "3632400", "title": "Valley of Saints (film)", "text": " The film opened at 2012 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Sundance Film Festival World Dramatic Audience Award and also the Alfred P. Sloan Prize, tied with the American film Robot & Frank.", "score": "1.4590952" }, { "id": "26844172", "title": "Scotts Valley, California", "text": " 1966 but continued to be operated under lease by the Santa's Village Corporation. When that corporation went bankrupt in 1977. the owner considered launching a Knott's Berry Farm type of complex but was denied a permit by the city of Scotts Valley, and the park closed for good in 1979. Scotts Valley's most famous resident was film director Alfred Hitchcock, who lived in a mountaintop estate above the Vine Hill area from 1940 to 1972. Florence Owens Thompson, made famous by Dorothea Lange's Migrant Mother photograph, died in Scotts Valley in 1983. Netflix was founded in Scotts Valley by Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph in 1997.", "score": "1.457885" }, { "id": "28426435", "title": "Valley of the Fallen", "text": " by the Italian filmmaker Alessandro Pugno. The film tells the secret story of the children of the chorus who sing every day in the mass. They live in a boarding school inside the monument and receive a traditional education. The film has been awarded with the first prize for the best documentary at Festival de Málaga de Cine Español. In the 2016 film The Queen of Spain, actor Antonio Resines plays Blas Fontiverosa, a film director who returns to Spain after fleeing following the Civil War and is captured and forced to work on the construction of the Valley. In 2016, Mayor of Madrid Manuela Carmena, proposed to change the site's name from \"El Valle de los Caídos\" to \"El Valle de la Paz\" (The Valley of Peace). The monument appears in Dan Brown's novel Origin.", "score": "1.4484572" }, { "id": "3632398", "title": "Valley of Saints (film)", "text": " The director of the film, Musa Syeed, grew up in US, where his father had migrated in the 1970s, after being a political prisoner in Kashmir. Sayeed visited Kashmir in 2009 and stayed for a year, living at a houseboat on Dal lake, gathering information and developing film ideas, eventually he set the film around the Dal lake, as an allegory for Kashmir. He first cast a local boatman, Gulzar Bhat, as the film's lead, followed by Mohammed Afzal and Neelofar Hamid, who play lead roles in the film. The film was shot during uprising of 2010, where much of the area was under curfew, and crew stayed on houseboats over the lake and script was changed to include scenes of curfew and violence, minimum crew was used to avoid attention. The film is scored by NY based indie alternative/rock band Zerobridge's Mubashir Mohi-ud-din, J. P. Bowersock, and also features songs like 'Nightingale's Lament (Gulzar Bhat)' rendering poetry of Rasul Mir, and the song 'Boulevard' penned by Makhanlal Bekas.", "score": "1.4438937" }, { "id": "3671311", "title": "Charles Spearin", "text": "Valley of the Giants (2004) ", "score": "1.4401073" }, { "id": "6281657", "title": "The Valley (2017 film)", "text": " The Valley has been in the festival circuit in 2017, having been in 22 festivals. It has garnered numerous awards including Best Feature Film (3 festivals), Best Original Screenplay, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress, Best Original Score and Best Cinematography.", "score": "1.4365215" }, { "id": "6780276", "title": "Dylan Valley", "text": " In 2007 he worked at Plexus Films on the HEADWRAP team as a researcher and trainee director. And he got promoted to director straight away. Later, he was invited to direct some of the famous episodes from the series Headwrap including “Hip Hopera” and “Awareness thru Colours”. With Plexus Films, Valley developed a feature-length documentary, called Afrikaaps which explores the history of Afrikaans using Hip Hop, humour and personal perspective. The film, follows a group of local artists, creating the stage production, Afrikaaps, as they trace the true roots of Afrikaans to slaves in the cape. The documentary won Best South African Documentary at the Cape ", "score": "1.4355491" }, { "id": "2913455", "title": "Down in the Valley (film)", "text": " Writer David Jacobson was inspired to write this film by his childhood in the San Fernando Valley. He commented that there was never much to do except throw things onto the highway (which possibly inspired a deleted scene from the film titled Don't Look), have dirt clod fights, and spending many hot summer days at the local cinema with friends, watching the same films over and over. One favorite was Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, which he watched seventeen times. Jacobson also has noted that he and his sister were mild backgrounds for Tobe and Lonnie. The script was written with loose scenes, and is considered by Jacobson himself to be some of his lighter work.", "score": "1.4345648" } ]
[ "The Valley (2017 film)\n The Valley is a 2017 American drama film written and directed by Saila Kariat and starring Alyy Khan, Suchitra Pillai, Jake T. Austin, Samina Peerzada, Barry Corbin, Christa B. Allen, Agneeta Thacker and Salma Khan. The plot follows a distraught father as he searches for answers after his college-age daughter's suicide. The film released on March 2, 2018.", "Valley of Peace (film)\n Valley of Peace (Dolina miru) is a 1956 Yugoslavian (Slovenian) war film directed by France Štiglic. It was in competition at the 1957 Cannes Film Festival, where John Kitzmiller received the Best Actor award for his role as Sgt. Jim. The film was selected for screening as part of the Cannes Classics section at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.", "In a Valley of Violence\n In a Valley of Violence is a 2016 American Western film written and directed by Ti West. Jason Blum serves as producer through his production company Blumhouse Productions. The film stars Ethan Hawke, Taissa Farmiga, James Ransone, Karen Gillan, and John Travolta. It had its world premiere at South by Southwest on March 12, 2016, and was released in a limited release and through video on demand on October 21, 2016, by Focus World. It was a commercial failure grossing only $61,797, but received critical praise for the screenplay, direction, and the performances.", "The Valley (2014 film)\n The Valley (الوادي; al-wadi) is a 2014 Lebanese drama film written and directed by Ghassan Salhab. It was selected to be screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival and received its world premiere on 4 September 2014.", "Nigel Hinton\nThe Heart of the Valley (1986) ", "Happy Valley (film)\n The film narrates the event at The Pennsylvania State University, when in November 2011 the former long-time defensive coordinator of school's football team, Jerry Sandusky, was charged with 40 counts of child sex abuse, setting off a firestorm of accusations about who failed to protect the children.", "The Valley (2017 film)\n In August 2015, Saila Kariat obtained all financing for The Valley and began forming a team. The crew was assembled mostly from the San Francisco Bay Area, while the cast was multi-national. The cast came from Pakistan, India, Los Angeles and New York City. Filming began in March 2016 in Silicon Valley, California, and was completed in early April. The entire production was completed in 21 days. Post-production was completed in February 2017, and The Valley premiered at Cinequest Film Festival in March 2017.", "Paul Michael Valley\n Valley was born in Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin. When he was eight years old he moved with his family to Greenwich, Connecticut. In 1984 he moved to Washington, D.C., where he attended American University for two years, followed by a year as an apprentice to Michael Kahn, the artistic director of the Shakespeare Theatre Company. Valley then attended the Juilliard School in New York City, where he was a member of the drama division's Group 20 (1987–1991). After his third year at Juilliard, he left to take on roles in television soap operas.", "Valley of the Kings (film)\n (Robert Pirosh) had no idea what he was doing; the head cameraman (Robert Surtees) was directing the film. Then the crew wasn't getting paid and our great cameraman told them that we were all going out on strike until everyone got paid. Believe me, the money showed up.\" The film's world premiere took place simultaneously on 21 July 1954 in Cairo and Alexandria (as well as New York City). It marked the first time an American film had a world premiere in Egypt. The film shows the Abu Simbel temples as they had existed for 3000 years, before they were relocated due to the construction of the Aswan High Dam.", "Valley of Saints (film)\n Valley of Saints is a 2012 Indian film in Kashmiri language directed by Musa Syeed. Syeed's directorial debut is a romantic film set in Dal lake, Srinagar, which also raises an environmental issue surrounding the lake. It won the Sundance Film Festival World Dramatic Audience Award in 2012. It tied for the Alfred P. Sloan Prize with the American film Robot & Frank.", "Valley of Song\n Filmed on location in Carmarthenshire in 1952, as well as at Elstree Studios, Valley of Song marks the first film appearance of Rachel Roberts and the first film credit of Kenneth Williams, both of whom worked together in Swansea repertory theatre in 1950 under the directorship of Clifford Evans, who also stars in the film.", "How Green Was My Valley (film)\n The script was written by Philip Dunne. He later recalled reading the original novel \"in horror, turgid stuff, long speeches about Welsh coal miners on strike.\" William Wyler, the original director, saw the screen test of McDowall and chose him for the part. Wyler was replaced by John Ford. Fox wanted to shoot the movie in Wales in Technicolor, but it was impossible to do so during World War II. Instead, Ford had the studio build an 80-acre authentic replica of a Welsh mining town at Brent's Crags (subsequently Crags Country Club) in the Santa Monica Mountains near Malibu, California.", "Valley of Saints (film)\n The film opened at 2012 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Sundance Film Festival World Dramatic Audience Award and also the Alfred P. Sloan Prize, tied with the American film Robot & Frank.", "Scotts Valley, California\n 1966 but continued to be operated under lease by the Santa's Village Corporation. When that corporation went bankrupt in 1977. the owner considered launching a Knott's Berry Farm type of complex but was denied a permit by the city of Scotts Valley, and the park closed for good in 1979. Scotts Valley's most famous resident was film director Alfred Hitchcock, who lived in a mountaintop estate above the Vine Hill area from 1940 to 1972. Florence Owens Thompson, made famous by Dorothea Lange's Migrant Mother photograph, died in Scotts Valley in 1983. Netflix was founded in Scotts Valley by Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph in 1997.", "Valley of the Fallen\n by the Italian filmmaker Alessandro Pugno. The film tells the secret story of the children of the chorus who sing every day in the mass. They live in a boarding school inside the monument and receive a traditional education. The film has been awarded with the first prize for the best documentary at Festival de Málaga de Cine Español. In the 2016 film The Queen of Spain, actor Antonio Resines plays Blas Fontiverosa, a film director who returns to Spain after fleeing following the Civil War and is captured and forced to work on the construction of the Valley. In 2016, Mayor of Madrid Manuela Carmena, proposed to change the site's name from \"El Valle de los Caídos\" to \"El Valle de la Paz\" (The Valley of Peace). The monument appears in Dan Brown's novel Origin.", "Valley of Saints (film)\n The director of the film, Musa Syeed, grew up in US, where his father had migrated in the 1970s, after being a political prisoner in Kashmir. Sayeed visited Kashmir in 2009 and stayed for a year, living at a houseboat on Dal lake, gathering information and developing film ideas, eventually he set the film around the Dal lake, as an allegory for Kashmir. He first cast a local boatman, Gulzar Bhat, as the film's lead, followed by Mohammed Afzal and Neelofar Hamid, who play lead roles in the film. The film was shot during uprising of 2010, where much of the area was under curfew, and crew stayed on houseboats over the lake and script was changed to include scenes of curfew and violence, minimum crew was used to avoid attention. The film is scored by NY based indie alternative/rock band Zerobridge's Mubashir Mohi-ud-din, J. P. Bowersock, and also features songs like 'Nightingale's Lament (Gulzar Bhat)' rendering poetry of Rasul Mir, and the song 'Boulevard' penned by Makhanlal Bekas.", "Charles Spearin\nValley of the Giants (2004) ", "The Valley (2017 film)\n The Valley has been in the festival circuit in 2017, having been in 22 festivals. It has garnered numerous awards including Best Feature Film (3 festivals), Best Original Screenplay, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress, Best Original Score and Best Cinematography.", "Dylan Valley\n In 2007 he worked at Plexus Films on the HEADWRAP team as a researcher and trainee director. And he got promoted to director straight away. Later, he was invited to direct some of the famous episodes from the series Headwrap including “Hip Hopera” and “Awareness thru Colours”. With Plexus Films, Valley developed a feature-length documentary, called Afrikaaps which explores the history of Afrikaans using Hip Hop, humour and personal perspective. The film, follows a group of local artists, creating the stage production, Afrikaaps, as they trace the true roots of Afrikaans to slaves in the cape. The documentary won Best South African Documentary at the Cape ", "Down in the Valley (film)\n Writer David Jacobson was inspired to write this film by his childhood in the San Fernando Valley. He commented that there was never much to do except throw things onto the highway (which possibly inspired a deleted scene from the film titled Don't Look), have dirt clod fights, and spending many hot summer days at the local cinema with friends, watching the same films over and over. One favorite was Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, which he watched seventeen times. Jacobson also has noted that he and his sister were mild backgrounds for Tobe and Lonnie. The script was written with loose scenes, and is considered by Jacobson himself to be some of his lighter work." ]
Who was the director of Per amare Ofelia?
[ "Flavio Mogherini" ]
director
To Love Ophelia
2,899,611
84
[ { "id": "453232", "title": "To Love Ophelia", "text": " Per amare Ofelia (internationally released as To Love Ophelia) is a 1974 Italian comedy film directed by Flavio Mogherini. It is the debut film of Renato Pozzetto, and for his performance he won a Silver Ribbon for Best New Actor.", "score": "1.7064011" }, { "id": "9821822", "title": "Adélia Sampaio", "text": " Adélia Sampaio (born 1944) is a Brazilian filmmaker, the first black woman to direct a film in Brazil, the 1984 feature Amor Maldito (Cursed Love).", "score": "1.5444837" }, { "id": "32182167", "title": "Edith Bruck", "text": "Improvviso, director (1979) ; Quale Sardegna?, director (1983) ; Fotografando Patrizia, writer (1984) ; Altare per la madre, director (1986) ; Per odio per amore, writer (1991) ", "score": "1.5403829" }, { "id": "9821824", "title": "Adélia Sampaio", "text": " producer. Her debut as a director was in 1979, with the short film Denúncia Vazia. In 1984 she released her first feature, Amor Maldito, based on the real-life case of a trial of a lesbian woman accused of killing her partner, of which she was also a screenwriter (with José Louzeiro) and producer. Thus, she became the first black woman to direct a feature film in Brazil. In 1987 she directed the documentary Fugindo do Passado: Um Drink para Tetéia e História Banal, about the Brazilian military dictatorship. In 2018 she directed O mundo de dentro, shown at the São Paulo International Short Film Festival.", "score": "1.5309107" }, { "id": "32285218", "title": "Memè Perlini", "text": " Amelio \"Memè\" Perlini (8 December 1947 – 5 April 2017) was an Italian actor and film director. His directorial debut, Italian Postcards, was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival. He directed Teatro La Maschera, of Rome, in his theatrical adaptation of Raymond Roussel's Locus Solus at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York City in April 1977. The production was co-presented by La MaMa and the International Theatre Institute, and billed as the First International Theater Festival. Perlini died in Rome on 5 April 2017, at the age of 69. He seems to have committed suicide by jumping from the fifth floor of his house.", "score": "1.4988664" }, { "id": "10324257", "title": "Aldo Buzzi", "text": "Taccuino dell'aiuto-regista (1944) ; Quando la pantera rugge (1972) ; Piccolo diario americano, illustrated by Saul Steinberg (1974) ; L'uovo alla kok: ricette, curiosita (1979) ; Viaggio in Terra delle mosche e altri viaggi (1994); translated into English by Ann Goldstein and published as Journey to the Land of the Flies (1996) ; Cechov a Sondrio (1991) ; A Weakness for Almost Everything (1999); translated by Ann Goldstein ; The Perfect Egg and Other Secrets (2005); translated by Guido Waldman, illustrated by Saul Steinberg ; Parliamo d'altro (2006) Aldo Buzzi is listed with Luigi Chiarini, Director of The Centro Sperimentale del Cinema, Rome, as one of the assistant directors of Love in The City (1953), the pioneering Neorealist episode film initiated and produced by Cesare Zavattini, together with Riccardo Ghione and Marco Ferrero (who directed La Grande Bouffe in the 1970s). Two of the episodes were directed by Federico Fellini (whom Buzzi had already worked with) and Alberto Lattuada. (Buzzi was married to Lattuada's sister). Gillo Pontecovorvo, who later directed The Battle of Algiers, combining documentary with a fictional treatment, was also an assistant director on the film.", "score": "1.4954841" }, { "id": "11722869", "title": "Amare (La Rappresentante di Lista song)", "text": " The music video for the song was released on YouTube on 4 March 2021, to accompany the single's release. It was directed by Alessandra Leone.", "score": "1.4779952" }, { "id": "28537794", "title": "Franco Zeffirelli", "text": " Bohème (1982) (live Metropolitan Opera – stage director) ; La Traviata (1983) – Academy Award nominee, BAFTA winner, art direction; with Teresa Stratas and Plácido Domingo ; Tosca (1985) (live Metropolitan Opera – stage director) ; Otello (1986) – BAFTA winner, foreign language film; with Plácido Domingo and Katia Ricciarelli ; Young Toscanini (1988) ; Hamlet (1990) ; Don Giovanni (live Metropolitan Opera – stage director) ; Don Carlo with Luciano Pavarotti and Daniela Dessì (live La Scala – stage director) ; Storia di una capinera (also known as Sparrow; 1993) with Sheherazade Ventura ; Jane Eyre (1996) ; Tea with Mussolini (1999) ; Callas Forever (2002) ", "score": "1.4751348" }, { "id": "29922751", "title": "Karin Proia", "text": "Cinque giorni di tempesta, director Francesco Calogero (1997) ; A View from the Bridge, director Luciano Odorisio - TV RAIDUE(1997) ; L'avvocato Porta, director Franco Giraldi - TV Series CANALE 5(1997) ; Amico mio 2, director Paolo Poeti - TV Series CANALE 5(1998) ; Terra bruciata, director Fabio Segatori (1999) ; La vita che verrà, director Pasquale Pozzessere - TV Series RAIDUE (1999) ; Lui e lei 2, director Luciano Manuzzi - Episodes 1/4 - Elisabetta Lodoli - Episodes 5/8 - TV Series RAIUNO(1999) ; The savior of san Nicola a.k.a. Vola Sciusciù, director Joseph Sargent - TV MOVIE (2000) ; Week-end, director ", "score": "1.471198" }, { "id": "29922754", "title": "Karin Proia", "text": " rose di Eva, director Raffaele Mertes, Vincenzo Verdecchi TV Series CANALE 5 (2011) ; Ragazze a mano armata, director Fabio Segatori (2012) ; Le tre rose di Eva 2, director Raffaele Mertes, Vincenzo Verdecchi TV Series CANALE 5 (2013) ; Ombrelloni, director Riccardo Grandi TV Series RAIDUE (2013) ; Il ritorno, director Olaf Kreinsen (2013) ; Le tre rose di Eva 3, director Raffaele Mertes, Vincenzo Verdecchi TV Series CANALE 5 (2015) ; Una gita a Roma (An outing to Rome), director Karin Proia (2017) ; Le tre rose di Eva 4, director Raffaele Mertes, Vincenzo Verdecchi TV Series CANALE 5 (2017) ", "score": "1.4590406" }, { "id": "29344120", "title": "Alex Belli", "text": "Camera Café various directors – sitcom (Italia 1, 2007) ; CentoVetrine, various directors – soap opera (Canale 5, 2010-2014 and 2016; Rete 4, 2014-2015) ; Sacrificio d'amore, various directors – fiction (Canale 5, 2017-2018) ; Furore, directed by Alessio Inturri – fiction (Canale 5, 2018) ", "score": "1.4541564" }, { "id": "26399332", "title": "Ewa Aulin", "text": "Don Juan in Sicily (1967, director: Alberto Lattuada) ; Col cuore in gola (1967, director: Tinto Brass) ; Candy (1968, director: Christian Marquand) ; Death Laid an Egg (1968, director: Giulio Questi) ; Start the Revolution Without Me (1970, director: Bud Yorkin) ; Microscopic Liquid Subway to Oblivion (1970, director: John Shadow) ; The Double (1971, director: Romolo Guerrieri) ; This Kind of Love (1972, director: Alberto Bevilacqua) ; Rosina Fumo viene in città... per farsi il corredo (1972, director: Claudio Gora) ; Fiorina la vacca (1972, director: Vittorio De Sisti) ; My Pleasure Is Your Pleasure (1973, director: Claudio Racca) ; Death Smiles on a Murderer (1973, director: Joe D'Amato) ; Ceremonia sangrienta (1973, director: Jorge Grau) aka Legend of Blood Castle ; When Love Is Lust (1973, director: Vittorio De Sisti) ; Long Lasting Days (1973, director: Ferdinando Baldi) ; Stella's Favor (1996, director: Giancarlo Scarchilli) ", "score": "1.4531786" }, { "id": "2083737", "title": "Joan Capri", "text": "1953 Vuelo 971. Director: Rafael J. Salvia. ; 1953 Concierto mágico. Director: Rafael J. Salvia. ; 1953 Juzgado permanente. Director: Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent. ; 1954 El padre Pitillo. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1954 Cañas y barro. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1955 Zalacaín el aventurero. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1955 El fugitivo de Amberes. Director: Miguel Iglesias. ; 1956 La legión del silencio. Director: José María Forqué. ; 1956 Sucedió en mi aldea ; 1957 Juanillo, papá y mamá. Director: Lorenzo Gicca Palli. ; 1957 Un tesoro en el cielo ; 1958 El azar se divierte ; 1958 Avenida Roma, 66 ; 1961 Juventud a la intemperie. Director: Ignacio F. Iquino ; 1962 Los castigadores. Director: Alfonso Balcázar. ; 1964 Los felices 60. Director: Jaime Camino ; 1968 En Baldiri de la costa. Director: Josep Maria Font ; 1969 L'advocat, l'alcalde i el notari. Director: Josep Maria Font. ", "score": "1.4525237" }, { "id": "1467169", "title": "Bedelia (film)", "text": " 1944 she sold the film rights to producer Isadore Goldsmith, who had impressed Caspary with The Stars Look Down, and wanted to set up the film in England. Goldsmith arranged financing through John Cornfield Productions, a unit of the Rank Organisation. Caspary travelled to London to do an early draft of the script, which transplanted the action from Connecticut to Yorkshire. \"The movie will probably have one or two Hollywood names in it and will be an Arthur Rank release\", said said. \"Mr Rank is another who was wonderful to me – but then in England even the producers respect writers... England is counting on pictures to be ", "score": "1.45221" }, { "id": "13285931", "title": "Jonis Bascir", "text": "Di che vizio sei?, directed by Gigi Proietti (1988) ; Villa Arzilla, directed by Gigi Proietti (1990) ; Il caso Bebawi, directed by Valerio Jalongo (1996) ; Il commissario Montalbano: Il ladro di merendine, directed by Alberto Sironi (1998) ; Incantesimo - serie TV, 1 episodio (2001) ; Padri, directed by Riccardo Donna (2002) ; Soraya, directed by Lodovico Gasparini (2003) ; Empire - mini-serie TV, 1 episodio (2005) ; Un posto al sole - 1 episodio (2005) ; Un medico in famiglia - serie TV (1998-2007) ; Due imbroglioni e... mezzo! 2 (2010) ; La ladra - serie TV, 1 episodio (2010) ; Il commissario Rex - serie TV, 1 episodio (2011) ; Anita Garibaldi, directed by Claudio Bonivento (2012) ; Il caso Enzo Tortora - Dove eravamo rimasti?, directed by Ricky Tognazzi (2012) ; Roma nuda, directed by Giuseppe Ferrara (2013) ; Centovetrine(2015) ; Il sistema - miniserie TV directed by Carmine Elia (2015) ", "score": "1.4442024" }, { "id": "27876992", "title": "Lucilla Agosti", "text": "CentoVetrine, various directors (2003-2004) ; Camera Café, various directors (2004) guest star ; Intralci, directed by Maccio Capatonda (2006) ; Buona la prima!, various directors (2007) ; Distretto di Polizia, directed by Alberto Ferrari (2010-2012) ", "score": "1.4432542" }, { "id": "8188745", "title": "Amarro Fiamberti", "text": " Bizzozzero Provincial Psychiatric Hospital. He was the director of that hospital until 1964, when he retired. He was given the title of director emeritus in 1970. After leaving the hospital's medical directorship, he was elected to the position of provincial councilor on the Italian Liberal Party's list in 1964, continuing to deal with psychiatric matters in a political capacity. He died in Feltre (Belluno) on August 31, 1970, after being widowed by Alfonsina Mondino. He had designated the Municipality of Canneto Pavese and the Stradella Hospital as his main heirs, and he had left his book collection to the library of the Varese Neuropsychiatric Hospital.", "score": "1.4406252" }, { "id": "1467170", "title": "Bedelia (film)", "text": " of her great export items.\" Early contenders for the title role included Geraldine Fitzgerald, Vivien Leigh and Merle Oberon. Later on Marlene Dietrich, Valerie Hobson and Linden Travers were mentioned. Donald Woods, then appearing in a stage version of Laura, was a front-runner for the male lead. Eventually Margaret Lockwood was cast in the lead, with Ian Hunter and Barry Barnes in support. It was Barnes' first film since The Girl in the News, also with Lockwood, and Hunter's first British film in 14 years. Jill Esmond, Laurence Olivier's first wife, was given a support role. The film was made with the American market very much in mind.", "score": "1.4381418" }, { "id": "5693804", "title": "Giuseppe Capotondi", "text": "The Double Hour (2009 film, director) ; Endeavour (British TV series, director of the Season 2 episode \"Nocturne\", 2014) ; Berlin Station (American TV series, director of four episodes, 2016-2017) ; Suburra: Blood on Rome (Italian TV series, director of four episodes, 2017) ; The Burnt Orange Heresy (2019 film, director) ", "score": "1.4356441" }, { "id": "2176457", "title": "Maria Monti", "text": "Vento di ponente (2002) TV Series .... Emma (2002-) ; Controvento (2000) ; L'Ultimo capodanno (1998) .... The Contessa ; La Medaglia (1997) .... Teacher ; Gangsters (1992) .... Guest-house owner ; Milan noir (1987) .... Bianca ; Strana la vita (1987) .... Anna's Mother ; Mary Ward (film) (1985) .... Italian Mother ; La Ragazza di Via Millelire (1980) ; Piccole labbra (1978) .... Anna ; Mogliamante (1977) (uncredited) .... Hotel director ; Ritratto di borghesia in nero (1977) .... Linda ; Black Journal (1977) .... Second neighbor ; Novecento (1976) .... Rosina Dalco ; Al piacere di rivederla ", "score": "1.4343991" } ]
[ "To Love Ophelia\n Per amare Ofelia (internationally released as To Love Ophelia) is a 1974 Italian comedy film directed by Flavio Mogherini. It is the debut film of Renato Pozzetto, and for his performance he won a Silver Ribbon for Best New Actor.", "Adélia Sampaio\n Adélia Sampaio (born 1944) is a Brazilian filmmaker, the first black woman to direct a film in Brazil, the 1984 feature Amor Maldito (Cursed Love).", "Edith Bruck\nImprovviso, director (1979) ; Quale Sardegna?, director (1983) ; Fotografando Patrizia, writer (1984) ; Altare per la madre, director (1986) ; Per odio per amore, writer (1991) ", "Adélia Sampaio\n producer. Her debut as a director was in 1979, with the short film Denúncia Vazia. In 1984 she released her first feature, Amor Maldito, based on the real-life case of a trial of a lesbian woman accused of killing her partner, of which she was also a screenwriter (with José Louzeiro) and producer. Thus, she became the first black woman to direct a feature film in Brazil. In 1987 she directed the documentary Fugindo do Passado: Um Drink para Tetéia e História Banal, about the Brazilian military dictatorship. In 2018 she directed O mundo de dentro, shown at the São Paulo International Short Film Festival.", "Memè Perlini\n Amelio \"Memè\" Perlini (8 December 1947 – 5 April 2017) was an Italian actor and film director. His directorial debut, Italian Postcards, was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival. He directed Teatro La Maschera, of Rome, in his theatrical adaptation of Raymond Roussel's Locus Solus at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York City in April 1977. The production was co-presented by La MaMa and the International Theatre Institute, and billed as the First International Theater Festival. Perlini died in Rome on 5 April 2017, at the age of 69. He seems to have committed suicide by jumping from the fifth floor of his house.", "Aldo Buzzi\nTaccuino dell'aiuto-regista (1944) ; Quando la pantera rugge (1972) ; Piccolo diario americano, illustrated by Saul Steinberg (1974) ; L'uovo alla kok: ricette, curiosita (1979) ; Viaggio in Terra delle mosche e altri viaggi (1994); translated into English by Ann Goldstein and published as Journey to the Land of the Flies (1996) ; Cechov a Sondrio (1991) ; A Weakness for Almost Everything (1999); translated by Ann Goldstein ; The Perfect Egg and Other Secrets (2005); translated by Guido Waldman, illustrated by Saul Steinberg ; Parliamo d'altro (2006) Aldo Buzzi is listed with Luigi Chiarini, Director of The Centro Sperimentale del Cinema, Rome, as one of the assistant directors of Love in The City (1953), the pioneering Neorealist episode film initiated and produced by Cesare Zavattini, together with Riccardo Ghione and Marco Ferrero (who directed La Grande Bouffe in the 1970s). Two of the episodes were directed by Federico Fellini (whom Buzzi had already worked with) and Alberto Lattuada. (Buzzi was married to Lattuada's sister). Gillo Pontecovorvo, who later directed The Battle of Algiers, combining documentary with a fictional treatment, was also an assistant director on the film.", "Amare (La Rappresentante di Lista song)\n The music video for the song was released on YouTube on 4 March 2021, to accompany the single's release. It was directed by Alessandra Leone.", "Franco Zeffirelli\n Bohème (1982) (live Metropolitan Opera – stage director) ; La Traviata (1983) – Academy Award nominee, BAFTA winner, art direction; with Teresa Stratas and Plácido Domingo ; Tosca (1985) (live Metropolitan Opera – stage director) ; Otello (1986) – BAFTA winner, foreign language film; with Plácido Domingo and Katia Ricciarelli ; Young Toscanini (1988) ; Hamlet (1990) ; Don Giovanni (live Metropolitan Opera – stage director) ; Don Carlo with Luciano Pavarotti and Daniela Dessì (live La Scala – stage director) ; Storia di una capinera (also known as Sparrow; 1993) with Sheherazade Ventura ; Jane Eyre (1996) ; Tea with Mussolini (1999) ; Callas Forever (2002) ", "Karin Proia\nCinque giorni di tempesta, director Francesco Calogero (1997) ; A View from the Bridge, director Luciano Odorisio - TV RAIDUE(1997) ; L'avvocato Porta, director Franco Giraldi - TV Series CANALE 5(1997) ; Amico mio 2, director Paolo Poeti - TV Series CANALE 5(1998) ; Terra bruciata, director Fabio Segatori (1999) ; La vita che verrà, director Pasquale Pozzessere - TV Series RAIDUE (1999) ; Lui e lei 2, director Luciano Manuzzi - Episodes 1/4 - Elisabetta Lodoli - Episodes 5/8 - TV Series RAIUNO(1999) ; The savior of san Nicola a.k.a. Vola Sciusciù, director Joseph Sargent - TV MOVIE (2000) ; Week-end, director ", "Karin Proia\n rose di Eva, director Raffaele Mertes, Vincenzo Verdecchi TV Series CANALE 5 (2011) ; Ragazze a mano armata, director Fabio Segatori (2012) ; Le tre rose di Eva 2, director Raffaele Mertes, Vincenzo Verdecchi TV Series CANALE 5 (2013) ; Ombrelloni, director Riccardo Grandi TV Series RAIDUE (2013) ; Il ritorno, director Olaf Kreinsen (2013) ; Le tre rose di Eva 3, director Raffaele Mertes, Vincenzo Verdecchi TV Series CANALE 5 (2015) ; Una gita a Roma (An outing to Rome), director Karin Proia (2017) ; Le tre rose di Eva 4, director Raffaele Mertes, Vincenzo Verdecchi TV Series CANALE 5 (2017) ", "Alex Belli\nCamera Café various directors – sitcom (Italia 1, 2007) ; CentoVetrine, various directors – soap opera (Canale 5, 2010-2014 and 2016; Rete 4, 2014-2015) ; Sacrificio d'amore, various directors – fiction (Canale 5, 2017-2018) ; Furore, directed by Alessio Inturri – fiction (Canale 5, 2018) ", "Ewa Aulin\nDon Juan in Sicily (1967, director: Alberto Lattuada) ; Col cuore in gola (1967, director: Tinto Brass) ; Candy (1968, director: Christian Marquand) ; Death Laid an Egg (1968, director: Giulio Questi) ; Start the Revolution Without Me (1970, director: Bud Yorkin) ; Microscopic Liquid Subway to Oblivion (1970, director: John Shadow) ; The Double (1971, director: Romolo Guerrieri) ; This Kind of Love (1972, director: Alberto Bevilacqua) ; Rosina Fumo viene in città... per farsi il corredo (1972, director: Claudio Gora) ; Fiorina la vacca (1972, director: Vittorio De Sisti) ; My Pleasure Is Your Pleasure (1973, director: Claudio Racca) ; Death Smiles on a Murderer (1973, director: Joe D'Amato) ; Ceremonia sangrienta (1973, director: Jorge Grau) aka Legend of Blood Castle ; When Love Is Lust (1973, director: Vittorio De Sisti) ; Long Lasting Days (1973, director: Ferdinando Baldi) ; Stella's Favor (1996, director: Giancarlo Scarchilli) ", "Joan Capri\n1953 Vuelo 971. Director: Rafael J. Salvia. ; 1953 Concierto mágico. Director: Rafael J. Salvia. ; 1953 Juzgado permanente. Director: Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent. ; 1954 El padre Pitillo. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1954 Cañas y barro. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1955 Zalacaín el aventurero. Director: Juan de Orduña. ; 1955 El fugitivo de Amberes. Director: Miguel Iglesias. ; 1956 La legión del silencio. Director: José María Forqué. ; 1956 Sucedió en mi aldea ; 1957 Juanillo, papá y mamá. Director: Lorenzo Gicca Palli. ; 1957 Un tesoro en el cielo ; 1958 El azar se divierte ; 1958 Avenida Roma, 66 ; 1961 Juventud a la intemperie. Director: Ignacio F. Iquino ; 1962 Los castigadores. Director: Alfonso Balcázar. ; 1964 Los felices 60. Director: Jaime Camino ; 1968 En Baldiri de la costa. Director: Josep Maria Font ; 1969 L'advocat, l'alcalde i el notari. Director: Josep Maria Font. ", "Bedelia (film)\n 1944 she sold the film rights to producer Isadore Goldsmith, who had impressed Caspary with The Stars Look Down, and wanted to set up the film in England. Goldsmith arranged financing through John Cornfield Productions, a unit of the Rank Organisation. Caspary travelled to London to do an early draft of the script, which transplanted the action from Connecticut to Yorkshire. \"The movie will probably have one or two Hollywood names in it and will be an Arthur Rank release\", said said. \"Mr Rank is another who was wonderful to me – but then in England even the producers respect writers... England is counting on pictures to be ", "Jonis Bascir\nDi che vizio sei?, directed by Gigi Proietti (1988) ; Villa Arzilla, directed by Gigi Proietti (1990) ; Il caso Bebawi, directed by Valerio Jalongo (1996) ; Il commissario Montalbano: Il ladro di merendine, directed by Alberto Sironi (1998) ; Incantesimo - serie TV, 1 episodio (2001) ; Padri, directed by Riccardo Donna (2002) ; Soraya, directed by Lodovico Gasparini (2003) ; Empire - mini-serie TV, 1 episodio (2005) ; Un posto al sole - 1 episodio (2005) ; Un medico in famiglia - serie TV (1998-2007) ; Due imbroglioni e... mezzo! 2 (2010) ; La ladra - serie TV, 1 episodio (2010) ; Il commissario Rex - serie TV, 1 episodio (2011) ; Anita Garibaldi, directed by Claudio Bonivento (2012) ; Il caso Enzo Tortora - Dove eravamo rimasti?, directed by Ricky Tognazzi (2012) ; Roma nuda, directed by Giuseppe Ferrara (2013) ; Centovetrine(2015) ; Il sistema - miniserie TV directed by Carmine Elia (2015) ", "Lucilla Agosti\nCentoVetrine, various directors (2003-2004) ; Camera Café, various directors (2004) guest star ; Intralci, directed by Maccio Capatonda (2006) ; Buona la prima!, various directors (2007) ; Distretto di Polizia, directed by Alberto Ferrari (2010-2012) ", "Amarro Fiamberti\n Bizzozzero Provincial Psychiatric Hospital. He was the director of that hospital until 1964, when he retired. He was given the title of director emeritus in 1970. After leaving the hospital's medical directorship, he was elected to the position of provincial councilor on the Italian Liberal Party's list in 1964, continuing to deal with psychiatric matters in a political capacity. He died in Feltre (Belluno) on August 31, 1970, after being widowed by Alfonsina Mondino. He had designated the Municipality of Canneto Pavese and the Stradella Hospital as his main heirs, and he had left his book collection to the library of the Varese Neuropsychiatric Hospital.", "Bedelia (film)\n of her great export items.\" Early contenders for the title role included Geraldine Fitzgerald, Vivien Leigh and Merle Oberon. Later on Marlene Dietrich, Valerie Hobson and Linden Travers were mentioned. Donald Woods, then appearing in a stage version of Laura, was a front-runner for the male lead. Eventually Margaret Lockwood was cast in the lead, with Ian Hunter and Barry Barnes in support. It was Barnes' first film since The Girl in the News, also with Lockwood, and Hunter's first British film in 14 years. Jill Esmond, Laurence Olivier's first wife, was given a support role. The film was made with the American market very much in mind.", "Giuseppe Capotondi\nThe Double Hour (2009 film, director) ; Endeavour (British TV series, director of the Season 2 episode \"Nocturne\", 2014) ; Berlin Station (American TV series, director of four episodes, 2016-2017) ; Suburra: Blood on Rome (Italian TV series, director of four episodes, 2017) ; The Burnt Orange Heresy (2019 film, director) ", "Maria Monti\nVento di ponente (2002) TV Series .... Emma (2002-) ; Controvento (2000) ; L'Ultimo capodanno (1998) .... The Contessa ; La Medaglia (1997) .... Teacher ; Gangsters (1992) .... Guest-house owner ; Milan noir (1987) .... Bianca ; Strana la vita (1987) .... Anna's Mother ; Mary Ward (film) (1985) .... Italian Mother ; La Ragazza di Via Millelire (1980) ; Piccole labbra (1978) .... Anna ; Mogliamante (1977) (uncredited) .... Hotel director ; Ritratto di borghesia in nero (1977) .... Linda ; Black Journal (1977) .... Second neighbor ; Novecento (1976) .... Rosina Dalco ; Al piacere di rivederla " ]
Who was the director of The Loudwater Mystery?
[ "Walter West", "Walter Alabaster West" ]
director
The Loudwater Mystery (film)
5,939,255
93
[ { "id": "14923683", "title": "The Loudwater Mystery (film)", "text": " A detective investigating the death of an aristocrat eventually deduces he was murdered by his secretary.", "score": "1.8505179" }, { "id": "14923807", "title": "The Loudwater Mystery (novel)", "text": " In 1921, the novel was made by Broadwest into a silent film directed by Walter West and starring Gregory Scott, Pauline Peters and Clive Brook.", "score": "1.7699251" }, { "id": "14923682", "title": "The Loudwater Mystery (film)", "text": " The Loudwater Mystery is a 1921 British silent crime film directed by Walter West and starring Gregory Scott, Pauline Peters and Clive Brook. It was based on the 1920 novel The Loudwater Mystery by Edgar Jepson.", "score": "1.7300788" }, { "id": "14923684", "title": "The Loudwater Mystery (film)", "text": "Gregory Scott as Hubert Manley ; Pauline Peters as Lady Loudwater ; Clive Brook as Lord Loudwater ; Cameron Carr as Inspector Flexen ; Charles Tilson-Chowne as Colonel Grey ; Arthur Walcott as Carrington ; Nan Heriot as Miss Truslove ; Charles Poulton as Roper ", "score": "1.6553762" }, { "id": "14923806", "title": "The Loudwater Mystery (novel)", "text": " The Loudwater Mystery is crime novel by the British writer Edgar Jepson which was first published in 1920. Police are called in to investigate the suspicious death of Lord Loudwater and eventually deduce he was murdered by his private secretary. Or maybe not.", "score": "1.6417474" }, { "id": "31001433", "title": "River of Mystery", "text": " River of Mystery is a 1971 television film directed by Paul Stanley and starring Vic Morrow.", "score": "1.3790939" }, { "id": "8945456", "title": "Loudwater railway station", "text": " The station appears briefly in an early scene of The Reptile'' (1966) made by Hammer Film Productions.", "score": "1.360347" }, { "id": "10966686", "title": "The Cameron Files: Secret at Loch Ness", "text": " The detective Alan Parker Cameron is investigating the secret case of the monster of Loch Ness, he is sent to “Devil's Ridge Manor” (A mansion located at the shore of the lake) because people claim to see ghosts and paranormal activity around the house. Alan is sent there to resolve this weird case.", "score": "1.3394997" }, { "id": "5199630", "title": "Piranha (1995 film)", "text": " During the night, Barbara (Lorissa McComas) and her boyfriend David (Richard Israel) sneak into a closed down US Army test site, and discovered a pool. They go swimming, but are attacked and killed by an unseen force in the pool. The next day, J.R. Randolph (Monte Markham) the uncle of Barbara, hires private investigator Maggie McNamara (Alexandra Paul), to investigate the incident, believing her to be a runaway. Maggie searches the area for any possible witnesses, eventually stopping by local homeowner Paul Grogan (William Katt), asking for any knowledge of the girl's disappearance. He claims to have not seen her, but leads her to the army test site where they discover the pool. They enter to look for ", "score": "1.3309851" }, { "id": "11415789", "title": "Pete Hautman", "text": "The Bloodwater Mysteries (co-authored with Mary Logue) ; Snatched (2006) ; Skullduggery (2007) ; Doppelganger (2008) ; The Flinkwater Chronicles ; The Flinkwater Factor (2015) ; The Forgetting Machine (2016) ; Slider (2017) ; Otherwood (2018) ", "score": "1.324255" }, { "id": "27714230", "title": "Igor Auzins", "text": "Matlock Police (TV series) - camera operator ; Division 4 (1972-73) (TV series) - director ; Upstream, Downstream (1975) (short film) ; Homicide (1973–76) - won a Logie for his direction of episode \"The Firework Man\" ; The Outsiders (1976) - director Ghost Town ; The Big Backyard (1977) (short film) - director ; Upstream downstream (1977) (short) - director ; All at Sea (1977) (TV movie) ; Death Train (1977) (TV movie) - director ; The Night Nurse (1977) (TV movie) - director ; High Rolling (1977) - director ; Chopper Squad (1978) (TV series) - director ; Bailey's Bird (1979) (TV series) - director ; Water Under the Bridge (1980) (miniseries) - director ; A Country Practice (TV series) - director ; Runaway Island (1982) - director ; We of the Never Never (1982) - director ; Taurus Rising (1982) (Tv series) - director ; The Coolangatta Gold (1984) - director ", "score": "1.32191" }, { "id": "26797841", "title": "The Murder Game (TV series)", "text": " In the town of Blackwater a fictional woman named Catherine Prior had been murdered. Ten contestants from the British public were set the challenge of becoming investigators and finding the killer. The investigators were led by Bob Taylor, known as the Chief Investigator or Chief, who was in real life a retired Detective Chief Superintendent from the West Yorkshire Police. The people from the town, played by actors, formed the suspects, some of whom later became victims. At the beginning of each episode, one investigator would be appointed as the Lead Investigator, who would have specific responsibilities and powers. The investigators would be split into teams by the Lead Investigator, and sent down different lines of inquiry determined by the Chief. These lines of inquiry would involve hidden tests, which the teams would either pass or fail as judged by the Chief.", "score": "1.3196354" }, { "id": "27060283", "title": "The Lady in the Lake (Agent Carter)", "text": " In 1947 New York, Strategic Scientific Reserve (SSR) Agent Peggy Carter and Chief Jack Thompson apprehend Soviet spy Dottie Underwood during an attempted bank robbery. In Los Angeles, newly appointed SSR Chief Daniel Sousa meets with Los Angeles Police Department Detective Andrew Henry, who informs him that a woman's body was found in Echo Park Lake with stab wounds similar to victims of a notorious serial killer, the Lady of the Lake Killer, but that the body was oddly discovered encased in a block of ice during a scorching heat wave in the city. Sousa requests backup from New York and Thompson sends Carter, interrupting her interrogation of Underwood. Carter travels to Los Angeles, where she ", "score": "1.3186991" }, { "id": "14013056", "title": "Kyle Marshall", "text": " He directed several episodes of The Loud House, along with series creator Chris Savino. In October 2017, he replaced Savino as the show's head director, after he was being fired from Nickelodeon for sexual harassment allegations.", "score": "1.3164892" }, { "id": "8945454", "title": "Loudwater railway station", "text": " Loudwater railway station was a railway station which served Loudwater, Buckinghamshire and Flackwell Heath, on the Wycombe Railway.", "score": "1.3098958" }, { "id": "26668273", "title": "William Witney", "text": " Doctor (1956-59) (TV series) - director ; Riverboat (1959-60) (TV series) - director ; Wagon Train (1959-65) (TV series) - director ; Valley of the Redwoods (1960) - director ; Overland Trail (1960) (TV series) - director ; The Secret of the Purple Reef (1960) - director ; M Squad (1960) (TV series) - director ; The Tall Man (1961) (TV series) - editor, director ; Coronado 9 (1960-61) (TV series) - director ; The Long Rope (1961) - director ; The Cat Burglar (1961) - director ; Master of the World (1961) - director ; Frontier Circus (1961-62) (TV series) ", "score": "1.3043284" }, { "id": "1530882", "title": "The Caribbean Mystery", "text": " The Caribbean Mystery is a 1945 American film noir mystery film which marked the directorial debut of Robert D. Webb. It is the third film adaptation of the 1933 novel Murder in Trinidad by John W. Vandercook to be produced by 20th Century Fox. Starring James Dunn, Sheila Ryan, and Reed Hadley, the plot finds a Brooklyn detective summoned to a Caribbean island to solve the disappearance of eight geologists who had visited an alligator-infested swamp. The lead role was rewritten especially for Dunn after his successful film comeback in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), also produced by 20th Century Fox.", "score": "1.2974763" }, { "id": "3575984", "title": "Ron Mann", "text": " Ronald Mann (born June 13, 1958), credited professionally as Ron Mann, is a Canadian documentary film director. His work includes the films Imagine the Sound (1981); Comic Book Confidential (1988); Grass (1999) and Go Further (2003), both of which feature Woody Harrelson; In the Wake of the Flood (2010), which features author Margaret Atwood; and Altman (2014), about the life and career of film director Robert Altman. Mann has served as mentor to and worked with many filmmakers from the Toronto New Wave of the 1980s, including Atom Egoyan, Bruce McDonald, Jeremy Podeswa, and Peter Mettler.", "score": "1.2936349" }, { "id": "32976073", "title": "David Loud", "text": " David Loud (born November 28, 1961, in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American music supervisor, music director, conductor, vocal and dance arranger, pianist and actor. He is best known for his collaborations with and interpretations of the music of both Kander and Ebb and Stephen Sondheim.", "score": "1.2893121" }, { "id": "26587574", "title": "Robert Louden", "text": " Robert Louden (died 1867), also known by the alias Charlie Dale, was a Confederate saboteur and mail carrier during the American Civil War. He was said to be the primary messenger between General Sterling Price and Confederate regulars and bushwhackers. As a Confederate agent, Louden was involved in the sabotage and sinking of several Union steamboats near St. Louis, Missouri and, on his deathbed, claimed to have been responsible for the destruction of the steamboat Sultana, which exploded on April 27, 1865 just north of Memphis, Tennessee, killing an estimated 1,300 to 1,900 paroled Union prisoners and civilians returning home after the war, the deadliest maritime disaster in United States history. Louden supposedly ", "score": "1.2891954" } ]
[ "The Loudwater Mystery (film)\n A detective investigating the death of an aristocrat eventually deduces he was murdered by his secretary.", "The Loudwater Mystery (novel)\n In 1921, the novel was made by Broadwest into a silent film directed by Walter West and starring Gregory Scott, Pauline Peters and Clive Brook.", "The Loudwater Mystery (film)\n The Loudwater Mystery is a 1921 British silent crime film directed by Walter West and starring Gregory Scott, Pauline Peters and Clive Brook. It was based on the 1920 novel The Loudwater Mystery by Edgar Jepson.", "The Loudwater Mystery (film)\nGregory Scott as Hubert Manley ; Pauline Peters as Lady Loudwater ; Clive Brook as Lord Loudwater ; Cameron Carr as Inspector Flexen ; Charles Tilson-Chowne as Colonel Grey ; Arthur Walcott as Carrington ; Nan Heriot as Miss Truslove ; Charles Poulton as Roper ", "The Loudwater Mystery (novel)\n The Loudwater Mystery is crime novel by the British writer Edgar Jepson which was first published in 1920. Police are called in to investigate the suspicious death of Lord Loudwater and eventually deduce he was murdered by his private secretary. Or maybe not.", "River of Mystery\n River of Mystery is a 1971 television film directed by Paul Stanley and starring Vic Morrow.", "Loudwater railway station\n The station appears briefly in an early scene of The Reptile'' (1966) made by Hammer Film Productions.", "The Cameron Files: Secret at Loch Ness\n The detective Alan Parker Cameron is investigating the secret case of the monster of Loch Ness, he is sent to “Devil's Ridge Manor” (A mansion located at the shore of the lake) because people claim to see ghosts and paranormal activity around the house. Alan is sent there to resolve this weird case.", "Piranha (1995 film)\n During the night, Barbara (Lorissa McComas) and her boyfriend David (Richard Israel) sneak into a closed down US Army test site, and discovered a pool. They go swimming, but are attacked and killed by an unseen force in the pool. The next day, J.R. Randolph (Monte Markham) the uncle of Barbara, hires private investigator Maggie McNamara (Alexandra Paul), to investigate the incident, believing her to be a runaway. Maggie searches the area for any possible witnesses, eventually stopping by local homeowner Paul Grogan (William Katt), asking for any knowledge of the girl's disappearance. He claims to have not seen her, but leads her to the army test site where they discover the pool. They enter to look for ", "Pete Hautman\nThe Bloodwater Mysteries (co-authored with Mary Logue) ; Snatched (2006) ; Skullduggery (2007) ; Doppelganger (2008) ; The Flinkwater Chronicles ; The Flinkwater Factor (2015) ; The Forgetting Machine (2016) ; Slider (2017) ; Otherwood (2018) ", "Igor Auzins\nMatlock Police (TV series) - camera operator ; Division 4 (1972-73) (TV series) - director ; Upstream, Downstream (1975) (short film) ; Homicide (1973–76) - won a Logie for his direction of episode \"The Firework Man\" ; The Outsiders (1976) - director Ghost Town ; The Big Backyard (1977) (short film) - director ; Upstream downstream (1977) (short) - director ; All at Sea (1977) (TV movie) ; Death Train (1977) (TV movie) - director ; The Night Nurse (1977) (TV movie) - director ; High Rolling (1977) - director ; Chopper Squad (1978) (TV series) - director ; Bailey's Bird (1979) (TV series) - director ; Water Under the Bridge (1980) (miniseries) - director ; A Country Practice (TV series) - director ; Runaway Island (1982) - director ; We of the Never Never (1982) - director ; Taurus Rising (1982) (Tv series) - director ; The Coolangatta Gold (1984) - director ", "The Murder Game (TV series)\n In the town of Blackwater a fictional woman named Catherine Prior had been murdered. Ten contestants from the British public were set the challenge of becoming investigators and finding the killer. The investigators were led by Bob Taylor, known as the Chief Investigator or Chief, who was in real life a retired Detective Chief Superintendent from the West Yorkshire Police. The people from the town, played by actors, formed the suspects, some of whom later became victims. At the beginning of each episode, one investigator would be appointed as the Lead Investigator, who would have specific responsibilities and powers. The investigators would be split into teams by the Lead Investigator, and sent down different lines of inquiry determined by the Chief. These lines of inquiry would involve hidden tests, which the teams would either pass or fail as judged by the Chief.", "The Lady in the Lake (Agent Carter)\n In 1947 New York, Strategic Scientific Reserve (SSR) Agent Peggy Carter and Chief Jack Thompson apprehend Soviet spy Dottie Underwood during an attempted bank robbery. In Los Angeles, newly appointed SSR Chief Daniel Sousa meets with Los Angeles Police Department Detective Andrew Henry, who informs him that a woman's body was found in Echo Park Lake with stab wounds similar to victims of a notorious serial killer, the Lady of the Lake Killer, but that the body was oddly discovered encased in a block of ice during a scorching heat wave in the city. Sousa requests backup from New York and Thompson sends Carter, interrupting her interrogation of Underwood. Carter travels to Los Angeles, where she ", "Kyle Marshall\n He directed several episodes of The Loud House, along with series creator Chris Savino. In October 2017, he replaced Savino as the show's head director, after he was being fired from Nickelodeon for sexual harassment allegations.", "Loudwater railway station\n Loudwater railway station was a railway station which served Loudwater, Buckinghamshire and Flackwell Heath, on the Wycombe Railway.", "William Witney\n Doctor (1956-59) (TV series) - director ; Riverboat (1959-60) (TV series) - director ; Wagon Train (1959-65) (TV series) - director ; Valley of the Redwoods (1960) - director ; Overland Trail (1960) (TV series) - director ; The Secret of the Purple Reef (1960) - director ; M Squad (1960) (TV series) - director ; The Tall Man (1961) (TV series) - editor, director ; Coronado 9 (1960-61) (TV series) - director ; The Long Rope (1961) - director ; The Cat Burglar (1961) - director ; Master of the World (1961) - director ; Frontier Circus (1961-62) (TV series) ", "The Caribbean Mystery\n The Caribbean Mystery is a 1945 American film noir mystery film which marked the directorial debut of Robert D. Webb. It is the third film adaptation of the 1933 novel Murder in Trinidad by John W. Vandercook to be produced by 20th Century Fox. Starring James Dunn, Sheila Ryan, and Reed Hadley, the plot finds a Brooklyn detective summoned to a Caribbean island to solve the disappearance of eight geologists who had visited an alligator-infested swamp. The lead role was rewritten especially for Dunn after his successful film comeback in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), also produced by 20th Century Fox.", "Ron Mann\n Ronald Mann (born June 13, 1958), credited professionally as Ron Mann, is a Canadian documentary film director. His work includes the films Imagine the Sound (1981); Comic Book Confidential (1988); Grass (1999) and Go Further (2003), both of which feature Woody Harrelson; In the Wake of the Flood (2010), which features author Margaret Atwood; and Altman (2014), about the life and career of film director Robert Altman. Mann has served as mentor to and worked with many filmmakers from the Toronto New Wave of the 1980s, including Atom Egoyan, Bruce McDonald, Jeremy Podeswa, and Peter Mettler.", "David Loud\n David Loud (born November 28, 1961, in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American music supervisor, music director, conductor, vocal and dance arranger, pianist and actor. He is best known for his collaborations with and interpretations of the music of both Kander and Ebb and Stephen Sondheim.", "Robert Louden\n Robert Louden (died 1867), also known by the alias Charlie Dale, was a Confederate saboteur and mail carrier during the American Civil War. He was said to be the primary messenger between General Sterling Price and Confederate regulars and bushwhackers. As a Confederate agent, Louden was involved in the sabotage and sinking of several Union steamboats near St. Louis, Missouri and, on his deathbed, claimed to have been responsible for the destruction of the steamboat Sultana, which exploded on April 27, 1865 just north of Memphis, Tennessee, killing an estimated 1,300 to 1,900 paroled Union prisoners and civilians returning home after the war, the deadliest maritime disaster in United States history. Louden supposedly " ]
Who was the director of Pilot?
[ "Andy Ackerman", "Robert Andrew Ackerman" ]
director
Pilot (Life on a Stick)
5,453,504
46
[ { "id": "11645394", "title": "Pilot (V)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ", "score": "1.4781814" }, { "id": "14177516", "title": "The Pilot (film)", "text": " The Pilot (also known as Danger in the Skies) is a 1980 American action-drama film by director and star Cliff Robertson and is based on the novel of the same name by Robert P. Davis.", "score": "1.4499825" }, { "id": "8602681", "title": "Pilots (film)", "text": " Pilots is a 2000 Indian Malayalam-language drama film written and directed by Rajiv Anchal and produced by Menaka under Revathy Kalamandhir. Starring Suresh Gopi, Sreenivasan, and Praveena.", "score": "1.4494889" }, { "id": "14985590", "title": "Alan Smithee", "text": " of season 4 of American television series, believed to be directed by Joseph L. Scanlan. ; Riviera, 1987 ABC-TV movie intended as pilot, directed by John Frankenheimer. ; MacGyver, \"Pilot\", directed by Jerrold Freedman, and \"The Heist\", director unknown (1985). ; Moonlight, TV movie and pilot for an unsold series (1982) (not to be confused with the later CBS vampire series), directed by Jackie Cooper and Rod Holcomb. ; The Owl, 1991 television film credited to director Tom Holland when originally broadcast. Holland approved of the 46-minute television cut but disliked the extended 84-minute home video cut and credited it to \"Alan Smithee\". ", "score": "1.4493661" }, { "id": "14920510", "title": "Pilot (The Americans)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.", "score": "1.4418707" }, { "id": "30220069", "title": "Tucker Cawley", "text": "\"Pilot\" ", "score": "1.435677" }, { "id": "6731306", "title": "Jay Sandrich", "text": "Kuney, Jack. Take One: Television Directors on Directing. ISBN: 978-0275935467 New York: Greenwood, 1990. ; Meisler, Andy. \"Jay Sandrich: Ace of Pilots.\" Channels magazine (New York), October 1986. ; Ravage, John W. Television: The Director's Viewpoint. Boulder, ISBN: 978-0891583370, Colorado: Westview, 1978. ", "score": "1.4349737" }, { "id": "6019210", "title": "Pilot (Masters of Sex)", "text": " The series opens in October 1956 at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri where Bill Masters (Michael Sheen) is honored for his work in obstetric surgery. While making a speech, Bill states that he has to go. Later, he watches through a peephole as Betty DiMello (Annaleigh Ashford), a prostitute whom he hired, has sex with Ernie (Steve Rosen). Afterwards, Bill talks with Betty at a bar where they discuss her sexual response. She tells him she faked her orgasm, a practice which Bill is unfamiliar with. A young doctor, Ethan Haas (Nicholas D'Agosto) speaks to Bill about a new female ", "score": "1.4300442" }, { "id": "13378281", "title": "Pilot (studio)", "text": " Aleksandr Tatarsky served as the Pilot's artistic director up until his death in 2007. He was replaced by Eduard Nazarov who held the position until 2013. Currently Igor Gelashvili serves as the studio's director. Pilot produced over 130 animated films. A subdivision called \"Pilot-TV\", founded in 1997, produced satirical animated series using 3D motion-captured characters, most famous of them being the studio's key mascots: the Pilot Brothers based on Chief and Colleague from the popular Soviet mini-series Investigation Held by Kolobki. The studio has received over 50 awards at international film festivals. It is best known for animating the popular Cartoon Network series Mike, Lu & Og outside of ", "score": "1.4285988" }, { "id": "27706142", "title": "Pilot (Homeland)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the psychological thriller TV series Homeland. It originally aired on Showtime on October 2, 2011. The episode focuses on the return home of Marine Sergeant Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), rescued after eight years as a prisoner-of-war in Afghanistan. While Brody is celebrated as a hero, CIA officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) believes Brody to actually be acting as a sleeper agent for al-Qaeda. The pilot was universally acclaimed by critics and was the highest-rated drama premiere on Showtime since 2003.", "score": "1.4216971" }, { "id": "27932156", "title": "Pilot (Person of Interest)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.", "score": "1.4200339" }, { "id": "9331023", "title": "John Hodge (engineer)", "text": " in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ", "score": "1.4185274" }, { "id": "14175622", "title": "Pilot (Preacher)", "text": " The \"Pilot\" of Preacher was directed by series creators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, both first-time television directors. Prior to directing for the series, Rogen and Goldberg's directorial filmography included This Is the End (2013) and The Interview (2014). Shortly after the airing of the pilot, AMC released a featurette titled \"Directors' Commentary On “Pilot”\" which went into greater detail about the creation of the pilot episode, with both Rogen and Goldberg providing commentary and insight into its construction. The directors were intent on challenging themselves within the production, with the budget limitations helping in that regard, as it forced both ", "score": "1.4113898" }, { "id": "9073659", "title": "Pilot Speed", "text": " Pilot Speed (formerly known as Pilate) was a Canadian rock band, who were active in the early 2000s. Based in Toronto, Ontario, the band consisted of vocalist and pianist Todd Clark, guitarist Chris Greenough, bassist Ruby Bumrah and drummer Bill Keeley. Clark was a graduate of the music program at the University of Western Ontario, while all of the other three members were alumni of OCAD University. They released their debut EP, For All That's Given, Wasted, independently in 2001 before signing to MapleMusic Recordings, which released their full-length debut album Caught by the Window in 2003. The album was most noted for the single \"Into Your Hideout\"; the song's music video, directed by Maxime Giroux, won the MuchMusic Video Award for Best Independent Video at ", "score": "1.4102072" }, { "id": "12877364", "title": "The Flying Ace", "text": " With principal photography in Jacksonville, Florida, The Flying Ace was an example of producer Norman's \"home talent\" films, in which he would travel to various towns with stock footage and a basic script. After recruiting local celebrities for minor roles, they would film a small portion of footage (approximately 200 feet of new material) over the course of a few days. The films were processed at Norman's laboratory in Chicago. Once completed, the films would be screened and any funds raised would be split between Norman and the town where the scenes were shot. Norman cast J. Laurence Criner, a veteran of Harlem’s prestigious all-black theater troupe the Lafayette Players, in the leading role of Captain Billy Stokes, a black pilot who fought in France during World War I. While Eugene Bullard was a black pilot in the Lafayette Escadrille, African-Americans were not allowed to serve as ", "score": "1.4081718" }, { "id": "26447212", "title": "Pilot (Revenge)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.", "score": "1.4069793" }, { "id": "2971117", "title": "Pilot (Lost)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ", "score": "1.4053873" }, { "id": "27683816", "title": "Wes Archer", "text": "\"Pilot\" ", "score": "1.4042232" }, { "id": "26346022", "title": "Pilot (The Deuce)", "text": " by a former adult film star who was working craft services for the shot. Of the project, Simon said \"We’re interested in what it means when profit is the primary metric for what we call society. In that sense, this story is intended as neither prurient nor puritan. It’s about a product, and those human beings who created, sold, profited from and suffered with that product... Porn, prostitution, pimps, the Mob, after-hours nightlife, institutional corruption, and New York in its Wild West heyday ... it’s a world rich in character, and a fascinating story we’re eager to tell.\" Filming began in October 2015, and in January, 2016, the pilot was picked up for series.", "score": "1.4006654" }, { "id": "8882905", "title": "Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies", "text": " Steven Spielberg had developed the story of a flyer with a young son, containing themes that interested him: aircraft and flying and parental responsibility. He developed the premise with fellow Cal State alumni Claudia Salter, and hoped to direct it himself, but Richard D. Zanuck, who was then the president of 20th Century Fox, declined to hire Spielberg as director. Producers Robert Fryer and James Cresson hired John Erman to direct because he was older. The film originally ended with Eli committing suicide, but the studio recut it to give it a happier ending. Spielberg was so displeased by the film that he publicly complained it had been \"turned into a really sick film. They should bury it.\" Spielberg would not make a film for Twentieth Century Fox until 2002's Minority Report (even then, this was a co-production with DreamWorks). Fryer, ", "score": "1.3966904" } ]
[ "Pilot (V)\n \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ", "The Pilot (film)\n The Pilot (also known as Danger in the Skies) is a 1980 American action-drama film by director and star Cliff Robertson and is based on the novel of the same name by Robert P. Davis.", "Pilots (film)\n Pilots is a 2000 Indian Malayalam-language drama film written and directed by Rajiv Anchal and produced by Menaka under Revathy Kalamandhir. Starring Suresh Gopi, Sreenivasan, and Praveena.", "Alan Smithee\n of season 4 of American television series, believed to be directed by Joseph L. Scanlan. ; Riviera, 1987 ABC-TV movie intended as pilot, directed by John Frankenheimer. ; MacGyver, \"Pilot\", directed by Jerrold Freedman, and \"The Heist\", director unknown (1985). ; Moonlight, TV movie and pilot for an unsold series (1982) (not to be confused with the later CBS vampire series), directed by Jackie Cooper and Rod Holcomb. ; The Owl, 1991 television film credited to director Tom Holland when originally broadcast. Holland approved of the 46-minute television cut but disliked the extended 84-minute home video cut and credited it to \"Alan Smithee\". ", "Pilot (The Americans)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.", "Tucker Cawley\n\"Pilot\" ", "Jay Sandrich\nKuney, Jack. Take One: Television Directors on Directing. ISBN: 978-0275935467 New York: Greenwood, 1990. ; Meisler, Andy. \"Jay Sandrich: Ace of Pilots.\" Channels magazine (New York), October 1986. ; Ravage, John W. Television: The Director's Viewpoint. Boulder, ISBN: 978-0891583370, Colorado: Westview, 1978. ", "Pilot (Masters of Sex)\n The series opens in October 1956 at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri where Bill Masters (Michael Sheen) is honored for his work in obstetric surgery. While making a speech, Bill states that he has to go. Later, he watches through a peephole as Betty DiMello (Annaleigh Ashford), a prostitute whom he hired, has sex with Ernie (Steve Rosen). Afterwards, Bill talks with Betty at a bar where they discuss her sexual response. She tells him she faked her orgasm, a practice which Bill is unfamiliar with. A young doctor, Ethan Haas (Nicholas D'Agosto) speaks to Bill about a new female ", "Pilot (studio)\n Aleksandr Tatarsky served as the Pilot's artistic director up until his death in 2007. He was replaced by Eduard Nazarov who held the position until 2013. Currently Igor Gelashvili serves as the studio's director. Pilot produced over 130 animated films. A subdivision called \"Pilot-TV\", founded in 1997, produced satirical animated series using 3D motion-captured characters, most famous of them being the studio's key mascots: the Pilot Brothers based on Chief and Colleague from the popular Soviet mini-series Investigation Held by Kolobki. The studio has received over 50 awards at international film festivals. It is best known for animating the popular Cartoon Network series Mike, Lu & Og outside of ", "Pilot (Homeland)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the psychological thriller TV series Homeland. It originally aired on Showtime on October 2, 2011. The episode focuses on the return home of Marine Sergeant Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), rescued after eight years as a prisoner-of-war in Afghanistan. While Brody is celebrated as a hero, CIA officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) believes Brody to actually be acting as a sleeper agent for al-Qaeda. The pilot was universally acclaimed by critics and was the highest-rated drama premiere on Showtime since 2003.", "Pilot (Person of Interest)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.", "John Hodge (engineer)\n in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ", "Pilot (Preacher)\n The \"Pilot\" of Preacher was directed by series creators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, both first-time television directors. Prior to directing for the series, Rogen and Goldberg's directorial filmography included This Is the End (2013) and The Interview (2014). Shortly after the airing of the pilot, AMC released a featurette titled \"Directors' Commentary On “Pilot”\" which went into greater detail about the creation of the pilot episode, with both Rogen and Goldberg providing commentary and insight into its construction. The directors were intent on challenging themselves within the production, with the budget limitations helping in that regard, as it forced both ", "Pilot Speed\n Pilot Speed (formerly known as Pilate) was a Canadian rock band, who were active in the early 2000s. Based in Toronto, Ontario, the band consisted of vocalist and pianist Todd Clark, guitarist Chris Greenough, bassist Ruby Bumrah and drummer Bill Keeley. Clark was a graduate of the music program at the University of Western Ontario, while all of the other three members were alumni of OCAD University. They released their debut EP, For All That's Given, Wasted, independently in 2001 before signing to MapleMusic Recordings, which released their full-length debut album Caught by the Window in 2003. The album was most noted for the single \"Into Your Hideout\"; the song's music video, directed by Maxime Giroux, won the MuchMusic Video Award for Best Independent Video at ", "The Flying Ace\n With principal photography in Jacksonville, Florida, The Flying Ace was an example of producer Norman's \"home talent\" films, in which he would travel to various towns with stock footage and a basic script. After recruiting local celebrities for minor roles, they would film a small portion of footage (approximately 200 feet of new material) over the course of a few days. The films were processed at Norman's laboratory in Chicago. Once completed, the films would be screened and any funds raised would be split between Norman and the town where the scenes were shot. Norman cast J. Laurence Criner, a veteran of Harlem’s prestigious all-black theater troupe the Lafayette Players, in the leading role of Captain Billy Stokes, a black pilot who fought in France during World War I. While Eugene Bullard was a black pilot in the Lafayette Escadrille, African-Americans were not allowed to serve as ", "Pilot (Revenge)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.", "Pilot (Lost)\n \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ", "Wes Archer\n\"Pilot\" ", "Pilot (The Deuce)\n by a former adult film star who was working craft services for the shot. Of the project, Simon said \"We’re interested in what it means when profit is the primary metric for what we call society. In that sense, this story is intended as neither prurient nor puritan. It’s about a product, and those human beings who created, sold, profited from and suffered with that product... Porn, prostitution, pimps, the Mob, after-hours nightlife, institutional corruption, and New York in its Wild West heyday ... it’s a world rich in character, and a fascinating story we’re eager to tell.\" Filming began in October 2015, and in January, 2016, the pilot was picked up for series.", "Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies\n Steven Spielberg had developed the story of a flyer with a young son, containing themes that interested him: aircraft and flying and parental responsibility. He developed the premise with fellow Cal State alumni Claudia Salter, and hoped to direct it himself, but Richard D. Zanuck, who was then the president of 20th Century Fox, declined to hire Spielberg as director. Producers Robert Fryer and James Cresson hired John Erman to direct because he was older. The film originally ended with Eli committing suicide, but the studio recut it to give it a happier ending. Spielberg was so displeased by the film that he publicly complained it had been \"turned into a really sick film. They should bury it.\" Spielberg would not make a film for Twentieth Century Fox until 2002's Minority Report (even then, this was a co-production with DreamWorks). Fryer, " ]
Who was the director of Hakeem's New Flame?
[ "Stan Lathan" ]
director
Hakeem Owes Moesha Big
1,194,530
5
[ { "id": "735830", "title": "Hakeem Khaaliq", "text": " Hakeem Khaaliq (also Hakeem Abdul-Khaaliq) is an American cinematographer, television producer, film director, photographer, multi-media activist, graphic design artist, and. Before his career in film and television he worked as a music producer, music publisher, music supervisor and radio personality. In 1995 Khaaliq founded Radio Bums and in 2010 he co-founded Nation19 magazine / APDTA with longtime partner Queen Muhammad Ali.", "score": "1.4699414" }, { "id": "8446614", "title": "Hakeem Lyon", "text": " It looks like he is going to make up with Tiana but she leaves him again after they sleep together. Hakeem is given an opportunity to act in a film alongside well known actress, Haven Quinn (Cassie Ventura). Unfortunately for Hakeem, the director is racist and ends up firing him after they have an argument. Haven, who was initially hostile to Hakeem, is impressed by him standing up to the director and makes it clear she likes him. Hakeem invites her to an Empire event and they kiss in front of Tiana. Hakeem and Blake fall out when Hakeem learns that Blake's father is a racist and a picture ", "score": "1.4692795" }, { "id": "25380726", "title": "Flame (1996 film)", "text": " Flame is a controversial 1996 war film directed by Ingrid Sinclair, produced by Joel Phiri and Simon Bright, and stars Marian Kunonga and Ulla Mahaka. It was the first Zimbabwean film, since independence, to be set in the Rhodesian Bush War. It served as a tribute to the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army's many female guerrillas.", "score": "1.4680603" }, { "id": "15448835", "title": "The Flame of New Orleans", "text": " The Flame of New Orleans is a 1941 comedy film directed by René Clair and starring Marlene Dietrich and Bruce Cabot in his first comedy role. The supporting cast features Roland Young, Andy Devine and Franklin Pangborn. It was the last of three films Dietrich made with producer Joe Pasternak who called it \"in many ways, our most interesting.\" The movie was nominated for an Oscar for Best Art Direction by Martin Obzina, Jack Otterson and Russell A. Gausman.", "score": "1.4614704" }, { "id": "30857312", "title": "Keeper of the Flame (film)", "text": " despairing of love) and her own part expanded. Film producer Victor Saville threatened to resign if the changes were made, and Spencer Tracy supported him, which led to the changes being rejected. Nonetheless, the script still had numerous problems, and Stewart refused to recognize these shortcomings. In late summer 1942, Cukor brought in Zoë Akins, one of his favorite playwrights and screenwriters, to help with the script. Victor Saville expressed concern that Stewart was basing more and more of the script on William Randolph Hearst, one of Louis B. Mayer's best friends, and that this might jeopardize the success of the picture. As script work continued, casting ", "score": "1.4608452" }, { "id": "8446621", "title": "Hakeem Lyon", "text": " with Maya (Rhyon Nicole Brown), who is adding ballet to his performance but they manage to work it out. Hakeem is promoted to Creative Director at Empire and during the Empire trust tour he performs a tribute to Andre with Jamal as Andre has cancer. Hakeem gets jealous when Tiana takes an interest in Devon (Mario) but he spends most of his time with his kids. When Andre goes into hospital after suffering cardiac arrest, Hakeem is there at the hospital to support him. However, he is hostile to Kingsley, telling him he is not part of their family.", "score": "1.4555235" }, { "id": "30857310", "title": "Keeper of the Flame (film)", "text": " chosen to direct in late April 1942 because he had dealt well with troubled and headstrong actors in the past, and Tracy was considered a difficult actor to direct. Bronisław Kaper, who had come to MGM in 1935 from Nazi Germany, was assigned to compose the film score. William H. Daniels was named the cinematographer. Katharine Hepburn joined the cast in mid-April 1942 after Stewart sent her a copy of the unfinished script. Hepburn was fascinated by the character of Christine, and felt that doing the film would be a way of contributing to the war effort. MGM executives did not want Hepburn attached to the picture, ", "score": "1.4512336" }, { "id": "13035295", "title": "The Flame's Daughter", "text": " The series is produced by the same team behind the 2017 hit drama Eternal Love, which consists of Gao Shen as its producer, Zhang Shuping as style director and Chen Haozhong as artistic director. Director Liang Shengquan is known for his works in Swords of Legends and The Mystic Nine; while screenwriter Mobao Feibao is known for her success adaptations of popular IPs like Scarlet Heart and My Sunshine. Costume designer Ru Meiqi and makeup director Su Yongzhi; who worked on Nirvana in Fire and All Quiet in Peking also joined the team. Filming began on 30 March 2017 at Xiangshan Movie & Television Town, and wrapped up on 26 July 2017.", "score": "1.443792" }, { "id": "9584245", "title": "Mark Haapala", "text": " entitled \"Play’n With Fire\". In 2010, Haapala was accepted into the Directors Guild of America Trainee program as an assistant director trainee. He is a member of the Producers Guild of America. Haapala and writing partner, Stewart Gold penned an original romantic comedy, The Groom Whisperer, for Larry Levinson Productions in 2013. The duo also created the reality show Pinky and the Fangirls which was optioned by the Lifetime Channel in 2014. It starred actor Keith Coogan and his wife, Kristen \"Pinky\" Coogan. Haapala co-wrote and directed the 2014 Independent TV pilot Off The Record which was screened at Tribeca Cinemas as part of the 2014 New York Television Festival.", "score": "1.418049" }, { "id": "3153008", "title": "Adam Hakeem", "text": " As @ 10 Oct 2021", "score": "1.4168463" }, { "id": "15445655", "title": "Phillip Youmans", "text": " Youmans wrote, shot, directed and edited his first feature-length film, Burning Cane, as a senior in high school, when he was 17. The film grew from a short film that Youmans wrote called The Glory. It tells the story of a woman (played by Karen Kaia Livers) in rural Louisiana and her relationships with her alcoholic son and a local preacher. It also stars and was co-produced by Wendell Pierce. Raised Baptist, Youmans stated that the goal of Burning Cane was to \"touch on [] how rigid religious conviction can be within the rural South, especially under sort of rigid interpretation of Protestantism.\" Youmans financed the film with $2500 in personal savings, an Indiegogo campaign, and donations from friends and family. Burning Cane won the Founders Prize and the prize for best cinematography in a U.S. narrative feature film at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival. Youmans is the first African-American director to receive the Founders Prize; he is also the youngest director to have a film accepted to the Tribeca Film Festival. Youmans announced that he is currently developing his next feature film, which will focus on \"the Black Panther chapter in New Orleans during 1978.\"", "score": "1.405669" }, { "id": "7325740", "title": "For Ahkeem", "text": " For Ahkeem was shot over a period of two years. It happened to overlap with the shooting of Michael Brown and the subsequent Ferguson protests. The film was directed by Landon Van Soest and Jeremy S. Levine. The cinematography was done by Nicholas Weissman. It premiered at the 2017 Berlin Film Festival.", "score": "1.4012079" }, { "id": "32280529", "title": "Addison N. Scurlock", "text": " Award-winning film director Hakeem Khaaliq is Scurlock's great-nephew.", "score": "1.3948809" }, { "id": "30857315", "title": "Keeper of the Flame (film)", "text": " attempt to convince Garland of the need to sober up. In order to add realism to the production, Cukor consulted reporters from United Press for advice on how newspapermen would handle Forrest's funeral. Based on their critiques, Cukor changed the scene in the village hotel's bar so that instead of drinking and talking about the funeral, the reporters get to work drafting articles on their typewriters. The script, too, was changed to permit the bartender to make a quip about reporters working rather than drinking.\" Reshoots occurred in September and October. Katharine Hepburn returned to Hollywood in early September for retakes, and Pauline Lord was called back in early October. Although James E. Newcom was the film's editor, Cukor had final cut on the film. Lord's scenes were deleted from the picture, and her name did not appear on cast lists. She was replaced by Margaret Wycherley.", "score": "1.3943477" }, { "id": "14097462", "title": "Mak 'Kusare", "text": " Motion Picture Production. 'Kusare attended the Cannes film festival, as a part of the Producers Network, seeking funds for his movie \"90- Degrees\" when he met South African filmmaker, Ramadan Suleman, who inspired him to simply get started. He is the President and Creative Director of his privately owned production company Avehil Media Company, specialising in film and video productions for Cinema and TV and was awarded the British Council International Young Creative Entrepreneur (IYCE) (for TV and Motion Picture) In 2006, he was commissioned by the Nigerian Film Corporation to direct a short film about deprivation, solitude and paranoia “Duty”. It was written by a renowned Nigerian ", "score": "1.3917141" }, { "id": "30857298", "title": "Keeper of the Flame (film)", "text": " Keeper of the Flame is a 1942 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) drama film directed by George Cukor, and starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn. The screenplay by Donald Ogden Stewart is adapted from the 1942 novel Keeper of the Flame by I. A. R. Wylie. Hepburn plays the widow of a famous civic leader who has died in an accident. Tracy portrays a former war correspondent who intends to write a flattering biography of the dead man, only to find that his death is shrouded in mystery. Screenwriter Stewart considered the script to be the finest moment of his career, feeling vindicated by the assignment as he believed that Hollywood had punished him for years for his political views. Principal filming began in the last week of August 1942, four months after the release of the novel, published by Random House. The picture was filmed on a ", "score": "1.3911695" }, { "id": "30335968", "title": "Salim Akil", "text": " Director in a Motion Picture for the film that same year. In 2012, he directed and co-produced a remake of the film Sparkle. Akil executive produced the BET series Being Mary Jane, created by Mara, which premiered in 2014. In 2016, he received an NAACP Image Award nomination for Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series for the show's episode \"Sparrow\", as well as a nomination for Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture (Television) for The Start Up. He later began developing the show Black Lightning, which premiered in 2018 on The CW. He has written and directed several episodes of the series since its premiere. In February 2021, Akil confirmed a spin-off of Black Lightning titled Painkiller was in production.", "score": "1.3902658" }, { "id": "30857301", "title": "Keeper of the Flame (film)", "text": " son of the gatekeeper of the Forrest estate, Jason Rickards (Howard Da Silva). The grief-stricken boy shows him a way into the mansion, where he meets Christine. Though she is cordial, she refuses to cooperate with his biography. After O'Malley leaves, Forrest's private secretary, Clive Kerndon (Richard Whorf), fearful of how the reporter will react to the brush-off, convinces Christine to offer her help to O'Malley so that they can guide him in the direction they want. Over time, O'Malley gains the widow's trust. Christine is the \"keeper of the flame,\" protecting her husband's memory and reputation. O'Malley's instincts ", "score": "1.3870139" }, { "id": "4608072", "title": "Day Leclaire", "text": "Old Flame, New Sparks (2007) ", "score": "1.385664" }, { "id": "30857299", "title": "Keeper of the Flame (film)", "text": " stage, with no location shooting. Hepburn had already begun a relationship with Tracy, and his heavy drinking led her to become his vigilant guardian during the filming. The film was screened for the Office of War Information's Bureau of Motion Pictures on December 2, 1942, where it was disapproved of by the Bureau's chief, Lowell Mellett. Keeper of the Flame premiered to a poor reception at Radio City Music Hall on Thursday, March 18, 1943. MGM head Louis B. Mayer stormed out of the cinema, enraged by his having encouraged the making of a film that equated wealth with fascism. Republican members of Congress complained about the film's leftist politics and demanded that Will H. Hays, president of the Motion Picture Production Code, establish motion picture industry guidelines for propaganda. Cukor was dissatisfied with the film and considered it one of his poorest efforts.", "score": "1.3850639" } ]
[ "Hakeem Khaaliq\n Hakeem Khaaliq (also Hakeem Abdul-Khaaliq) is an American cinematographer, television producer, film director, photographer, multi-media activist, graphic design artist, and. Before his career in film and television he worked as a music producer, music publisher, music supervisor and radio personality. In 1995 Khaaliq founded Radio Bums and in 2010 he co-founded Nation19 magazine / APDTA with longtime partner Queen Muhammad Ali.", "Hakeem Lyon\n It looks like he is going to make up with Tiana but she leaves him again after they sleep together. Hakeem is given an opportunity to act in a film alongside well known actress, Haven Quinn (Cassie Ventura). Unfortunately for Hakeem, the director is racist and ends up firing him after they have an argument. Haven, who was initially hostile to Hakeem, is impressed by him standing up to the director and makes it clear she likes him. Hakeem invites her to an Empire event and they kiss in front of Tiana. Hakeem and Blake fall out when Hakeem learns that Blake's father is a racist and a picture ", "Flame (1996 film)\n Flame is a controversial 1996 war film directed by Ingrid Sinclair, produced by Joel Phiri and Simon Bright, and stars Marian Kunonga and Ulla Mahaka. It was the first Zimbabwean film, since independence, to be set in the Rhodesian Bush War. It served as a tribute to the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army's many female guerrillas.", "The Flame of New Orleans\n The Flame of New Orleans is a 1941 comedy film directed by René Clair and starring Marlene Dietrich and Bruce Cabot in his first comedy role. The supporting cast features Roland Young, Andy Devine and Franklin Pangborn. It was the last of three films Dietrich made with producer Joe Pasternak who called it \"in many ways, our most interesting.\" The movie was nominated for an Oscar for Best Art Direction by Martin Obzina, Jack Otterson and Russell A. Gausman.", "Keeper of the Flame (film)\n despairing of love) and her own part expanded. Film producer Victor Saville threatened to resign if the changes were made, and Spencer Tracy supported him, which led to the changes being rejected. Nonetheless, the script still had numerous problems, and Stewart refused to recognize these shortcomings. In late summer 1942, Cukor brought in Zoë Akins, one of his favorite playwrights and screenwriters, to help with the script. Victor Saville expressed concern that Stewart was basing more and more of the script on William Randolph Hearst, one of Louis B. Mayer's best friends, and that this might jeopardize the success of the picture. As script work continued, casting ", "Hakeem Lyon\n with Maya (Rhyon Nicole Brown), who is adding ballet to his performance but they manage to work it out. Hakeem is promoted to Creative Director at Empire and during the Empire trust tour he performs a tribute to Andre with Jamal as Andre has cancer. Hakeem gets jealous when Tiana takes an interest in Devon (Mario) but he spends most of his time with his kids. When Andre goes into hospital after suffering cardiac arrest, Hakeem is there at the hospital to support him. However, he is hostile to Kingsley, telling him he is not part of their family.", "Keeper of the Flame (film)\n chosen to direct in late April 1942 because he had dealt well with troubled and headstrong actors in the past, and Tracy was considered a difficult actor to direct. Bronisław Kaper, who had come to MGM in 1935 from Nazi Germany, was assigned to compose the film score. William H. Daniels was named the cinematographer. Katharine Hepburn joined the cast in mid-April 1942 after Stewart sent her a copy of the unfinished script. Hepburn was fascinated by the character of Christine, and felt that doing the film would be a way of contributing to the war effort. MGM executives did not want Hepburn attached to the picture, ", "The Flame's Daughter\n The series is produced by the same team behind the 2017 hit drama Eternal Love, which consists of Gao Shen as its producer, Zhang Shuping as style director and Chen Haozhong as artistic director. Director Liang Shengquan is known for his works in Swords of Legends and The Mystic Nine; while screenwriter Mobao Feibao is known for her success adaptations of popular IPs like Scarlet Heart and My Sunshine. Costume designer Ru Meiqi and makeup director Su Yongzhi; who worked on Nirvana in Fire and All Quiet in Peking also joined the team. Filming began on 30 March 2017 at Xiangshan Movie & Television Town, and wrapped up on 26 July 2017.", "Mark Haapala\n entitled \"Play’n With Fire\". In 2010, Haapala was accepted into the Directors Guild of America Trainee program as an assistant director trainee. He is a member of the Producers Guild of America. Haapala and writing partner, Stewart Gold penned an original romantic comedy, The Groom Whisperer, for Larry Levinson Productions in 2013. The duo also created the reality show Pinky and the Fangirls which was optioned by the Lifetime Channel in 2014. It starred actor Keith Coogan and his wife, Kristen \"Pinky\" Coogan. Haapala co-wrote and directed the 2014 Independent TV pilot Off The Record which was screened at Tribeca Cinemas as part of the 2014 New York Television Festival.", "Adam Hakeem\n As @ 10 Oct 2021", "Phillip Youmans\n Youmans wrote, shot, directed and edited his first feature-length film, Burning Cane, as a senior in high school, when he was 17. The film grew from a short film that Youmans wrote called The Glory. It tells the story of a woman (played by Karen Kaia Livers) in rural Louisiana and her relationships with her alcoholic son and a local preacher. It also stars and was co-produced by Wendell Pierce. Raised Baptist, Youmans stated that the goal of Burning Cane was to \"touch on [] how rigid religious conviction can be within the rural South, especially under sort of rigid interpretation of Protestantism.\" Youmans financed the film with $2500 in personal savings, an Indiegogo campaign, and donations from friends and family. Burning Cane won the Founders Prize and the prize for best cinematography in a U.S. narrative feature film at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival. Youmans is the first African-American director to receive the Founders Prize; he is also the youngest director to have a film accepted to the Tribeca Film Festival. Youmans announced that he is currently developing his next feature film, which will focus on \"the Black Panther chapter in New Orleans during 1978.\"", "For Ahkeem\n For Ahkeem was shot over a period of two years. It happened to overlap with the shooting of Michael Brown and the subsequent Ferguson protests. The film was directed by Landon Van Soest and Jeremy S. Levine. The cinematography was done by Nicholas Weissman. It premiered at the 2017 Berlin Film Festival.", "Addison N. Scurlock\n Award-winning film director Hakeem Khaaliq is Scurlock's great-nephew.", "Keeper of the Flame (film)\n attempt to convince Garland of the need to sober up. In order to add realism to the production, Cukor consulted reporters from United Press for advice on how newspapermen would handle Forrest's funeral. Based on their critiques, Cukor changed the scene in the village hotel's bar so that instead of drinking and talking about the funeral, the reporters get to work drafting articles on their typewriters. The script, too, was changed to permit the bartender to make a quip about reporters working rather than drinking.\" Reshoots occurred in September and October. Katharine Hepburn returned to Hollywood in early September for retakes, and Pauline Lord was called back in early October. Although James E. Newcom was the film's editor, Cukor had final cut on the film. Lord's scenes were deleted from the picture, and her name did not appear on cast lists. She was replaced by Margaret Wycherley.", "Mak 'Kusare\n Motion Picture Production. 'Kusare attended the Cannes film festival, as a part of the Producers Network, seeking funds for his movie \"90- Degrees\" when he met South African filmmaker, Ramadan Suleman, who inspired him to simply get started. He is the President and Creative Director of his privately owned production company Avehil Media Company, specialising in film and video productions for Cinema and TV and was awarded the British Council International Young Creative Entrepreneur (IYCE) (for TV and Motion Picture) In 2006, he was commissioned by the Nigerian Film Corporation to direct a short film about deprivation, solitude and paranoia “Duty”. It was written by a renowned Nigerian ", "Keeper of the Flame (film)\n Keeper of the Flame is a 1942 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) drama film directed by George Cukor, and starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn. The screenplay by Donald Ogden Stewart is adapted from the 1942 novel Keeper of the Flame by I. A. R. Wylie. Hepburn plays the widow of a famous civic leader who has died in an accident. Tracy portrays a former war correspondent who intends to write a flattering biography of the dead man, only to find that his death is shrouded in mystery. Screenwriter Stewart considered the script to be the finest moment of his career, feeling vindicated by the assignment as he believed that Hollywood had punished him for years for his political views. Principal filming began in the last week of August 1942, four months after the release of the novel, published by Random House. The picture was filmed on a ", "Salim Akil\n Director in a Motion Picture for the film that same year. In 2012, he directed and co-produced a remake of the film Sparkle. Akil executive produced the BET series Being Mary Jane, created by Mara, which premiered in 2014. In 2016, he received an NAACP Image Award nomination for Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series for the show's episode \"Sparrow\", as well as a nomination for Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture (Television) for The Start Up. He later began developing the show Black Lightning, which premiered in 2018 on The CW. He has written and directed several episodes of the series since its premiere. In February 2021, Akil confirmed a spin-off of Black Lightning titled Painkiller was in production.", "Keeper of the Flame (film)\n son of the gatekeeper of the Forrest estate, Jason Rickards (Howard Da Silva). The grief-stricken boy shows him a way into the mansion, where he meets Christine. Though she is cordial, she refuses to cooperate with his biography. After O'Malley leaves, Forrest's private secretary, Clive Kerndon (Richard Whorf), fearful of how the reporter will react to the brush-off, convinces Christine to offer her help to O'Malley so that they can guide him in the direction they want. Over time, O'Malley gains the widow's trust. Christine is the \"keeper of the flame,\" protecting her husband's memory and reputation. O'Malley's instincts ", "Day Leclaire\nOld Flame, New Sparks (2007) ", "Keeper of the Flame (film)\n stage, with no location shooting. Hepburn had already begun a relationship with Tracy, and his heavy drinking led her to become his vigilant guardian during the filming. The film was screened for the Office of War Information's Bureau of Motion Pictures on December 2, 1942, where it was disapproved of by the Bureau's chief, Lowell Mellett. Keeper of the Flame premiered to a poor reception at Radio City Music Hall on Thursday, March 18, 1943. MGM head Louis B. Mayer stormed out of the cinema, enraged by his having encouraged the making of a film that equated wealth with fascism. Republican members of Congress complained about the film's leftist politics and demanded that Will H. Hays, president of the Motion Picture Production Code, establish motion picture industry guidelines for propaganda. Cukor was dissatisfied with the film and considered it one of his poorest efforts." ]
Who was the director of Just Like Us?
[ "Ahmed Ahmed" ]
director
Just Like Us (film)
4,783,338
98
[ { "id": "28444581", "title": "Just Like Us (film)", "text": " Just Like Us premiered at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. Its theatrical premiere was on June 6, 2011 in Los Angeles.", "score": "1.603764" }, { "id": "28444582", "title": "Just Like Us (film)", "text": " Just Like Us features an original score by Omar Fadel, as well as licensed tracks from, Fredwreck, MC Rai, and Tom Morello's Street Sweeper Social Club.", "score": "1.5956769" }, { "id": "28444576", "title": "Just Like Us (film)", "text": " Just Like Us is a 2010 documentary about a comedy tour of international comedians throughout the middle east. Directed by Egyptian-American actor/comedian, Ahmed Ahmed, the film premiered at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival.", "score": "1.5803224" }, { "id": "28444579", "title": "Just Like Us (film)", "text": "Ahmed Ahmed ; Whitney Cummings ; Omid Djalili ; Erik Griffin ; Maz Jobrani ; Tom Papa ; Ted Alexandro ; Sebastian Maniscalco ; Angelo Tsarouchas ; Tommy Davidson ", "score": "1.5380136" }, { "id": "29323328", "title": "Like Me (film)", "text": " Like Me is a 2017 American film written and directed by Robert Mockler. The film stars Addison Timlin as a loner on a crime spree that she broadcasts on social media. The film had its world premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival on March 10, 2017. It holds a 69% approval rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on 29 reviews, with an average rating of 6.6/10.", "score": "1.5184777" }, { "id": "28444580", "title": "Just Like Us (film)", "text": " Just Like Us was filmed in Los Angeles, New York, Arkansas, Cairo, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Beirut.", "score": "1.4962902" }, { "id": "9620752", "title": "Just Like Us!", "text": " Just Like Us! is the fourth studio album by American pop rock group Paul Revere & the Raiders. Produced by Terry Melcher and released on January 3, 1966, by Columbia Records, it featured the U.S. hit single \"Just Like Me\". Unlike their later albums, on which Mark Lindsay was the primary lead singer, the lead vocal duties on Just Like Us! were split among him and the other band members, guitarist Drake Levin, bassist Phil Volk, and drummer Mike Smith. This was their last album of cover songs, their next album Midnight Ride was mostly self-penned material.", "score": "1.4830613" }, { "id": "12770218", "title": "Just Us (film)", "text": " Just Us is a 1986 television film, based on a true story and the autobiography by Gabrielle Carey, of the same name. Set in Sydney, Australia, but filmed mainly in Melbourne, it starred Scott Burgess and Catherine McClements. It was written by Ted Roberts and directed by Gordon Glenn.", "score": "1.4741956" }, { "id": "12872984", "title": "Thieves Like Us (film)", "text": " Thieves Like Us is a 1974 American crime film, set in the United States of the 1930s. It was directed by Robert Altman and starred Keith Carradine and Shelley Duvall. The film was based on the novel of the same name by Edward Anderson, which also supplied source material for the 1948 film They Live by Night, directed by Nicholas Ray. The Altman film sticks much closer to the book. The supporting cast includes Louise Fletcher and Tom Skerritt. The film was entered into the 1974 Cannes Film Festival.", "score": "1.4553399" }, { "id": "15535808", "title": "Blair Treu", "text": "1995 — Just Like Dad — Director ; 1996 — The Paper Brigade — Director ; 1996 — Wish Upon a Star — Director ; 2000 — The Brainiacs.com — Director ; 2000 — Phantom of the Megaplex — Director ; 2001 — Little Secrets — Director ; 2007 — The Last Day of Summer — Director ; 2014 — Meet the Mormons — Director ; 2014 — \"Glorious\" (David Archuleta music video) — Director ", "score": "1.4337485" }, { "id": "1756724", "title": "Someone Like Me (film)", "text": " Someone Like Me is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Steve J. Adams and Sean Horlor and released in 2021. The film centres on Drake, a gay man from Uganda who moves to Vancouver, British Columbia as a refugee, and the group of Canadians who have agreed to sponsor him through Rainbow Refugee; it documents his arrival in Vancouver and his adaptation to Canadian life, including friction among his sponsors when all he wants to do is celebrate his new freedom by partying, and the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic as a complicating factor. The film premiered at the 2021 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, where it was named one of five winners of the Rogers Audience Award. It was subsequently screened at the DOXA Documentary Film Festival.", "score": "1.4289074" }, { "id": "7642825", "title": "Black Like Me (film)", "text": " Black Like Me is a 1964 American drama film based on the 1961 book Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin. The journalist disguised himself to pass as an African-American man for six weeks in 1959 in the Deep South to report on life in the segregated society from the other side of the color line. The film was directed by Carl Lerner and the screenplay was written by Carl and Gerda Lerner. The film stars James Whitmore, Sorrell Booke and Roscoe Lee Browne. The DVD was released December 11, 2012 in North America from Video Services Corp. The DVD includes a documentary titled Uncommon Vision about John Howard Griffin, the journalist on which the main character is based.", "score": "1.4283999" }, { "id": "15416567", "title": "Just like Heaven (film)", "text": "Reese Witherspoon as Dr. Elizabeth Masterson ; Mark Ruffalo as David Abbott ; Ivana Miličević as Katrina ; Jon Heder as Darryl ; Donal Logue as Jack ; Dina Waters as Abby Brody ; Rosalind Chao as Dr. Fran Lo ; Ben Shenkman as Dr. Brett Rushton ; Joel McKinnon Miller as Lead Ghostbuster ; Caroline Aaron as Grace ; Kerris Dorsey as Zoe Brody ; Alyssa Shafer as Lily Brody ; Willie Garson as Maitre D' ", "score": "1.4262264" }, { "id": "9620755", "title": "Just Like Us!", "text": "1) \"Just Like Me\" (Richard Dey, Roger Hart) — 2:23 ; 2) \"Catch the Wind\" (Donovan Leitch) — 2:00 ; 3) \"(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction\" (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards) — 3:18 ; 4) \"I'm Crying\" (Alan Price, Eric Burdon)— 3:05 ; 5) \"New Orleans\" (Frank Guida, Joseph Royster)— 2:57 ; 6) \"Action\" (Steve Venet, Tommy Boyce) — 1:28 ", "score": "1.4238036" }, { "id": "32274889", "title": "Just Like the Son", "text": " Just Like the Son is an American feature film written and directed by Morgan J. Freeman. The film was Freeman’s third from an original screenplay and shot during the summer of 2005 in New York City and Wilmington, North Carolina. It premiered at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival, made its European debut at the 2006 Rome Film Festival and was released in North America on DVD/VOD by Breaking Glass Pictures.", "score": "1.4023246" }, { "id": "28444577", "title": "Just Like Us (film)", "text": " Modern technology and globalization have made the world a much smaller place and caused us to be more interconnected as people, yet cultural misconceptions persist. Through a celebration of culture and comedy, this film uproots the widely held misconception that Arabs have no sense of humor − when in fact they laugh, and are, just like us. This documentary features Egyptian-American comedian Ahmed Ahmed, in his directorial debut, along with a host of critically acclaimed international stand-up comedians. Presented by Cross Cultural Entertainment and Cross Cultural Productions, \"Just Like Us\" exemplifies their goal of reintroducing socially relevant issues to the world in an effort to build cultural bridges in this age of greater tolerance, understanding and acceptance. The film documents four countries in the Middle East, showcasing the cultures of Dubai, Lebanon, the Kingdom ", "score": "1.4017563" }, { "id": "28060688", "title": "Girls Like Us", "text": " Girls Like Us is a 1997 documentary film directed by Tina Di Feliciantonio and Jane C. Wagner. It follows the lives of four teenage girls of Philadelphia for four years. Girls Like Us was funded by the Independent Television Service (ITVS) with funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.", "score": "1.3963497" }, { "id": "1818671", "title": "People Like Us (mockumentary)", "text": " People Like Us is a British radio and TV comedy programme, a spoof on-location documentary (or mockumentary) written by John Morton, and starring Chris Langham as Roy Mallard, an inept interviewer. Originally a radio show for BBC Radio 4 in three series from 1995 to 1997, it was made into two television series for BBC Two broadcast between September 1999 and June 2001.", "score": "1.3950932" }, { "id": "32357941", "title": "There Is Many Like Us (film)", "text": " There Is Many Like Us is a 2015 documentary film directed by Josh Webber and starring Tyler Mauro, Kayleigh Gilbert, Eric Roberts, Michael Girgenti, Zach Silverman, Stefanja Orlowska, and Douglas Bierman. It is based on the true life story of Max and Rena Fronenberg. The documentary film follows Max Fronenberg during his forced labor and imprisonment in Pawiak Prison Camp in Warsaw, Poland, during World War II. While imprisoned Max befriends two women who would later become his wives. Max and two friends, Karochic and Goodman, escape by digging a tunnel under the prison camp. Through their courageous actions fifteen prisoners escaped certain death but Fronenburg had to leave the love of his life in the process.", "score": "1.3820484" }, { "id": "14892311", "title": "Just Like Me (Jamie Foxx song)", "text": " The music video was directed by Brett Ratner. It was released on November 26, 2008. The theme is Jamie Foxx engaged in a series of \"anything you can do, I can do better\" style contests with Taraji P. Henson. The video ranked at #73 on BET's Notarized: Top 100 Videos of 2009 countdown.", "score": "1.3799336" } ]
[ "Just Like Us (film)\n Just Like Us premiered at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. Its theatrical premiere was on June 6, 2011 in Los Angeles.", "Just Like Us (film)\n Just Like Us features an original score by Omar Fadel, as well as licensed tracks from, Fredwreck, MC Rai, and Tom Morello's Street Sweeper Social Club.", "Just Like Us (film)\n Just Like Us is a 2010 documentary about a comedy tour of international comedians throughout the middle east. Directed by Egyptian-American actor/comedian, Ahmed Ahmed, the film premiered at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival.", "Just Like Us (film)\nAhmed Ahmed ; Whitney Cummings ; Omid Djalili ; Erik Griffin ; Maz Jobrani ; Tom Papa ; Ted Alexandro ; Sebastian Maniscalco ; Angelo Tsarouchas ; Tommy Davidson ", "Like Me (film)\n Like Me is a 2017 American film written and directed by Robert Mockler. The film stars Addison Timlin as a loner on a crime spree that she broadcasts on social media. The film had its world premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival on March 10, 2017. It holds a 69% approval rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on 29 reviews, with an average rating of 6.6/10.", "Just Like Us (film)\n Just Like Us was filmed in Los Angeles, New York, Arkansas, Cairo, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Beirut.", "Just Like Us!\n Just Like Us! is the fourth studio album by American pop rock group Paul Revere & the Raiders. Produced by Terry Melcher and released on January 3, 1966, by Columbia Records, it featured the U.S. hit single \"Just Like Me\". Unlike their later albums, on which Mark Lindsay was the primary lead singer, the lead vocal duties on Just Like Us! were split among him and the other band members, guitarist Drake Levin, bassist Phil Volk, and drummer Mike Smith. This was their last album of cover songs, their next album Midnight Ride was mostly self-penned material.", "Just Us (film)\n Just Us is a 1986 television film, based on a true story and the autobiography by Gabrielle Carey, of the same name. Set in Sydney, Australia, but filmed mainly in Melbourne, it starred Scott Burgess and Catherine McClements. It was written by Ted Roberts and directed by Gordon Glenn.", "Thieves Like Us (film)\n Thieves Like Us is a 1974 American crime film, set in the United States of the 1930s. It was directed by Robert Altman and starred Keith Carradine and Shelley Duvall. The film was based on the novel of the same name by Edward Anderson, which also supplied source material for the 1948 film They Live by Night, directed by Nicholas Ray. The Altman film sticks much closer to the book. The supporting cast includes Louise Fletcher and Tom Skerritt. The film was entered into the 1974 Cannes Film Festival.", "Blair Treu\n1995 — Just Like Dad — Director ; 1996 — The Paper Brigade — Director ; 1996 — Wish Upon a Star — Director ; 2000 — The Brainiacs.com — Director ; 2000 — Phantom of the Megaplex — Director ; 2001 — Little Secrets — Director ; 2007 — The Last Day of Summer — Director ; 2014 — Meet the Mormons — Director ; 2014 — \"Glorious\" (David Archuleta music video) — Director ", "Someone Like Me (film)\n Someone Like Me is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Steve J. Adams and Sean Horlor and released in 2021. The film centres on Drake, a gay man from Uganda who moves to Vancouver, British Columbia as a refugee, and the group of Canadians who have agreed to sponsor him through Rainbow Refugee; it documents his arrival in Vancouver and his adaptation to Canadian life, including friction among his sponsors when all he wants to do is celebrate his new freedom by partying, and the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic as a complicating factor. The film premiered at the 2021 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, where it was named one of five winners of the Rogers Audience Award. It was subsequently screened at the DOXA Documentary Film Festival.", "Black Like Me (film)\n Black Like Me is a 1964 American drama film based on the 1961 book Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin. The journalist disguised himself to pass as an African-American man for six weeks in 1959 in the Deep South to report on life in the segregated society from the other side of the color line. The film was directed by Carl Lerner and the screenplay was written by Carl and Gerda Lerner. The film stars James Whitmore, Sorrell Booke and Roscoe Lee Browne. The DVD was released December 11, 2012 in North America from Video Services Corp. The DVD includes a documentary titled Uncommon Vision about John Howard Griffin, the journalist on which the main character is based.", "Just like Heaven (film)\nReese Witherspoon as Dr. Elizabeth Masterson ; Mark Ruffalo as David Abbott ; Ivana Miličević as Katrina ; Jon Heder as Darryl ; Donal Logue as Jack ; Dina Waters as Abby Brody ; Rosalind Chao as Dr. Fran Lo ; Ben Shenkman as Dr. Brett Rushton ; Joel McKinnon Miller as Lead Ghostbuster ; Caroline Aaron as Grace ; Kerris Dorsey as Zoe Brody ; Alyssa Shafer as Lily Brody ; Willie Garson as Maitre D' ", "Just Like Us!\n1) \"Just Like Me\" (Richard Dey, Roger Hart) — 2:23 ; 2) \"Catch the Wind\" (Donovan Leitch) — 2:00 ; 3) \"(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction\" (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards) — 3:18 ; 4) \"I'm Crying\" (Alan Price, Eric Burdon)— 3:05 ; 5) \"New Orleans\" (Frank Guida, Joseph Royster)— 2:57 ; 6) \"Action\" (Steve Venet, Tommy Boyce) — 1:28 ", "Just Like the Son\n Just Like the Son is an American feature film written and directed by Morgan J. Freeman. The film was Freeman’s third from an original screenplay and shot during the summer of 2005 in New York City and Wilmington, North Carolina. It premiered at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival, made its European debut at the 2006 Rome Film Festival and was released in North America on DVD/VOD by Breaking Glass Pictures.", "Just Like Us (film)\n Modern technology and globalization have made the world a much smaller place and caused us to be more interconnected as people, yet cultural misconceptions persist. Through a celebration of culture and comedy, this film uproots the widely held misconception that Arabs have no sense of humor − when in fact they laugh, and are, just like us. This documentary features Egyptian-American comedian Ahmed Ahmed, in his directorial debut, along with a host of critically acclaimed international stand-up comedians. Presented by Cross Cultural Entertainment and Cross Cultural Productions, \"Just Like Us\" exemplifies their goal of reintroducing socially relevant issues to the world in an effort to build cultural bridges in this age of greater tolerance, understanding and acceptance. The film documents four countries in the Middle East, showcasing the cultures of Dubai, Lebanon, the Kingdom ", "Girls Like Us\n Girls Like Us is a 1997 documentary film directed by Tina Di Feliciantonio and Jane C. Wagner. It follows the lives of four teenage girls of Philadelphia for four years. Girls Like Us was funded by the Independent Television Service (ITVS) with funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.", "People Like Us (mockumentary)\n People Like Us is a British radio and TV comedy programme, a spoof on-location documentary (or mockumentary) written by John Morton, and starring Chris Langham as Roy Mallard, an inept interviewer. Originally a radio show for BBC Radio 4 in three series from 1995 to 1997, it was made into two television series for BBC Two broadcast between September 1999 and June 2001.", "There Is Many Like Us (film)\n There Is Many Like Us is a 2015 documentary film directed by Josh Webber and starring Tyler Mauro, Kayleigh Gilbert, Eric Roberts, Michael Girgenti, Zach Silverman, Stefanja Orlowska, and Douglas Bierman. It is based on the true life story of Max and Rena Fronenberg. The documentary film follows Max Fronenberg during his forced labor and imprisonment in Pawiak Prison Camp in Warsaw, Poland, during World War II. While imprisoned Max befriends two women who would later become his wives. Max and two friends, Karochic and Goodman, escape by digging a tunnel under the prison camp. Through their courageous actions fifteen prisoners escaped certain death but Fronenburg had to leave the love of his life in the process.", "Just Like Me (Jamie Foxx song)\n The music video was directed by Brett Ratner. It was released on November 26, 2008. The theme is Jamie Foxx engaged in a series of \"anything you can do, I can do better\" style contests with Taraji P. Henson. The video ranked at #73 on BET's Notarized: Top 100 Videos of 2009 countdown." ]
Who was the director of A Helpful Sisterhood?
[ "Van Dyke Brooke", "Stewart McKerrow" ]
director
A Helpful Sisterhood
2,726,873
69
[ { "id": "1353067", "title": "A Helpful Sisterhood", "text": " A Helpful Sisterhood is a 1914 American film directed by Van Dyke Brooke.", "score": "1.7222718" }, { "id": "29082839", "title": "Church of God in Christ", "text": " and supportive to the leadership of the church. One of her contributions was to divide the women's fellowship in the local congregations into two groups: The Christian Women's Council for the middle aged and senior women, and the Young Women's Christian Council (YWCC) for the younger women. Mother Willie Mae Rivers (1997–2017) of Goose Creek, South Carolina, succeeded Mother Crouch. She is also the Jurisdictional Supervisor of Women for the South Carolina Jurisdiction. She served as chairperson of the board of supervisors, member, Executive Board, member, Screening Committee, member, Program Committee General Church, coordinator, Leadership Conference, International Marshall, secretary, and Assistant General Supervisor for the ", "score": "1.4408836" }, { "id": "27953453", "title": "The Sisterhood (1988 film)", "text": "Rebecca Holden ; Chuck Wagner ; Lynn-Holly Johnson ; Barbara Patrick ; Robert Dryer ; Henry Strzalkowski ; David Light ; Jim Moss ; Anthony East ; Tom McNeeley ", "score": "1.4205585" }, { "id": "31912112", "title": "SisterSong", "text": " as a scholar and thought leader working within academia. With Ross's exit, SisterSong shifted from the Management Circle model to a conventional Board of Directors model and named Monica Raye Simpson, then the organization's Development Director, as Interim Executive Director in 2012 and Executive Director in 2013. Monica Simpson had previously been the first staff person of color at Charlotte's Lesbian & Gay Community Center and won awards for organizing the first Black Gay Pride in the Bible Belt. She remains SisterSong's Executive Director today. In 2014, SisterSong selected four strategic priority areas: In 2016, SisterSong opened a second office in North Carolina focused on building a state-based reproductive justice movement there.", "score": "1.4180183" }, { "id": "25040283", "title": "Cosette Simon", "text": " Simon served as executive director of the YWCA in Fort Wayne in the 1970s. In the late 1990s, she was the executive director of the League of American Bicyclists.", "score": "1.3877409" }, { "id": "31255594", "title": "Institute for Women's Leadership at Rutgers University", "text": " in Women’s Leadership: Business, edited by Lisa Hetfield and Dana M. Britton. ; Alison R. Bernstein, Director of the Institute for Women's Leadership passes away on June 30, 2016. ; As of July 1, 2016, Lisa Hetfield is appointed the Interim Director of the IWL. ; In July 2016, the Gloria Steinem Media Mentoring Program is renamed the Alison R. Bernstein Media Mentoring Program. ; In September 2016, the WINGS Mentoring Program gains approval as a one credit academic experience. ; The documentary film, “From the Boarding House to the Board Room: 250 Years of Women at Rutgers” produced by award-winning filmmaker June Cross, premieres ", "score": "1.3803635" }, { "id": "7507403", "title": "Georgianna Glose", "text": " Glose was a teaching sister at a Roman Catholic elementary school, and was a member of the Sisters of St. Dominic religious community in Amityville, New York until 1969, when she left to join an experimental collaborative ministry with other sisters and three priests at St. Michael and St. Edward Church in Brooklyn. She was founder and director of the Fort Greene Strategic Neighborhood Action Partnership (SNAP), establishing educational and support programs for the neighborhood. She testified before a Congressional committee in 1982, on the social impact of the Reagan administration's economic recovery programs. She and two other sisters reported evidence of sexual abuse by priests in her parish to the Diocese of Brooklyn in 1993, and later in a public statement. She co-authored a 2011 study of infant mortality prevention in Brooklyn's Brownsville neighborhood. Glose served as chair of the human services department at New York City College of Technology, head of the Mid-Atlantic Consortium for Human Services, executive director of the Brooklyn-wide Interagency Council on the Aging, and board member of the Myrtle Avenue Revitalization Project (MARP).", "score": "1.37886" }, { "id": "14175970", "title": "Ruth Lockhart", "text": " Lockhart served as executive director of Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Aroostook from 1977 to 1978.", "score": "1.3766823" }, { "id": "32014475", "title": "Stacey Lannert", "text": " president of the Outreach program; an organization that brings troubled teens to prison to meet inmates with the incentive to warn them to take a different path in life. Stacey Lannert has since founded Healing Sisters, a resource website and non-profit organization to aid women who have suffered abuse, as well as to work to end sexual abuse in the United States. She has appeared as a guest on The Oprah Winfrey Show on May 14, 2009; The Joy Behar Show on March 16, 2011; and Piers Morgan Tonight on April 20, 2011. In 2011 she published a memoir, written with Kristen Kemp: Redemption: A Story of Sisterhood, Survival, and Finding Freedom Behind Bars.", "score": "1.3736454" }, { "id": "4755555", "title": "Sisters of '77", "text": " Sisters of '77 was created by filmmakers Cynthia Salzman Mondell and Allen Mondell and executive produced by Ed Delaney and Circle R Media, in association with Media Projects Inc. Salzman Mondell participated in the 1977 conference as a relay runner helping to carry a torch from Seneca Falls, New York, the site of the first women's rights convention in the United States, to Houston for the 1977 National Women's Conference. The film incorporates actual footage of the conference and modern-day interviews with movement leaders and women who attended.", "score": "1.3727748" }, { "id": "12890407", "title": "Big Brothers Big Sisters of New York City", "text": " Alicia Guevara began serving on June 10, 2019 and is the nonprofit’s first female CEO. Previously, she had more than 25 years of experience leading nonprofit organizations, including as executive director of Part of the Solution, a neighborhood-based comprehensive human services agency. She is a native New Yorker, and is a graduate of Columbia University, and holds an executive education certificate for senior leaders in nonprofit management from Columbia Business School.", "score": "1.3670706" }, { "id": "25355805", "title": "Jill Stein 2012 presidential campaign", "text": " Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign. ; Mary Bricker-Jenkins, USA-Canada Alliance of Inhabitants & former co-chair of the Assembly to End Poverty. ; Monica Beemer, executive director of Sisters of the Road. ; Rick Tingling-Clemmons, former United States House of Representatives candidate, former consultant for Metropolitan District of Columbia Health Consortium, and former member of Washington DC Advisory Neighborhood Commission. ; Eric Sheptock, Chair of Shelter Housing and Respectful Change. ; Lee Ballinger, West Coast Editor of Rock & Rap Confidential. ; Jennifer Jewell, Director of Women in Transition. ; Sister Margaret McKenna, Director of New Jerusalem Laura. ; Galen Tyler, Director of ", "score": "1.3648756" }, { "id": "16134977", "title": "Caryn Waechter", "text": " Waechter initially attended Columbia University to earn a degree as a film critic. Encouraged by her mentors she switched majors and ended up earning an MFA in directing. While there she met Marilyn Fu who later presented her with the screenplay of The Sisterhood of Night.", "score": "1.3578095" }, { "id": "4347736", "title": "The Sisterhood (gothic rock band)", "text": " The Sisterhood was a musical project led by Andrew Eldritch. With guest musicians, the Sisterhood recorded songs he had originally intended for a second album by the Sisters of Mercy.", "score": "1.3542168" }, { "id": "32142586", "title": "Mary Scullion", "text": " Scullion joined the Sisters of Mercy and began working on behalf of the homeless in 1976. She has been involved in service work and advocacy for homeless and mentally ill persons since 1978. She was a co-founder in 1985 of Woman of Hope, which provides permanent residences and support services for homeless mentally ill women. In 1988, she founded the Outreach Coordination Center, the nation's first program that coordinated city private and public agencies to assist people living on the streets with special needs in finding housing and shelter in a more systematic way. The following year, she and her associate, Joan Dawson ", "score": "1.3520303" }, { "id": "7792815", "title": "Alliance of Women Directors", "text": " According to their press kit, the Alliance believes in \"foster[ing] a community of professionals to advance the art, craft and visibility of women directors in the world of film, television and new media\" and promotes the idea that it is \"vital that stories are told from all perspectives\". Eleonore Dailly, co-chair of the AWD, in an interview with Elle magazine, described the group's goals as, \"debunk[ing] this myth that there aren't enough female directors. There are highly trained female directors who can handle thrillers and action films just like male directors can handle romantic comedies.\" Director Maria Burton was the co-chair of the Alliance for six years. Describing the problem to the LA Daily News, Burton said \"through all the years, ", "score": "1.3498752" }, { "id": "27953452", "title": "The Sisterhood (1988 film)", "text": " The Sisterhood (released in the Philippines as Caged Women) is a 1988 American action/adventure/science fiction film directed by Filipino director Cirio H. Santiago.", "score": "1.347305" }, { "id": "4279930", "title": "The Sisterhood (2004 film)", "text": " The Sisterhood is a 2004 American supernatural horror film directed by David DeCoteau.", "score": "1.3418915" }, { "id": "26644873", "title": "Ruth Simpson (activist)", "text": " Ruth Simpson (March 15, 1926 – May 8, 2008) was the founder of the United States' first lesbian community center, an author, and former president of Daughters of Bilitis, New York. Her book, From the Closet to the Courts was published in 1977 and republished in 2007. She also produced the weekly hour-long program \"Minority Report\" in Woodstock, New York from 1982 until her death in 2008.", "score": "1.341655" }, { "id": "10355910", "title": "Peggy O'Brien", "text": " SAGE Publications, Inc., Thousand Oaks, CA, Director, 2005–present, St. Coletta’s Public Charter School, Washington, DC, Director, 2006-2008; 2011–present, Black Women’s Playwrighting Forum, Washington, DC, Director, 1996–present, Association of American Colleges and Universities, Washington, DC, National Leadership Council, 2006–2010, Trinity University, Washington, DC, Chair, Board of Trustees, 2001-2008, National PTA, Chicago, IL, Director, 2004-2007, Partnership for 21st Century Skills, Founding Board Member, 2001-2004, Edmund Burke School, Washington, DC, Director, 1995-2001, Capitol Hill Day School, Washington, DC, Director, 1992-1995", "score": "1.3408754" } ]
[ "A Helpful Sisterhood\n A Helpful Sisterhood is a 1914 American film directed by Van Dyke Brooke.", "Church of God in Christ\n and supportive to the leadership of the church. One of her contributions was to divide the women's fellowship in the local congregations into two groups: The Christian Women's Council for the middle aged and senior women, and the Young Women's Christian Council (YWCC) for the younger women. Mother Willie Mae Rivers (1997–2017) of Goose Creek, South Carolina, succeeded Mother Crouch. She is also the Jurisdictional Supervisor of Women for the South Carolina Jurisdiction. She served as chairperson of the board of supervisors, member, Executive Board, member, Screening Committee, member, Program Committee General Church, coordinator, Leadership Conference, International Marshall, secretary, and Assistant General Supervisor for the ", "The Sisterhood (1988 film)\nRebecca Holden ; Chuck Wagner ; Lynn-Holly Johnson ; Barbara Patrick ; Robert Dryer ; Henry Strzalkowski ; David Light ; Jim Moss ; Anthony East ; Tom McNeeley ", "SisterSong\n as a scholar and thought leader working within academia. With Ross's exit, SisterSong shifted from the Management Circle model to a conventional Board of Directors model and named Monica Raye Simpson, then the organization's Development Director, as Interim Executive Director in 2012 and Executive Director in 2013. Monica Simpson had previously been the first staff person of color at Charlotte's Lesbian & Gay Community Center and won awards for organizing the first Black Gay Pride in the Bible Belt. She remains SisterSong's Executive Director today. In 2014, SisterSong selected four strategic priority areas: In 2016, SisterSong opened a second office in North Carolina focused on building a state-based reproductive justice movement there.", "Cosette Simon\n Simon served as executive director of the YWCA in Fort Wayne in the 1970s. In the late 1990s, she was the executive director of the League of American Bicyclists.", "Institute for Women's Leadership at Rutgers University\n in Women’s Leadership: Business, edited by Lisa Hetfield and Dana M. Britton. ; Alison R. Bernstein, Director of the Institute for Women's Leadership passes away on June 30, 2016. ; As of July 1, 2016, Lisa Hetfield is appointed the Interim Director of the IWL. ; In July 2016, the Gloria Steinem Media Mentoring Program is renamed the Alison R. Bernstein Media Mentoring Program. ; In September 2016, the WINGS Mentoring Program gains approval as a one credit academic experience. ; The documentary film, “From the Boarding House to the Board Room: 250 Years of Women at Rutgers” produced by award-winning filmmaker June Cross, premieres ", "Georgianna Glose\n Glose was a teaching sister at a Roman Catholic elementary school, and was a member of the Sisters of St. Dominic religious community in Amityville, New York until 1969, when she left to join an experimental collaborative ministry with other sisters and three priests at St. Michael and St. Edward Church in Brooklyn. She was founder and director of the Fort Greene Strategic Neighborhood Action Partnership (SNAP), establishing educational and support programs for the neighborhood. She testified before a Congressional committee in 1982, on the social impact of the Reagan administration's economic recovery programs. She and two other sisters reported evidence of sexual abuse by priests in her parish to the Diocese of Brooklyn in 1993, and later in a public statement. She co-authored a 2011 study of infant mortality prevention in Brooklyn's Brownsville neighborhood. Glose served as chair of the human services department at New York City College of Technology, head of the Mid-Atlantic Consortium for Human Services, executive director of the Brooklyn-wide Interagency Council on the Aging, and board member of the Myrtle Avenue Revitalization Project (MARP).", "Ruth Lockhart\n Lockhart served as executive director of Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Aroostook from 1977 to 1978.", "Stacey Lannert\n president of the Outreach program; an organization that brings troubled teens to prison to meet inmates with the incentive to warn them to take a different path in life. Stacey Lannert has since founded Healing Sisters, a resource website and non-profit organization to aid women who have suffered abuse, as well as to work to end sexual abuse in the United States. She has appeared as a guest on The Oprah Winfrey Show on May 14, 2009; The Joy Behar Show on March 16, 2011; and Piers Morgan Tonight on April 20, 2011. In 2011 she published a memoir, written with Kristen Kemp: Redemption: A Story of Sisterhood, Survival, and Finding Freedom Behind Bars.", "Sisters of '77\n Sisters of '77 was created by filmmakers Cynthia Salzman Mondell and Allen Mondell and executive produced by Ed Delaney and Circle R Media, in association with Media Projects Inc. Salzman Mondell participated in the 1977 conference as a relay runner helping to carry a torch from Seneca Falls, New York, the site of the first women's rights convention in the United States, to Houston for the 1977 National Women's Conference. The film incorporates actual footage of the conference and modern-day interviews with movement leaders and women who attended.", "Big Brothers Big Sisters of New York City\n Alicia Guevara began serving on June 10, 2019 and is the nonprofit’s first female CEO. Previously, she had more than 25 years of experience leading nonprofit organizations, including as executive director of Part of the Solution, a neighborhood-based comprehensive human services agency. She is a native New Yorker, and is a graduate of Columbia University, and holds an executive education certificate for senior leaders in nonprofit management from Columbia Business School.", "Jill Stein 2012 presidential campaign\n Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign. ; Mary Bricker-Jenkins, USA-Canada Alliance of Inhabitants & former co-chair of the Assembly to End Poverty. ; Monica Beemer, executive director of Sisters of the Road. ; Rick Tingling-Clemmons, former United States House of Representatives candidate, former consultant for Metropolitan District of Columbia Health Consortium, and former member of Washington DC Advisory Neighborhood Commission. ; Eric Sheptock, Chair of Shelter Housing and Respectful Change. ; Lee Ballinger, West Coast Editor of Rock & Rap Confidential. ; Jennifer Jewell, Director of Women in Transition. ; Sister Margaret McKenna, Director of New Jerusalem Laura. ; Galen Tyler, Director of ", "Caryn Waechter\n Waechter initially attended Columbia University to earn a degree as a film critic. Encouraged by her mentors she switched majors and ended up earning an MFA in directing. While there she met Marilyn Fu who later presented her with the screenplay of The Sisterhood of Night.", "The Sisterhood (gothic rock band)\n The Sisterhood was a musical project led by Andrew Eldritch. With guest musicians, the Sisterhood recorded songs he had originally intended for a second album by the Sisters of Mercy.", "Mary Scullion\n Scullion joined the Sisters of Mercy and began working on behalf of the homeless in 1976. She has been involved in service work and advocacy for homeless and mentally ill persons since 1978. She was a co-founder in 1985 of Woman of Hope, which provides permanent residences and support services for homeless mentally ill women. In 1988, she founded the Outreach Coordination Center, the nation's first program that coordinated city private and public agencies to assist people living on the streets with special needs in finding housing and shelter in a more systematic way. The following year, she and her associate, Joan Dawson ", "Alliance of Women Directors\n According to their press kit, the Alliance believes in \"foster[ing] a community of professionals to advance the art, craft and visibility of women directors in the world of film, television and new media\" and promotes the idea that it is \"vital that stories are told from all perspectives\". Eleonore Dailly, co-chair of the AWD, in an interview with Elle magazine, described the group's goals as, \"debunk[ing] this myth that there aren't enough female directors. There are highly trained female directors who can handle thrillers and action films just like male directors can handle romantic comedies.\" Director Maria Burton was the co-chair of the Alliance for six years. Describing the problem to the LA Daily News, Burton said \"through all the years, ", "The Sisterhood (1988 film)\n The Sisterhood (released in the Philippines as Caged Women) is a 1988 American action/adventure/science fiction film directed by Filipino director Cirio H. Santiago.", "The Sisterhood (2004 film)\n The Sisterhood is a 2004 American supernatural horror film directed by David DeCoteau.", "Ruth Simpson (activist)\n Ruth Simpson (March 15, 1926 – May 8, 2008) was the founder of the United States' first lesbian community center, an author, and former president of Daughters of Bilitis, New York. Her book, From the Closet to the Courts was published in 1977 and republished in 2007. She also produced the weekly hour-long program \"Minority Report\" in Woodstock, New York from 1982 until her death in 2008.", "Peggy O'Brien\n SAGE Publications, Inc., Thousand Oaks, CA, Director, 2005–present, St. Coletta’s Public Charter School, Washington, DC, Director, 2006-2008; 2011–present, Black Women’s Playwrighting Forum, Washington, DC, Director, 1996–present, Association of American Colleges and Universities, Washington, DC, National Leadership Council, 2006–2010, Trinity University, Washington, DC, Chair, Board of Trustees, 2001-2008, National PTA, Chicago, IL, Director, 2004-2007, Partnership for 21st Century Skills, Founding Board Member, 2001-2004, Edmund Burke School, Washington, DC, Director, 1995-2001, Capitol Hill Day School, Washington, DC, Director, 1992-1995" ]
Who was the director of Panic?
[ "Harry Piel", "Heinrich Piel" ]
director
Panic (1928 film)
701,533
84
[ { "id": "13418094", "title": "Sean D. Carr", "text": " Sean D. Carr (born January 21, 1969) is the Executive Director of Batten Institute for Entrepreneurship & Innovation at the University of Virginia. He is also co-author, along with Robert F. Bruner, of the book The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm. The book focuses on the early 20th Century financial disaster known as the Panic of 1907.", "score": "1.531714" }, { "id": "16376762", "title": "Panic in the City", "text": " Panic in the City is a 1968 American science fiction thriller film directed by Eddie Davis and written by Eddie Davis and Charles E. Savage. The film is about nuclear weapons, set and filmed on location in Los Angeles in 1967. The film stars Howard Duff, Linda Cristal, Stephen McNally, Nehemiah Persoff, Anne Jeffreys, Oscar Beregi Jr. and Gregory Morton. The film was released in October 1968.", "score": "1.4798596" }, { "id": "28076212", "title": "Elia Kazan", "text": " In 1950 he directed Panic in the Streets, starring Richard Widmark, in a thriller shot on the streets of New Orleans. In that film, Kazan experimented with a documentary style of cinematography, which succeeded in \"energizing\" the action scenes. He won the Venice Film Festival International Award as director, and the film also won two Academy Awards. Kazan had requested that Zero Mostel also act in the film, despite Mostel being \"blacklisted\" as a result of HCUA testimony a few years earlier. Kazan writes of his decision: \"Each director has a favorite in his cast, ... my favorite this time was Zero ", "score": "1.4703197" }, { "id": "15199323", "title": "Panic Room", "text": "David Fincher – director ; David Koepp – screenwriter, producer ; Ceán Chaffin – producer ; Judy Hofflund – producer ; Gavin Polone – producer ; Howard Shore – composer ; Conrad W. Hall – cinematographer ; Darius Khondji – cinematographer ; James Haygood – editor ; Angus Wall – editor ; Arthur Max – production designer ; Keith Neely – art director ; James E. Tocci\t– art director ; Jon Danniells – set decorator ; Garrett Lewis – set decorator ; Michael Kaplan – costume designer Panic Room was directed by David Fincher based on a screenplay written by David Koepp. The film, produced at Columbia Pictures, was Fincher's fifth feature film, following Fight Club (1999). Koepp was also a producer for Panic Room, and he was joined by Judy Hofflund and Gavin Polone, with ", "score": "1.4618952" }, { "id": "609892", "title": "Panic in Year Zero!", "text": " Panic in Year Zero! (a.k.a. End of the World) is a 1962 American black-and-white survival science fiction film from American International Pictures, produced by Arnold Houghland and Lou Rusoff, directed by Ray Milland, who also stars with Jean Hagen, Frankie Avalon, Mary Mitchel, and Joan Freeman. The original music score was composed by Les Baxter. The screenplay was written by John Morton and Jay Simms. The film was released by AIP in 1962 as a double feature with Tales of Terror.", "score": "1.4480808" }, { "id": "6245974", "title": "Panic (comics)", "text": " Panic was a bi-monthly humor comic that was published by Bill Gaines' EC Comics line during the mid-1950s as a companion to Harvey Kurtzman's Mad, which was being heavily imitated by other comic publishers. Panic was edited by Al Feldstein (who became the editor of Mad a few years later). Beginning with its first issue (February–March 1954), Panic had a 12-issue run over two years. Feldstein was the primary cover artist, with stories illustrated by Jack Davis, Will Elder, Jack Kamen, Joe Orlando, Basil Wolverton and Wally Wood. Some story ideas were by Nick Meglin, later the co-editor of Mad. Scripts were by Feldstein, Elder and Jack Mendelsohn, later a co-screenwriter of Yellow Submarine (1968) and an Emmy-nominated TV comedy writer. EC dubbed Panic the \"only authorized imitation\" of Mad, but Mad's creator didn't enjoy the joke. Almost thirty years later, Harvey Kurtzman told an interviewer, \"Panic was another sore point. Gaines, by some convoluted reasoning, decided to double the profit of Mad by doing a Feldstein version of Mad and he just plundered all of my techniques and artists. For this there was a real conflict of interests.\"", "score": "1.4257987" }, { "id": "30699253", "title": "City in Fear", "text": " The film was inspired by a conversation between two friends, William Goldman and Pete Masterson. Goldman got the idea when he came home one afternoon to find that his daughter, then about twelve, had tried to dye her hair because the real life serial killer, Son Of Sam, was said to be killing dark-haired women. Goldman was horrified that exploitive press accounts had reached into his home and frightened his daughter and saw a story in the interplay of killer and press. \"That's how pervasive women's fear became,\" said director Jud Taylor. Goldman told Masterson \"this would make a terrific TV movie\" and they hired Albert Rubin to write a script and novelist and friend Linda Stewart to write a novel based on the idea. The novel was published by Delacorte under the title \"Panic on Page One\" to solid ", "score": "1.4217775" }, { "id": "8109736", "title": "Harold Hecht", "text": " when Burt Lancaster was cast in the lead, replacing Glenn Ford, in early 1960. With Lancaster in the picture, The Young Savages headed in a new direction. Hecht hired J.P. Miller, who had worked on The Rabbit Trap and had since been nominated for an Emmy Award, and Edward Anhalt, a two-time Academy Award nominee who had won a Best Screenplay Oscar for the 1951 film Panic in the Streets, to rewrite the script. Meanwhile, Lancaster approached respected young television director John Frankenheimer who had already done a low-budget picture, The Young Stranger, a few years prior but The Young ", "score": "1.4199762" }, { "id": "1084912", "title": "Panic in the Skies!", "text": " Panic in the Skies! is a 1996 American made-for television disaster film that is directed by Paul Ziller and was premiered on The Family Channel on October 13, 1996. The film stars Kate Jackson, Ed Marinaro and Erik Estrada.", "score": "1.4150149" }, { "id": "2562124", "title": "Panic Button (Playhouse 90)", "text": " \"Panic Button\" was an American television play broadcast on November 28, 1957, as part of the second season of the CBS television series Playhouse 90. Rod Serling wrote the teleplay. Franklin Schaffner directed, Martin Manulis was the producer, and Dominick Dunne was the executive assistant. Robert Stack, Vera Miles, and Lee J. Cobb starred.", "score": "1.4024603" }, { "id": "2119954", "title": "Elite panic", "text": " Brown, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, was later held responsible for the crisis, despite official guidelines stating that leadership during times of crisis fell to the United States Secretary of Homeland Security, who at the time was Michael Chertoff. Following the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, officials communicated unclear and contradictory information to the public, leading many to believe that the government was minimizing the risk of radiation damage. During the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, Mayor of New York City Bill de Blasio urged residents of New York City to \"go about their lives\", in a statement he later claimed was made in order to \"avoid panic\".", "score": "1.3980776" }, { "id": "15199333", "title": "Panic Room", "text": " Sandra Bullock, Angelina Jolie, and Robin Wright. Jodie Foster was previously occupied with directing duties of Flora Plum before its star Russell Crowe was injured and left the project, leading to that production's shutdown. To join Panic Room, Foster also stepped down as head of the awards jury at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival. Foster had a week to prepare for her role before filming resumed. Five weeks after Foster began filming Panic Room, she learned she was pregnant. She informed Fincher and his producer Chaffin of her pregnancy, and they decided to continue filming. Fincher did not want to rush ", "score": "1.393615" }, { "id": "11484611", "title": "Omid Nooshin", "text": "Panic (1999) (writer, director, composer, actor, producer) ; Rooftop (1996) (writer, director, composer, producer) ", "score": "1.3905523" }, { "id": "3675109", "title": "Crisis (1950 film)", "text": " Crisis is a 1950 American film noir crime film, drama, thriller, mystery, suspense, political-thriller, starring Cary Grant and José Ferrer. Directed by Richard Brooks (making his directorial debut). The story of an American couple who inadvertently become embroiled in a revolution. Crisis was based on the short story titled \"The Doubters\" by George Tabori published in the magazine Today's Woman (Feb 1950).", "score": "1.3898916" }, { "id": "6251727", "title": "Jack Palance", "text": " Palance made his screen debut in the movie Panic in the Streets (1950), directed by Elia Kazan, who had directed Streetcar on Broadway. He played a gangster, and was credited as \"Walter (Jack) Palance\". The same year he was featured in Halls of Montezuma (1951), about the United States Marines during World War II. He returned to Broadway for Darkness at Noon (1951), by Sidney Kingsley, which was a minor hit.", "score": "1.3861525" }, { "id": "15199324", "title": "Panic Room", "text": " he collaborated on Stir of Echoes (1999). Fincher included as producer Ceán Chaffin, with whom he had worked on commercials and music videos. Fincher also included in his initial crew people with whom he had worked before: cinematographer Darius Khondji, production designer Arthur Max, costume designer Michael Kaplan, and editors James Haygood and Angus Wall. Fincher envisioned Panic Room as a popcorn movie about survival. His previous film Fight Club had 400 scenes and 100 locations, so he wanted to simplify the production of Panic Room. To this end, he wanted to focus production on a single set and to plan the scenes and shots thoroughly before the start of filming. Despite the preparation, he experienced difficulty in production with changes in the cast and the crew as well as the inherent inflexibility of his initial planning.", "score": "1.3832699" }, { "id": "26650770", "title": "Michael J. Socolow", "text": " Socolow, often working in collaboration with Jefferson Pooley, has written several articles (both scholarly and popular) dispelling the myth of The War of the Worlds (1938 radio drama) mass panic. Their collaborative work argues that the panic was “almost non-existent” and significantly overstated by contemporaneous sensational press reporting, and, later, in academic scholarship. In a 2013 interview with Gizmodo, Socolow denied the idea that he and Pooley originated this mass panic revisionism, citing at least four previous scholars who arrived at the same conclusion about the mass panic being largely a myth. Yet Pooley and Socolow’s scholarship has been cited by Snopes, Time, National Geographic, and others ", "score": "1.382756" }, { "id": "919302", "title": "Cry Panic", "text": " Cry Panic is a 1974 American made-for-television mystery film directed by James Goldstone and starring John Forsythe, Earl Holliman, Ralph Meeker, Norman Alden, Claudia McNeil and Anne Francis. The film premiered as the ABC Movie of the Week on February 6, 1974 and was co-produced by Aaron Spelling and Leonard Goldberg.", "score": "1.3747882" }, { "id": "15199353", "title": "Panic Room", "text": " March 2004, the studio released a special edition DVD, which consisted of three discs, two which provided featurettes of the pre-production, production, and post-production processes for the film. The DVD also had several commentary tracks, including one by the director. Author John T. Caldwell cites the special edition DVD of Panic Room as an example of demonstrating directorial control to \"aesthetically elevate\" the film. Columbia Pictures sold the television rights for Panic Room to Turner Broadcasting and CBS, who shared the rights over five years. In September 2004, Turner aired the film on channels TBS and TNT for 12 months, and afterward, CBS aired the film three times in an 18-month span. Turner resumed airing Panic Room for 30 months after CBS's turn. A Blu-ray version of the film has yet to be released.", "score": "1.3740277" }, { "id": "12043541", "title": "Estate of Panic", "text": " Estate of Panic is an American reality show in which seven strangers compete to find cash in a large estate. The show is hosted by Steve Valentine, and produced by Endemol USA. The first season aired on the Sci-Fi Channel from November 12 to December 17 of 2008, and has also aired on USA Network and Chiller.", "score": "1.3736439" } ]
[ "Sean D. Carr\n Sean D. Carr (born January 21, 1969) is the Executive Director of Batten Institute for Entrepreneurship & Innovation at the University of Virginia. He is also co-author, along with Robert F. Bruner, of the book The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm. The book focuses on the early 20th Century financial disaster known as the Panic of 1907.", "Panic in the City\n Panic in the City is a 1968 American science fiction thriller film directed by Eddie Davis and written by Eddie Davis and Charles E. Savage. The film is about nuclear weapons, set and filmed on location in Los Angeles in 1967. The film stars Howard Duff, Linda Cristal, Stephen McNally, Nehemiah Persoff, Anne Jeffreys, Oscar Beregi Jr. and Gregory Morton. The film was released in October 1968.", "Elia Kazan\n In 1950 he directed Panic in the Streets, starring Richard Widmark, in a thriller shot on the streets of New Orleans. In that film, Kazan experimented with a documentary style of cinematography, which succeeded in \"energizing\" the action scenes. He won the Venice Film Festival International Award as director, and the film also won two Academy Awards. Kazan had requested that Zero Mostel also act in the film, despite Mostel being \"blacklisted\" as a result of HCUA testimony a few years earlier. Kazan writes of his decision: \"Each director has a favorite in his cast, ... my favorite this time was Zero ", "Panic Room\nDavid Fincher – director ; David Koepp – screenwriter, producer ; Ceán Chaffin – producer ; Judy Hofflund – producer ; Gavin Polone – producer ; Howard Shore – composer ; Conrad W. Hall – cinematographer ; Darius Khondji – cinematographer ; James Haygood – editor ; Angus Wall – editor ; Arthur Max – production designer ; Keith Neely – art director ; James E. Tocci\t– art director ; Jon Danniells – set decorator ; Garrett Lewis – set decorator ; Michael Kaplan – costume designer Panic Room was directed by David Fincher based on a screenplay written by David Koepp. The film, produced at Columbia Pictures, was Fincher's fifth feature film, following Fight Club (1999). Koepp was also a producer for Panic Room, and he was joined by Judy Hofflund and Gavin Polone, with ", "Panic in Year Zero!\n Panic in Year Zero! (a.k.a. End of the World) is a 1962 American black-and-white survival science fiction film from American International Pictures, produced by Arnold Houghland and Lou Rusoff, directed by Ray Milland, who also stars with Jean Hagen, Frankie Avalon, Mary Mitchel, and Joan Freeman. The original music score was composed by Les Baxter. The screenplay was written by John Morton and Jay Simms. The film was released by AIP in 1962 as a double feature with Tales of Terror.", "Panic (comics)\n Panic was a bi-monthly humor comic that was published by Bill Gaines' EC Comics line during the mid-1950s as a companion to Harvey Kurtzman's Mad, which was being heavily imitated by other comic publishers. Panic was edited by Al Feldstein (who became the editor of Mad a few years later). Beginning with its first issue (February–March 1954), Panic had a 12-issue run over two years. Feldstein was the primary cover artist, with stories illustrated by Jack Davis, Will Elder, Jack Kamen, Joe Orlando, Basil Wolverton and Wally Wood. Some story ideas were by Nick Meglin, later the co-editor of Mad. Scripts were by Feldstein, Elder and Jack Mendelsohn, later a co-screenwriter of Yellow Submarine (1968) and an Emmy-nominated TV comedy writer. EC dubbed Panic the \"only authorized imitation\" of Mad, but Mad's creator didn't enjoy the joke. Almost thirty years later, Harvey Kurtzman told an interviewer, \"Panic was another sore point. Gaines, by some convoluted reasoning, decided to double the profit of Mad by doing a Feldstein version of Mad and he just plundered all of my techniques and artists. For this there was a real conflict of interests.\"", "City in Fear\n The film was inspired by a conversation between two friends, William Goldman and Pete Masterson. Goldman got the idea when he came home one afternoon to find that his daughter, then about twelve, had tried to dye her hair because the real life serial killer, Son Of Sam, was said to be killing dark-haired women. Goldman was horrified that exploitive press accounts had reached into his home and frightened his daughter and saw a story in the interplay of killer and press. \"That's how pervasive women's fear became,\" said director Jud Taylor. Goldman told Masterson \"this would make a terrific TV movie\" and they hired Albert Rubin to write a script and novelist and friend Linda Stewart to write a novel based on the idea. The novel was published by Delacorte under the title \"Panic on Page One\" to solid ", "Harold Hecht\n when Burt Lancaster was cast in the lead, replacing Glenn Ford, in early 1960. With Lancaster in the picture, The Young Savages headed in a new direction. Hecht hired J.P. Miller, who had worked on The Rabbit Trap and had since been nominated for an Emmy Award, and Edward Anhalt, a two-time Academy Award nominee who had won a Best Screenplay Oscar for the 1951 film Panic in the Streets, to rewrite the script. Meanwhile, Lancaster approached respected young television director John Frankenheimer who had already done a low-budget picture, The Young Stranger, a few years prior but The Young ", "Panic in the Skies!\n Panic in the Skies! is a 1996 American made-for television disaster film that is directed by Paul Ziller and was premiered on The Family Channel on October 13, 1996. The film stars Kate Jackson, Ed Marinaro and Erik Estrada.", "Panic Button (Playhouse 90)\n \"Panic Button\" was an American television play broadcast on November 28, 1957, as part of the second season of the CBS television series Playhouse 90. Rod Serling wrote the teleplay. Franklin Schaffner directed, Martin Manulis was the producer, and Dominick Dunne was the executive assistant. Robert Stack, Vera Miles, and Lee J. Cobb starred.", "Elite panic\n Brown, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, was later held responsible for the crisis, despite official guidelines stating that leadership during times of crisis fell to the United States Secretary of Homeland Security, who at the time was Michael Chertoff. Following the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, officials communicated unclear and contradictory information to the public, leading many to believe that the government was minimizing the risk of radiation damage. During the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, Mayor of New York City Bill de Blasio urged residents of New York City to \"go about their lives\", in a statement he later claimed was made in order to \"avoid panic\".", "Panic Room\n Sandra Bullock, Angelina Jolie, and Robin Wright. Jodie Foster was previously occupied with directing duties of Flora Plum before its star Russell Crowe was injured and left the project, leading to that production's shutdown. To join Panic Room, Foster also stepped down as head of the awards jury at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival. Foster had a week to prepare for her role before filming resumed. Five weeks after Foster began filming Panic Room, she learned she was pregnant. She informed Fincher and his producer Chaffin of her pregnancy, and they decided to continue filming. Fincher did not want to rush ", "Omid Nooshin\nPanic (1999) (writer, director, composer, actor, producer) ; Rooftop (1996) (writer, director, composer, producer) ", "Crisis (1950 film)\n Crisis is a 1950 American film noir crime film, drama, thriller, mystery, suspense, political-thriller, starring Cary Grant and José Ferrer. Directed by Richard Brooks (making his directorial debut). The story of an American couple who inadvertently become embroiled in a revolution. Crisis was based on the short story titled \"The Doubters\" by George Tabori published in the magazine Today's Woman (Feb 1950).", "Jack Palance\n Palance made his screen debut in the movie Panic in the Streets (1950), directed by Elia Kazan, who had directed Streetcar on Broadway. He played a gangster, and was credited as \"Walter (Jack) Palance\". The same year he was featured in Halls of Montezuma (1951), about the United States Marines during World War II. He returned to Broadway for Darkness at Noon (1951), by Sidney Kingsley, which was a minor hit.", "Panic Room\n he collaborated on Stir of Echoes (1999). Fincher included as producer Ceán Chaffin, with whom he had worked on commercials and music videos. Fincher also included in his initial crew people with whom he had worked before: cinematographer Darius Khondji, production designer Arthur Max, costume designer Michael Kaplan, and editors James Haygood and Angus Wall. Fincher envisioned Panic Room as a popcorn movie about survival. His previous film Fight Club had 400 scenes and 100 locations, so he wanted to simplify the production of Panic Room. To this end, he wanted to focus production on a single set and to plan the scenes and shots thoroughly before the start of filming. Despite the preparation, he experienced difficulty in production with changes in the cast and the crew as well as the inherent inflexibility of his initial planning.", "Michael J. Socolow\n Socolow, often working in collaboration with Jefferson Pooley, has written several articles (both scholarly and popular) dispelling the myth of The War of the Worlds (1938 radio drama) mass panic. Their collaborative work argues that the panic was “almost non-existent” and significantly overstated by contemporaneous sensational press reporting, and, later, in academic scholarship. In a 2013 interview with Gizmodo, Socolow denied the idea that he and Pooley originated this mass panic revisionism, citing at least four previous scholars who arrived at the same conclusion about the mass panic being largely a myth. Yet Pooley and Socolow’s scholarship has been cited by Snopes, Time, National Geographic, and others ", "Cry Panic\n Cry Panic is a 1974 American made-for-television mystery film directed by James Goldstone and starring John Forsythe, Earl Holliman, Ralph Meeker, Norman Alden, Claudia McNeil and Anne Francis. The film premiered as the ABC Movie of the Week on February 6, 1974 and was co-produced by Aaron Spelling and Leonard Goldberg.", "Panic Room\n March 2004, the studio released a special edition DVD, which consisted of three discs, two which provided featurettes of the pre-production, production, and post-production processes for the film. The DVD also had several commentary tracks, including one by the director. Author John T. Caldwell cites the special edition DVD of Panic Room as an example of demonstrating directorial control to \"aesthetically elevate\" the film. Columbia Pictures sold the television rights for Panic Room to Turner Broadcasting and CBS, who shared the rights over five years. In September 2004, Turner aired the film on channels TBS and TNT for 12 months, and afterward, CBS aired the film three times in an 18-month span. Turner resumed airing Panic Room for 30 months after CBS's turn. A Blu-ray version of the film has yet to be released.", "Estate of Panic\n Estate of Panic is an American reality show in which seven strangers compete to find cash in a large estate. The show is hosted by Steve Valentine, and produced by Endemol USA. The first season aired on the Sci-Fi Channel from November 12 to December 17 of 2008, and has also aired on USA Network and Chiller." ]
Who was the director of Victory?
[ "Mikhail Doller", "Mikhail Ivanovich Doller", "Vsevolod Pudovkin", "Vsevolod Illarionovich Pudovkin", "Wsewolod Illarionowitsch Pudowkin" ]
director
Victory (1938 film)
3,060,497
64
[ { "id": "6921090", "title": "California Victory 2006", "text": " A list of all of the Victory offices with their accompanying field director.", "score": "1.7163994" }, { "id": "6603095", "title": "LGBTQ Victory Fund", "text": " Victory Fund from his position as the director of the Gay & Lesbian Leadership Council at the Democratic National Committee from to rebuild the nearly-bankrupt organization. He is credited by Tammy Baldwin with helping grow the visibility and size of the organization. He stepped down in 2003. Former Victory Fund board member Chuck Wolfe was named executive director in 2003. Under his leadership, the organization's budgets grew exponentially. In 2008, 80 of the group's 111 endorsed candidates won their elections. In 2009, Victory Fund donated $40000 to the election of Annise Parker as mayor of Houston. In electing an out lesbian as its chief ", "score": "1.6960025" }, { "id": "7687081", "title": "Victory Gardens Theater", "text": " Chay Yew was named Artistic Director in 2011. In February 2012, Yew granted the original Playwrights Ensemble 'alumni' status and introduced a new ensemble of playwrights. Yew announced his departure from Victory Gardens in December 2019. On May 5, 2020, then-executive director Erica Daniels was named Victory Gardens' executive artistic director. The Playwrights Ensemble announced their collective resignation in protest on May 22, citing a lack of transparency in Victory Gardens' search for a new Artistic Director. On June 8, in response to the resulting community backlash and the ongoing George Floyd protests, Daniels stepped down from her positions as Executive Director and Executive Artistic Director. The board of directors' chairman Steve Miller also stepped down from his position, but remained on the board. The current Acting Managing Director of Victory Gardens is Roxanna Conner, and the current Board Chair is Charles E. Harris, II.", "score": "1.6930432" }, { "id": "29370700", "title": "Victory Pictures Corporation", "text": " Victory Pictures Corporation was a California-based film production and distribution company that operated from 1935–39. It was owned by Sam Katzman and specialised in making low-budget movies, predominantly Westerns. It made two serials and 30 films, including some of the Western series of Bob Steele and Tim McCoy. It also made eight films based on the works of Peter B. Kyne. The studio plant caught fire in 1937, causing $50,000 worth of damage.", "score": "1.6892796" }, { "id": "15443283", "title": "John Cromwell (director)", "text": " Twenty years later, Cromwell filmed his screen version, Victory (1940), for Paramount with Fredrick March as the recluse Hendrik Heyst and Betty Field as Alma, and Cedric Hardwicke as the pathological Mr. Jones (also serving as narrator). Cromwell’s professional relationship with March had commenced on Broadway in 1925 when he directed March in Kay Horton’s Harvest. Cromwell was dissatisfied with some of the casting in Victory, particularly with that of British actor Cedric Hardwicke : \"Then [there was] Mr. Hardwicke, whom I knew—or thought I knew—pretty well. I don’t know what the hell happened to him. He just conked out on me entirely, and I felt he gave no indication what the part ", "score": "1.6689444" }, { "id": "15443282", "title": "John Cromwell (director)", "text": " As early as 1919, Cromwell had taken a keen interest in novelist Joseph Conrad’s psychological drama Victory: An Island Tale (1915), concerning an English expatriate who attempts to withdraw as a recluse to a small Indonesian island. His solitary existence is undone when he rescues a young woman, leading to the infiltration of his sanctuary by a gang of sociopaths, with tragic results. Cromwell personally contacted Conrad shortly after publication of Victory to obtain production and dramatic rights to the work, only to discover that permission had been bestowed on producer Laurence Irving and McDonald Hastings, respectively. Cromwell directed a version of their adaptation in the United States in the 1920s that quickly ", "score": "1.6541452" }, { "id": "8611295", "title": "Chay Yew", "text": " in The Collision Project at The Alliance Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia. He wrote a documentary play 17 based on the actual lives of Atlanta’s racially diverse teenagers. Chay Yew was the Artistic Director of Victory Gardens Theater in Chicago from 2011 to 2020. During his tenure, out of 43 productions, 18 plays received world premieres of which one went to Broadway, four were produced off-Broadway at the Public, Soho Rep, and Signature Theatre, while others were presented regionally, and abroad at Donmar Warehouse and Bush Theatre in London. For his leadership, he was awarded the Iris Award for Outstanding Commitment to Connecting Chicago ", "score": "1.6250021" }, { "id": "32977330", "title": "Victory Ford", "text": " Victory was once the most celebrated up-and-coming fashion designer in the business, until the New York Times trashed her new Fall collection and subsequently she lost her financial backing, forcing her to fire all of her employees and work from her house. She must now pick up the pieces of her shattered life and rebuild her career, as she relies on her friends and the man in her life, businessman Joe Bennett (Andrew McCarthy), to help her get back on her feet.", "score": "1.6245948" }, { "id": "7774089", "title": "New Victory Theater", "text": " runway down the middle of the auditorium for his strippers, the most famous of whom was Gypsy Rose Lee. In 1942, it became a movie theater called The Victory, named to support the war effort during World War II. In 1972, as the neighborhood gradually declined, it became the first theater on 42nd Street to exhibit XXX pornographic films. In the early 1990s, the Victory returned to legitimate theater, using its stage space as a venue for offering plays by non-profit companies. It presented the En Garde Arts company's production of the play Crowbar in 1990 and in 1991 the Theater for a New Audience ", "score": "1.5910481" }, { "id": "1867455", "title": "Victory (2013 film)", "text": " Actor turned debutant director Nanda Kishore, son of yester-year actor Sudheer, announced his maiden project and titled it as \"Victory\". He roped in Sharan as the main protagonist who tasted big success from Rambo released in 2012. One of the unit members reported that the film would be a comic-caper and would engage the audience for its complete length. Model-turned-actress Asmita Sood who was a Miss India finalist in 2011, was signed up for her first Kannada film to play the lead role opposite Sharan.", "score": "1.5887026" }, { "id": "12655678", "title": "A. V. T. Shankardass", "text": " Shankardass worked in theatre as a director in London and Edinburgh. He then directed the films Praying for Pay, The Commuters and The Stepmother, before becoming involved in film production. He was also a screenwriter with Tomahawk Entertainment and Warner Bros for five years. Shankardass became C. E. O. and Managing Director of film finance corporation Victory in 1998, handling tax efficient and equity funding, matched with debt structure in various countries. Films financed included K-19 The Widowmaker (Harrison Ford), Femme Fatale (Antonio Banderas), Fly Boys (James Franco), Johnny Was (Vinnie Jones), and Ball & Chain (Kal Penn). In 2000 he managed a takeover of the company, and in 2005 Victory conducted ", "score": "1.5853202" }, { "id": "12295181", "title": "Desert Victory", "text": " Desert Victory is a 1943 film produced by the British Ministry of Information, documenting the Allies' North African campaign against Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and the Afrika Korps. This documentary traces the struggle between General Erwin Rommel and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, from the German's defeat at El Alamein to Tripoli. The film was produced by David MacDonald and directed by Roy Boulting who also directed Tunisian Victory and Burma Victory. Like the famous \"Why We Fight\" series of films by Frank Capra, Desert Victory relies heavily on captured German newsreel footage. Many of the most famous sequences in the film have been excerpted and appear with frequency in History Channel and A&E productions. The film won a special Oscar in 1943 and the 1951 film The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel took sections of the film for its battle footage. ", "score": "1.5808918" }, { "id": "25441182", "title": "Victory (1940 film)", "text": " Victory is a 1940 American adventure film directed by John Cromwell and starring Fredric March, Cedric Hardwicke, and Betty Field. It was based on the popular 1915 novel by Joseph Conrad. On the eve of the American entry into World War II, the often-filmed Conrad story of a hermit on an island invaded by thugs was refashioned into a clarion call for intervention in the war in Europe, at the height of American isolationism.", "score": "1.5758166" }, { "id": "13065056", "title": "Victory (Bethel Music album)", "text": "Eric Allen – artist direction, director ; Jacob Arnold – drums ; Cory Asbury – vocals ; Josh Baldwin – vocals ; Daniel Bashta – vocals ; Andrew Bergthold – background vocals, keyboards, pre-production, programming ; Jordan Borgart – creative director ; Kyle Briskin – background vocals ; Robby Busick – production manager ; Ed Cash – acoustic guitar, background vocals, electric guitar, keyboards, mandolin, mixing, producer, programming ; Franni Cash – background vocals ; Martin Cash – background vocals, drum programming, percussion ; Scott Cash – acoustic guitar, background vocals, electric guitar ; Chris Estes – director ; Alton ", "score": "1.5707272" }, { "id": "7687077", "title": "Victory Gardens Theater", "text": " The company's initial home was the Northside Auditorium Building, 3730 N. Clark Street in Chicago, originally a Swedish social club. Its second production—a country-western musical co-produced with commercial producers called The Magnolia Club by Jeff Berkson, John Karraker and David Karraker — was the company's first hit. Marcelle McVay was the first Managing Director. In 1975, director Dennis Začek staged The Caretaker by Harold Pinter, beginning a relationship that led to Začek being named artistic director in 1977. Key on-going collaborators worked with the company for the first time in the Clark Street space, including actor William L. Petersen, Marcelle McVay, director Sandy Shinner, and playwrights Steve Carter and Jeffrey Sweet. McVay, who is married to Začek, subsequently became managing director and Shinner later became associate artistic director.", "score": "1.5697205" }, { "id": "15424639", "title": "Victory (1996 film)", "text": " Victory is a 1996 French-German drama suspense film written and directed by Mark Peploe and starring Willem Dafoe, Irène Jacob, Sam Neill and Rufus Sewell. It is based on the 1915 novel of the same name by Joseph Conrad. The novel had been adapted into film on multiple previous occasions, including a 1919 silent version directed by Maurice Tourneur and featuring Jack Holt, Seena Owen, Lon Chaney Sr., and Wallace Beery; the 1930 William Wellman directed Dangerous Paradise starring Nancy Carroll, Richard Arlen and Warner Oland; and the 1940 version featuring Fredric March, Betty Field, and Sir Cedric Hardwicke.", "score": "1.565603" }, { "id": "6199274", "title": "Brian Bond (activist)", "text": " director of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund to rebuild the nearly-bankrupt organization. He is credited by Tammy Baldwin with helping grow the visibility and size of the organization. He left the organization in 2003. Bond was later hired by Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean to replace Donald Hitchcock as executive director of the DNC's Gay and Lesbian Leadership Council., and would eventually join Obama for America as National Constituency Director in Chicago, Illinois. In January 2009, The Advocate magazine announced that Bond would be named deputy director of the White House Office of Public Liaison under Tina Tchen, as confirmed by the transition team of ", "score": "1.5652602" }, { "id": "12649225", "title": "Jack Victory", "text": " In 1998, Victory debuted in Extreme Championship Wrestling as a mercenary hired to assault New Jack. His wrestling ended for ECW when he broke his leg at 1998's November to Remember in a tag team match pitting himself and Justin Credible against Tommy Dreamer and Jake \"The Snake\" Roberts when he was backdropped over the top rope by Dreamer. While using a wheelchair for rehabilitation, Victory became the manager of Steve Corino. When his leg healed, Victory began interfering in Corino's matches on behalf of his client. Along with Corino, Victory was a member of the stable known as The Network. He remained in ECW until the promotion declared bankruptcy in April 2001, defeating C.W. Anderson on the promotion's last show in January.", "score": "1.5636884" }, { "id": "2192757", "title": "Victory Contents", "text": " source: ", "score": "1.5632533" }, { "id": "3876402", "title": "David Atkins", "text": " Atkins has directed and produced major live events in various countries. These include Victory Ceremonies in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.", "score": "1.5627522" } ]
[ "California Victory 2006\n A list of all of the Victory offices with their accompanying field director.", "LGBTQ Victory Fund\n Victory Fund from his position as the director of the Gay & Lesbian Leadership Council at the Democratic National Committee from to rebuild the nearly-bankrupt organization. He is credited by Tammy Baldwin with helping grow the visibility and size of the organization. He stepped down in 2003. Former Victory Fund board member Chuck Wolfe was named executive director in 2003. Under his leadership, the organization's budgets grew exponentially. In 2008, 80 of the group's 111 endorsed candidates won their elections. In 2009, Victory Fund donated $40000 to the election of Annise Parker as mayor of Houston. In electing an out lesbian as its chief ", "Victory Gardens Theater\n Chay Yew was named Artistic Director in 2011. In February 2012, Yew granted the original Playwrights Ensemble 'alumni' status and introduced a new ensemble of playwrights. Yew announced his departure from Victory Gardens in December 2019. On May 5, 2020, then-executive director Erica Daniels was named Victory Gardens' executive artistic director. The Playwrights Ensemble announced their collective resignation in protest on May 22, citing a lack of transparency in Victory Gardens' search for a new Artistic Director. On June 8, in response to the resulting community backlash and the ongoing George Floyd protests, Daniels stepped down from her positions as Executive Director and Executive Artistic Director. The board of directors' chairman Steve Miller also stepped down from his position, but remained on the board. The current Acting Managing Director of Victory Gardens is Roxanna Conner, and the current Board Chair is Charles E. Harris, II.", "Victory Pictures Corporation\n Victory Pictures Corporation was a California-based film production and distribution company that operated from 1935–39. It was owned by Sam Katzman and specialised in making low-budget movies, predominantly Westerns. It made two serials and 30 films, including some of the Western series of Bob Steele and Tim McCoy. It also made eight films based on the works of Peter B. Kyne. The studio plant caught fire in 1937, causing $50,000 worth of damage.", "John Cromwell (director)\n Twenty years later, Cromwell filmed his screen version, Victory (1940), for Paramount with Fredrick March as the recluse Hendrik Heyst and Betty Field as Alma, and Cedric Hardwicke as the pathological Mr. Jones (also serving as narrator). Cromwell’s professional relationship with March had commenced on Broadway in 1925 when he directed March in Kay Horton’s Harvest. Cromwell was dissatisfied with some of the casting in Victory, particularly with that of British actor Cedric Hardwicke : \"Then [there was] Mr. Hardwicke, whom I knew—or thought I knew—pretty well. I don’t know what the hell happened to him. He just conked out on me entirely, and I felt he gave no indication what the part ", "John Cromwell (director)\n As early as 1919, Cromwell had taken a keen interest in novelist Joseph Conrad’s psychological drama Victory: An Island Tale (1915), concerning an English expatriate who attempts to withdraw as a recluse to a small Indonesian island. His solitary existence is undone when he rescues a young woman, leading to the infiltration of his sanctuary by a gang of sociopaths, with tragic results. Cromwell personally contacted Conrad shortly after publication of Victory to obtain production and dramatic rights to the work, only to discover that permission had been bestowed on producer Laurence Irving and McDonald Hastings, respectively. Cromwell directed a version of their adaptation in the United States in the 1920s that quickly ", "Chay Yew\n in The Collision Project at The Alliance Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia. He wrote a documentary play 17 based on the actual lives of Atlanta’s racially diverse teenagers. Chay Yew was the Artistic Director of Victory Gardens Theater in Chicago from 2011 to 2020. During his tenure, out of 43 productions, 18 plays received world premieres of which one went to Broadway, four were produced off-Broadway at the Public, Soho Rep, and Signature Theatre, while others were presented regionally, and abroad at Donmar Warehouse and Bush Theatre in London. For his leadership, he was awarded the Iris Award for Outstanding Commitment to Connecting Chicago ", "Victory Ford\n Victory was once the most celebrated up-and-coming fashion designer in the business, until the New York Times trashed her new Fall collection and subsequently she lost her financial backing, forcing her to fire all of her employees and work from her house. She must now pick up the pieces of her shattered life and rebuild her career, as she relies on her friends and the man in her life, businessman Joe Bennett (Andrew McCarthy), to help her get back on her feet.", "New Victory Theater\n runway down the middle of the auditorium for his strippers, the most famous of whom was Gypsy Rose Lee. In 1942, it became a movie theater called The Victory, named to support the war effort during World War II. In 1972, as the neighborhood gradually declined, it became the first theater on 42nd Street to exhibit XXX pornographic films. In the early 1990s, the Victory returned to legitimate theater, using its stage space as a venue for offering plays by non-profit companies. It presented the En Garde Arts company's production of the play Crowbar in 1990 and in 1991 the Theater for a New Audience ", "Victory (2013 film)\n Actor turned debutant director Nanda Kishore, son of yester-year actor Sudheer, announced his maiden project and titled it as \"Victory\". He roped in Sharan as the main protagonist who tasted big success from Rambo released in 2012. One of the unit members reported that the film would be a comic-caper and would engage the audience for its complete length. Model-turned-actress Asmita Sood who was a Miss India finalist in 2011, was signed up for her first Kannada film to play the lead role opposite Sharan.", "A. V. T. Shankardass\n Shankardass worked in theatre as a director in London and Edinburgh. He then directed the films Praying for Pay, The Commuters and The Stepmother, before becoming involved in film production. He was also a screenwriter with Tomahawk Entertainment and Warner Bros for five years. Shankardass became C. E. O. and Managing Director of film finance corporation Victory in 1998, handling tax efficient and equity funding, matched with debt structure in various countries. Films financed included K-19 The Widowmaker (Harrison Ford), Femme Fatale (Antonio Banderas), Fly Boys (James Franco), Johnny Was (Vinnie Jones), and Ball & Chain (Kal Penn). In 2000 he managed a takeover of the company, and in 2005 Victory conducted ", "Desert Victory\n Desert Victory is a 1943 film produced by the British Ministry of Information, documenting the Allies' North African campaign against Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and the Afrika Korps. This documentary traces the struggle between General Erwin Rommel and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, from the German's defeat at El Alamein to Tripoli. The film was produced by David MacDonald and directed by Roy Boulting who also directed Tunisian Victory and Burma Victory. Like the famous \"Why We Fight\" series of films by Frank Capra, Desert Victory relies heavily on captured German newsreel footage. Many of the most famous sequences in the film have been excerpted and appear with frequency in History Channel and A&E productions. The film won a special Oscar in 1943 and the 1951 film The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel took sections of the film for its battle footage. ", "Victory (1940 film)\n Victory is a 1940 American adventure film directed by John Cromwell and starring Fredric March, Cedric Hardwicke, and Betty Field. It was based on the popular 1915 novel by Joseph Conrad. On the eve of the American entry into World War II, the often-filmed Conrad story of a hermit on an island invaded by thugs was refashioned into a clarion call for intervention in the war in Europe, at the height of American isolationism.", "Victory (Bethel Music album)\nEric Allen – artist direction, director ; Jacob Arnold – drums ; Cory Asbury – vocals ; Josh Baldwin – vocals ; Daniel Bashta – vocals ; Andrew Bergthold – background vocals, keyboards, pre-production, programming ; Jordan Borgart – creative director ; Kyle Briskin – background vocals ; Robby Busick – production manager ; Ed Cash – acoustic guitar, background vocals, electric guitar, keyboards, mandolin, mixing, producer, programming ; Franni Cash – background vocals ; Martin Cash – background vocals, drum programming, percussion ; Scott Cash – acoustic guitar, background vocals, electric guitar ; Chris Estes – director ; Alton ", "Victory Gardens Theater\n The company's initial home was the Northside Auditorium Building, 3730 N. Clark Street in Chicago, originally a Swedish social club. Its second production—a country-western musical co-produced with commercial producers called The Magnolia Club by Jeff Berkson, John Karraker and David Karraker — was the company's first hit. Marcelle McVay was the first Managing Director. In 1975, director Dennis Začek staged The Caretaker by Harold Pinter, beginning a relationship that led to Začek being named artistic director in 1977. Key on-going collaborators worked with the company for the first time in the Clark Street space, including actor William L. Petersen, Marcelle McVay, director Sandy Shinner, and playwrights Steve Carter and Jeffrey Sweet. McVay, who is married to Začek, subsequently became managing director and Shinner later became associate artistic director.", "Victory (1996 film)\n Victory is a 1996 French-German drama suspense film written and directed by Mark Peploe and starring Willem Dafoe, Irène Jacob, Sam Neill and Rufus Sewell. It is based on the 1915 novel of the same name by Joseph Conrad. The novel had been adapted into film on multiple previous occasions, including a 1919 silent version directed by Maurice Tourneur and featuring Jack Holt, Seena Owen, Lon Chaney Sr., and Wallace Beery; the 1930 William Wellman directed Dangerous Paradise starring Nancy Carroll, Richard Arlen and Warner Oland; and the 1940 version featuring Fredric March, Betty Field, and Sir Cedric Hardwicke.", "Brian Bond (activist)\n director of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund to rebuild the nearly-bankrupt organization. He is credited by Tammy Baldwin with helping grow the visibility and size of the organization. He left the organization in 2003. Bond was later hired by Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean to replace Donald Hitchcock as executive director of the DNC's Gay and Lesbian Leadership Council., and would eventually join Obama for America as National Constituency Director in Chicago, Illinois. In January 2009, The Advocate magazine announced that Bond would be named deputy director of the White House Office of Public Liaison under Tina Tchen, as confirmed by the transition team of ", "Jack Victory\n In 1998, Victory debuted in Extreme Championship Wrestling as a mercenary hired to assault New Jack. His wrestling ended for ECW when he broke his leg at 1998's November to Remember in a tag team match pitting himself and Justin Credible against Tommy Dreamer and Jake \"The Snake\" Roberts when he was backdropped over the top rope by Dreamer. While using a wheelchair for rehabilitation, Victory became the manager of Steve Corino. When his leg healed, Victory began interfering in Corino's matches on behalf of his client. Along with Corino, Victory was a member of the stable known as The Network. He remained in ECW until the promotion declared bankruptcy in April 2001, defeating C.W. Anderson on the promotion's last show in January.", "Victory Contents\n source: ", "David Atkins\n Atkins has directed and produced major live events in various countries. These include Victory Ceremonies in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada." ]
Who was the director of Not So Long Ago?
[ "Sidney Olcott" ]
director
Not So Long Ago
1,374,895
83
[ { "id": "29618483", "title": "Not So Long Ago", "text": " Not So Long Ago is a 1925 American silent film produced by Jesse Lasky and Adolph Zukor and distributed by Paramount. It was directed by Sidney Olcott with Betty Bronson and Ricardo Cortez in the leading roles. This is a lost film.", "score": "1.6198115" }, { "id": "28063075", "title": "Not My Life", "text": " in Warsaw, Poland, in May 2013; and the Pasadena International Film & New Media Festival in February 2014. In May 2014, the Somaly Mam Foundation released a statement that Somaly had resigned from her leadership of the organization as a result of investigations regarding allegations about her personal history. The following month, Bilheimer released a statement in response, saying that he had re-edited the film in order to remove the scenes depicting Somaly and that the new version would be available shortly. Bilheimer wrote that \"the storytelling in the Cambodia segment of Not My Life remains intact and is still very moving, with an even sharper focus, now, ", "score": "1.4262729" }, { "id": "31528963", "title": "David Farr (theatre director)", "text": " Farr began directing theatre at University and won the Guardian Student Drama Award at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 1991 with Slight Possession starring Rachel Weisz. His professional directorial debut came at The Gate Theatre, Notting Hill in 1995 (age25) under Stephen Daldry. He was also Artistic Director of Bristol Old Vic from 2002 to 2005 and Lyric Hammersmith from 2005 to 2009. In 2009 he joined the Royal Shakespeare Company as Associate Director. He wrote regularly for Spooks for the BBC and is a film writer having co-written the Joe Wright film Hanna, released in 2011. Farr's adaptation of John le Carré's novel The Night Manager was aired in 2016 on BBC1.", "score": "1.4101222" }, { "id": "383152", "title": "Eddie Schmidt", "text": " Eddie Schmidt (born August 29, 1970) is an American director, showrunner, producer, writer, commentator and satirist. He is perhaps best known for producing several feature documentaries that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, including Valentine Road (2013), This Film Is Not Yet Rated (2006), and Twist Of Faith (2005), and for directing and showrunning television projects including Ugly Delicious (2018), Chelsea Does (2016), and The Case of: JonBenet Ramsey (2016). From 2009-2011, he served as President of the IDA (International Documentary Association), and was its interim Executive Director for the latter half of 2008.", "score": "1.3952627" }, { "id": "5466541", "title": "Eliza Byard", "text": " Early in Byard's career she served as the director of development for the Center for Investigative Reporting. In 1996 she became the editor, writer, and co-producer of the film Out of the Past, which was published in 1997. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 1998, where it won the Audience Award for Best Documentary. While working on the film she met Kevin Jennings, the founder and then executive director of GLSEN. Byard joined GLSEN as deputy executive director in 2001, where she led the development of programs including the national Think B4 You Speak anti-bullying program, LGBT ad campaigns, and GLSEN's research and student organization efforts. In 2008 she became the organization's executive director. Byard announced on January 13, 2021 that she would be stepping down as executive director on March 1, 2021. Byard also serves on the board of trustees for America's Promise Alliance, Sodexo's diversity advisory board, the National Collaboration for Youth steering committee, and the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention LGBT suicide task force. She also served on Michael Bloomberg's commission for runaway and homeless children, and was the chair of the board of directors for Arts Engine.", "score": "1.3861336" }, { "id": "3890069", "title": "Gregg Champion", "text": "Whose Life Is It Anyway? (1981, producer) ; Blue Thunder (1983, producer) ; American Flyers (1985, producer) ; Short Circuit (1986, producer) ; Stakeout (1987, producer) ; Short Time (1990, director) ; The Cowboy Way (1994, director) ; \"A Woman's Place\" (Walker, Texas Ranger) (1997, director) ; The Simple Life of Noah Dearborn (1999, producer and director) ; The Magnificent Seven (1999-2000, director, 5 episodes) ; Dodson's Journey (2001, producer and director) ; The Last Brickmaker in America (2001, producer and director) ; Stealing Christmas (2003, producer and director) ; Miracle Run (2004, director) ; 14 Hours (2005, director) ; Amish Grace (2010, director) ; Field of Vision (2011, director) ; The Gabby Douglas Story (2014, director) ", "score": "1.3787848" }, { "id": "15535808", "title": "Blair Treu", "text": "1995 — Just Like Dad — Director ; 1996 — The Paper Brigade — Director ; 1996 — Wish Upon a Star — Director ; 2000 — The Brainiacs.com — Director ; 2000 — Phantom of the Megaplex — Director ; 2001 — Little Secrets — Director ; 2007 — The Last Day of Summer — Director ; 2014 — Meet the Mormons — Director ; 2014 — \"Glorious\" (David Archuleta music video) — Director ", "score": "1.3596773" }, { "id": "9170684", "title": "New York University Press", "text": "Arthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "score": "1.3474343" }, { "id": "1310268", "title": "Govett-Brewster Art Gallery", "text": "John Maynard, director (1967–1971) ; Robert Ballard, director (1971–1975) ; Ron O'Reilly, director (1975–1979) ; Dick Bett, director (1979–1984) ; Cheryll Sotheran, director (1984–1989) ; John McCormack, director (1990–1993) ; Priscilla Pitts, director (1993–1998) ; Gregory Burke, director (1998–2005) ; Rhana Devenport, director (2006–2013) ; Simon Rees, director (2014–2018) ; Aileen Burns and Johan Lundh, directors (2019–2020) ; Zara Stanhope, director (2021) ", "score": "1.3472142" }, { "id": "5881122", "title": "Phil Sogard", "text": " Sogard was hired by Gloria Monty to be on the directing staff of ABC Daytime's General Hospital, which he directed for several years in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In 1992, Ken Corday hired him to join the directing team of NBC Daytime's soap opera Days of Our Lives. Sogard is a member of the Directors Guild of America.", "score": "1.3471066" }, { "id": "2447267", "title": "John Mackenzie (film director)", "text": "Up the Junction, directed by Ken Loach ; Cathy Come Home, directed by Loach One Brief Summer (1970) ; Unman, Wittering and Zigo (1971) ; Made (1972) ; The Long Good Friday (1980) ; A Sense of Freedom (1981) ; The Honorary Consul, also released as Beyond the Limit (1983) The Innocent (1985) ; The Fourth Protocol (1987) ; The Last of the Finest, also released as Blue Heat and Street Legal (1990) ; Ruby (1992) ; When the Sky Falls (2000) ; Quicksand (2003) The Cheviot, the Stag, and the Black Black Oil BBC (1973) ; Shutdown BBC (1974) ; Just Another Saturday BBC (1975) ; Double Dare (BBC 1976) ; A Passage to England BBC (1976) ; Red Shift BBC (1977) Just a Boys' Game BBC (1979) ; Act of Vengeance HBO (1986) ; Voyage, also broadcast as Cruise of Fear US (1993) ; The Infiltrator, also broadcast as In Hitler's Shadow HBO (1995) ; Deadly Voyage HBO (1996) ; Looking After Jo Jo (1998) ; Aldrich Ames: Traitor Within Showtime (1998) ; Avenger (2004) As Assistant Director As Director: Film As Director: Television ", "score": "1.346806" }, { "id": "14947686", "title": "Michael Eilbaum", "text": "Director (1980-1999) Director (1999-2010) Director (September 2010-January 2012) Director (June 27-October 3, 2012) Director (October 17, 2012-present) Another World As the World Turns One Life to Live Hollywood Heights The Young and the Restless", "score": "1.3441975" }, { "id": "28032739", "title": "Not That Far Away", "text": "Not That Far Away (single) ", "score": "1.3441355" }, { "id": "3878188", "title": "Kwak Ji-kyoon", "text": "So Close Yet Far (1978) - assistant director ; When Sadness Takes Over a Wave (1978) - assistant director ; Yeosu (The Loneliness of the Journey) (1979) - assistant director ; Tomorrow After Tomorrow (1979) - assistant director ; The Divine Bow (1979) - assistant director ; Mrs. Speculator (1980) - assistant director ; The Hidden Hero (1980) - assistant director ; Mandala (1981) - assistant director ; Tears of the Idol (1982) - assistant director ; As Firm As A Stone (1983) - assistant director ; Deep Blue Night (1985) - assistant director ; Deer Hunting (1985) - screenwriter ; Winter Wanderer (1986) - director ; The Home of Two Women (1987) - director, screenwriter ; Wound (1989) - director ; Long After That (1989) - director ; Portrait of the Days of Youth (1991) - director ; The Woman Who Won't Divorce (1992) - director ; Rosy Days (1994) - director ; Deep Blue (1997) - director ; Plum Blossom (2000) - director, screenwriter ; Fly High (2006) - director, screenwriter ", "score": "1.343461" }, { "id": "12473463", "title": "List of films: N–O", "text": " Ozploitation! (2008) ; Not Quite Human (1987) ; Not Quite Human II (1989) ; Not Quite a Lady (1928) ; Not Quite Paradise (1985) ; Not Reconciled (1965) ; Not Safe for Work (2014) ; Not for Sale (1924) ; Not Since You (2009) ; Not So Dumb (1930) ; Not So Dusty: (1936 & 1956) ; Not So Long Ago (1925) ; Not So Quiet (1930) ; Not So Quiet on the Western Front (1930) ; Not as a Stranger (1955) ; Not So Stupid: (1928 & 1946) ; Not Suitable for Children (2012) ; Not of This Earth: ", "score": "1.3380733" }, { "id": "3048766", "title": "William P. Cartlidge", "text": "Educating Rita (1983), co-producer ; Not Quite Jerusalem (1984), co-producer ; Consuming Passions (1988), producer ; Dealers (1989), producer ", "score": "1.3370328" }, { "id": "1228520", "title": "Mike Gibbon", "text": "New Scotland Yard (1972) - director ; Helen: A Woman of Today (1973) - director ; Thick as Thieves (1974) - director ; Within These Walls (1974) - director ; Intimate Strangers (1974) - director ; Emmerdale Farm -director ; The Brack Report (1982) - director ; Airline - director ; Fair City (1988) - director ; EastEnders (1988-89) - producer ; City of the Rich - executive producer ; The Log of the Ark - producer ; Remains To Be Seen ; The League Against Christmas ", "score": "1.3350005" }, { "id": "10360991", "title": "List of film director and editor collaborations", "text": " (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ", "score": "1.3342758" }, { "id": "28292502", "title": "Michael Apted", "text": " Michael David Apted, (10 February 1941 – 7 January 2021) was a British television and film director and producer. Apted began working in television and directed the Up documentary series (1964–2019). He later directed Coal Miner's Daughter (1980), which was nominated for seven Academy Awards including Best Picture. His subsequent work included Gorillas in the Mist (1988), Nell (1994), James Bond film The World Is Not Enough (1999), and Enigma (2001). His film Amazing Grace (2006) premiered at the closing of the Toronto International Film Festival that year. On 29 June 2003, he was elected president of the Directors Guild of America, a position he served until 2009. He was appointed Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in the 2008 Birthday Honours.", "score": "1.3340011" }, { "id": "93097", "title": "Dan Ireland", "text": "A Most Peculiar Man, director and producer (short film, 2015) ; Hate From A Distance, Director, Producer (short film, 2014) ; Living Proof, director (TV film, 2008) ; Jolene, director (film, 2008) ; Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont, director and co-writer (w/Ruth Sacks, Martin Donovan) (2006) ; Passionada aka Passionate, director (film, 2003) ; The Velocity of Gary, director and executive producer (film, 1998) ; The Whole Wide World, director and producer (film, 1996) ; The Rainbow, executive producer (film, 1989) ; The Lair Of The White Worm, executive producer (film, 1988) ; Salome's Last Dance, Executive Producer (film, 1987) ; The Dead, executive producer (film, 1987) ", "score": "1.3333673" } ]
[ "Not So Long Ago\n Not So Long Ago is a 1925 American silent film produced by Jesse Lasky and Adolph Zukor and distributed by Paramount. It was directed by Sidney Olcott with Betty Bronson and Ricardo Cortez in the leading roles. This is a lost film.", "Not My Life\n in Warsaw, Poland, in May 2013; and the Pasadena International Film & New Media Festival in February 2014. In May 2014, the Somaly Mam Foundation released a statement that Somaly had resigned from her leadership of the organization as a result of investigations regarding allegations about her personal history. The following month, Bilheimer released a statement in response, saying that he had re-edited the film in order to remove the scenes depicting Somaly and that the new version would be available shortly. Bilheimer wrote that \"the storytelling in the Cambodia segment of Not My Life remains intact and is still very moving, with an even sharper focus, now, ", "David Farr (theatre director)\n Farr began directing theatre at University and won the Guardian Student Drama Award at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 1991 with Slight Possession starring Rachel Weisz. His professional directorial debut came at The Gate Theatre, Notting Hill in 1995 (age25) under Stephen Daldry. He was also Artistic Director of Bristol Old Vic from 2002 to 2005 and Lyric Hammersmith from 2005 to 2009. In 2009 he joined the Royal Shakespeare Company as Associate Director. He wrote regularly for Spooks for the BBC and is a film writer having co-written the Joe Wright film Hanna, released in 2011. Farr's adaptation of John le Carré's novel The Night Manager was aired in 2016 on BBC1.", "Eddie Schmidt\n Eddie Schmidt (born August 29, 1970) is an American director, showrunner, producer, writer, commentator and satirist. He is perhaps best known for producing several feature documentaries that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, including Valentine Road (2013), This Film Is Not Yet Rated (2006), and Twist Of Faith (2005), and for directing and showrunning television projects including Ugly Delicious (2018), Chelsea Does (2016), and The Case of: JonBenet Ramsey (2016). From 2009-2011, he served as President of the IDA (International Documentary Association), and was its interim Executive Director for the latter half of 2008.", "Eliza Byard\n Early in Byard's career she served as the director of development for the Center for Investigative Reporting. In 1996 she became the editor, writer, and co-producer of the film Out of the Past, which was published in 1997. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 1998, where it won the Audience Award for Best Documentary. While working on the film she met Kevin Jennings, the founder and then executive director of GLSEN. Byard joined GLSEN as deputy executive director in 2001, where she led the development of programs including the national Think B4 You Speak anti-bullying program, LGBT ad campaigns, and GLSEN's research and student organization efforts. In 2008 she became the organization's executive director. Byard announced on January 13, 2021 that she would be stepping down as executive director on March 1, 2021. Byard also serves on the board of trustees for America's Promise Alliance, Sodexo's diversity advisory board, the National Collaboration for Youth steering committee, and the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention LGBT suicide task force. She also served on Michael Bloomberg's commission for runaway and homeless children, and was the chair of the board of directors for Arts Engine.", "Gregg Champion\nWhose Life Is It Anyway? (1981, producer) ; Blue Thunder (1983, producer) ; American Flyers (1985, producer) ; Short Circuit (1986, producer) ; Stakeout (1987, producer) ; Short Time (1990, director) ; The Cowboy Way (1994, director) ; \"A Woman's Place\" (Walker, Texas Ranger) (1997, director) ; The Simple Life of Noah Dearborn (1999, producer and director) ; The Magnificent Seven (1999-2000, director, 5 episodes) ; Dodson's Journey (2001, producer and director) ; The Last Brickmaker in America (2001, producer and director) ; Stealing Christmas (2003, producer and director) ; Miracle Run (2004, director) ; 14 Hours (2005, director) ; Amish Grace (2010, director) ; Field of Vision (2011, director) ; The Gabby Douglas Story (2014, director) ", "Blair Treu\n1995 — Just Like Dad — Director ; 1996 — The Paper Brigade — Director ; 1996 — Wish Upon a Star — Director ; 2000 — The Brainiacs.com — Director ; 2000 — Phantom of the Megaplex — Director ; 2001 — Little Secrets — Director ; 2007 — The Last Day of Summer — Director ; 2014 — Meet the Mormons — Director ; 2014 — \"Glorious\" (David Archuleta music video) — Director ", "New York University Press\nArthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ", "Govett-Brewster Art Gallery\nJohn Maynard, director (1967–1971) ; Robert Ballard, director (1971–1975) ; Ron O'Reilly, director (1975–1979) ; Dick Bett, director (1979–1984) ; Cheryll Sotheran, director (1984–1989) ; John McCormack, director (1990–1993) ; Priscilla Pitts, director (1993–1998) ; Gregory Burke, director (1998–2005) ; Rhana Devenport, director (2006–2013) ; Simon Rees, director (2014–2018) ; Aileen Burns and Johan Lundh, directors (2019–2020) ; Zara Stanhope, director (2021) ", "Phil Sogard\n Sogard was hired by Gloria Monty to be on the directing staff of ABC Daytime's General Hospital, which he directed for several years in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In 1992, Ken Corday hired him to join the directing team of NBC Daytime's soap opera Days of Our Lives. Sogard is a member of the Directors Guild of America.", "John Mackenzie (film director)\nUp the Junction, directed by Ken Loach ; Cathy Come Home, directed by Loach One Brief Summer (1970) ; Unman, Wittering and Zigo (1971) ; Made (1972) ; The Long Good Friday (1980) ; A Sense of Freedom (1981) ; The Honorary Consul, also released as Beyond the Limit (1983) The Innocent (1985) ; The Fourth Protocol (1987) ; The Last of the Finest, also released as Blue Heat and Street Legal (1990) ; Ruby (1992) ; When the Sky Falls (2000) ; Quicksand (2003) The Cheviot, the Stag, and the Black Black Oil BBC (1973) ; Shutdown BBC (1974) ; Just Another Saturday BBC (1975) ; Double Dare (BBC 1976) ; A Passage to England BBC (1976) ; Red Shift BBC (1977) Just a Boys' Game BBC (1979) ; Act of Vengeance HBO (1986) ; Voyage, also broadcast as Cruise of Fear US (1993) ; The Infiltrator, also broadcast as In Hitler's Shadow HBO (1995) ; Deadly Voyage HBO (1996) ; Looking After Jo Jo (1998) ; Aldrich Ames: Traitor Within Showtime (1998) ; Avenger (2004) As Assistant Director As Director: Film As Director: Television ", "Michael Eilbaum\nDirector (1980-1999) Director (1999-2010) Director (September 2010-January 2012) Director (June 27-October 3, 2012) Director (October 17, 2012-present) Another World As the World Turns One Life to Live Hollywood Heights The Young and the Restless", "Not That Far Away\nNot That Far Away (single) ", "Kwak Ji-kyoon\nSo Close Yet Far (1978) - assistant director ; When Sadness Takes Over a Wave (1978) - assistant director ; Yeosu (The Loneliness of the Journey) (1979) - assistant director ; Tomorrow After Tomorrow (1979) - assistant director ; The Divine Bow (1979) - assistant director ; Mrs. Speculator (1980) - assistant director ; The Hidden Hero (1980) - assistant director ; Mandala (1981) - assistant director ; Tears of the Idol (1982) - assistant director ; As Firm As A Stone (1983) - assistant director ; Deep Blue Night (1985) - assistant director ; Deer Hunting (1985) - screenwriter ; Winter Wanderer (1986) - director ; The Home of Two Women (1987) - director, screenwriter ; Wound (1989) - director ; Long After That (1989) - director ; Portrait of the Days of Youth (1991) - director ; The Woman Who Won't Divorce (1992) - director ; Rosy Days (1994) - director ; Deep Blue (1997) - director ; Plum Blossom (2000) - director, screenwriter ; Fly High (2006) - director, screenwriter ", "List of films: N–O\n Ozploitation! (2008) ; Not Quite Human (1987) ; Not Quite Human II (1989) ; Not Quite a Lady (1928) ; Not Quite Paradise (1985) ; Not Reconciled (1965) ; Not Safe for Work (2014) ; Not for Sale (1924) ; Not Since You (2009) ; Not So Dumb (1930) ; Not So Dusty: (1936 & 1956) ; Not So Long Ago (1925) ; Not So Quiet (1930) ; Not So Quiet on the Western Front (1930) ; Not as a Stranger (1955) ; Not So Stupid: (1928 & 1946) ; Not Suitable for Children (2012) ; Not of This Earth: ", "William P. Cartlidge\nEducating Rita (1983), co-producer ; Not Quite Jerusalem (1984), co-producer ; Consuming Passions (1988), producer ; Dealers (1989), producer ", "Mike Gibbon\nNew Scotland Yard (1972) - director ; Helen: A Woman of Today (1973) - director ; Thick as Thieves (1974) - director ; Within These Walls (1974) - director ; Intimate Strangers (1974) - director ; Emmerdale Farm -director ; The Brack Report (1982) - director ; Airline - director ; Fair City (1988) - director ; EastEnders (1988-89) - producer ; City of the Rich - executive producer ; The Log of the Ark - producer ; Remains To Be Seen ; The League Against Christmas ", "List of film director and editor collaborations\n (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ", "Michael Apted\n Michael David Apted, (10 February 1941 – 7 January 2021) was a British television and film director and producer. Apted began working in television and directed the Up documentary series (1964–2019). He later directed Coal Miner's Daughter (1980), which was nominated for seven Academy Awards including Best Picture. His subsequent work included Gorillas in the Mist (1988), Nell (1994), James Bond film The World Is Not Enough (1999), and Enigma (2001). His film Amazing Grace (2006) premiered at the closing of the Toronto International Film Festival that year. On 29 June 2003, he was elected president of the Directors Guild of America, a position he served until 2009. He was appointed Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in the 2008 Birthday Honours.", "Dan Ireland\nA Most Peculiar Man, director and producer (short film, 2015) ; Hate From A Distance, Director, Producer (short film, 2014) ; Living Proof, director (TV film, 2008) ; Jolene, director (film, 2008) ; Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont, director and co-writer (w/Ruth Sacks, Martin Donovan) (2006) ; Passionada aka Passionate, director (film, 2003) ; The Velocity of Gary, director and executive producer (film, 1998) ; The Whole Wide World, director and producer (film, 1996) ; The Rainbow, executive producer (film, 1989) ; The Lair Of The White Worm, executive producer (film, 1988) ; Salome's Last Dance, Executive Producer (film, 1987) ; The Dead, executive producer (film, 1987) " ]
What is Kluczewsko the capital of?
[ "Gmina Kluczewsko" ]
capital of
Kluczewsko
2,187,704
65
[ { "id": "28455975", "title": "Kluczewsko", "text": " Kluczewsko is a village in Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Kluczewsko. It lies approximately 9 km north of Włoszczowa and 50 km west of the regional capital Kielce. The village has a population of 806.", "score": "1.6352063" }, { "id": "707773", "title": "Kluczbork", "text": " Kluczbork (Kreuzburg O.S., ) is a town in southern Poland with 23,554 inhabitants (2019), situated in the Opole Voivodeship. It is the capital of Kluczbork County and an important railroad junction. In Kluczbork the major rail line from Katowice splits into two directions – westwards to Wrocław and northwards to Poznań. It is also connected with Fosowskie.", "score": "1.5450166" }, { "id": "31432987", "title": "Kluczewko", "text": " Kluczewko is a part of the Szczecin City, Poland situated on the right bank of Oder river, south-east of the Szczecin Old Town, and south-west of Szczecin-Dąbie.", "score": "1.4924407" }, { "id": "4412851", "title": "Kluczewo, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Kluczewo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Płońsk, within Płońsk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "score": "1.4513583" }, { "id": "28455958", "title": "Ciemiętniki", "text": " Ciemiętniki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Kluczewsko, 13 km north-west of Włoszczowa, and 54 km west of the regional capital Kielce.", "score": "1.4425733" }, { "id": "32351616", "title": "Kluki, Łódź Voivodeship", "text": " Kluki (1943-45 Klucksdorf) is a village in Bełchatów County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Kluki. It lies approximately 10 km west of Bełchatów and 51 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 750.", "score": "1.4377353" }, { "id": "28455989", "title": "Rzewuszyce", "text": " Rzewuszyce is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km east of Kluczewsko, 9 km north of Włoszczowa, and 47 km west of the regional capital Kielce.", "score": "1.4218049" }, { "id": "28455957", "title": "Brzeście, Gmina Kluczewsko", "text": " Brzeście is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south of Kluczewsko, 6 km north-west of Włoszczowa, and 49 km west of the regional capital Kielce.", "score": "1.4216907" }, { "id": "12768268", "title": "Klucze, Lesser Poland Voivodeship", "text": " Klucze is a village in Olkusz County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Klucze. It lies approximately 7 km north of Olkusz and 41 km north-west of the regional capital Kraków. The village has a population of 5,926. Religions: Roman Catholicism (The Church).", "score": "1.4017522" }, { "id": "28455987", "title": "Praczka", "text": " Praczka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland.", "score": "1.3983464" }, { "id": "28906366", "title": "Klucz, Opole Voivodeship", "text": " Klucz (Klutschau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ujazd, within Strzelce County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 7 km northwest of Ujazd, 8 km south of Strzelce Opolskie, and 36 km southeast of the regional capital Opole. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II). The village has a population of 190.", "score": "1.3911699" }, { "id": "4516412", "title": "Klukówek", "text": " Klukówek is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Świercze, within Pułtusk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km north-west of Świercze, 24 km west of Pułtusk, and 55 km north of Warsaw.", "score": "1.3836195" }, { "id": "28455990", "title": "Stanowiska, Włoszczowa County", "text": " Stanowiska is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north of Kluczewsko, 14 km north of Włoszczowa, and 50 km west of the regional capital Kielce.", "score": "1.3749895" }, { "id": "32351612", "title": "Kaszewice", "text": " Kaszewice is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluki, within Bełchatów County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km south-east of Kluki, 9 km south-west of Bełchatów, and 54 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 500.", "score": "1.3728107" }, { "id": "26683490", "title": "Klucz, Lubusz Voivodeship", "text": " Klucz is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Wschowa, within Wschowa County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland.", "score": "1.3726184" }, { "id": "11724205", "title": "Klucze, Lower Silesian Voivodeship", "text": " Klucze (Klautsch) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Głogów, within Głogów County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 7 km north-east of Głogów, and 87 km north-west of the regional capital Wrocław. The village has an approximate population of 200.", "score": "1.3717656" }, { "id": "31432986", "title": "Klucz, Szczecin", "text": " Klucz is a part of the city of Szczecin, Poland situated on the right bank of Oder river, south-east of the Szczecin Old Town, and south-west of Szczecin-Dąbie. Before 1945 when Stettin was a part of Germany, the German name of this suburb was Stettin-Klütz.", "score": "1.3717003" }, { "id": "14787118", "title": "Kluczewo, Wolsztyn County", "text": " Kluczewo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Przemęt, within Wolsztyn County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-east of Przemęt, 20 km south-east of Wolsztyn, and 56 km south-west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 646.", "score": "1.365125" }, { "id": "14139620", "title": "Kluczewo-Huby", "text": " Kluczewo-Huby is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ostroróg, within Szamotuły County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 2 km east of Ostroróg, 8 km north-west of Szamotuły, and 39 km north-west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 80.", "score": "1.3600594" }, { "id": "32270196", "title": "Klukowo, Wysokie Mazowieckie County", "text": " Klukowo is a village in Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Klukowo. It lies approximately 17 km south of Wysokie Mazowieckie and 60 km south-west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 610.", "score": "1.3595738" } ]
[ "Kluczewsko\n Kluczewsko is a village in Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Kluczewsko. It lies approximately 9 km north of Włoszczowa and 50 km west of the regional capital Kielce. The village has a population of 806.", "Kluczbork\n Kluczbork (Kreuzburg O.S., ) is a town in southern Poland with 23,554 inhabitants (2019), situated in the Opole Voivodeship. It is the capital of Kluczbork County and an important railroad junction. In Kluczbork the major rail line from Katowice splits into two directions – westwards to Wrocław and northwards to Poznań. It is also connected with Fosowskie.", "Kluczewko\n Kluczewko is a part of the Szczecin City, Poland situated on the right bank of Oder river, south-east of the Szczecin Old Town, and south-west of Szczecin-Dąbie.", "Kluczewo, Masovian Voivodeship\n Kluczewo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Płońsk, within Płońsk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "Ciemiętniki\n Ciemiętniki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Kluczewsko, 13 km north-west of Włoszczowa, and 54 km west of the regional capital Kielce.", "Kluki, Łódź Voivodeship\n Kluki (1943-45 Klucksdorf) is a village in Bełchatów County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Kluki. It lies approximately 10 km west of Bełchatów and 51 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 750.", "Rzewuszyce\n Rzewuszyce is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km east of Kluczewsko, 9 km north of Włoszczowa, and 47 km west of the regional capital Kielce.", "Brzeście, Gmina Kluczewsko\n Brzeście is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south of Kluczewsko, 6 km north-west of Włoszczowa, and 49 km west of the regional capital Kielce.", "Klucze, Lesser Poland Voivodeship\n Klucze is a village in Olkusz County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Klucze. It lies approximately 7 km north of Olkusz and 41 km north-west of the regional capital Kraków. The village has a population of 5,926. Religions: Roman Catholicism (The Church).", "Praczka\n Praczka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland.", "Klucz, Opole Voivodeship\n Klucz (Klutschau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ujazd, within Strzelce County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 7 km northwest of Ujazd, 8 km south of Strzelce Opolskie, and 36 km southeast of the regional capital Opole. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II). The village has a population of 190.", "Klukówek\n Klukówek is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Świercze, within Pułtusk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km north-west of Świercze, 24 km west of Pułtusk, and 55 km north of Warsaw.", "Stanowiska, Włoszczowa County\n Stanowiska is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluczewsko, within Włoszczowa County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north of Kluczewsko, 14 km north of Włoszczowa, and 50 km west of the regional capital Kielce.", "Kaszewice\n Kaszewice is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kluki, within Bełchatów County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km south-east of Kluki, 9 km south-west of Bełchatów, and 54 km south of the regional capital Łódź. The village has a population of 500.", "Klucz, Lubusz Voivodeship\n Klucz is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Wschowa, within Wschowa County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland.", "Klucze, Lower Silesian Voivodeship\n Klucze (Klautsch) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Głogów, within Głogów County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 7 km north-east of Głogów, and 87 km north-west of the regional capital Wrocław. The village has an approximate population of 200.", "Klucz, Szczecin\n Klucz is a part of the city of Szczecin, Poland situated on the right bank of Oder river, south-east of the Szczecin Old Town, and south-west of Szczecin-Dąbie. Before 1945 when Stettin was a part of Germany, the German name of this suburb was Stettin-Klütz.", "Kluczewo, Wolsztyn County\n Kluczewo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Przemęt, within Wolsztyn County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-east of Przemęt, 20 km south-east of Wolsztyn, and 56 km south-west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 646.", "Kluczewo-Huby\n Kluczewo-Huby is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ostroróg, within Szamotuły County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 2 km east of Ostroróg, 8 km north-west of Szamotuły, and 39 km north-west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 80.", "Klukowo, Wysokie Mazowieckie County\n Klukowo is a village in Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Klukowo. It lies approximately 17 km south of Wysokie Mazowieckie and 60 km south-west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 610." ]
What is Jesús the capital of?
[ "Lauricocha Province" ]
capital of
Jesús, Peru
351,646
66
[ { "id": "8051479", "title": "Ecclesiastical capital", "text": " The religious capital or ecclesiastical capital of a region is a place considered pre-eminent by the adherents of a particular religion within that region. This is most often significant for the region's predominant religion or state religion, if any. The administrative headquarters of an organised religion may be centralised in a particular location; for example, Rome for the Catholic Church, or Salt Lake City for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In an episcopal church, the site of the cathedral of the primate bishop of an area may be considered its ecclesiastical capital; for example, Armagh is the seat of the primate of All Ireland in both the Catholic church and the Anglican church. Other places may be considered religious capitals by being centres of learning, such as Qom for Shia Islam in Iran; or places of pilgrimage, such as Jerusalem for the Abrahamic religions and Varanasi for Hinduism.", "score": "1.4106193" }, { "id": "11192417", "title": "The Visual Bible: Matthew", "text": " In Israel/Palestine/Jordan, then known as Judea (Roman province) of the Roman Empire, Jesus Christ of Nazareth travels around the country with his disciples preaching to the people about God and salvation of their souls. He claims to be the son of God and the Messiah. He is arrested by the Romans and crucified. He rises from the dead after three days.", "score": "1.367733" }, { "id": "11964881", "title": "Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament", "text": " to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 1:1-7, ESV).\"According to the Apostle Paul, the unjust death of the Son of God and His resurrection from the dead result in grace, peace, and an increasing faithful obedience among all nations through the proclamation of the Gospel. The Kingdom of the Son of David, Jesus Christ, is portrayed in the New Testament as being current as He reigns at the right hand of the Father (Hebrews 8:1; Revelation 2:26-27; 20:4-6). It should be no surprise to anyone familiar with the Scriptures that the Throne of the LORD is the ", "score": "1.3612092" }, { "id": "9775851", "title": "Christmas with a Capital C", "text": " Christmas with a Capital C is a 2010 American Christian drama direct-to-DVD film directed by Helmut Schleppi. The film's plot was based on a song of the same name by Christian band Go Fish, whose name was inspired by one of actor Brad Stine's stand-up comedy routines. It centers on what, in recent years, has been dubbed the \"War on Christmas\" in the United States.", "score": "1.3486245" }, { "id": "25530709", "title": "Triumphal entry into Jerusalem", "text": " On his entry into the city, Matthew's account suggests that Jesus evoked great excitement - \"all the city was moved\". The people of the city asked \"Who is this?\" and \"the multitudes\" answered, \"This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth of Galilee”. In Jesus and Judaism (1985), E. P. Sanders asked: 'If the entry was what we are told itwas, why did it take so long for the Romans to execute Jesus?' A large-scale event as portrayed in the Gospels, in which Jesus is loudly proclaimed to be the (future) king of Israel, would have been an act of rebellion that the ", "score": "1.3437792" }, { "id": "27636510", "title": "Capital Kings", "text": "GMA Dove Awards ", "score": "1.3422276" }, { "id": "6037657", "title": "New Administrative Capital", "text": " The Nativity of Christ is a mega-cathedral, the largest of its kind in Egypt and the Middle East.", "score": "1.3401212" }, { "id": "11964876", "title": "Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament", "text": " of the Living God\" (Matthew 16:13), the Son of the Virgin and as God with us (Matthew 1:23). So in Orthodox Christian theology, Jesus Christ is both Most High and Son of Man, whose mystical Body is the Church, and \"of His Kingdom there shall be no end\" (Luke 1:33; Nicene Creed). According to Christian theology, the faithful of Christ will reign with Him over sin, death, and corruption both in this life and in the next (Romans 5:17; 2 Timothy 2:12). This unfolding kingdom is held by Christians to be the fulfillment of the Son-of-Man vision recorded in Daniel 7.", "score": "1.32951" }, { "id": "27899007", "title": "Caput Mundi", "text": " was seen as the \"Capital of the World\" because of its prime trading position in the center of the medieval world. This privileged position continued after its Islamic conquest, even as the capital of the Ottoman Empire. The Patriarch of Constantinople has been designated Ecumenical Patriarch since the sixth century, and has come to be regarded as the leader of the today 300 million Orthodox Christians. Today, the city's name is Istanbul, based in Turkey. It is a megacity of 15 million people and the economic and cultural centre of Turkey, but not the capital, which is Ankara. Istanbul is one of the largest cities in the world.", "score": "1.3219337" }, { "id": "26070944", "title": "Threefold office", "text": " The Catechism of the Catholic Church states: \"Jesus fulfilled the messianic hope of Israel in his threefold office of priest, prophet, and king.\" In his 5th century Gospel harmony book Harmony of the Gospels Saint Augustine viewed the variations in the gospel accounts in terms of the different focuses of the authors on Jesus: Matthew on royalty, Mark on humanity, Luke on priesthood and John on divinity.", "score": "1.3196924" }, { "id": "12562909", "title": "Jesus, King of the Jews", "text": " Jesus, the title \"King of the Jews\" leads to charges against Jesus that result in his crucifixion. The initialism INRI (Iēsus Nazarēnus, Rēx Iūdaeōrum) represents the Latin inscription (in John 19:19), which in English translates to \"Jesus the Nazarene, King of the Jews\", and John 19:20 states that this was written in three languages—Hebrew, Latin, and Greek—during the crucifixion of Jesus. The title \"King of the Jews\" is only used in the New Testament by gentiles, namely by the Magi, Pontius Pilate, and the Roman soldiers. In contrast, the Jewish leaders use the designation \"Christ\", which means \"Messiah\" Although the phrase \"King of the Jews\" is used in most English translations, it has also been translated \"King of the Judeans\" (see Ioudaioi).", "score": "1.3169651" }, { "id": "29408357", "title": "Tourism in Israel", "text": "Nazareth is known as the 'Arab capital of Israel'. ; Visit Nazareth's old city and historical sites around the city ; Jesus's hometown and the site of many of his reported acts and miracles. ; Many churches, including The Church of the Annunciation, the largest church building in the Middle East. In Roman Catholic tradition, it marks the site where the Archangel Gabriel announced the future birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary (Luke 1:26–31). ; Starting point for the Jesus Trail, a network of hiking routes connecting many sites from Jesus's life and ministry. ", "score": "1.3139675" }, { "id": "10010988", "title": "!Hero", "text": " !HERO is a rock opera modernizing Jesus's last two years of life, as narrated in the Bible. The story takes place in New York City, in Brooklyn. The world government in this near-future dystopic Earth is centered under the International Confederation of Nations (I.C.O.N.). Under the iron fist of I.C.O.N., nearly all religion in the world has been wiped out, except for small occult and mystic sects. Only one synagogue in Brooklyn exists. Currently, New York City is a police-occupied warzone between ethnic gangs and small, isolated revolutionary groups fighting I.C.O.N. Of all the ancient world religions, only Judaism survives and flourishes, at least, as much as it can. In Bethlehem, Pensilvania, a child named Jesus, but referred to as Hero, is born and forced to flee with his family to the small Jewish section of Brooklyn. Jesus grows up and begins ", "score": "1.3137364" }, { "id": "12562908", "title": "Jesus, King of the Jews", "text": " In the New Testament, Jesus is referred to as the King of the Jews (or King of the Judeans), both at the beginning of his life and at the end. In the Koine Greek of the New Testament, e.g., in John 19:3, this is written as Basileus ton Ioudaion (βασιλεὺς τῶν Ἰουδαίων). Both uses of the title lead to dramatic results in the New Testament accounts. In the account of the nativity of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew, the Biblical Magi who come from the east call Jesus the \"King of the Jews\", causing Herod the Great to order the Massacre of the Innocents. Towards the end of the accounts of all four canonical Gospels, in the narrative of the Passion ", "score": "1.313282" }, { "id": "15064820", "title": "A Capital", "text": " A Capital (meaning The Capital [City] in English) was a Portuguese afternoon newspaper published in Lisbon, Portugal, between 1968 and 2005.", "score": "1.3117256" }, { "id": "32759982", "title": "Jesus", "text": " Jesus (c. 4 BC – AD 30 / 33), also referred to as Jesus of Nazareth or Jesus Christ, is the central figure of Christianity, the world's largest religion. He was a first-century Jewish preacher and religious leader. Most Christians believe he is the incarnation of God the Son and the awaited messiah (the Christ), in the Hebrew Bible. Virtually all modern scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed historically. The quest for the historical Jesus has yielded some uncertainty on the historical reliability of the Gospels and on how closely the Jesus portrayed in the New Testament reflects the historical Jesus, as the only records of Jesus' life are contained in the Gospels. Jesus was a Galilean Jew, who was baptized by ", "score": "1.3115555" }, { "id": "2451270", "title": "Jesus in Manichaeism", "text": " In Manichaeism, Jesus (Romanization of Parthian and Pahlavi: Yyšw '[Yišō] ) is considered one of the four prophets of this religion, along with Zoroaster, Gautama Buddha and Mani. is also a \"Guiding deity\" who greets the light bodies of the righteous after their deliverance. Before the introduction of Manichaeism to Central Asia, the number of prophets recognized by it was undetermined. After being introduced to Central Asia, it was determined to be five, that is, the above-mentioned four prophets plus the Hindu god Narayana, because Hinduism had a great influence in ancient Central Asia. Mani, the founder of the church, grew up in ", "score": "1.308316" }, { "id": "6506959", "title": "The Gospel According to St. Matthew (film)", "text": " In Galilee during the Roman Empire, Jesus of Nazareth travels around the country with his disciples, healing the blind, raising the dead, exorcising demons and proclaiming the arrival of the Kingdom of God and the salvation of Israel. He claims to be the Son of God and so, therefore, the prophesied Messiah of Israel, which brings him into direct confrontation with the Jewish temple leaders. He is arrested, handed over to the Romans and charged with sedition against the Roman state, of which he is declared innocent by the Roman governor of Judea, but is, nevertheless, crucified at the behest of the Temple leaders. He rises from the dead after three days.", "score": "1.3081586" }, { "id": "3391359", "title": "Capital Kings (album)", "text": " Capital Kings is the first studio album by Christian electronic pop band Capital Kings. The album was released on January 8, 2013 and with Gotee Records. Three songs on Capital Kings were released on their EP I Feel So Alive on September 25, 2012.", "score": "1.3076606" }, { "id": "32759996", "title": "Jesus", "text": " few of Jesus' words or teachings. The Gospel of Matthew emphasizes that Jesus is the fulfillment of God's will as revealed in the Old Testament, and the Lord of the Church. He is the \"Son of David\", a \"king\", and the messiah. Luke presents Jesus as the divine-human savior who shows compassion to the needy. He is the friend of sinners and outcasts, come to seek and save the lost. This gospel includes well-known parables, such as the Good Samaritan and the Prodigal Son. The prologue to the Gospel of John identifies Jesus as an incarnation of the divine Word (Logos). As the Word, ", "score": "1.303578" } ]
[ "Ecclesiastical capital\n The religious capital or ecclesiastical capital of a region is a place considered pre-eminent by the adherents of a particular religion within that region. This is most often significant for the region's predominant religion or state religion, if any. The administrative headquarters of an organised religion may be centralised in a particular location; for example, Rome for the Catholic Church, or Salt Lake City for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In an episcopal church, the site of the cathedral of the primate bishop of an area may be considered its ecclesiastical capital; for example, Armagh is the seat of the primate of All Ireland in both the Catholic church and the Anglican church. Other places may be considered religious capitals by being centres of learning, such as Qom for Shia Islam in Iran; or places of pilgrimage, such as Jerusalem for the Abrahamic religions and Varanasi for Hinduism.", "The Visual Bible: Matthew\n In Israel/Palestine/Jordan, then known as Judea (Roman province) of the Roman Empire, Jesus Christ of Nazareth travels around the country with his disciples preaching to the people about God and salvation of their souls. He claims to be the son of God and the Messiah. He is arrested by the Romans and crucified. He rises from the dead after three days.", "Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament\n to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 1:1-7, ESV).\"According to the Apostle Paul, the unjust death of the Son of God and His resurrection from the dead result in grace, peace, and an increasing faithful obedience among all nations through the proclamation of the Gospel. The Kingdom of the Son of David, Jesus Christ, is portrayed in the New Testament as being current as He reigns at the right hand of the Father (Hebrews 8:1; Revelation 2:26-27; 20:4-6). It should be no surprise to anyone familiar with the Scriptures that the Throne of the LORD is the ", "Christmas with a Capital C\n Christmas with a Capital C is a 2010 American Christian drama direct-to-DVD film directed by Helmut Schleppi. The film's plot was based on a song of the same name by Christian band Go Fish, whose name was inspired by one of actor Brad Stine's stand-up comedy routines. It centers on what, in recent years, has been dubbed the \"War on Christmas\" in the United States.", "Triumphal entry into Jerusalem\n On his entry into the city, Matthew's account suggests that Jesus evoked great excitement - \"all the city was moved\". The people of the city asked \"Who is this?\" and \"the multitudes\" answered, \"This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth of Galilee”. In Jesus and Judaism (1985), E. P. Sanders asked: 'If the entry was what we are told itwas, why did it take so long for the Romans to execute Jesus?' A large-scale event as portrayed in the Gospels, in which Jesus is loudly proclaimed to be the (future) king of Israel, would have been an act of rebellion that the ", "Capital Kings\nGMA Dove Awards ", "New Administrative Capital\n The Nativity of Christ is a mega-cathedral, the largest of its kind in Egypt and the Middle East.", "Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament\n of the Living God\" (Matthew 16:13), the Son of the Virgin and as God with us (Matthew 1:23). So in Orthodox Christian theology, Jesus Christ is both Most High and Son of Man, whose mystical Body is the Church, and \"of His Kingdom there shall be no end\" (Luke 1:33; Nicene Creed). According to Christian theology, the faithful of Christ will reign with Him over sin, death, and corruption both in this life and in the next (Romans 5:17; 2 Timothy 2:12). This unfolding kingdom is held by Christians to be the fulfillment of the Son-of-Man vision recorded in Daniel 7.", "Caput Mundi\n was seen as the \"Capital of the World\" because of its prime trading position in the center of the medieval world. This privileged position continued after its Islamic conquest, even as the capital of the Ottoman Empire. The Patriarch of Constantinople has been designated Ecumenical Patriarch since the sixth century, and has come to be regarded as the leader of the today 300 million Orthodox Christians. Today, the city's name is Istanbul, based in Turkey. It is a megacity of 15 million people and the economic and cultural centre of Turkey, but not the capital, which is Ankara. Istanbul is one of the largest cities in the world.", "Threefold office\n The Catechism of the Catholic Church states: \"Jesus fulfilled the messianic hope of Israel in his threefold office of priest, prophet, and king.\" In his 5th century Gospel harmony book Harmony of the Gospels Saint Augustine viewed the variations in the gospel accounts in terms of the different focuses of the authors on Jesus: Matthew on royalty, Mark on humanity, Luke on priesthood and John on divinity.", "Jesus, King of the Jews\n Jesus, the title \"King of the Jews\" leads to charges against Jesus that result in his crucifixion. The initialism INRI (Iēsus Nazarēnus, Rēx Iūdaeōrum) represents the Latin inscription (in John 19:19), which in English translates to \"Jesus the Nazarene, King of the Jews\", and John 19:20 states that this was written in three languages—Hebrew, Latin, and Greek—during the crucifixion of Jesus. The title \"King of the Jews\" is only used in the New Testament by gentiles, namely by the Magi, Pontius Pilate, and the Roman soldiers. In contrast, the Jewish leaders use the designation \"Christ\", which means \"Messiah\" Although the phrase \"King of the Jews\" is used in most English translations, it has also been translated \"King of the Judeans\" (see Ioudaioi).", "Tourism in Israel\nNazareth is known as the 'Arab capital of Israel'. ; Visit Nazareth's old city and historical sites around the city ; Jesus's hometown and the site of many of his reported acts and miracles. ; Many churches, including The Church of the Annunciation, the largest church building in the Middle East. In Roman Catholic tradition, it marks the site where the Archangel Gabriel announced the future birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary (Luke 1:26–31). ; Starting point for the Jesus Trail, a network of hiking routes connecting many sites from Jesus's life and ministry. ", "!Hero\n !HERO is a rock opera modernizing Jesus's last two years of life, as narrated in the Bible. The story takes place in New York City, in Brooklyn. The world government in this near-future dystopic Earth is centered under the International Confederation of Nations (I.C.O.N.). Under the iron fist of I.C.O.N., nearly all religion in the world has been wiped out, except for small occult and mystic sects. Only one synagogue in Brooklyn exists. Currently, New York City is a police-occupied warzone between ethnic gangs and small, isolated revolutionary groups fighting I.C.O.N. Of all the ancient world religions, only Judaism survives and flourishes, at least, as much as it can. In Bethlehem, Pensilvania, a child named Jesus, but referred to as Hero, is born and forced to flee with his family to the small Jewish section of Brooklyn. Jesus grows up and begins ", "Jesus, King of the Jews\n In the New Testament, Jesus is referred to as the King of the Jews (or King of the Judeans), both at the beginning of his life and at the end. In the Koine Greek of the New Testament, e.g., in John 19:3, this is written as Basileus ton Ioudaion (βασιλεὺς τῶν Ἰουδαίων). Both uses of the title lead to dramatic results in the New Testament accounts. In the account of the nativity of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew, the Biblical Magi who come from the east call Jesus the \"King of the Jews\", causing Herod the Great to order the Massacre of the Innocents. Towards the end of the accounts of all four canonical Gospels, in the narrative of the Passion ", "A Capital\n A Capital (meaning The Capital [City] in English) was a Portuguese afternoon newspaper published in Lisbon, Portugal, between 1968 and 2005.", "Jesus\n Jesus (c. 4 BC – AD 30 / 33), also referred to as Jesus of Nazareth or Jesus Christ, is the central figure of Christianity, the world's largest religion. He was a first-century Jewish preacher and religious leader. Most Christians believe he is the incarnation of God the Son and the awaited messiah (the Christ), in the Hebrew Bible. Virtually all modern scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed historically. The quest for the historical Jesus has yielded some uncertainty on the historical reliability of the Gospels and on how closely the Jesus portrayed in the New Testament reflects the historical Jesus, as the only records of Jesus' life are contained in the Gospels. Jesus was a Galilean Jew, who was baptized by ", "Jesus in Manichaeism\n In Manichaeism, Jesus (Romanization of Parthian and Pahlavi: Yyšw '[Yišō] ) is considered one of the four prophets of this religion, along with Zoroaster, Gautama Buddha and Mani. is also a \"Guiding deity\" who greets the light bodies of the righteous after their deliverance. Before the introduction of Manichaeism to Central Asia, the number of prophets recognized by it was undetermined. After being introduced to Central Asia, it was determined to be five, that is, the above-mentioned four prophets plus the Hindu god Narayana, because Hinduism had a great influence in ancient Central Asia. Mani, the founder of the church, grew up in ", "The Gospel According to St. Matthew (film)\n In Galilee during the Roman Empire, Jesus of Nazareth travels around the country with his disciples, healing the blind, raising the dead, exorcising demons and proclaiming the arrival of the Kingdom of God and the salvation of Israel. He claims to be the Son of God and so, therefore, the prophesied Messiah of Israel, which brings him into direct confrontation with the Jewish temple leaders. He is arrested, handed over to the Romans and charged with sedition against the Roman state, of which he is declared innocent by the Roman governor of Judea, but is, nevertheless, crucified at the behest of the Temple leaders. He rises from the dead after three days.", "Capital Kings (album)\n Capital Kings is the first studio album by Christian electronic pop band Capital Kings. The album was released on January 8, 2013 and with Gotee Records. Three songs on Capital Kings were released on their EP I Feel So Alive on September 25, 2012.", "Jesus\n few of Jesus' words or teachings. The Gospel of Matthew emphasizes that Jesus is the fulfillment of God's will as revealed in the Old Testament, and the Lord of the Church. He is the \"Son of David\", a \"king\", and the messiah. Luke presents Jesus as the divine-human savior who shows compassion to the needy. He is the friend of sinners and outcasts, come to seek and save the lost. This gospel includes well-known parables, such as the Good Samaritan and the Prodigal Son. The prologue to the Gospel of John identifies Jesus as an incarnation of the divine Word (Logos). As the Word, " ]
What is Bolsheustyikinskoye the capital of?
[ "Mechetlinsky District" ]
capital of
Bolsheustyikinskoye
2,835,247
73
[ { "id": "30746814", "title": "Bolsheustyikinskoye", "text": " Bolsheustyikinskoye (Большеустьикинское, Оло Ыҡтамаҡ) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Mechetlinsky District in Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located near the Ay River. Population:", "score": "1.6684371" }, { "id": "11533240", "title": "Bolsheuluysky District", "text": " The Head of the District and the Chairman of the District Council is Sergey A. Lyubkin.", "score": "1.5382111" }, { "id": "5942742", "title": "Bolshiye Vyazyomy", "text": " Bolshiye Vyaziomy or Bolshye Vyazemye (Большие Вязёмы) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) in Odintsovsky District of Moscow Oblast, Russia. The population is Vjazjomy is the location of Vyazyomy Manor owned by members of the Golitsyn family. Both Kutuzov and Napoleon Bonaparte slept in the main manor house (on the same sofa in the library) only one day apart; Napoleon left the day before the French entered Moscow. The manor and two outbuildings remain to this day.", "score": "1.5182362" }, { "id": "9946142", "title": "Bolshoy Dom", "text": " Bolshoy Dom (Большой дом, lit. the Big House) is an office building located at 4 Liteyny Avenue in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It is the headquarters of the local Saint Petersburg and Leningrad Oblast branches of the Federal Security Service of Russia (FSB) and Main Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. The building is located in the Central District of Saint Petersburg at the beginning of Liteyny Prospekt, one block from the Neva River, at the site of Imperial Russian Old Armoury Building which burned down in 1917. It was originally constructed in 1931–32 for the Joint State Political Directorate (OGPU), the secret police of the Soviet Union at the ", "score": "1.5147415" }, { "id": "32888589", "title": "Bolsherechye, Omsk Oblast", "text": " The Bolsheretsky fortress was founded on the Irtysh as a barrier for defense from invasions in 1627. Bolsherechye is located about half-way between Omsk and Tara and is a convenient stopping point for many automobile and river travelers, including those on package tours of the region.", "score": "1.5069227" }, { "id": "11533239", "title": "Bolsheuluysky District", "text": " The district was founded on April 4, 1924.", "score": "1.5029936" }, { "id": "4119638", "title": "Bolsheselsky District", "text": " Bolsheselsky District (Большесе́льский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the seventeen in Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia. It is located in the center of the oblast. The area of the district is 1353 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshoye Selo. Population: 9,906 (2010 Census); The population of Bolshoye Selo accounts for 35.6% of the district's total population.", "score": "1.5025163" }, { "id": "4119789", "title": "Bolshesoldatsky District", "text": " Bolshesoldatsky District (Большесолда́тский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-eight in Kursk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the south of the oblast. The area of the district is 800 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshoye Soldatskoye. Population: 14,636 (2002 Census); The population of Bolshoye Soldatskoye accounts for 21.1% of the district's total population.", "score": "1.4883146" }, { "id": "899673", "title": "Bolsheozyorka", "text": " Bolsheozyorka is located near the left bank of the Ivanovka River, 13 km northeast of Ivanovka (the district's administrative centre) by road. Lugovoye is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.4882979" }, { "id": "9282373", "title": "Mechetlinsky District", "text": " Mechetlinsky District (Мечетли́нский райо́н; Мәсетле районы) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-four in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located in the northeast of the republic and borders with Sverdlovsk Oblast in the north, Belokataysky District in the east, Kiginsky District in the southeast, and with Duvansky District in the south and west. The area of the district is 1556.67 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolsheustyikinskoye. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 25,032, with the population of Bolsheustyikinskoye accounting for 31.3% of that number.", "score": "1.4875858" }, { "id": "8040359", "title": "Bolshevistskaya Street, Novosibirsk", "text": " Bolshevistskaya Street (Большевистская улица) is a street in Oktyabrsky City District of Novosibirsk, Russia. It starts from the road junction called Engineer Budagov Square, runs southeast along the right bank of the Ob River and ends near the bridge over the Inya River. The length of the street is more than 7 km. Bolshevistskaya Street is one of the most important traffic arteries of the city, besides it is part of the Federal Highway R256.", "score": "1.4864184" }, { "id": "7364479", "title": "List of capitals outside the territories they serve", "text": " special status of capital ; Moscow, Russia – capital of Moscow Oblast, itself a federal city ; Oslo, Norway – administration headquarters of Akershus county, itself a separate county ; Prague, Czech Republic – capital of Central Bohemian Region, Prague-West District and Prague-East District, itself an administrative unit on its own ; Saint Petersburg, Russia – capital of the Leningrad Oblast, itself a federal city ; Sofia, Bulgaria – capital of the Sofia Province, itself an administrative unit (oblast) on its own ; Vilnius, Lithuania - capital of Vilnius district municipality, itself an separate administrative unit (urban municipality). ; Zagreb, Croatia – Capital of Zagreb County, itself administratively separate ", "score": "1.4834234" }, { "id": "4225168", "title": "Bolsheukovsky District", "text": " Bolsheukovsky District (Большеуко́вский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the thirty-two in Omsk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northwest of the oblast. The area of the district is 9500 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshiye Uki. Population: 8,174 (2010 Census); The population of Bolshiye Uki accounts for 50.9% of the district's total population.", "score": "1.4812425" }, { "id": "213909", "title": "Bolshevo", "text": " Bolshevo (Болшево) is the area of the city of Korolyov (an industrial city in Moscow Oblast, Russia, well known as the cradle of Soviet and Russian space exploration), the historical part of it. It was founded as an independent town in 1573. It is best known as giving the name of Bolshevo railway station which is located on Yaroslavsky suburban railway line, Moscow. In 2019 the exhibition Station Bolshevo: the crossroads of fate, 1939 commemorated a notebook of the poet Marina Tsvetaeva which contains translations she made of 12 poems by Mikhail Lermontov into French whilst in Bolshevo. A second notebook belonging to Sergei Durylin was also featured. This contained chapters from his book In His Own Corner which covered his stay in Bolshevo, also in 1939.", "score": "1.4767933" }, { "id": "27497385", "title": "Bolshoy Beryozovy Island", "text": " Bolshoy Beryozovy (Большой Берёзовый; Koivistonsaari), alternatively spelled Bolshoy Berezovy, is the largest of the Beryozovye Islands in the Gulf of Finland in Leningrad Oblast, Russia. The island is situated near the Karelian Isthmus, outside the town of Primorsk.", "score": "1.4758532" }, { "id": "7983054", "title": "Bolshebereznikovsky District", "text": " Bolshebereznikovsky District (Большеберезнико́вский райо́н; ; ) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-two in the Republic of Mordovia, Russia. It is located in the southeast of the republic. The area of the district is 957.7 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshiye Berezniki. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 14,072, with the population of Bolshiye Berezniki accounting for 45.4% of that number.", "score": "1.473418" }, { "id": "31632623", "title": "Bolshevichka", "text": " Bolshevichka or Bolshevitchka (Большевичка, literally: \"female Bolshevik\") is a clothes factory in Moscow. It was launched on November 16, 1929. The current official name of the enterprise is \"Moscow Public Company 'Bolshevichka'\" (Московское Открытое Акционерное Общество \"БОЛЬШЕВИЧКА\", or МОАО \"Большевичка\"). In 1966, it was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour. Bolshevichka was one of the largest manufacturers of menswear in the Soviet Union.", "score": "1.471478" }, { "id": "11533238", "title": "Bolsheuluysky District", "text": " Bolsheuluysky District (Большеулу́йский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the forty-three in Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia. It is located in the southwest of the krai and borders with Birilyussky District in the north, Kozulsky District in the east, Achinsky District in the south, Bogotolsky District in the southwest, and with Tyukhtetsky District in the west. The area of the district is 2708 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshoy Uluy. Population: 8,948 (2002 Census); The population of Bolshoy Uluy accounts for 43.6% of the district's total population.", "score": "1.4693513" }, { "id": "5942743", "title": "Bolshiye Vyazyomy", "text": " The present settlement dates back to the village of the same name, which was first mentioned in 1526 as a relay station. It was the penultimate horse changing station on the postal and travel route from the west to Moscow. (The next one was in Dorogomilovo; and it is often mentioned in the business letters of that time, related to the arrival of foreign ambassadors.) In the 16th century Bolshiye Vyaziomy was the family estate of Boris Godunov, and later the country palace of False Dmitry I, who turned the estate into a place of entertainment and organized 'jolly battles'. A unique monument of architecture of XVI century is a ", "score": "1.4681935" }, { "id": "25783417", "title": "Beloselsky-Belozersky Palace", "text": " Beloselsky Belozersky Palace (Russian: Дворе́ц Белосе́льских-Белозе́рских; also known before the Revolution as the Palace of the Grand Duchess Elizabeth Fyodorovna, the Sergei Palace, and the Dmitry Palace) is a Neo-Baroque palace at the intersection of the Fontanka River and Nevsky Prospekt in Saint Petersburg, Russia.", "score": "1.4670854" } ]
[ "Bolsheustyikinskoye\n Bolsheustyikinskoye (Большеустьикинское, Оло Ыҡтамаҡ) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Mechetlinsky District in Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located near the Ay River. Population:", "Bolsheuluysky District\n The Head of the District and the Chairman of the District Council is Sergey A. Lyubkin.", "Bolshiye Vyazyomy\n Bolshiye Vyaziomy or Bolshye Vyazemye (Большие Вязёмы) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) in Odintsovsky District of Moscow Oblast, Russia. The population is Vjazjomy is the location of Vyazyomy Manor owned by members of the Golitsyn family. Both Kutuzov and Napoleon Bonaparte slept in the main manor house (on the same sofa in the library) only one day apart; Napoleon left the day before the French entered Moscow. The manor and two outbuildings remain to this day.", "Bolshoy Dom\n Bolshoy Dom (Большой дом, lit. the Big House) is an office building located at 4 Liteyny Avenue in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It is the headquarters of the local Saint Petersburg and Leningrad Oblast branches of the Federal Security Service of Russia (FSB) and Main Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. The building is located in the Central District of Saint Petersburg at the beginning of Liteyny Prospekt, one block from the Neva River, at the site of Imperial Russian Old Armoury Building which burned down in 1917. It was originally constructed in 1931–32 for the Joint State Political Directorate (OGPU), the secret police of the Soviet Union at the ", "Bolsherechye, Omsk Oblast\n The Bolsheretsky fortress was founded on the Irtysh as a barrier for defense from invasions in 1627. Bolsherechye is located about half-way between Omsk and Tara and is a convenient stopping point for many automobile and river travelers, including those on package tours of the region.", "Bolsheuluysky District\n The district was founded on April 4, 1924.", "Bolsheselsky District\n Bolsheselsky District (Большесе́льский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the seventeen in Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia. It is located in the center of the oblast. The area of the district is 1353 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshoye Selo. Population: 9,906 (2010 Census); The population of Bolshoye Selo accounts for 35.6% of the district's total population.", "Bolshesoldatsky District\n Bolshesoldatsky District (Большесолда́тский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-eight in Kursk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the south of the oblast. The area of the district is 800 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshoye Soldatskoye. Population: 14,636 (2002 Census); The population of Bolshoye Soldatskoye accounts for 21.1% of the district's total population.", "Bolsheozyorka\n Bolsheozyorka is located near the left bank of the Ivanovka River, 13 km northeast of Ivanovka (the district's administrative centre) by road. Lugovoye is the nearest rural locality.", "Mechetlinsky District\n Mechetlinsky District (Мечетли́нский райо́н; Мәсетле районы) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-four in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located in the northeast of the republic and borders with Sverdlovsk Oblast in the north, Belokataysky District in the east, Kiginsky District in the southeast, and with Duvansky District in the south and west. The area of the district is 1556.67 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolsheustyikinskoye. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 25,032, with the population of Bolsheustyikinskoye accounting for 31.3% of that number.", "Bolshevistskaya Street, Novosibirsk\n Bolshevistskaya Street (Большевистская улица) is a street in Oktyabrsky City District of Novosibirsk, Russia. It starts from the road junction called Engineer Budagov Square, runs southeast along the right bank of the Ob River and ends near the bridge over the Inya River. The length of the street is more than 7 km. Bolshevistskaya Street is one of the most important traffic arteries of the city, besides it is part of the Federal Highway R256.", "List of capitals outside the territories they serve\n special status of capital ; Moscow, Russia – capital of Moscow Oblast, itself a federal city ; Oslo, Norway – administration headquarters of Akershus county, itself a separate county ; Prague, Czech Republic – capital of Central Bohemian Region, Prague-West District and Prague-East District, itself an administrative unit on its own ; Saint Petersburg, Russia – capital of the Leningrad Oblast, itself a federal city ; Sofia, Bulgaria – capital of the Sofia Province, itself an administrative unit (oblast) on its own ; Vilnius, Lithuania - capital of Vilnius district municipality, itself an separate administrative unit (urban municipality). ; Zagreb, Croatia – Capital of Zagreb County, itself administratively separate ", "Bolsheukovsky District\n Bolsheukovsky District (Большеуко́вский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the thirty-two in Omsk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northwest of the oblast. The area of the district is 9500 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshiye Uki. Population: 8,174 (2010 Census); The population of Bolshiye Uki accounts for 50.9% of the district's total population.", "Bolshevo\n Bolshevo (Болшево) is the area of the city of Korolyov (an industrial city in Moscow Oblast, Russia, well known as the cradle of Soviet and Russian space exploration), the historical part of it. It was founded as an independent town in 1573. It is best known as giving the name of Bolshevo railway station which is located on Yaroslavsky suburban railway line, Moscow. In 2019 the exhibition Station Bolshevo: the crossroads of fate, 1939 commemorated a notebook of the poet Marina Tsvetaeva which contains translations she made of 12 poems by Mikhail Lermontov into French whilst in Bolshevo. A second notebook belonging to Sergei Durylin was also featured. This contained chapters from his book In His Own Corner which covered his stay in Bolshevo, also in 1939.", "Bolshoy Beryozovy Island\n Bolshoy Beryozovy (Большой Берёзовый; Koivistonsaari), alternatively spelled Bolshoy Berezovy, is the largest of the Beryozovye Islands in the Gulf of Finland in Leningrad Oblast, Russia. The island is situated near the Karelian Isthmus, outside the town of Primorsk.", "Bolshebereznikovsky District\n Bolshebereznikovsky District (Большеберезнико́вский райо́н; ; ) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-two in the Republic of Mordovia, Russia. It is located in the southeast of the republic. The area of the district is 957.7 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshiye Berezniki. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 14,072, with the population of Bolshiye Berezniki accounting for 45.4% of that number.", "Bolshevichka\n Bolshevichka or Bolshevitchka (Большевичка, literally: \"female Bolshevik\") is a clothes factory in Moscow. It was launched on November 16, 1929. The current official name of the enterprise is \"Moscow Public Company 'Bolshevichka'\" (Московское Открытое Акционерное Общество \"БОЛЬШЕВИЧКА\", or МОАО \"Большевичка\"). In 1966, it was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour. Bolshevichka was one of the largest manufacturers of menswear in the Soviet Union.", "Bolsheuluysky District\n Bolsheuluysky District (Большеулу́йский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the forty-three in Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia. It is located in the southwest of the krai and borders with Birilyussky District in the north, Kozulsky District in the east, Achinsky District in the south, Bogotolsky District in the southwest, and with Tyukhtetsky District in the west. The area of the district is 2708 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Bolshoy Uluy. Population: 8,948 (2002 Census); The population of Bolshoy Uluy accounts for 43.6% of the district's total population.", "Bolshiye Vyazyomy\n The present settlement dates back to the village of the same name, which was first mentioned in 1526 as a relay station. It was the penultimate horse changing station on the postal and travel route from the west to Moscow. (The next one was in Dorogomilovo; and it is often mentioned in the business letters of that time, related to the arrival of foreign ambassadors.) In the 16th century Bolshiye Vyaziomy was the family estate of Boris Godunov, and later the country palace of False Dmitry I, who turned the estate into a place of entertainment and organized 'jolly battles'. A unique monument of architecture of XVI century is a ", "Beloselsky-Belozersky Palace\n Beloselsky Belozersky Palace (Russian: Дворе́ц Белосе́льских-Белозе́рских; also known before the Revolution as the Palace of the Grand Duchess Elizabeth Fyodorovna, the Sergei Palace, and the Dmitry Palace) is a Neo-Baroque palace at the intersection of the Fontanka River and Nevsky Prospekt in Saint Petersburg, Russia." ]
What is Dmitriyev the capital of?
[ "Dmitriyevsky District" ]
capital of
Dmitriyev (town)
5,482,101
98
[ { "id": "27184047", "title": "Dmitriyev (town)", "text": " Dmitriyev (Дми́триев), also known as Dmitriyev-Lgovsky (Дми́триев-Льго́вский), is a town and the administrative center of Dmitriyevsky District of Kursk Oblast, Russia, located on the Svapa River (Dnieper's basin), on the Moscow–Kyiv highway, 159 km northwest of Kursk, the administrative center of the oblast. Population:", "score": "1.6069942" }, { "id": "27184050", "title": "Dmitriyev (town)", "text": " Within the framework of administrative divisions, Dmitriyev serves as the administrative center of Dmitriyevsky District. As an administrative division, it is incorporated within Dmitriyevsky District as the town of district significance of Dmitriyev. As a municipal division, the town of district significance of Dmitriyev is incorporated within Dmitriyevsky Municipal District as Dmitriyev Urban Settlement.", "score": "1.5926844" }, { "id": "4119793", "title": "Dmitriyevsky District", "text": " Dmitriyevsky District (Дми́триевский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-eight in Kursk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northwest of the oblast. The area of the district is 1270 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Dmitriyev. Population: 22,420 (2002 Census); The population of Dmitriyev accounts for 42.7% of the district's total population.", "score": "1.5816585" }, { "id": "27184049", "title": "Dmitriyev (town)", "text": " During World War II, Dmitriyev was occupied by German troops from October 8, 1941 to March 2, 1943.", "score": "1.5439122" }, { "id": "4119794", "title": "Dmitriyevsky District", "text": " Dmitriyevsky District is located in the northwest of Kursk Oblast, on the border with Bryansk Oblast to the north. The terrain is hilly plain dissected by ravines; there are 81 rivers and streams in the district, which lies on the Central Russian Upland. The main river in the district is the Svapa River, which flows southwest into the Seym River. The district is 65 km northwest of the city of Kursk, and 420 km southwest of Moscow The area measures 51 km (north-south), and 53 km (west-east). The administrative center is the town of Dmitriev. The district is bordered on the north by Komarichsky District and Sevsky District of Bryansk Oblast, on the east by Zheleznogorsky District, on the south by Konyshyovsky District, and on the west by Khomutovsky District.", "score": "1.531317" }, { "id": "9141629", "title": "Dmitriyevsky, Republic of Adygea", "text": " Dmitriyevsky (Дмитриевский) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Dmitriyevskoye Rural Settlement of Koshekhablsky District, Adygea, Russia. The population of this khutor was 479 as of 2018. There are 9 streets.", "score": "1.4704995" }, { "id": "8192465", "title": "List of cities and towns in Russia by population", "text": " Cities in bold symbolize the capital city of its respective federal subject. Three capitals are too small to make the list: Naryan-Mar (pop. 25,536), Anadyr (pop. 15,240), and Magas (pop. 13,601). Pyatigorsk is the administrative centre of North Caucasian Federal District but not of any federal subject.", "score": "1.469363" }, { "id": "29690799", "title": "Dmitriyevka, Chuy", "text": " Dmitriyevka is a village in the Ysyk-Ata District of Chuy Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 3,081 in 2009, and estimated as 3,573 in the beginning of 2020.", "score": "1.4687773" }, { "id": "12446086", "title": "Dmitriyevo", "text": "Dmitriyevo, Kotlassky District, Arkhangelsk Oblast, a village in Udimsky Selsoviet of Kotlassky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Velsky District, Arkhangelsk Oblast, a village in Puysky Selsoviet of Velsky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Buysky District, Kostroma Oblast, a village in Tsentralnoye Settlement of Buysky District of Kostroma Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Manturovsky District, Kostroma Oblast, a village in Ugorskoye Settlement of Manturovsky District of Kostroma Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Sivinsky District, Perm Krai, a village in Sivinsky District, Perm Krai ; Dmitriyevo, Yusvinsky District, Perm Krai, a village in Yusvinsky District, Perm Krai ; Dmitriyevo, Kasimovsky District, Ryazan Oblast, a selo in Dmitriyevsky ", "score": "1.4644551" }, { "id": "16481773", "title": "Dmitrievskaya Tower", "text": " The Dmitrievskaya Tower is the main tower on the southern wall of the Nizhny Novgorod Kremlin which overlooks the Minin and Pozharsky Square. The tower named after a powerful Prince of Suzdal and Nizhny Novgorod Dmitry of Suzdal. Another version claims that the name gave a church which was sanctified of the name of Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki. This church was located opposite the tower.", "score": "1.4578269" }, { "id": "3271888", "title": "Administrative centre", "text": " In Russia, several million-plus cities in federal districts have the official status of an administrative center: Moscow (as the main city of the Central Federal District), Vladivostok, Volgograd, Yekaterinburg, Nizhny Novgorod, Novosibirsk, Pyatigorsk, Rostov-on-Don and St. Petersburg. The main cities of regions and municipal districts are also called unofficially the administrative center or simply the center. The only exception to this rule is the republics, for which the term \"capital\" is used to refer to the seat of government. The capital of Russia is also an entity to which the term \"administrative centre\" does not apply.", "score": "1.448335" }, { "id": "8401326", "title": "Dmitriyevka", "text": " Dmitriyevka (Дмитриевка) is the name of several inhabited localities in Russia.", "score": "1.4435052" }, { "id": "26995408", "title": "Dmitriyevo, Gus-Khrustalny District, Vladimir Oblast", "text": " Dmitriyevo is located 29 km southeast of Gus-Khrustalny (the district's administrative centre) by road. Borisovo is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.4424701" }, { "id": "16115549", "title": "Dmitriyevskaya, Vologda Oblast", "text": " Dmitriyevskaya is located 66 km northwest of Ustye (the district's administrative centre) by road. Malaya Gora is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.441736" }, { "id": "12446088", "title": "Dmitriyevo", "text": " Vladimir Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Babushkinsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Bereznikovsky Selsoviet of Babushkinsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Cherepovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Nikolo-Ramensky Selsoviet of Cherepovetsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Lezhsky Selsoviet, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Lezhsky Selsoviet of Gryazovetsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Rostilovsky Selsoviet, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Rostilovsky Selsoviet of Gryazovetsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Kharovsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Kharovsky Selsoviet of Kharovsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Kirillovsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Kolkachsky Selsoviet of ", "score": "1.4416944" }, { "id": "796648", "title": "The Golden Cockerel", "text": "Time: Unspecified ; Place: In the thrice-tenth tsardom, a far off place (beyond thrice-nine lands) in Russian folklore Note: There is an actual city of Shemakha (also spelled \"Şamaxı\", \"Schemacha\" and \"Shamakhy\"), which is the capital of the Shamakhi Rayon of Azerbaijan. In Pushkin's day it was an important city and capital of what was to become the Baku Governorate. But the realm of that name, ruled by its tsaritsa, bears little resemblance to today's Shemakha and region; Pushkin likely seized the name for convenience, to conjure an exotic monarchy.", "score": "1.4348209" }, { "id": "13080829", "title": "Dmitriyevsky (rural locality)", "text": "Dmitriyevskoye, Krasnobakovsky District, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, a selo under the administrative jurisdiction of the work settlement of Vetluzhsky, Krasnobakovsky District ; Dmitriyevskoye, Sokolsky District, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, a selo in Volzhsky Selsoviet of Sokolsky District As of 2010, two rural localities in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast bear this name:", "score": "1.4341868" }, { "id": "8401332", "title": "Dmitriyevka", "text": " of Gafuriysky District ; Dmitriyevka, Karmaskalinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Yefremkinsky Selsoviet of Karmaskalinsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Nordovsky Selsoviet, Meleuzovsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Nordovsky Selsoviet of Meleuzovsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Pervomaysky Selsoviet, Meleuzovsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Pervomaysky Selsoviet of Meleuzovsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Sterlibashevsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Starokalkashevsky Selsoviet of Sterlibashevsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Ufimsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a selo in Dmitriyevsky Selsoviet of Ufimsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Zilairsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Dmitriyevsky Selsoviet of Zilairsky District As of 2010, thirteen rural localities in the Republic of Bashkortostan bear this name:", "score": "1.4341471" }, { "id": "27299537", "title": "Dmitriyevskoye, Vladimir Oblast", "text": " Dmitriyevskoye is located on the Nerekhta River, 39 km south of Kovrov (the district's administrative centre) by road. Mordviny is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.4336431" }, { "id": "9141630", "title": "Dmitriyevsky, Republic of Adygea", "text": " Dmitriyevsky is located 14 km northwest of Koshekhabl (the district's administrative centre) by road. Druzhba is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.4325082" } ]
[ "Dmitriyev (town)\n Dmitriyev (Дми́триев), also known as Dmitriyev-Lgovsky (Дми́триев-Льго́вский), is a town and the administrative center of Dmitriyevsky District of Kursk Oblast, Russia, located on the Svapa River (Dnieper's basin), on the Moscow–Kyiv highway, 159 km northwest of Kursk, the administrative center of the oblast. Population:", "Dmitriyev (town)\n Within the framework of administrative divisions, Dmitriyev serves as the administrative center of Dmitriyevsky District. As an administrative division, it is incorporated within Dmitriyevsky District as the town of district significance of Dmitriyev. As a municipal division, the town of district significance of Dmitriyev is incorporated within Dmitriyevsky Municipal District as Dmitriyev Urban Settlement.", "Dmitriyevsky District\n Dmitriyevsky District (Дми́триевский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-eight in Kursk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northwest of the oblast. The area of the district is 1270 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Dmitriyev. Population: 22,420 (2002 Census); The population of Dmitriyev accounts for 42.7% of the district's total population.", "Dmitriyev (town)\n During World War II, Dmitriyev was occupied by German troops from October 8, 1941 to March 2, 1943.", "Dmitriyevsky District\n Dmitriyevsky District is located in the northwest of Kursk Oblast, on the border with Bryansk Oblast to the north. The terrain is hilly plain dissected by ravines; there are 81 rivers and streams in the district, which lies on the Central Russian Upland. The main river in the district is the Svapa River, which flows southwest into the Seym River. The district is 65 km northwest of the city of Kursk, and 420 km southwest of Moscow The area measures 51 km (north-south), and 53 km (west-east). The administrative center is the town of Dmitriev. The district is bordered on the north by Komarichsky District and Sevsky District of Bryansk Oblast, on the east by Zheleznogorsky District, on the south by Konyshyovsky District, and on the west by Khomutovsky District.", "Dmitriyevsky, Republic of Adygea\n Dmitriyevsky (Дмитриевский) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Dmitriyevskoye Rural Settlement of Koshekhablsky District, Adygea, Russia. The population of this khutor was 479 as of 2018. There are 9 streets.", "List of cities and towns in Russia by population\n Cities in bold symbolize the capital city of its respective federal subject. Three capitals are too small to make the list: Naryan-Mar (pop. 25,536), Anadyr (pop. 15,240), and Magas (pop. 13,601). Pyatigorsk is the administrative centre of North Caucasian Federal District but not of any federal subject.", "Dmitriyevka, Chuy\n Dmitriyevka is a village in the Ysyk-Ata District of Chuy Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 3,081 in 2009, and estimated as 3,573 in the beginning of 2020.", "Dmitriyevo\nDmitriyevo, Kotlassky District, Arkhangelsk Oblast, a village in Udimsky Selsoviet of Kotlassky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Velsky District, Arkhangelsk Oblast, a village in Puysky Selsoviet of Velsky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Buysky District, Kostroma Oblast, a village in Tsentralnoye Settlement of Buysky District of Kostroma Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Manturovsky District, Kostroma Oblast, a village in Ugorskoye Settlement of Manturovsky District of Kostroma Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Sivinsky District, Perm Krai, a village in Sivinsky District, Perm Krai ; Dmitriyevo, Yusvinsky District, Perm Krai, a village in Yusvinsky District, Perm Krai ; Dmitriyevo, Kasimovsky District, Ryazan Oblast, a selo in Dmitriyevsky ", "Dmitrievskaya Tower\n The Dmitrievskaya Tower is the main tower on the southern wall of the Nizhny Novgorod Kremlin which overlooks the Minin and Pozharsky Square. The tower named after a powerful Prince of Suzdal and Nizhny Novgorod Dmitry of Suzdal. Another version claims that the name gave a church which was sanctified of the name of Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki. This church was located opposite the tower.", "Administrative centre\n In Russia, several million-plus cities in federal districts have the official status of an administrative center: Moscow (as the main city of the Central Federal District), Vladivostok, Volgograd, Yekaterinburg, Nizhny Novgorod, Novosibirsk, Pyatigorsk, Rostov-on-Don and St. Petersburg. The main cities of regions and municipal districts are also called unofficially the administrative center or simply the center. The only exception to this rule is the republics, for which the term \"capital\" is used to refer to the seat of government. The capital of Russia is also an entity to which the term \"administrative centre\" does not apply.", "Dmitriyevka\n Dmitriyevka (Дмитриевка) is the name of several inhabited localities in Russia.", "Dmitriyevo, Gus-Khrustalny District, Vladimir Oblast\n Dmitriyevo is located 29 km southeast of Gus-Khrustalny (the district's administrative centre) by road. Borisovo is the nearest rural locality.", "Dmitriyevskaya, Vologda Oblast\n Dmitriyevskaya is located 66 km northwest of Ustye (the district's administrative centre) by road. Malaya Gora is the nearest rural locality.", "Dmitriyevo\n Vladimir Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Babushkinsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Bereznikovsky Selsoviet of Babushkinsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Cherepovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Nikolo-Ramensky Selsoviet of Cherepovetsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Lezhsky Selsoviet, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Lezhsky Selsoviet of Gryazovetsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Rostilovsky Selsoviet, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Rostilovsky Selsoviet of Gryazovetsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Kharovsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Kharovsky Selsoviet of Kharovsky District of Vologda Oblast ; Dmitriyevo, Kirillovsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Kolkachsky Selsoviet of ", "The Golden Cockerel\nTime: Unspecified ; Place: In the thrice-tenth tsardom, a far off place (beyond thrice-nine lands) in Russian folklore Note: There is an actual city of Shemakha (also spelled \"Şamaxı\", \"Schemacha\" and \"Shamakhy\"), which is the capital of the Shamakhi Rayon of Azerbaijan. In Pushkin's day it was an important city and capital of what was to become the Baku Governorate. But the realm of that name, ruled by its tsaritsa, bears little resemblance to today's Shemakha and region; Pushkin likely seized the name for convenience, to conjure an exotic monarchy.", "Dmitriyevsky (rural locality)\nDmitriyevskoye, Krasnobakovsky District, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, a selo under the administrative jurisdiction of the work settlement of Vetluzhsky, Krasnobakovsky District ; Dmitriyevskoye, Sokolsky District, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, a selo in Volzhsky Selsoviet of Sokolsky District As of 2010, two rural localities in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast bear this name:", "Dmitriyevka\n of Gafuriysky District ; Dmitriyevka, Karmaskalinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Yefremkinsky Selsoviet of Karmaskalinsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Nordovsky Selsoviet, Meleuzovsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Nordovsky Selsoviet of Meleuzovsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Pervomaysky Selsoviet, Meleuzovsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Pervomaysky Selsoviet of Meleuzovsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Sterlibashevsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Starokalkashevsky Selsoviet of Sterlibashevsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Ufimsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a selo in Dmitriyevsky Selsoviet of Ufimsky District ; Dmitriyevka, Zilairsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Dmitriyevsky Selsoviet of Zilairsky District As of 2010, thirteen rural localities in the Republic of Bashkortostan bear this name:", "Dmitriyevskoye, Vladimir Oblast\n Dmitriyevskoye is located on the Nerekhta River, 39 km south of Kovrov (the district's administrative centre) by road. Mordviny is the nearest rural locality.", "Dmitriyevsky, Republic of Adygea\n Dmitriyevsky is located 14 km northwest of Koshekhabl (the district's administrative centre) by road. Druzhba is the nearest rural locality." ]
What is Idi Rayeuk the capital of?
[ "Aceh Timur" ]
capital of
Idi Rayeuk
2,998,627
73
[ { "id": "7364483", "title": "List of capitals outside the territories they serve", "text": "Busan, South Korea – capital of the province of South Gyeongsang, itself a metropolitan city (from 1963, when the city was separated from the province, to 1983, when it was replaced by Changwon) ; Calicut (Kozhikode), India – until 1964, the administration of the then Union Territory of the Laccadive, Minicoy and Amindivi Islands (now Lakshadweep) was conducted from offices in the city of Kozhikode (better known in English as Calicut), located on the mainland, in the state of Kerala. The territory's government is now seated on the island of Kavaratti. ; Canberra, Australia – seat of government of the Territory of Papua ; Canton (now Guangzhou), China – capital of the province of Kwangtung ", "score": "1.427507" }, { "id": "3787001", "title": "Ngerulmud", "text": " Ngerulmud is the seat of government of the Republic of Palau, an island nation in the Pacific Ocean. It replaced Koror City, Palau's largest city, as capital in 2006. The settlement is located in the state of Melekeok on Babeldaob, the country's largest island, located 20 km northeast of Koror City and 2 km northwest of Melekeok City. It is the least-populous capital city of a sovereign nation in the world.", "score": "1.425597" }, { "id": "25791300", "title": "Capital of Korea", "text": "Jolbon — first capital of Goguryeo ; Gungnae City — second capital of Goguryeo ; Pyongyang — third capital of Goguryeo ; Wiryeseong (modern Seoul) — first capital of Baekje ; Ungjin (modern Gongju) — second capital of Baekje ; Sabi (modern Buyeo County) — third capital of Baekje ; Gyeongju — capital of Silla ", "score": "1.425183" }, { "id": "7364484", "title": "List of capitals outside the territories they serve", "text": " Guangdong), Republic of China, itself a centrally-administered city ; Cotabato City, Philippines – former administrative center of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, but itself part of the Soccsksargen region. After a 2019 referendum, the city became part of the newly created Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, of which it is now the de facto capital. ; Daegu, South Korea – capital of the province of North Gyeongsang, itself a metropolitan city (from 1981, when the city was separated from the province, to 2016, when it was replaced by Andong) ; Daejeon, South Korea – capital of the province of South Chungcheong, itself a metropolitan city (from 1989, when the city was separated ", "score": "1.4195948" }, { "id": "7364488", "title": "List of capitals outside the territories they serve", "text": " Seoul, South Korea – capital of the province of Gyeonggi, itself a metropolitan city (from 1946, when the city was separated from the province, to 1967, when it was replaced by Suwon). It was also claimed as the capital of North Korea until 1972, where the de facto Capital, Pyongyang, was also made the de jure capital. ; Sian (now Xi'an), China – capital of the province of Shensi (now Shaanxi), Republic of China, itself a centrally-administered city ; Xindian, Taiwan – capital of the province of Fukien, Republic of China from 1956 to 1996, itself located in Taiwan Province. Before 1956, the capital was Jincheng; it was moved back to Jincheng in 1996. ", "score": "1.4135042" }, { "id": "25791302", "title": "Capital of Korea", "text": "Gyeongju — capital of Silla ; Wansanju (modern Jeonju) — capital of Later Baekje ; Songak (modern Kaesong) — first capital of Taebong ; Cheorwon (modern Cheorwon County) — second capital of Taebong Later Three Kingdoms:", "score": "1.4080359" }, { "id": "7364468", "title": "List of capitals outside the territories they serve", "text": "Addis Ababa, Ethiopia - capital of the region of Oromia (in addition to being the national capital city), itself an independently governed chartered city that is not part of Oromia. ; Bujumbura, Burundi – capital of both Bujumbura Mairie and Bujumbura Rural provinces; the city itself is located in the former ; East London, South Africa – administrative centre of the Amathole District Municipality, itself in the Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality ; Francistown, Botswana – capital of the North-East District, itself a separately administered urban district. ; Port Elizabeth, South Africa – administrative centre of the Cacadu District Municipality, itself in the Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality ", "score": "1.4052582" }, { "id": "4191291", "title": "Aweil East State", "text": " Malualkon was the capital city of Aweil East. It comprised Wanyjok, Machar Mou, Mabil, Pan Apuoth, Kanajak, Paroot, Majak Ajuong, Majak Akoon, Riang Tab, and Malualkon. The Wer Bei Radio which broadcasts the word of God is found to north-east of the city and Nhomlau FM radio stationed in Malualkon to the east. Because of its proximity to South and West Kordofan, commercial goods from Sudan come through Abyei (Akong border location) and Majokyinthiou via Merem locality and later supply the markets in the other sisterly states of Lol and Aweil states.", "score": "1.3921165" }, { "id": "9075543", "title": "Riau", "text": " location in the Strait of Malacca. In addition, Dumai is the largest city in Indonesia at this time. Dumai is home to many beaches and mangrove forests. The capital of Riau, Pekanbaru, contains several tourist attractions. The Idrus Tintin Art Building is named after an Indonesian artist named Idrus Tintin. Judging from the architecture of the Idrus Tintin Art Building almost looks like a Malay Royal Palace, even though this building functioned as an art performance venue. Various works by Indonesian artists are displayed in the building. The An-Nur Great Mosque is the pride of Pekanbaru. An-Nur Great Mosque is one of the ", "score": "1.3900371" }, { "id": "25359654", "title": "Shariff Aguak", "text": " capital. In 2019 incumbent Governor Bai Mariam Mangudadatu expressed plans to move the provincial capitol back to Shariff Aguak. Pending the completion of the new provincial capitol complex at Buluan, the executive branch of provincial government holds offices in that town's Rajah Buayan Silongan Peace Center. On the other hand, the legislative branch of provincial government, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Maguindanao, continues to hold sessions in the rehabilitated buildings of the old provincial capitol in Barangay Simuay Crossing in the town of Sultan Kudarat. The Ampatuan-built former provincial capitol complex in Shariff Aguak, initially planned to be converted for public school use, is set to become the new regional headquarters of ARMM's Bureau of Fire Protection but eventually became an infantry brigade of the Philippine Army.", "score": "1.3836354" }, { "id": "32180462", "title": "Ikot Ibritam", "text": " Ikot Ibritam is popularly known among the local government council headquarters and as well as one of the administrative centers in Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria and a seat of a first-order administrative division in the Oruk Anam LGA. neared Ukanafun and a part in Rivers State.", "score": "1.3809767" }, { "id": "27621985", "title": "South Sudan", "text": " will fund the project. In September 2011, a spokesman for the government said the country's political leaders had accepted a proposal to build a new capital at Ramciel, a place in Lakes state near the borders with Central Equatoria and Jonglei. Ramciel is considered to be the geographical center of the country, and the late pro-independence leader John Garang allegedly had plans to relocate the capital there before his death in 2005. The proposal was supported by the Lakes state government and at least one Ramciel tribal chief. The design, planning, and construction of the city will likely take as many as five years, government ministers said, and the move of national institutions to the new capital will be implemented in stages.", "score": "1.3785731" }, { "id": "4768952", "title": "List of purpose-built national capitals", "text": "For decades, Indonesia has mulled the relocation of its capital from Jakarta (which is overcrowded and subsiding rapidly) to a proposed new site. On 26 August 2019, President Joko Widodo announced that the future Indonesian capital will be carved from Penajam North Paser and Kutai Kartanegara regencies in East Kalimantan province, and its construction will commence in 2020. ; South Korea began construction of its new capital city, Sejong, in 2007, with the first inhabitants arriving in 2012. Complete relocation of the capital from Seoul is expected in 2030. ; In February 2011, the Autonomous Government of Southern Sudan adopted a resolution to study moving the capital of the new Republic of South Sudan that was to be created in July of that year to a new, ", "score": "1.3735226" }, { "id": "15956040", "title": "Temporary capital", "text": " its 1948 Constitution that Seoul was its de jure capital, and that Pyongyang is a temporary capital. ; During the Bangladesh Liberation War, the Provisional Government of Bangladesh declared Mujibnagar as the temporary capital, even though the seat of the government in exile remained in Calcutta for most of the war. ; The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic claimed temporary capitals previously in Bir Lehlou and currently in Tifariti, in contrast to its de jure capital of Laâyoune, which is controlled by Morocco. Its de facto headquarters is in Tindouf, Algeria. ; The Transitional Federal Government of Somalia met in various locations within its territory rather than Mogadishu while the ", "score": "1.3719379" }, { "id": "4191737", "title": "Gok State", "text": " The capital of the state is the town of Cueibet. The town is located in Cueibet County, and is also the capital of the state.", "score": "1.371028" }, { "id": "25791305", "title": "Capital of Korea", "text": "Seoul — capital of South Korea a.k.a. Republic of Korea (ROK) ; Pyongyang — capital of North Korea a.k.a. Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) ", "score": "1.3681784" }, { "id": "625090", "title": "Seoul Capital Area", "text": " The Capital Area has been home to a Korean capital for around 2,000 years. Its central location and relatively gentle landscape have given it a central role in the country's affairs. The first capital to be constructed in the region was that of Baekje, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. The country's first capital was built in 19 BC and was named Wiryeseong. This is believed to have been constructed near the modern-day boundary of Seoul and Gwangju City. However, Baekje was unable to hold this territory, and surrendered the Han River valley to Goguryeo in the 5th century. The land was then taken over by Silla in the 6th century, at which point it ", "score": "1.3647842" }, { "id": "28450788", "title": "South Sudanese Civil War", "text": " 2017. In the same month, SPLA-IO captured Raja, the capital of Lol State, while state governor Hassan claimed the city was immediately retaken. A counteroffensive by the government starting in late April 2017 reversed most rebel gains, captured the capital of the Shilluk kingdom, Kodok, from Uliny and closed in on Pagak, which had been the SPLA-IO headquarters since 2014. In July 2017, SPLA along with forces loyal to Taban Deng Gai took over the rebel-held town of Maiwut. The government took over Pagak in August 2017 while the IO rebels still held territory in traditional Nuer areas of Panyijar Country in Unity state ", "score": "1.3626161" }, { "id": "12445820", "title": "ABU Radio Song Festival 2012", "text": " Seoul, officially the Seoul Special City, is the capital and largest metropolis of South Korea. A megacity with a population of over 10 million, it is the largest city proper in the OECD developed world. The Seoul National Capital Area is the world's second largest metropolitan area with over 25 million inhabitants, which includes the surrounding Incheon metropolis and Gyeonggi province. Almost a quarter of South Koreans live in Seoul, half of South Koreans live in the metropolitan area, along with over 275,000 international residents. Located on the Han River, Seoul has been a major settlement for over 2,000 years, with its foundation dating back to 18 B.C. when Baekje, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, established its capital in what is now south-east Seoul. It continued as the capital of Korea during the Joseon Dynasty and the Korean Empire. The Seoul National Capital Area is home to four UNESCO World Heritage Sites: Changdeokgung, Hwaseong Fortress, Jongmyo Shrine and the Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty.", "score": "1.3625672" }, { "id": "28642580", "title": "ABU TV Song Festival 2012", "text": " Seoul, officially the Seoul Special City, is the capital and largest metropolis of South Korea. A megacity with a population of over 10 million, it is the largest city proper in the OECD developed world. The Seoul National Capital Area is the world's second largest metropolitan area with over 25 million inhabitants, which includes the surrounding Incheon metropolis and Gyeonggi province. Almost a quarter of South Koreans live in Seoul, half of South Koreans live in the metropolitan area, along with over 275,000 international residents. Located on the Han River, Seoul has been a major settlement for over 2,000 years, with its foundation dating back to 18 B.C. when Baekje, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, established its capital in what is now south-east Seoul. It continued as the capital of Korea during the Joseon Dynasty and the Korean Empire. The Seoul National Capital Area is home to four UNESCO World Heritage Sites: Changdeokgung, Hwaseong Fortress, Jongmyo Shrine and the Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty.", "score": "1.3597867" } ]
[ "List of capitals outside the territories they serve\nBusan, South Korea – capital of the province of South Gyeongsang, itself a metropolitan city (from 1963, when the city was separated from the province, to 1983, when it was replaced by Changwon) ; Calicut (Kozhikode), India – until 1964, the administration of the then Union Territory of the Laccadive, Minicoy and Amindivi Islands (now Lakshadweep) was conducted from offices in the city of Kozhikode (better known in English as Calicut), located on the mainland, in the state of Kerala. The territory's government is now seated on the island of Kavaratti. ; Canberra, Australia – seat of government of the Territory of Papua ; Canton (now Guangzhou), China – capital of the province of Kwangtung ", "Ngerulmud\n Ngerulmud is the seat of government of the Republic of Palau, an island nation in the Pacific Ocean. It replaced Koror City, Palau's largest city, as capital in 2006. The settlement is located in the state of Melekeok on Babeldaob, the country's largest island, located 20 km northeast of Koror City and 2 km northwest of Melekeok City. It is the least-populous capital city of a sovereign nation in the world.", "Capital of Korea\nJolbon — first capital of Goguryeo ; Gungnae City — second capital of Goguryeo ; Pyongyang — third capital of Goguryeo ; Wiryeseong (modern Seoul) — first capital of Baekje ; Ungjin (modern Gongju) — second capital of Baekje ; Sabi (modern Buyeo County) — third capital of Baekje ; Gyeongju — capital of Silla ", "List of capitals outside the territories they serve\n Guangdong), Republic of China, itself a centrally-administered city ; Cotabato City, Philippines – former administrative center of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, but itself part of the Soccsksargen region. After a 2019 referendum, the city became part of the newly created Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, of which it is now the de facto capital. ; Daegu, South Korea – capital of the province of North Gyeongsang, itself a metropolitan city (from 1981, when the city was separated from the province, to 2016, when it was replaced by Andong) ; Daejeon, South Korea – capital of the province of South Chungcheong, itself a metropolitan city (from 1989, when the city was separated ", "List of capitals outside the territories they serve\n Seoul, South Korea – capital of the province of Gyeonggi, itself a metropolitan city (from 1946, when the city was separated from the province, to 1967, when it was replaced by Suwon). It was also claimed as the capital of North Korea until 1972, where the de facto Capital, Pyongyang, was also made the de jure capital. ; Sian (now Xi'an), China – capital of the province of Shensi (now Shaanxi), Republic of China, itself a centrally-administered city ; Xindian, Taiwan – capital of the province of Fukien, Republic of China from 1956 to 1996, itself located in Taiwan Province. Before 1956, the capital was Jincheng; it was moved back to Jincheng in 1996. ", "Capital of Korea\nGyeongju — capital of Silla ; Wansanju (modern Jeonju) — capital of Later Baekje ; Songak (modern Kaesong) — first capital of Taebong ; Cheorwon (modern Cheorwon County) — second capital of Taebong Later Three Kingdoms:", "List of capitals outside the territories they serve\nAddis Ababa, Ethiopia - capital of the region of Oromia (in addition to being the national capital city), itself an independently governed chartered city that is not part of Oromia. ; Bujumbura, Burundi – capital of both Bujumbura Mairie and Bujumbura Rural provinces; the city itself is located in the former ; East London, South Africa – administrative centre of the Amathole District Municipality, itself in the Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality ; Francistown, Botswana – capital of the North-East District, itself a separately administered urban district. ; Port Elizabeth, South Africa – administrative centre of the Cacadu District Municipality, itself in the Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality ", "Aweil East State\n Malualkon was the capital city of Aweil East. It comprised Wanyjok, Machar Mou, Mabil, Pan Apuoth, Kanajak, Paroot, Majak Ajuong, Majak Akoon, Riang Tab, and Malualkon. The Wer Bei Radio which broadcasts the word of God is found to north-east of the city and Nhomlau FM radio stationed in Malualkon to the east. Because of its proximity to South and West Kordofan, commercial goods from Sudan come through Abyei (Akong border location) and Majokyinthiou via Merem locality and later supply the markets in the other sisterly states of Lol and Aweil states.", "Riau\n location in the Strait of Malacca. In addition, Dumai is the largest city in Indonesia at this time. Dumai is home to many beaches and mangrove forests. The capital of Riau, Pekanbaru, contains several tourist attractions. The Idrus Tintin Art Building is named after an Indonesian artist named Idrus Tintin. Judging from the architecture of the Idrus Tintin Art Building almost looks like a Malay Royal Palace, even though this building functioned as an art performance venue. Various works by Indonesian artists are displayed in the building. The An-Nur Great Mosque is the pride of Pekanbaru. An-Nur Great Mosque is one of the ", "Shariff Aguak\n capital. In 2019 incumbent Governor Bai Mariam Mangudadatu expressed plans to move the provincial capitol back to Shariff Aguak. Pending the completion of the new provincial capitol complex at Buluan, the executive branch of provincial government holds offices in that town's Rajah Buayan Silongan Peace Center. On the other hand, the legislative branch of provincial government, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Maguindanao, continues to hold sessions in the rehabilitated buildings of the old provincial capitol in Barangay Simuay Crossing in the town of Sultan Kudarat. The Ampatuan-built former provincial capitol complex in Shariff Aguak, initially planned to be converted for public school use, is set to become the new regional headquarters of ARMM's Bureau of Fire Protection but eventually became an infantry brigade of the Philippine Army.", "Ikot Ibritam\n Ikot Ibritam is popularly known among the local government council headquarters and as well as one of the administrative centers in Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria and a seat of a first-order administrative division in the Oruk Anam LGA. neared Ukanafun and a part in Rivers State.", "South Sudan\n will fund the project. In September 2011, a spokesman for the government said the country's political leaders had accepted a proposal to build a new capital at Ramciel, a place in Lakes state near the borders with Central Equatoria and Jonglei. Ramciel is considered to be the geographical center of the country, and the late pro-independence leader John Garang allegedly had plans to relocate the capital there before his death in 2005. The proposal was supported by the Lakes state government and at least one Ramciel tribal chief. The design, planning, and construction of the city will likely take as many as five years, government ministers said, and the move of national institutions to the new capital will be implemented in stages.", "List of purpose-built national capitals\nFor decades, Indonesia has mulled the relocation of its capital from Jakarta (which is overcrowded and subsiding rapidly) to a proposed new site. On 26 August 2019, President Joko Widodo announced that the future Indonesian capital will be carved from Penajam North Paser and Kutai Kartanegara regencies in East Kalimantan province, and its construction will commence in 2020. ; South Korea began construction of its new capital city, Sejong, in 2007, with the first inhabitants arriving in 2012. Complete relocation of the capital from Seoul is expected in 2030. ; In February 2011, the Autonomous Government of Southern Sudan adopted a resolution to study moving the capital of the new Republic of South Sudan that was to be created in July of that year to a new, ", "Temporary capital\n its 1948 Constitution that Seoul was its de jure capital, and that Pyongyang is a temporary capital. ; During the Bangladesh Liberation War, the Provisional Government of Bangladesh declared Mujibnagar as the temporary capital, even though the seat of the government in exile remained in Calcutta for most of the war. ; The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic claimed temporary capitals previously in Bir Lehlou and currently in Tifariti, in contrast to its de jure capital of Laâyoune, which is controlled by Morocco. Its de facto headquarters is in Tindouf, Algeria. ; The Transitional Federal Government of Somalia met in various locations within its territory rather than Mogadishu while the ", "Gok State\n The capital of the state is the town of Cueibet. The town is located in Cueibet County, and is also the capital of the state.", "Capital of Korea\nSeoul — capital of South Korea a.k.a. Republic of Korea (ROK) ; Pyongyang — capital of North Korea a.k.a. Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) ", "Seoul Capital Area\n The Capital Area has been home to a Korean capital for around 2,000 years. Its central location and relatively gentle landscape have given it a central role in the country's affairs. The first capital to be constructed in the region was that of Baekje, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. The country's first capital was built in 19 BC and was named Wiryeseong. This is believed to have been constructed near the modern-day boundary of Seoul and Gwangju City. However, Baekje was unable to hold this territory, and surrendered the Han River valley to Goguryeo in the 5th century. The land was then taken over by Silla in the 6th century, at which point it ", "South Sudanese Civil War\n 2017. In the same month, SPLA-IO captured Raja, the capital of Lol State, while state governor Hassan claimed the city was immediately retaken. A counteroffensive by the government starting in late April 2017 reversed most rebel gains, captured the capital of the Shilluk kingdom, Kodok, from Uliny and closed in on Pagak, which had been the SPLA-IO headquarters since 2014. In July 2017, SPLA along with forces loyal to Taban Deng Gai took over the rebel-held town of Maiwut. The government took over Pagak in August 2017 while the IO rebels still held territory in traditional Nuer areas of Panyijar Country in Unity state ", "ABU Radio Song Festival 2012\n Seoul, officially the Seoul Special City, is the capital and largest metropolis of South Korea. A megacity with a population of over 10 million, it is the largest city proper in the OECD developed world. The Seoul National Capital Area is the world's second largest metropolitan area with over 25 million inhabitants, which includes the surrounding Incheon metropolis and Gyeonggi province. Almost a quarter of South Koreans live in Seoul, half of South Koreans live in the metropolitan area, along with over 275,000 international residents. Located on the Han River, Seoul has been a major settlement for over 2,000 years, with its foundation dating back to 18 B.C. when Baekje, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, established its capital in what is now south-east Seoul. It continued as the capital of Korea during the Joseon Dynasty and the Korean Empire. The Seoul National Capital Area is home to four UNESCO World Heritage Sites: Changdeokgung, Hwaseong Fortress, Jongmyo Shrine and the Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty.", "ABU TV Song Festival 2012\n Seoul, officially the Seoul Special City, is the capital and largest metropolis of South Korea. A megacity with a population of over 10 million, it is the largest city proper in the OECD developed world. The Seoul National Capital Area is the world's second largest metropolitan area with over 25 million inhabitants, which includes the surrounding Incheon metropolis and Gyeonggi province. Almost a quarter of South Koreans live in Seoul, half of South Koreans live in the metropolitan area, along with over 275,000 international residents. Located on the Han River, Seoul has been a major settlement for over 2,000 years, with its foundation dating back to 18 B.C. when Baekje, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, established its capital in what is now south-east Seoul. It continued as the capital of Korea during the Joseon Dynasty and the Korean Empire. The Seoul National Capital Area is home to four UNESCO World Heritage Sites: Changdeokgung, Hwaseong Fortress, Jongmyo Shrine and the Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Death of a Batman?
[ "Roger Marshall" ]
screenwriter
Death of a Batman
3,884,063
61
[ { "id": "3201225", "title": "Batman (1989 film)", "text": " of the murder of Bruce Wayne's parents. When Hamm's script was rewritten, the scene was deleted, reducing it to a photo in the Gotham Globe newspaper seen in the film. Warner Bros. was less willing to move forward on development, despite their enthusiasm for Hamm's script, which Kane greeted with positive feedback. Hamm's script was then bootlegged at various comic book stores in the United States. Batman was finally given the greenlight to commence pre-production in April 1988, after the success of Burton's Beetlejuice (1988). When comic book fans found out about Burton directing the film with Michael Keaton starring in the lead role, controversy arose over the ", "score": "1.6408478" }, { "id": "28294747", "title": "Batman: The Killing Joke", "text": " Novelists Christa Faust and Gary Phillips wrote a novel adaptation of Alan Moore's story, published on September 25, 2018 by Titan Books.", "score": "1.6191242" }, { "id": "12211129", "title": "The Batman (film)", "text": " to director Zack Snyder's Batman v Superman story. Cinematographer Robert Richardson was attached early in development, and said Affleck's script was primarily set in Arkham Asylum and dealt with insanity. The script reportedly featured Deathstroke orchestrating a breakout at Arkham to tire Batman and make him vulnerable, drawing inspiration from the comic books Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth (1989) and \"Knightfall\" (1992–1994), as well as the video game Batman: Arkham Asylum (2009). Manganiello explained that Deathstroke believed Batman was responsible for the death of his son, and the script featured Deathstroke systematically dismantling Batman's life and killing ", "score": "1.6107612" }, { "id": "3201253", "title": "Batman (1989 film)", "text": " and the art and set production design than Batman or anything else in terms of characterization and screentime. Comic book fans reacted negatively over the Joker murdering Thomas and Martha Wayne; in the comic book, Joe Chill is responsible. Writer Sam Hamm said it was Burton's idea to have the Joker murder Wayne's parents. \"The Writer's Strike was going on, and Tim had the other writers do that. I also hold innocent to Alfred letting Vicki Vale into the Batcave. Fans were ticked off with that, and I agree. That would have been Alfred's last day of employment at Wayne Manor,\" Hamm said. The songs written ", "score": "1.6037838" }, { "id": "28291085", "title": "Ivan Reitman", "text": " In the early 1980s, Tom Mankiewicz wrote a script for a film entitled The Batman, with Reitman attached to direct. He planned to cast Meatballs star Bill Murray as Batman, David Niven as Alfred Pennyworth, William Holden as Commissioner James Gordon, and singer David Bowie as The Joker. However, due to Holden's and Niven's death and the rewrites of the script, Reitman left the project and Gremlins director Joe Dante entered in the project, but the film never materialized. In April 1996, it was reported that Reitman was attached to produce, and possibly direct, a Wonder Woman film. However, three years later, he passed the project on to writer Jon Cohen and left for unknown reasons. In 2000 Reitman along with Wolfgang Petersen, Rob Reiner, M. Night Shyamalan, Alan Parker, Tim Robbins, Terry ", "score": "1.6024077" }, { "id": "288104", "title": "Doctor Death (character)", "text": " Detective Comics #30. With a new accomplice, a Cossack named Mikhail, Dr. Death is this time successful in claiming a victim in his extortion scheme, but discovers from the widow that the poisoned man lost his fortune in the Great Depression. Batman intervenes in the plot, following Mikhail back to Dr. Death's base, and upon apprehending the doctor, discovers that his face had been horribly disfigured from the lab explosion, resulting in a brown, skeletal appearance. The scriptwriter for Detective Comics #29 and #30 is an issue of dispute, leaving the creator of Dr. Death uncertain. Batman creator Bob Kane is officially credited as scriptwriter of these issues, though later Gardner Fox, the scriptwriter of Detective Comics #31 and #32, claimed authorship.", "score": "1.5971497" }, { "id": "15765031", "title": "Sam Hamm", "text": " Sam Hamm (born November 19, 1955) is an American screenwriter and comic book writer. Hamm is known for co-writing the screenplay for Tim Burton's Batman. He also received a story credit for Batman Returns (though the final version of the movie differs significantly from his ideas). DC Comics invited Hamm to write for Detective Comics. The result was Batman: Blind Justice, which introduced Bruce Wayne's mentor, Henri Ducard. Hamm's other screen credits include Never Cry Wolf and Monkeybone. In February 2021, DC Comics announced that Hamm would return to the 1989 Batman film universe with the limited series Batman '89, which will be a direct continuation of both the 1989 film and Batman Returns.", "score": "1.5791919" }, { "id": "1636459", "title": "John Costanza", "text": " Starlin and penciller Bernie Wrightson, 4-issue limited series, DC, 1988) ; Batman: A Death in the Family (with writer Jim Starlin and penciller Jim Aparo, 4-issue storyline, DC, 1988–1989) ; Batman: A Lonely Place of Dying (with writers Marv Wolfman and George Perez and pencillers Jim Aparo and Tom Grummett, 5-issue storyline, DC, 1989) ; Sandman Mystery Theatre (with writers Matt Wagner and Steven T. Seagle, Vertigo, 1993–1999) ; Captain America (with writer Mark Waid and penciller Ron Garney, Marvel, 1995–1996) ; Scene of the Crime (with writer Ed Brubaker and penciller Michael Lark, Vertigo, 2000) ; Red (with writer Warren Ellis and artist Cully Hamner, 3-issue storyline, Wildstorm, 2003) ", "score": "1.5576237" }, { "id": "31599997", "title": "Dan Gilroy", "text": " Gilroy was hired by Tim Burton to re-write Wesley Strick's Superman Lives script, making it more budget conscious and expanding the psychology for the final shooting drafts before it was cancelled by WB. Gilroy later appeared in the documentary The Death of \"Superman Lives\": What Happened? (2015) to recount his contribution to the project. In 2011, he was due to write a film adaptation of the comic strip adventure The Annihilator.", "score": "1.5571094" }, { "id": "4110906", "title": "Jill Thompson", "text": " 9-11: The World's Finest Comic Book Writers & Artists Tell Stories to Remember, Volume Two (2002) ; Looney Tunes #100 (2003) ; Death: At Death's Door (writer/artist 2003) ; Batman: Gotham Knights #44 (\"Batman Black and White\" backup story) (writer/artist 2003) ; Masks: Too Hot for TV #1 (2004) ; Dead Boy Detectives (writer /artist 2005) ; Fables: 1001 Nights of Snowfall: \"Fair Division\" ; Fables #59 (2007) ; House of Mystery vol. 2 #2 (2008) ; Delirium's Party: A Little Endless Storybook (writer/artist 2011) ; The Unexpected vol. 2 #1 (2011) ; Shade vol. 2 #8 (2012) ; The Dark Knight III: The Master Race #1 (variant cover art 2016) ", "score": "1.550933" }, { "id": "3201223", "title": "Batman (1989 film)", "text": " Joke rekindled Warner Bros.' interest in a film adaptation. Burton was initially not a comic book fan, but he was impressed by the dark and serious tone found in both The Dark Knight Returns and The Killing Joke. Warner Bros. enlisted the aid of Englehart to write a new treatment in March 1986. Like Mankiewicz's script, it was based on his own Strange Apparitions, and included Silver St. Cloud, Dick Grayson, the Joker and Rupert Thorne, as well as a cameo appearance by the Penguin. Warner Bros. was impressed, but Englehart felt there were too many characters. He removed the Penguin and Dick Grayson in his second treatment, finishing ", "score": "1.543931" }, { "id": "3201442", "title": "Batman: Year One", "text": " of \"Year One\". Joss Whedon and Joel Schumacher both pitched their own takes. In 2000, Warner Bros. hired Darren Aronofsky to write and direct Batman: Year One. The film was to be written by Miller, who finished an early draft of the script. The script, however, was a loose adaptation, as it kept most of the themes and elements from the graphic novel but shunned other conventions that were otherwise integral to the character. It was shelved by the studio in 2001, after an individual who claimed to have read Miller's script published a negative review on Ain't It Cool ", "score": "1.5433527" }, { "id": "32967333", "title": "Judd Winick", "text": " Teen Titans East special, a prequel for Titans, which was scripted by Winick. Following the \"Battle for the Cowl\" storyline, Winick took over the writing on Batman for four issues. He co-wrote the 26-issue biweekly Justice League: Generation Lost with Keith Giffen, a title which alternated with Brightest Day. In addition, he was a regular writer on the monthly Power Girl series. Winick wrote the screenplay for the 2010 direct to DVD animated feature Batman: Under the Red Hood, which was based on the 1988–89 story arc \"Batman: A Death in the Family\" and the 2005 \"Batman: Under the Hood\" story arc that he wrote in the Batman comic book. Beginning ", "score": "1.5372858" }, { "id": "4331425", "title": "Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight", "text": " by Ra's al Ghul, were later used in the DC Animated Movie Batman: Under the Red Hood, instead of the plot from \"A Death in the Family\", to explain how the Joker killed Jason Todd. By Doug Moench and Barry Kitson By J. M. DeMatteis, Trevor Von Eeden, and José Luis García-López By Mike Baron and Bill Reinhold By Dwayne McDuffie, Val Semeiks, and Dan Green Batman teams up with a man who can see through the eyes of others in order to track down the leader of an underground snuff film ring. By John Ostrander, David Lopez, and Dan ", "score": "1.5324343" }, { "id": "3201239", "title": "Batman (1989 film)", "text": " publicist was offered and refused £10,000 for the first pictures of Jack Nicholson as the Joker. The police were later called in when two reels of footage (about 20 minutes' worth) were stolen. With various problems during filming, Burton called it \"Torture. The worst period of my life!\" Hamm was not allowed to perform rewrites during the 1988 Writers Guild of America strike. Warren Skaaren, who had also worked on Burton's Beetlejuice, did rewrites. Jonathan Gems and Charles McKeown rewrote the script during filming. Only Skaaren received screenplay credit with Hamm. Hamm criticized the rewrites, but blamed the changes on Warner Bros. Burton explained, \"I don't understand why that became such a problem. We started out with a ", "score": "1.5324199" }, { "id": "27793266", "title": "A Death in the Family (comics)", "text": " Bruce Timm and Paul Dini considered adapting \"A Death in the Family\" for Batman: The Animated Series (1992–1999), but decided it was too violent. Instead, they omitted the Todd character and incorporated some of his characteristics in Drake. The story was eventually adapted in the comic book sequel Batman: The Adventures Continue (2020), written by Dini and Alan Burnett and penciled by Ty Templeton. In the Adventures Continue adaptation, the Joker and Harley Quinn kidnap Todd, and the Joker beats him with a crowbar with intent to kill him. Harley objects to killing a child and finds Batman, who arrives as the ", "score": "1.5321139" }, { "id": "14485200", "title": "Gardner Fox", "text": " During July 1939, just two issues after debut of the character Batman by artist Bob Kane and writer Bill Finger, Fox wrote the first of his several tales for that character, introducing an early villain in the story \"The Batman Meets Doctor Death\". Alongside Kane and Finger, Fox contributed to the evolution of the character, including the character's first use of his utility belt, which \"contain[ed] choking gas capsules,\" as well as writing the first usages of both the Batarang and the Batgyro, an autogyro precursor to the Batcopter, two issues later. Fox returned to the Batman in 1964. (See below)", "score": "1.5310246" }, { "id": "8063140", "title": "Batman Black and White", "text": " (originally published in Gotham Knights #31) ; This story highlights two underexplored sides of Batman, those of forensic investigator and granter of absolution. Batman discovers an old death, and has to decide the path of least heartache when conveying the results of his investigation into the death of a young child to her surviving family. ; \"Toyride\" - written by Mark Askwith, art by Michael William Kaluta (originally published in Gotham Knights #32) ; Three little girls write a letter to Bruce Wayne in which they tell a story about their strange classmate, who has a genius-level intellect and a knack for ", "score": "1.5299472" }, { "id": "12136188", "title": "Oswald Cobblepot (Batman Returns)", "text": " screenplay for the film.\" Director Tim Burton hired Wesley Strick to do an uncredited rewrite. Strick recalled, \"When I was hired to write Batman Returns (Batman II at the time), the big problem of the script was the Penguin's lack of a 'master plan'.\" Warner Bros. presented Strick with warming, or freezing Gotham City, a plot point they would later use in Batman & Robin. Strick gained inspiration from a Moses parallel that had the Penguin killing the firstborn sons of Gotham. A similar notion was used when the Penguin's parents threw him into a river as a baby. While this Penguin retained many trademarks, such as a variety of ", "score": "1.5292816" }, { "id": "6958437", "title": "Batman: Death of the Family", "text": " \"Batman: Death of the Family\" is a 23-issue comic book story arc first published by DC Comics in 2012 featuring the fictional superhero Batman and his family of supporting characters. The arc spans several titles featuring characters of the Batman family including: Batman, Batgirl, Batman and Robin, Catwoman, Detective Comics, Nightwing, Red Hood and the Outlaws, Suicide Squad, and Teen Titans. The story involves the return of Batman's archenemy, the Joker, and his plan to destroy all of the people Batman has come to rely on over the years: the multiple Robins, Batgirl, Catwoman, Alfred Pennyworth, and Commissioner James Gordon. The title is a reference to the classic Batman story arc \"A Death in the Family\" (1988), in which the Joker murders Jason Todd.", "score": "1.5290703" } ]
[ "Batman (1989 film)\n of the murder of Bruce Wayne's parents. When Hamm's script was rewritten, the scene was deleted, reducing it to a photo in the Gotham Globe newspaper seen in the film. Warner Bros. was less willing to move forward on development, despite their enthusiasm for Hamm's script, which Kane greeted with positive feedback. Hamm's script was then bootlegged at various comic book stores in the United States. Batman was finally given the greenlight to commence pre-production in April 1988, after the success of Burton's Beetlejuice (1988). When comic book fans found out about Burton directing the film with Michael Keaton starring in the lead role, controversy arose over the ", "Batman: The Killing Joke\n Novelists Christa Faust and Gary Phillips wrote a novel adaptation of Alan Moore's story, published on September 25, 2018 by Titan Books.", "The Batman (film)\n to director Zack Snyder's Batman v Superman story. Cinematographer Robert Richardson was attached early in development, and said Affleck's script was primarily set in Arkham Asylum and dealt with insanity. The script reportedly featured Deathstroke orchestrating a breakout at Arkham to tire Batman and make him vulnerable, drawing inspiration from the comic books Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth (1989) and \"Knightfall\" (1992–1994), as well as the video game Batman: Arkham Asylum (2009). Manganiello explained that Deathstroke believed Batman was responsible for the death of his son, and the script featured Deathstroke systematically dismantling Batman's life and killing ", "Batman (1989 film)\n and the art and set production design than Batman or anything else in terms of characterization and screentime. Comic book fans reacted negatively over the Joker murdering Thomas and Martha Wayne; in the comic book, Joe Chill is responsible. Writer Sam Hamm said it was Burton's idea to have the Joker murder Wayne's parents. \"The Writer's Strike was going on, and Tim had the other writers do that. I also hold innocent to Alfred letting Vicki Vale into the Batcave. Fans were ticked off with that, and I agree. That would have been Alfred's last day of employment at Wayne Manor,\" Hamm said. The songs written ", "Ivan Reitman\n In the early 1980s, Tom Mankiewicz wrote a script for a film entitled The Batman, with Reitman attached to direct. He planned to cast Meatballs star Bill Murray as Batman, David Niven as Alfred Pennyworth, William Holden as Commissioner James Gordon, and singer David Bowie as The Joker. However, due to Holden's and Niven's death and the rewrites of the script, Reitman left the project and Gremlins director Joe Dante entered in the project, but the film never materialized. In April 1996, it was reported that Reitman was attached to produce, and possibly direct, a Wonder Woman film. However, three years later, he passed the project on to writer Jon Cohen and left for unknown reasons. In 2000 Reitman along with Wolfgang Petersen, Rob Reiner, M. Night Shyamalan, Alan Parker, Tim Robbins, Terry ", "Doctor Death (character)\n Detective Comics #30. With a new accomplice, a Cossack named Mikhail, Dr. Death is this time successful in claiming a victim in his extortion scheme, but discovers from the widow that the poisoned man lost his fortune in the Great Depression. Batman intervenes in the plot, following Mikhail back to Dr. Death's base, and upon apprehending the doctor, discovers that his face had been horribly disfigured from the lab explosion, resulting in a brown, skeletal appearance. The scriptwriter for Detective Comics #29 and #30 is an issue of dispute, leaving the creator of Dr. Death uncertain. Batman creator Bob Kane is officially credited as scriptwriter of these issues, though later Gardner Fox, the scriptwriter of Detective Comics #31 and #32, claimed authorship.", "Sam Hamm\n Sam Hamm (born November 19, 1955) is an American screenwriter and comic book writer. Hamm is known for co-writing the screenplay for Tim Burton's Batman. He also received a story credit for Batman Returns (though the final version of the movie differs significantly from his ideas). DC Comics invited Hamm to write for Detective Comics. The result was Batman: Blind Justice, which introduced Bruce Wayne's mentor, Henri Ducard. Hamm's other screen credits include Never Cry Wolf and Monkeybone. In February 2021, DC Comics announced that Hamm would return to the 1989 Batman film universe with the limited series Batman '89, which will be a direct continuation of both the 1989 film and Batman Returns.", "John Costanza\n Starlin and penciller Bernie Wrightson, 4-issue limited series, DC, 1988) ; Batman: A Death in the Family (with writer Jim Starlin and penciller Jim Aparo, 4-issue storyline, DC, 1988–1989) ; Batman: A Lonely Place of Dying (with writers Marv Wolfman and George Perez and pencillers Jim Aparo and Tom Grummett, 5-issue storyline, DC, 1989) ; Sandman Mystery Theatre (with writers Matt Wagner and Steven T. Seagle, Vertigo, 1993–1999) ; Captain America (with writer Mark Waid and penciller Ron Garney, Marvel, 1995–1996) ; Scene of the Crime (with writer Ed Brubaker and penciller Michael Lark, Vertigo, 2000) ; Red (with writer Warren Ellis and artist Cully Hamner, 3-issue storyline, Wildstorm, 2003) ", "Dan Gilroy\n Gilroy was hired by Tim Burton to re-write Wesley Strick's Superman Lives script, making it more budget conscious and expanding the psychology for the final shooting drafts before it was cancelled by WB. Gilroy later appeared in the documentary The Death of \"Superman Lives\": What Happened? (2015) to recount his contribution to the project. In 2011, he was due to write a film adaptation of the comic strip adventure The Annihilator.", "Jill Thompson\n 9-11: The World's Finest Comic Book Writers & Artists Tell Stories to Remember, Volume Two (2002) ; Looney Tunes #100 (2003) ; Death: At Death's Door (writer/artist 2003) ; Batman: Gotham Knights #44 (\"Batman Black and White\" backup story) (writer/artist 2003) ; Masks: Too Hot for TV #1 (2004) ; Dead Boy Detectives (writer /artist 2005) ; Fables: 1001 Nights of Snowfall: \"Fair Division\" ; Fables #59 (2007) ; House of Mystery vol. 2 #2 (2008) ; Delirium's Party: A Little Endless Storybook (writer/artist 2011) ; The Unexpected vol. 2 #1 (2011) ; Shade vol. 2 #8 (2012) ; The Dark Knight III: The Master Race #1 (variant cover art 2016) ", "Batman (1989 film)\n Joke rekindled Warner Bros.' interest in a film adaptation. Burton was initially not a comic book fan, but he was impressed by the dark and serious tone found in both The Dark Knight Returns and The Killing Joke. Warner Bros. enlisted the aid of Englehart to write a new treatment in March 1986. Like Mankiewicz's script, it was based on his own Strange Apparitions, and included Silver St. Cloud, Dick Grayson, the Joker and Rupert Thorne, as well as a cameo appearance by the Penguin. Warner Bros. was impressed, but Englehart felt there were too many characters. He removed the Penguin and Dick Grayson in his second treatment, finishing ", "Batman: Year One\n of \"Year One\". Joss Whedon and Joel Schumacher both pitched their own takes. In 2000, Warner Bros. hired Darren Aronofsky to write and direct Batman: Year One. The film was to be written by Miller, who finished an early draft of the script. The script, however, was a loose adaptation, as it kept most of the themes and elements from the graphic novel but shunned other conventions that were otherwise integral to the character. It was shelved by the studio in 2001, after an individual who claimed to have read Miller's script published a negative review on Ain't It Cool ", "Judd Winick\n Teen Titans East special, a prequel for Titans, which was scripted by Winick. Following the \"Battle for the Cowl\" storyline, Winick took over the writing on Batman for four issues. He co-wrote the 26-issue biweekly Justice League: Generation Lost with Keith Giffen, a title which alternated with Brightest Day. In addition, he was a regular writer on the monthly Power Girl series. Winick wrote the screenplay for the 2010 direct to DVD animated feature Batman: Under the Red Hood, which was based on the 1988–89 story arc \"Batman: A Death in the Family\" and the 2005 \"Batman: Under the Hood\" story arc that he wrote in the Batman comic book. Beginning ", "Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight\n by Ra's al Ghul, were later used in the DC Animated Movie Batman: Under the Red Hood, instead of the plot from \"A Death in the Family\", to explain how the Joker killed Jason Todd. By Doug Moench and Barry Kitson By J. M. DeMatteis, Trevor Von Eeden, and José Luis García-López By Mike Baron and Bill Reinhold By Dwayne McDuffie, Val Semeiks, and Dan Green Batman teams up with a man who can see through the eyes of others in order to track down the leader of an underground snuff film ring. By John Ostrander, David Lopez, and Dan ", "Batman (1989 film)\n publicist was offered and refused £10,000 for the first pictures of Jack Nicholson as the Joker. The police were later called in when two reels of footage (about 20 minutes' worth) were stolen. With various problems during filming, Burton called it \"Torture. The worst period of my life!\" Hamm was not allowed to perform rewrites during the 1988 Writers Guild of America strike. Warren Skaaren, who had also worked on Burton's Beetlejuice, did rewrites. Jonathan Gems and Charles McKeown rewrote the script during filming. Only Skaaren received screenplay credit with Hamm. Hamm criticized the rewrites, but blamed the changes on Warner Bros. Burton explained, \"I don't understand why that became such a problem. We started out with a ", "A Death in the Family (comics)\n Bruce Timm and Paul Dini considered adapting \"A Death in the Family\" for Batman: The Animated Series (1992–1999), but decided it was too violent. Instead, they omitted the Todd character and incorporated some of his characteristics in Drake. The story was eventually adapted in the comic book sequel Batman: The Adventures Continue (2020), written by Dini and Alan Burnett and penciled by Ty Templeton. In the Adventures Continue adaptation, the Joker and Harley Quinn kidnap Todd, and the Joker beats him with a crowbar with intent to kill him. Harley objects to killing a child and finds Batman, who arrives as the ", "Gardner Fox\n During July 1939, just two issues after debut of the character Batman by artist Bob Kane and writer Bill Finger, Fox wrote the first of his several tales for that character, introducing an early villain in the story \"The Batman Meets Doctor Death\". Alongside Kane and Finger, Fox contributed to the evolution of the character, including the character's first use of his utility belt, which \"contain[ed] choking gas capsules,\" as well as writing the first usages of both the Batarang and the Batgyro, an autogyro precursor to the Batcopter, two issues later. Fox returned to the Batman in 1964. (See below)", "Batman Black and White\n (originally published in Gotham Knights #31) ; This story highlights two underexplored sides of Batman, those of forensic investigator and granter of absolution. Batman discovers an old death, and has to decide the path of least heartache when conveying the results of his investigation into the death of a young child to her surviving family. ; \"Toyride\" - written by Mark Askwith, art by Michael William Kaluta (originally published in Gotham Knights #32) ; Three little girls write a letter to Bruce Wayne in which they tell a story about their strange classmate, who has a genius-level intellect and a knack for ", "Oswald Cobblepot (Batman Returns)\n screenplay for the film.\" Director Tim Burton hired Wesley Strick to do an uncredited rewrite. Strick recalled, \"When I was hired to write Batman Returns (Batman II at the time), the big problem of the script was the Penguin's lack of a 'master plan'.\" Warner Bros. presented Strick with warming, or freezing Gotham City, a plot point they would later use in Batman & Robin. Strick gained inspiration from a Moses parallel that had the Penguin killing the firstborn sons of Gotham. A similar notion was used when the Penguin's parents threw him into a river as a baby. While this Penguin retained many trademarks, such as a variety of ", "Batman: Death of the Family\n \"Batman: Death of the Family\" is a 23-issue comic book story arc first published by DC Comics in 2012 featuring the fictional superhero Batman and his family of supporting characters. The arc spans several titles featuring characters of the Batman family including: Batman, Batgirl, Batman and Robin, Catwoman, Detective Comics, Nightwing, Red Hood and the Outlaws, Suicide Squad, and Teen Titans. The story involves the return of Batman's archenemy, the Joker, and his plan to destroy all of the people Batman has come to rely on over the years: the multiple Robins, Batgirl, Catwoman, Alfred Pennyworth, and Commissioner James Gordon. The title is a reference to the classic Batman story arc \"A Death in the Family\" (1988), in which the Joker murders Jason Todd." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Fear No More?
[ "Adam Barr" ]
screenwriter
Fear No More (Desperate Housewives)
5,471,141
37
[ { "id": "28426730", "title": "Fear No More (film)", "text": " Fear No More is a 1961 American thriller film directed by Bernard Wiesen and starring Mala Powers, Jacques Bergerac and Anna Lee Carroll. It was based on a 1946 novel of the same name by Leslie Edgley.", "score": "1.7202818" }, { "id": "28426733", "title": "Fear No More (film)", "text": "Mala Powers as Sharon Carlin ; Jacques Bergerac as Paul Colbert ; John Harding as Milo Seymour ; Helena Nash as Irene Maddox ; John Baer as Keith Burgess ; Anna Lee Carroll as Denise Colbert ; Robert Karnes as Joe Brady ; Peter Brocco as Steve Cresca ; Peter Virgo Jr. as Duke Maddox ; Gregory Irvin as Chris Colbert ; Emile Hamaty as Train Conductor ", "score": "1.5807053" }, { "id": "15639416", "title": "Cape Fear (1991 film)", "text": " The film was adapted by Wesley Strick from the original screenplay by James R. Webb, which was an adaptation from the novel The Executioners by John D. MacDonald. It was originally developed by Steven Spielberg, who eventually decided it was too violent and traded it to Scorsese to get back Schindler's List, which Scorsese had decided not to make. Scorsese eventually agreed to do Cape Fear because Universal did support The Last Temptation of Christ. Spielberg stayed on as a producer, through his Amblin Entertainment, but chose not to be credited personally on the finished film. Despite having worked with Nolte in New York Stories (1989), Scorsese did ", "score": "1.5705026" }, { "id": "31599951", "title": "Wesley Strick", "text": " Wesley Strick (born February 11, 1954) is an American screenwriter who has written such films as the comic-horror hit Arachnophobia, the Martin Scorsese remake of Cape Fear and the video game adaptation Doom. Since 2015, Strick has worked as a writer/executive producer on The Man in the High Castle.", "score": "1.5482717" }, { "id": "10906813", "title": "Guy Endore", "text": " in the New York Times. He worked on the screenplay for Mark of the Vampire starring Bela Lugosi. He also wrote the 19-page treatment that eventually became The Raven, for which he was not credited. A number of other horror films followed, interspersed with more mainstream films including the Oscar-nominated (The Story of G.I. Joe), a John Wayne movie (Lady from Louisiana), and Carefree. His Hollywood career ended in 1969 with a made for TV movie entitled Fear No Evil, for which he wrote the story. It was the first US television “Movie of the Week” and a success in the ratings, spawning a sequel a year later.", "score": "1.5297654" }, { "id": "16096441", "title": "Richard Maibaum", "text": " the \"Footsteps of Freedom\" project, a teleplay writing course. For Warwick, he worked on the war story, The Cockleshell Heroes (1955) which starred Jose Ferrer. Maibaum returned to Hollywood in 1955. He and Hume adapted \"Fearful Decision\" for the big screen in Ransom! (1956) with Glenn Ford. He co-wrote \"Bigger Than Life,\" (1956) with Hume along with its star and producer, the British actor James Mason. Maibaum did another for Warwick, Zarak (1956), directed by Terence Young and starring Victor Mature. He and Young collaborated on the script for Warwick's No Time to Die (1958) with Mature and he did some uncredited work on Warwick's The Man Inside (1959). He wrote some episodes of Wagon Train (1958) and provided the story for Warwick's The Bandit of Zhobe (1959) and Killers of Kilimanjaro (1959).", "score": "1.5181854" }, { "id": "32788316", "title": "Dr. No (film)", "text": " and thriller writer Berkely Mather then worked on Maibaum's script. Terence Young described Harwood as a script doctor who helped put elements more in tune with a British character. Harwood stated in an interview in a Cinema Retro special on the making of the film that she had been a screenwriter of several of Harry Saltzman's projects; she said both her screenplays for Dr. No and her screenplay for From Russia with Love had followed Fleming's novels closely. During the series' decades-long history only a few of the films have remained substantially true to their source material; Dr. No has many similarities to the novel and follows its basic plot, but there are a ", "score": "1.5177832" }, { "id": "6970857", "title": "Michael McDowell (author)", "text": " and featured three different endings; however, the novelization was based on the shooting script and includes an additional fourth ending that was cut from the film. He also contributed screenplays to a number of television horror anthologies, including Tales from the Darkside. McDowell was one of seventeen contemporary British and American horror writers interviewed by Douglas E. Winter in his 1985 interview book Faces of Fear. Of his writing, McDowell says in this book: \"I am a commercial writer and I'm proud of that. I am writing things to be put in the bookstore next month. I think it is a mistake to try to write for the ages.\" Stephen King described McDowell as \"the finest writer of paperback originals in America today\".", "score": "1.5176224" }, { "id": "26728482", "title": "Frank LaLoggia", "text": " Frank LaLoggia (born January 12, 1954) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, and actor. LaLoggia appeared in several films before making his directorial debut with the horror film Fear No Evil (1981). His second feature was the mystery horror film Lady in White (1988), starring Lukas Haas and Alex Rocco.", "score": "1.5157418" }, { "id": "25048808", "title": "The Fear Index", "text": " On August 23, 2011, Robert Harris has written a screenplay adaptation of the novel, for a film to be directed by Paul Greengrass and produced by 20th Century Fox. On February 5, 2020, Sky Studios and Left Bank were set to produce the 4-part limited series adaptation starring Josh Hartnett, Leila Farzad, Arsher Ali, and Grégory Montel.", "score": "1.5042582" }, { "id": "26560952", "title": "13 West Street", "text": " Leigh Brackett's novel The Tiger Among Us was originally published in 1957. Film rights were purchased by producer Charles Schnee, who had just left MGM and signed a deal with Columbia Pictures. He hired John Michael Hayes to write the script. John Wayne was announced as a possible star. It was then reported that Valentine Davies was working on the script, which had been retitled Fear No Evil. Production plans were delayed when Schnee announced he was leaving Columbia, claiming he was unable to get any of his films in development made because of \"almost insurmountable casting difficulties.\" The project stayed with Columbia and was assigned to producer Boris Kaplan. ", "score": "1.50243" }, { "id": "8069197", "title": "Tony Grisoni", "text": " He has co-written several of director Terry Gilliam's films, including Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Tideland. Gilliam and Grisoni went to WGA arbitration to get credit for Fear and Loathing; initially only Tod Davies and Alex Cox (who had written a previous version of the screenplay) were credited, despite Gilliam and Grisoni rewriting the entire film from scratch. In the end, all four writers were credited. Later, Gilliam and Grisoni were involved in a similar dispute when original writer Ehren Kruger received sole credit for The Brothers Grimm; as an alternative to receiving a writing credit, Gilliam and Grisoni listed themselves as \"dress pattern makers\". Grisoni also co-wrote the screenplay for Gilliam's The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, which was abandoned soon after starting filming. During the production, he met filmmakers Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe, who were shooting the making-of documentary that ", "score": "1.5016425" }, { "id": "32941396", "title": "Xander Bennett", "text": " Bennett began writing screenplays in 2004, but has had none produced as yet. In 2010 he developed The Colour of Fear, a feature film, for Rising Swell Productions, a Melbourne based production company.", "score": "1.4942055" }, { "id": "1324259", "title": "Johanna Harwood", "text": " R. Broccoli had originally hired Richard Maibaum and his friend Wolf Mankowitz to write the Dr. No screenplay. An initial draft of the screenplay was rejected because the scriptwriters had made the villain, Dr. No, a monkey. Mankowitz left the movie, and Maibaum then undertook a second version, more closely in line with the novel. Mankowitz eventually had his name removed from the credits after viewing early rushes, as he feared it would be a disaster. Johanna Harwood and thriller writer Berkely Mather then worked on Maibaum's script. The film's director Terence Young described Harwood as a script doctor who helped put elements more in tune with a British character. Richard ", "score": "1.49108" }, { "id": "10829177", "title": "Fear No Evil (1945 film)", "text": " Fear No Evil (Il sole di Montecassino) is a 1945 Italian drama film directed by Giuseppe Maria Scotese and starring Fosco Giachetti, Adriana Benetti and Liliana Laine. It is based on a book written by Diego Fabbri about the life of Benedict of Nursia.", "score": "1.4892801" }, { "id": "28426732", "title": "Fear No More (film)", "text": " her home. She has forgotten that her male friend is staying in her flat. Later he phones her and they have a coffee together at a local beat café. When she returns home, she finds her friend dead. Chased by the murderer, she dashes out of the apartment block and Paul drives her away. She eventually discloses to him that she can't go to the police as they won't believe her: she has a mental health history and was once in a sanitorium. The following day, Paul drives her to her employer's house where, inexplicably, his employer and his staff disavow any knowledge of her errand. More worryingly, her employer, Milo Seymour (John Harding) claims a large sum of money has disappeared from his safe, to which only he and she have the combination. Is Sharon the victim of an elaborate plot, or is she veering into madness?", "score": "1.4863533" }, { "id": "13316", "title": "The Writer with No Hands", "text": " The Writer with No Hands is a 2017 British documentary feature film, which follows writer Matthew Alford as he tries to establish that the accidental death of Hollywood screenwriter Gary DeVore was, in fact, an assassination by the United States government. The film was screened at venues on 27 June 2017 to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of DeVore's fate and a television edit subsequently shown on VGTV, Rialto Channel, and Means TV. It began streaming on Scottish Television in February 2021.", "score": "1.4853011" }, { "id": "9482888", "title": "No-FEAR Act", "text": " Coleman-Adebayo wrote a book about her experience which as of 2014 is in the process of being adapted into the movie The Marsha Coleman-Adebayo Story with producer and actor Danny Glover.", "score": "1.482326" }, { "id": "11036726", "title": "Scott Frost (writer)", "text": "Wait for Dark (2010) ; Don't Look Back (2009) ; Point of No Return (2007) ; Never Fear (2006) ; Run the Risk (2005) Frost's first novel, The Autobiography of FBI Agent Dale Cooper, was based on the Twin Peaks character played by Kyle MacLachlan. More recently, he has been working on a mystery/thriller series based on a character named Alex Delillo, a Pasadena homicide detective and single mother. There are currently five novels in the series. ", "score": "1.4793596" }, { "id": "9743244", "title": "No Way Out (1987 film)", "text": " The screenplay is based on Kenneth Fearing's 1946 novel The Big Clock.", "score": "1.4788691" } ]
[ "Fear No More (film)\n Fear No More is a 1961 American thriller film directed by Bernard Wiesen and starring Mala Powers, Jacques Bergerac and Anna Lee Carroll. It was based on a 1946 novel of the same name by Leslie Edgley.", "Fear No More (film)\nMala Powers as Sharon Carlin ; Jacques Bergerac as Paul Colbert ; John Harding as Milo Seymour ; Helena Nash as Irene Maddox ; John Baer as Keith Burgess ; Anna Lee Carroll as Denise Colbert ; Robert Karnes as Joe Brady ; Peter Brocco as Steve Cresca ; Peter Virgo Jr. as Duke Maddox ; Gregory Irvin as Chris Colbert ; Emile Hamaty as Train Conductor ", "Cape Fear (1991 film)\n The film was adapted by Wesley Strick from the original screenplay by James R. Webb, which was an adaptation from the novel The Executioners by John D. MacDonald. It was originally developed by Steven Spielberg, who eventually decided it was too violent and traded it to Scorsese to get back Schindler's List, which Scorsese had decided not to make. Scorsese eventually agreed to do Cape Fear because Universal did support The Last Temptation of Christ. Spielberg stayed on as a producer, through his Amblin Entertainment, but chose not to be credited personally on the finished film. Despite having worked with Nolte in New York Stories (1989), Scorsese did ", "Wesley Strick\n Wesley Strick (born February 11, 1954) is an American screenwriter who has written such films as the comic-horror hit Arachnophobia, the Martin Scorsese remake of Cape Fear and the video game adaptation Doom. Since 2015, Strick has worked as a writer/executive producer on The Man in the High Castle.", "Guy Endore\n in the New York Times. He worked on the screenplay for Mark of the Vampire starring Bela Lugosi. He also wrote the 19-page treatment that eventually became The Raven, for which he was not credited. A number of other horror films followed, interspersed with more mainstream films including the Oscar-nominated (The Story of G.I. Joe), a John Wayne movie (Lady from Louisiana), and Carefree. His Hollywood career ended in 1969 with a made for TV movie entitled Fear No Evil, for which he wrote the story. It was the first US television “Movie of the Week” and a success in the ratings, spawning a sequel a year later.", "Richard Maibaum\n the \"Footsteps of Freedom\" project, a teleplay writing course. For Warwick, he worked on the war story, The Cockleshell Heroes (1955) which starred Jose Ferrer. Maibaum returned to Hollywood in 1955. He and Hume adapted \"Fearful Decision\" for the big screen in Ransom! (1956) with Glenn Ford. He co-wrote \"Bigger Than Life,\" (1956) with Hume along with its star and producer, the British actor James Mason. Maibaum did another for Warwick, Zarak (1956), directed by Terence Young and starring Victor Mature. He and Young collaborated on the script for Warwick's No Time to Die (1958) with Mature and he did some uncredited work on Warwick's The Man Inside (1959). He wrote some episodes of Wagon Train (1958) and provided the story for Warwick's The Bandit of Zhobe (1959) and Killers of Kilimanjaro (1959).", "Dr. No (film)\n and thriller writer Berkely Mather then worked on Maibaum's script. Terence Young described Harwood as a script doctor who helped put elements more in tune with a British character. Harwood stated in an interview in a Cinema Retro special on the making of the film that she had been a screenwriter of several of Harry Saltzman's projects; she said both her screenplays for Dr. No and her screenplay for From Russia with Love had followed Fleming's novels closely. During the series' decades-long history only a few of the films have remained substantially true to their source material; Dr. No has many similarities to the novel and follows its basic plot, but there are a ", "Michael McDowell (author)\n and featured three different endings; however, the novelization was based on the shooting script and includes an additional fourth ending that was cut from the film. He also contributed screenplays to a number of television horror anthologies, including Tales from the Darkside. McDowell was one of seventeen contemporary British and American horror writers interviewed by Douglas E. Winter in his 1985 interview book Faces of Fear. Of his writing, McDowell says in this book: \"I am a commercial writer and I'm proud of that. I am writing things to be put in the bookstore next month. I think it is a mistake to try to write for the ages.\" Stephen King described McDowell as \"the finest writer of paperback originals in America today\".", "Frank LaLoggia\n Frank LaLoggia (born January 12, 1954) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, and actor. LaLoggia appeared in several films before making his directorial debut with the horror film Fear No Evil (1981). His second feature was the mystery horror film Lady in White (1988), starring Lukas Haas and Alex Rocco.", "The Fear Index\n On August 23, 2011, Robert Harris has written a screenplay adaptation of the novel, for a film to be directed by Paul Greengrass and produced by 20th Century Fox. On February 5, 2020, Sky Studios and Left Bank were set to produce the 4-part limited series adaptation starring Josh Hartnett, Leila Farzad, Arsher Ali, and Grégory Montel.", "13 West Street\n Leigh Brackett's novel The Tiger Among Us was originally published in 1957. Film rights were purchased by producer Charles Schnee, who had just left MGM and signed a deal with Columbia Pictures. He hired John Michael Hayes to write the script. John Wayne was announced as a possible star. It was then reported that Valentine Davies was working on the script, which had been retitled Fear No Evil. Production plans were delayed when Schnee announced he was leaving Columbia, claiming he was unable to get any of his films in development made because of \"almost insurmountable casting difficulties.\" The project stayed with Columbia and was assigned to producer Boris Kaplan. ", "Tony Grisoni\n He has co-written several of director Terry Gilliam's films, including Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Tideland. Gilliam and Grisoni went to WGA arbitration to get credit for Fear and Loathing; initially only Tod Davies and Alex Cox (who had written a previous version of the screenplay) were credited, despite Gilliam and Grisoni rewriting the entire film from scratch. In the end, all four writers were credited. Later, Gilliam and Grisoni were involved in a similar dispute when original writer Ehren Kruger received sole credit for The Brothers Grimm; as an alternative to receiving a writing credit, Gilliam and Grisoni listed themselves as \"dress pattern makers\". Grisoni also co-wrote the screenplay for Gilliam's The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, which was abandoned soon after starting filming. During the production, he met filmmakers Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe, who were shooting the making-of documentary that ", "Xander Bennett\n Bennett began writing screenplays in 2004, but has had none produced as yet. In 2010 he developed The Colour of Fear, a feature film, for Rising Swell Productions, a Melbourne based production company.", "Johanna Harwood\n R. Broccoli had originally hired Richard Maibaum and his friend Wolf Mankowitz to write the Dr. No screenplay. An initial draft of the screenplay was rejected because the scriptwriters had made the villain, Dr. No, a monkey. Mankowitz left the movie, and Maibaum then undertook a second version, more closely in line with the novel. Mankowitz eventually had his name removed from the credits after viewing early rushes, as he feared it would be a disaster. Johanna Harwood and thriller writer Berkely Mather then worked on Maibaum's script. The film's director Terence Young described Harwood as a script doctor who helped put elements more in tune with a British character. Richard ", "Fear No Evil (1945 film)\n Fear No Evil (Il sole di Montecassino) is a 1945 Italian drama film directed by Giuseppe Maria Scotese and starring Fosco Giachetti, Adriana Benetti and Liliana Laine. It is based on a book written by Diego Fabbri about the life of Benedict of Nursia.", "Fear No More (film)\n her home. She has forgotten that her male friend is staying in her flat. Later he phones her and they have a coffee together at a local beat café. When she returns home, she finds her friend dead. Chased by the murderer, she dashes out of the apartment block and Paul drives her away. She eventually discloses to him that she can't go to the police as they won't believe her: she has a mental health history and was once in a sanitorium. The following day, Paul drives her to her employer's house where, inexplicably, his employer and his staff disavow any knowledge of her errand. More worryingly, her employer, Milo Seymour (John Harding) claims a large sum of money has disappeared from his safe, to which only he and she have the combination. Is Sharon the victim of an elaborate plot, or is she veering into madness?", "The Writer with No Hands\n The Writer with No Hands is a 2017 British documentary feature film, which follows writer Matthew Alford as he tries to establish that the accidental death of Hollywood screenwriter Gary DeVore was, in fact, an assassination by the United States government. The film was screened at venues on 27 June 2017 to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of DeVore's fate and a television edit subsequently shown on VGTV, Rialto Channel, and Means TV. It began streaming on Scottish Television in February 2021.", "No-FEAR Act\n Coleman-Adebayo wrote a book about her experience which as of 2014 is in the process of being adapted into the movie The Marsha Coleman-Adebayo Story with producer and actor Danny Glover.", "Scott Frost (writer)\nWait for Dark (2010) ; Don't Look Back (2009) ; Point of No Return (2007) ; Never Fear (2006) ; Run the Risk (2005) Frost's first novel, The Autobiography of FBI Agent Dale Cooper, was based on the Twin Peaks character played by Kyle MacLachlan. More recently, he has been working on a mystery/thriller series based on a character named Alex Delillo, a Pasadena homicide detective and single mother. There are currently five novels in the series. ", "No Way Out (1987 film)\n The screenplay is based on Kenneth Fearing's 1946 novel The Big Clock." ]
Who was the screenwriter for The Fake?
[ "Frederick Lonsdale" ]
screenwriter
The Fake (1927 film)
5,924,855
81
[ { "id": "16431628", "title": "Fakers", "text": " Fakers is a 2004 British film directed by Richard Janes and starring Matthew Rhys as con-man with a big debt to pay off to wanna-be crime lord Art Malik. It was produced by Richard Janes Claire Bee and Todd Kleparski, three graduates from Ravensbourne College of Design and Communication. Completely funded via independent routes the film cost $1,500,000 to make and has opened theatrically in the United Kingdom, America and Japan as well as other territories. The title track was written and performed by Andrea Britton and produced by Andrew J Jones.", "score": "1.4804316" }, { "id": "9249190", "title": "Paul Rusesabagina", "text": " In 1999, Rusesabagina received a phone call from an American screenwriter named Keir Pearson. Pearson, along with his colleague Terry George, went on to write the script for Hotel Rwanda in consultation with Rusesabagina. The script was made into a Hollywood film, starring Don Cheadle as Rusesabagina. The film was released in 2004 to much critical acclaim. It received three Academy Award nominations, including for Best Original Screenplay.", "score": "1.4714566" }, { "id": "13623720", "title": "The Fake (1953 film)", "text": " The Fake is a 1953 British crime film directed by Godfrey Grayson and starring Dennis O'Keefe, Coleen Gray and Hugh Williams. Its plot concerns an American detective who tries to solve the theft of a priceless painting from the Tate Gallery in London.", "score": "1.459837" }, { "id": "28666811", "title": "The Hoax", "text": " The Hoax is a 2006 American comedy-drama film starring Richard Gere, directed by Swedish filmmaker Lasse Hallström. The screenplay by William Wheeler is based on the book of the same title by Clifford Irving. It recounts Irving's elaborate hoax of publishing an autobiography of Howard Hughes that he purportedly helped write, without ever having talked with Hughes. The screenplay was considerably different from the book. Hired as a technical adviser to the film, Irving was displeased with the product and later asked to have his name removed from the credits. It nonetheless earned a positive critical reception, but was a box office bomb, grossing only $11.7 million against a budget of $25 million.", "score": "1.4509957" }, { "id": "7160235", "title": "F for Fake", "text": " with Reichenbach as his cinematographer. In the time between the shooting of Reichenbach's documentary and the finishing of Welles's, it became known that Irving had perpetrated a hoax of his own, namely a fabricated \"authorized biography\" of Howard Hughes (the hoax was later fictionalized in The Hoax). This discovery prompted the shooting of still more footage, which then got woven into F for Fake. Interweaving the narratives even more, there are several pieces of footage in the film showing Welles at a party with De Hory, and, at one point, De Hory even signs a painting with a forgery of Welles's signature. ", "score": "1.4508808" }, { "id": "4813361", "title": "Screenwriting", "text": " naïve New York playwright who comes to Hollywood with high hopes and great ambition. While there, he meets one of his writing idols, a celebrated novelist from the past who has become a drunken hack screenwriter (a character based on William Faulkner). ; Mistress (1992)—In this comedy written by Barry Primus and J. F. Lawton, Robert Wuhl is a screenwriter/director who's got integrity, vision, and a serious script — but no career. Martin Landau is a sleazy producer who introduces Wuhl to Robert De Niro, Danny Aiello and Eli Wallach - three guys willing to invest in the movie, but with one catch: each one wants his mistress ", "score": "1.4506049" }, { "id": "7160233", "title": "F for Fake", "text": " in other words, the essay, the personal essay, as opposed to the documentary.\" Several storylines are presented in the film, including those of de Hory, Irving, Welles, Howard Hughes and Kodar. About de Hory, we learn that he was a struggling artist who turned to forgery out of desperation, only to see the greater share of the profits from his deceptions go to doubly unscrupulous art dealers. As partial compensation for that injustice, he is maintained in a villa in Ibiza by one of his dealers. What is only hinted at in Welles's documentary is that de Hory had recently served a two-month ", "score": "1.4496936" }, { "id": "13623723", "title": "The Fake (1953 film)", "text": " Leonard Maltin called the film an \"OK crime drama,\" rating it two out of four stars, while The Hollywood Reporter found it \"fairly diverting.\"", "score": "1.4464159" }, { "id": "15523889", "title": "Kent Jones (writer)", "text": " In 1996, he discovered the 'far more legitimate field of fake news' at The Daily Show on Comedy Central, where he was a writer for five years. Around this time, Jones was a writer on the TV special Unauthorized Biography: Milo, Death of a Supermodel. In 2000, Kent and his fellow writers won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy, Variety or Special, as well as the Peabody Award for Excellence in Broadcasting. Kent then moved to Los Angeles and worked as a producer on shows at Oxygen and ABC.", "score": "1.4393289" }, { "id": "13623712", "title": "The Fake (1927 film)", "text": " The Fake is a 1927 British silent drama film directed by Georg Jacoby and starring Henry Edwards, Elga Brink and Juliette Compton. It is based on a 1924 play of the same title by Frederick Lonsdale. It was made at Twickenham Studios in London.", "score": "1.4388137" }, { "id": "3741282", "title": "The Tremor of Forgery", "text": " American writer Howard Ingham arrives in the sweltering heat of Tunisia in search of inspiration for a new movie script he has been commissioned to write. The director with whom he is collaborating fails to appear and hears reports from home in the U.S. about infidelity and suicide. Rather than abandon the project, Howard stays and starts work on a novel. He gets to know Francis J. Adams, an aging American propagandist, and Anders Jensen, a Danish homosexual painter. While waiting for a letter from his New York girlfriend, he settled on a plot for his projected novel, the story of a banker who forges documents to steal money he then gives to the poor. One night, Ingham finds someone breaking into his apartment. He throws his typewriter at the intruder, possibly killing him. The body is dragged away by the intruder's accomplices. Ingham struggles to keep this incident secret from his acquaintances while at the same time questioning Western morality, in particular the application of its principles in a country where he lives as a stranger.", "score": "1.4305885" }, { "id": "30512699", "title": "Matthew Cox", "text": " Cox left his job as an insurance agent to work as a mortgage broker for a local company. While there he developed a reputation for unscrupulousness, which was heightened by his authorship of an unpublished 317-page manuscript entitled The Associates. The novel's protagonist, who shares many traits in common with Cox, travels the country committing mortgage fraud. Cox told co-workers about the book, and elaborated its details to them. \"He sent it to a lot of people to see if they thought it worked\" said a former co-worker. After being fired from the company when he was convicted of mortgage fraud in 2002, Cox faked a good credit history, and used ", "score": "1.4287002" }, { "id": "26017579", "title": "The Fake (play)", "text": " In 1927 it was turned into a British silent film The Fake directed by Georg Jacoby and starring Henry Edwards, Elga Brink, Juliette Compton and Miles Mander.", "score": "1.4263728" }, { "id": "5457727", "title": "List of hoaxes", "text": "Cedric Allingham, fictitious author who wrote a book about meeting the pilot of a Martian spacecraft. Allingham was created by British astronomer Patrick Moore and his friend Peter Davies. ; Alien autopsy, a hoax film by Ray Santilli ; Amina Abdallah Arraf al Omari, a fake Syrian blogger ; The Archko Volume, a collection of documents related to the life of Jesus ; The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk, a book about purported sexual enslavement of a nun ; Sir Edmund Backhouse, 2nd Baronet co-authored the book China Under the Empress Dowager using a fake diary as a major source, and a manuscript of Backhouse's memoirs also was mostly fiction. He falsely represented himself as ", "score": "1.4260578" }, { "id": "7160241", "title": "F for Fake", "text": " Author Robert Anton Wilson, a great fan of the film, argued in Cosmic Trigger III: My Life After Death that the film was itself largely an intentional effort at fakery by Welles in support of the film's themes. Most directly, Wilson reports that in the BBC documentary Orson Welles: Stories of a Life in Film, Welles stated that \"everything in that film was a trick.\" Secondly, many of the interviews in the film were with people who were themselves directly involved with forgery in one way or another, often making statements that would have been known by the filmmakers to be false, ", "score": "1.421884" }, { "id": "4813362", "title": "Screenwriting", "text": " be the star. ; The Player (1992)—In this satire of the Hollywood system, Tim Robbins plays a movie producer who thinks he's being blackmailed by a screenwriter whose script was rejected. ; Adaptation (2002)—Nicolas Cage portrays real-life screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (as well as his fictional brother, Donald) as Kaufman struggles to adapt an esoteric book (Susan Orlean’s real-life nonfiction work The Orchid Thief ) into an action-filled Hollywood screenplay. ; Dreams on Spec (2007)—The only documentary to follow aspiring screenwriters as they struggle to turn their scripts into movies, the film also features wisdom from established scribes like James L. Brooks, Nora Ephron, Carrie Fisher, and Gary ", "score": "1.4195664" }, { "id": "6955786", "title": "Graham Moore (writer)", "text": " Graham Moore (born October 18, 1981) is an American screenwriter and author known for his 2010 novel The Sherlockian, as well as his screenplay for the historical film The Imitation Game, which topped the 2011 Black List for screenplays and won the 2014 Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay (awarded February 2015).", "score": "1.4193491" }, { "id": "2128393", "title": "Sam Raimi's unrealized projects", "text": " In January 2009, Siavash Farahani announced he has written a Ruse film script for Disney with Sam Raimi directing the project. Since then, there have been no further announcements.", "score": "1.4189368" }, { "id": "26017578", "title": "The Fake (play)", "text": " The Fake is a 1924 play by the British writer Frederick Lonsdale. It was staged at the Apollo Theatre in the West End with a cast that included Godfrey Tearle, Franklyn Bellamy and Allan Jeayes. Unlike most of his successful plays, generally farce-like comedies, this was intended as a serious drama although it contains a happy ending. It ran for 211 performances. When the play transferred to Broadway, Claudette Colbert was originally cast as the female lead, but was replaced by Frieda Inescort.", "score": "1.4167287" }, { "id": "7160232", "title": "F for Fake", "text": " Orson Welles was hired to edit a documentary by François Reichenbach about the art forger Elmyr de Hory. The film grew over time to encompass de Hory, as well as de Hory's biographer Clifford Irving, who was revealed to be a forger himself. Keith Woodward explains: \"following Irving’s hoax, Welles and his cinematographer, Gary Graver, shifted gears, scrambling to keep up with the Hughes affair, adding new shots, re-thinking the narrative, re-editing, re-combining different themes, incorporating emerging material.\" Welles used these circumstances to produce a meditation on the nature of fakery, which he called \" a new kind of movie … it’s a ", "score": "1.4161899" } ]
[ "Fakers\n Fakers is a 2004 British film directed by Richard Janes and starring Matthew Rhys as con-man with a big debt to pay off to wanna-be crime lord Art Malik. It was produced by Richard Janes Claire Bee and Todd Kleparski, three graduates from Ravensbourne College of Design and Communication. Completely funded via independent routes the film cost $1,500,000 to make and has opened theatrically in the United Kingdom, America and Japan as well as other territories. The title track was written and performed by Andrea Britton and produced by Andrew J Jones.", "Paul Rusesabagina\n In 1999, Rusesabagina received a phone call from an American screenwriter named Keir Pearson. Pearson, along with his colleague Terry George, went on to write the script for Hotel Rwanda in consultation with Rusesabagina. The script was made into a Hollywood film, starring Don Cheadle as Rusesabagina. The film was released in 2004 to much critical acclaim. It received three Academy Award nominations, including for Best Original Screenplay.", "The Fake (1953 film)\n The Fake is a 1953 British crime film directed by Godfrey Grayson and starring Dennis O'Keefe, Coleen Gray and Hugh Williams. Its plot concerns an American detective who tries to solve the theft of a priceless painting from the Tate Gallery in London.", "The Hoax\n The Hoax is a 2006 American comedy-drama film starring Richard Gere, directed by Swedish filmmaker Lasse Hallström. The screenplay by William Wheeler is based on the book of the same title by Clifford Irving. It recounts Irving's elaborate hoax of publishing an autobiography of Howard Hughes that he purportedly helped write, without ever having talked with Hughes. The screenplay was considerably different from the book. Hired as a technical adviser to the film, Irving was displeased with the product and later asked to have his name removed from the credits. It nonetheless earned a positive critical reception, but was a box office bomb, grossing only $11.7 million against a budget of $25 million.", "F for Fake\n with Reichenbach as his cinematographer. In the time between the shooting of Reichenbach's documentary and the finishing of Welles's, it became known that Irving had perpetrated a hoax of his own, namely a fabricated \"authorized biography\" of Howard Hughes (the hoax was later fictionalized in The Hoax). This discovery prompted the shooting of still more footage, which then got woven into F for Fake. Interweaving the narratives even more, there are several pieces of footage in the film showing Welles at a party with De Hory, and, at one point, De Hory even signs a painting with a forgery of Welles's signature. ", "Screenwriting\n naïve New York playwright who comes to Hollywood with high hopes and great ambition. While there, he meets one of his writing idols, a celebrated novelist from the past who has become a drunken hack screenwriter (a character based on William Faulkner). ; Mistress (1992)—In this comedy written by Barry Primus and J. F. Lawton, Robert Wuhl is a screenwriter/director who's got integrity, vision, and a serious script — but no career. Martin Landau is a sleazy producer who introduces Wuhl to Robert De Niro, Danny Aiello and Eli Wallach - three guys willing to invest in the movie, but with one catch: each one wants his mistress ", "F for Fake\n in other words, the essay, the personal essay, as opposed to the documentary.\" Several storylines are presented in the film, including those of de Hory, Irving, Welles, Howard Hughes and Kodar. About de Hory, we learn that he was a struggling artist who turned to forgery out of desperation, only to see the greater share of the profits from his deceptions go to doubly unscrupulous art dealers. As partial compensation for that injustice, he is maintained in a villa in Ibiza by one of his dealers. What is only hinted at in Welles's documentary is that de Hory had recently served a two-month ", "The Fake (1953 film)\n Leonard Maltin called the film an \"OK crime drama,\" rating it two out of four stars, while The Hollywood Reporter found it \"fairly diverting.\"", "Kent Jones (writer)\n In 1996, he discovered the 'far more legitimate field of fake news' at The Daily Show on Comedy Central, where he was a writer for five years. Around this time, Jones was a writer on the TV special Unauthorized Biography: Milo, Death of a Supermodel. In 2000, Kent and his fellow writers won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy, Variety or Special, as well as the Peabody Award for Excellence in Broadcasting. Kent then moved to Los Angeles and worked as a producer on shows at Oxygen and ABC.", "The Fake (1927 film)\n The Fake is a 1927 British silent drama film directed by Georg Jacoby and starring Henry Edwards, Elga Brink and Juliette Compton. It is based on a 1924 play of the same title by Frederick Lonsdale. It was made at Twickenham Studios in London.", "The Tremor of Forgery\n American writer Howard Ingham arrives in the sweltering heat of Tunisia in search of inspiration for a new movie script he has been commissioned to write. The director with whom he is collaborating fails to appear and hears reports from home in the U.S. about infidelity and suicide. Rather than abandon the project, Howard stays and starts work on a novel. He gets to know Francis J. Adams, an aging American propagandist, and Anders Jensen, a Danish homosexual painter. While waiting for a letter from his New York girlfriend, he settled on a plot for his projected novel, the story of a banker who forges documents to steal money he then gives to the poor. One night, Ingham finds someone breaking into his apartment. He throws his typewriter at the intruder, possibly killing him. The body is dragged away by the intruder's accomplices. Ingham struggles to keep this incident secret from his acquaintances while at the same time questioning Western morality, in particular the application of its principles in a country where he lives as a stranger.", "Matthew Cox\n Cox left his job as an insurance agent to work as a mortgage broker for a local company. While there he developed a reputation for unscrupulousness, which was heightened by his authorship of an unpublished 317-page manuscript entitled The Associates. The novel's protagonist, who shares many traits in common with Cox, travels the country committing mortgage fraud. Cox told co-workers about the book, and elaborated its details to them. \"He sent it to a lot of people to see if they thought it worked\" said a former co-worker. After being fired from the company when he was convicted of mortgage fraud in 2002, Cox faked a good credit history, and used ", "The Fake (play)\n In 1927 it was turned into a British silent film The Fake directed by Georg Jacoby and starring Henry Edwards, Elga Brink, Juliette Compton and Miles Mander.", "List of hoaxes\nCedric Allingham, fictitious author who wrote a book about meeting the pilot of a Martian spacecraft. Allingham was created by British astronomer Patrick Moore and his friend Peter Davies. ; Alien autopsy, a hoax film by Ray Santilli ; Amina Abdallah Arraf al Omari, a fake Syrian blogger ; The Archko Volume, a collection of documents related to the life of Jesus ; The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk, a book about purported sexual enslavement of a nun ; Sir Edmund Backhouse, 2nd Baronet co-authored the book China Under the Empress Dowager using a fake diary as a major source, and a manuscript of Backhouse's memoirs also was mostly fiction. He falsely represented himself as ", "F for Fake\n Author Robert Anton Wilson, a great fan of the film, argued in Cosmic Trigger III: My Life After Death that the film was itself largely an intentional effort at fakery by Welles in support of the film's themes. Most directly, Wilson reports that in the BBC documentary Orson Welles: Stories of a Life in Film, Welles stated that \"everything in that film was a trick.\" Secondly, many of the interviews in the film were with people who were themselves directly involved with forgery in one way or another, often making statements that would have been known by the filmmakers to be false, ", "Screenwriting\n be the star. ; The Player (1992)—In this satire of the Hollywood system, Tim Robbins plays a movie producer who thinks he's being blackmailed by a screenwriter whose script was rejected. ; Adaptation (2002)—Nicolas Cage portrays real-life screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (as well as his fictional brother, Donald) as Kaufman struggles to adapt an esoteric book (Susan Orlean’s real-life nonfiction work The Orchid Thief ) into an action-filled Hollywood screenplay. ; Dreams on Spec (2007)—The only documentary to follow aspiring screenwriters as they struggle to turn their scripts into movies, the film also features wisdom from established scribes like James L. Brooks, Nora Ephron, Carrie Fisher, and Gary ", "Graham Moore (writer)\n Graham Moore (born October 18, 1981) is an American screenwriter and author known for his 2010 novel The Sherlockian, as well as his screenplay for the historical film The Imitation Game, which topped the 2011 Black List for screenplays and won the 2014 Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay (awarded February 2015).", "Sam Raimi's unrealized projects\n In January 2009, Siavash Farahani announced he has written a Ruse film script for Disney with Sam Raimi directing the project. Since then, there have been no further announcements.", "The Fake (play)\n The Fake is a 1924 play by the British writer Frederick Lonsdale. It was staged at the Apollo Theatre in the West End with a cast that included Godfrey Tearle, Franklyn Bellamy and Allan Jeayes. Unlike most of his successful plays, generally farce-like comedies, this was intended as a serious drama although it contains a happy ending. It ran for 211 performances. When the play transferred to Broadway, Claudette Colbert was originally cast as the female lead, but was replaced by Frieda Inescort.", "F for Fake\n Orson Welles was hired to edit a documentary by François Reichenbach about the art forger Elmyr de Hory. The film grew over time to encompass de Hory, as well as de Hory's biographer Clifford Irving, who was revealed to be a forger himself. Keith Woodward explains: \"following Irving’s hoax, Welles and his cinematographer, Gary Graver, shifted gears, scrambling to keep up with the Hughes affair, adding new shots, re-thinking the narrative, re-editing, re-combining different themes, incorporating emerging material.\" Welles used these circumstances to produce a meditation on the nature of fakery, which he called \" a new kind of movie … it’s a " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Boquitas pintadas?
[ "Manuel Puig", "Juan Manuel Puig Delledonne" ]
screenwriter
Heartbreak Tango (film)
2,702,466
92
[ { "id": "30019504", "title": "Manuel Puig", "text": " Juan Manuel Puig Delledonne (December 28, 1932 – July 22, 1990), commonly called Manuel Puig, was an Argentine author. Among his best-known novels are La traición de Rita Hayworth (Betrayed by Rita Hayworth, 1968), Boquitas pintadas (Heartbreak Tango, 1969), and El beso de la mujer araña (Kiss of the Spider Woman, 1976) which was adapted into the film released in 1985, directed by the Argentine-Brazilian director Héctor Babenco; and a Broadway musical in 1993.", "score": "1.6100087" }, { "id": "623725", "title": "Pedro Peirano", "text": " a movie, 31 Minutos, La Película, in 2008 and won Altazor awards for both directing and writing in 2004. Pedro has achieved international recognition as the co-writer of the successful films The Maid (2009), with Sebastián Silva, and No (2012). Peirano resumed his successful partnership with The Maid's Sebastián Silva in 2011 to co-write and co-direct Gatos Viejos (Old Cats). No, which dealt with the Chilean national plebiscite of 1988, has been nominated for Best Foreign Film in the 85th Academy Awards. Peirano also co-wrote the film Joven y Alocada (Young and Wild, 2012) which won the World Cinema Screenwriting Award at the 2012 Sundance Festival. In 2012, Peirano released the graphic novel El Club de los Juguetes Perdidos (The Lost Toys Club).", "score": "1.5733781" }, { "id": "8494596", "title": "Borja Cobeaga", "text": "La máquina de bailar (2006). Co-screenwriter. ; Friend Zone (Pagafantas) (2009). Director and co-screenwriter. ; No controles (2010). Director and co-screenwriter. ; Amigos... (2011). Co-screenwriter. ; Spanish Affair (Ocho apellidos vascos) (2014). Co-screenwriter. ; Negociador (2014). Director and screenwriter. ; Spanish Affair 2 (Ocho apellidos catalanes) (2015). Co-screenwriter. ; Kalebegiak (anthology film, segment: Bidexka) (2016). Director and co-screenwriter. ; En tu cabeza (anthology film, segment: Milagros y Remedios) (2016). Director. ; Bomb Scared (Fe de etarras) (2017). Director and co-screenwriter. ; Superlópez (2018) Co-screenwriter. ", "score": "1.5422177" }, { "id": "16017805", "title": "Carita Pintada", "text": " Carita Pintada is a Venezuelan telenovela written by Valentina Párraga and produced by Radio Caracas Televisión in 1999. The series lasted 126 episodes and was distributed internationally by RCTV International. Catherine Correia and Simón Pestana starred as the main protagonists (with Simón playing a dual role as both protagonist and antagonist) with Marlene De Andrade, Eliana López and Fernando Flores as the villains.", "score": "1.5280023" }, { "id": "15261381", "title": "Ricardo López Aranda", "text": " television series based on the novel. In addition, he wrote scripts for several films: \"Cerca de las Estrellas\" (1962), \"Marta\" (1970), \"Tormento\" (1973) and co-wrote the script of the film Fortunata y Jacinta (1969). He drew inspiration from the work of Arthur Miller for his screenplays. He refrained from making public most of his poetry during this period. Only at the end of his life did he publish his book \"El crisantemo y la cometa\", written in 1971, and his \"Biografía secreta\" is posthumous. He is left a number of unpublished novels and essays. Between 1972 and 1977 he premiered a good number of adaptations of novels and classic plays, including ", "score": "1.5256972" }, { "id": "2360332", "title": "Juan José Plans", "text": " Juan José Plans Martínez (February 28, 1943, Gijón, Asturias - February 24, 2014, Gijón, Asturias) was a Spanish writer, journalist, and radio and television announcer. He specialized as a writer in fantasy, horror, and science fiction, and published several collections of short stories and several radio and TV adaptations of classics in these genres. He was the author of nearly forty books and is on over thirty national and international anthologies, which have been translated into Portuguese, Polish, French, Russian and English. His novel <span id=\"El juego de los niños\">El juego de los niños (roughly meaning Children's Game) has been adapted for film twice: first as Narciso Ibáñez Serrador's Who Can Kill a Child? and later as Come Out and Play. Of the asociación jovellanista, he has written biographies of Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos and Alejandro Casona. He was the father of painter Edgar Plans Pérez (b. 1977, in Madrid) who is author of the 2009 Feria Internacional de Muestras de Asturias (Asturias International Trade Fair) poster.", "score": "1.5122921" }, { "id": "29713241", "title": "Inés Bortagaray", "text": "Mi amiga del parque (screenplay with Ana Katz) ; Mujer conejo (2010, screenplay with Verónica Chen) ; La vida útil (2010, screenplay with Federico Veiroj) ; Luna con dormilones (screenplay, Pablo Uribe film that participated in the 2012-2013 Montevideo Biennial and won the \"El Azahar\" grand prize at the tenth Salto Art Biennial) ; El tiempo pasa (2013, screenplay) ; Una novia errante (2006, feature film screenplay with Ana Katz) ; Otra historia del mundo (2017, screenplay, feature film based on the novel Alivio de luto by Mario Delgado Aparaín, with the author and Guillermo Casanova) ; El fin del mundo (television series, 13 episodes, with Adrián Biniez, original idea with Juan Pablo Rebella and Pablo Stoll) ; Eight short testimonials for TV Ciudad in Montevideo about menarche, first sexual relations, first childbirth, and menopause (2001, direction, research, and production) ; Tokyo Boogie (participated in writing the screenplay, Pablo Casacuberta and Yuki Goto) ", "score": "1.5090282" }, { "id": "13960887", "title": "Adriano Bolzoni", "text": "I'm the Capataz (1951) ; Minnesota Clay (1964) Screenwriter ; Savage Gringo (1966) Screenwriter ; Avenger X (1967) Story ", "score": "1.5081515" }, { "id": "14920020", "title": "Chiquititas (2013 Brazilian TV series)", "text": " although praising its portrayal previously done by Fernanda Souza, which catapulted Souza's career. Ana Paula was originally played by Argentine actress Agustina Cherri. Isabela auditioned seven times until definitely getting the role. Actor Gésio Amadeu, who portrayed Chico the Chef in Chiquititas Brasil, was asked by SBT to reprise his role, which he could not accept due to commitments with Rede Globo's telenovela Flor do Caribe. Fellow actor João Acaiabe was then suggested by Amadeu for the part. The character was originally portrayed by actor Alberto Fernández de Rosa (named Saverio the Chef), who was also a supervising producer of Chiquititas Brasil. The series is directed by Reynaldo Boury, produced by Fernando Pelegio, and written by author Íris Abravanel, all of them responsible for the creation of Carrossel. Chiquititas is unique for having no involvement of creator Cris Morena.", "score": "1.5071971" }, { "id": "14950463", "title": "Alejandro Licona", "text": " de Escritores (\"Mexican Writers' Center\"). In 1987, he assumed charge of the playwriting workshop of the National Polytechnic Institute, and in 1990, was admitted as professor of television screenwriting in the school of the Mexican Writers' Guild. He also taught screenwriting at the Ibero-American University. In 1995, he headed the dramatic workshop for Mexican multimedia conglomerate Televisa's Centro de Capacitación de Escritores (\"writer training center\"). Among his better known works, Guau, vidas de perros (\"Bow-wow, the Lives of Dogs\") has been performed 75 times under the direction of Juan Silva López. In 1997, as Licona celebrated his 25th year as a writer, his play El espectáculo macarenazo (\"The Macarena-Nose Show,\" co-written with Tomás Urtusástegui) received a 200th performance in the Foro Coyoacanense.", "score": "1.4981368" }, { "id": "7450391", "title": "Carlos Pintado", "text": " Carlos Pintado (born 1974 in Cuba) is a Cuban–American writer, playwright and award-winning poet who immigrated to the United States in the early 90s. He received the prestigious 2014 Paz Prize for Poetry for his book Nine coins/Nueve Monedas awarded by the National Poetry Series and published in a bilingual edition by Akashic Press. His book Autorretrato en azul received the Sant Jordi's International Prize for Poetry and his El azar y los tesoros was one of the finalists for Adonais Prize in 2008. He also contributed to the book The exile Experience: a journey to freedom, coordinated by Cuban American music producer Emilio Estefan. In September 2015, The New York Times Magazine published his poem \"The moon\", selected by US Poet Laureate Natasha Trethewey. Some of ", "score": "1.4954578" }, { "id": "14442356", "title": "Sergio Vodanović", "text": " In 1982, he wrote a miniseries for Canal 13 entitled Una familia feliz. It was not until 1984, when his first telenovela Los títeres aired that he became known as a screenwriter. His television series were commercially successful while also intellectual, carefully disguising references to the Chilean socio-political context of the 1980s.", "score": "1.4951091" }, { "id": "30669660", "title": "Álex Pina", "text": " Born in Pamplona in 1967, Pina began his career as a journalist in the press such as Diario Vasco and Diario de Mallorca and later in the Europa Press Agency. Between 1993 and 1996, he worked as a scriptwriter and editor for Videomedia until he then joined Globomedia in 1996. In 1997, at the same production company, he started his career as a screenwriter in the television series Más que amigos, from there, he began to play the roles of creator and executive producer in iconic Spanish series such as Los Serrano, Los hombres de Paco, and El barco. At the end of 2016, after the launch of Vis a vis by Antena 3, Pina left Globomedia and founded Vancouver Media, his own production company. The first production was La Casa de Papel (Money Heist), which premiered on Antena 3 on 2 May 2017 with more than four million viewers. The series was distributed worldwide by Netflix and became the biggest success of his career, leading to the signing of an exclusive contract with the streaming platform for the creation and production of an original series. In 2020 Alex Pina produced White Lines.", "score": "1.4944553" }, { "id": "623728", "title": "Pedro Peirano", "text": "No (2012) ; Joven y alocada (2012); co-writer. ; Gatos viejos (2010), co-writer. ; La nana (2009), co-writer. ; 31 Minutos, la película (2008); co-writer. ; La vida me mata (2007) ; Los dibujos de Bruno Kulczewski (2004); co-writer. ", "score": "1.4939518" }, { "id": "31155054", "title": "Juan Zanotto", "text": "Henga, el cazador (1974, written by Ray Collins) ; Wakantanka (1976, written by Héctor Germán Oesterheld) ; Barbara (1979, written by Ricardo Barreiro) ; Nueva York año cero (1984, written by Ricardo Barreiro) ; Cronicas del Tiempo Medio (written by Emilio Balcarce) ; Penitenciario (1989, written by Ricardo Barreiro) ; Horizontes Perdidos (Falka, 1993) ; Los Ladrones del Tiempo, (1998) ", "score": "1.4869215" }, { "id": "27286279", "title": "Betrayed by Rita Hayworth", "text": " Betrayed by Rita Hayworth (La traición de Rita Hayworth) is a 1968 novel by the Argentine novelist Manuel Puig. It was Puig's first novel. Literary critic Jean Franco writes that the book \"was a revelation when it appeared, exploding once and for all the simplistic notions of American cultural imperialism.\" The book features what would become Puig's customary interests in mass culture, particularly Hollywood film. As Franco observes, \"Set in a small provincial town in Buenos Aires province, the novel traces the intense affective relationship between Toto and his mother and friends, a relationship in which Hollywood films such as Blood and Sand and The Great Waltz provide somewhat bizarre models for an affective life which is not satisfied either by religion or the state.\" With Puig's subsequent novel, Boquitas pintadas (Heartbreak Tango) of 1969, the book was a key text in the transition from Boom to post-Boom in Latin American fiction.", "score": "1.4859838" }, { "id": "30612452", "title": "Pintada", "text": "Pintada was the third project given to Lemuel Pelayo by ABS-CBN next to the Hiyas and Angelito. ; Lemuel Pelayo admitted that he knew that PHR Series contain daring scenes, and that he was ready to spice-up Pintada. ", "score": "1.4796928" }, { "id": "32102275", "title": "Los Olvidados", "text": " Journalist Verónica Calderón, in an article published on August 14, 2010 in the Spanish newspaper El País, collects statements by Morelia Guerrero, daughter of Mexican journalist and writer Jesús R. Guerrero (Numarán, Michoacán, 1911-1979), in which Morelia points out that the script and the film are based on a novel written by her father, entitled Los Olvidados, published in 1944, with a prologue by Mexican writer José Revueltas. The National Polytechnic Institute of Mexico (IPN) published, in December 2009, a second edition of the novel penned by Jesús R. Guerrero. However, comparative studies have been made between the film and the novel, and no trace of any plagiarism by Buñuel has been found.", "score": "1.4771729" }, { "id": "7625668", "title": "Carlos A. Petit", "text": " Carlos A. Petit was one of the most prominent screenwriters in the Cinema of Argentina, writing for over 30 films between 1941 and 1984. He wrote for acclaimed films such as Alma de bohemio (1949), A La Habana me voy and Con la música en el alma. (1951) and Las Apariencias engañan (1958)", "score": "1.4713662" }, { "id": "5351831", "title": "Los archivos del cardenal", "text": "Josefina Fernández (writer) – original idea ; Nicolás Acuña – director ; Rony Goldhmied – executive producer ; Nona Fernández – screenwriter ; Luis Emilio Guzmán – screenwriter ; Enrique Videla – screenwriter ; Valeria Vargas – screenwriter ; Larissa Contreras – screenwriter ", "score": "1.4645908" } ]
[ "Manuel Puig\n Juan Manuel Puig Delledonne (December 28, 1932 – July 22, 1990), commonly called Manuel Puig, was an Argentine author. Among his best-known novels are La traición de Rita Hayworth (Betrayed by Rita Hayworth, 1968), Boquitas pintadas (Heartbreak Tango, 1969), and El beso de la mujer araña (Kiss of the Spider Woman, 1976) which was adapted into the film released in 1985, directed by the Argentine-Brazilian director Héctor Babenco; and a Broadway musical in 1993.", "Pedro Peirano\n a movie, 31 Minutos, La Película, in 2008 and won Altazor awards for both directing and writing in 2004. Pedro has achieved international recognition as the co-writer of the successful films The Maid (2009), with Sebastián Silva, and No (2012). Peirano resumed his successful partnership with The Maid's Sebastián Silva in 2011 to co-write and co-direct Gatos Viejos (Old Cats). No, which dealt with the Chilean national plebiscite of 1988, has been nominated for Best Foreign Film in the 85th Academy Awards. Peirano also co-wrote the film Joven y Alocada (Young and Wild, 2012) which won the World Cinema Screenwriting Award at the 2012 Sundance Festival. In 2012, Peirano released the graphic novel El Club de los Juguetes Perdidos (The Lost Toys Club).", "Borja Cobeaga\nLa máquina de bailar (2006). Co-screenwriter. ; Friend Zone (Pagafantas) (2009). Director and co-screenwriter. ; No controles (2010). Director and co-screenwriter. ; Amigos... (2011). Co-screenwriter. ; Spanish Affair (Ocho apellidos vascos) (2014). Co-screenwriter. ; Negociador (2014). Director and screenwriter. ; Spanish Affair 2 (Ocho apellidos catalanes) (2015). Co-screenwriter. ; Kalebegiak (anthology film, segment: Bidexka) (2016). Director and co-screenwriter. ; En tu cabeza (anthology film, segment: Milagros y Remedios) (2016). Director. ; Bomb Scared (Fe de etarras) (2017). Director and co-screenwriter. ; Superlópez (2018) Co-screenwriter. ", "Carita Pintada\n Carita Pintada is a Venezuelan telenovela written by Valentina Párraga and produced by Radio Caracas Televisión in 1999. The series lasted 126 episodes and was distributed internationally by RCTV International. Catherine Correia and Simón Pestana starred as the main protagonists (with Simón playing a dual role as both protagonist and antagonist) with Marlene De Andrade, Eliana López and Fernando Flores as the villains.", "Ricardo López Aranda\n television series based on the novel. In addition, he wrote scripts for several films: \"Cerca de las Estrellas\" (1962), \"Marta\" (1970), \"Tormento\" (1973) and co-wrote the script of the film Fortunata y Jacinta (1969). He drew inspiration from the work of Arthur Miller for his screenplays. He refrained from making public most of his poetry during this period. Only at the end of his life did he publish his book \"El crisantemo y la cometa\", written in 1971, and his \"Biografía secreta\" is posthumous. He is left a number of unpublished novels and essays. Between 1972 and 1977 he premiered a good number of adaptations of novels and classic plays, including ", "Juan José Plans\n Juan José Plans Martínez (February 28, 1943, Gijón, Asturias - February 24, 2014, Gijón, Asturias) was a Spanish writer, journalist, and radio and television announcer. He specialized as a writer in fantasy, horror, and science fiction, and published several collections of short stories and several radio and TV adaptations of classics in these genres. He was the author of nearly forty books and is on over thirty national and international anthologies, which have been translated into Portuguese, Polish, French, Russian and English. His novel <span id=\"El juego de los niños\">El juego de los niños (roughly meaning Children's Game) has been adapted for film twice: first as Narciso Ibáñez Serrador's Who Can Kill a Child? and later as Come Out and Play. Of the asociación jovellanista, he has written biographies of Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos and Alejandro Casona. He was the father of painter Edgar Plans Pérez (b. 1977, in Madrid) who is author of the 2009 Feria Internacional de Muestras de Asturias (Asturias International Trade Fair) poster.", "Inés Bortagaray\nMi amiga del parque (screenplay with Ana Katz) ; Mujer conejo (2010, screenplay with Verónica Chen) ; La vida útil (2010, screenplay with Federico Veiroj) ; Luna con dormilones (screenplay, Pablo Uribe film that participated in the 2012-2013 Montevideo Biennial and won the \"El Azahar\" grand prize at the tenth Salto Art Biennial) ; El tiempo pasa (2013, screenplay) ; Una novia errante (2006, feature film screenplay with Ana Katz) ; Otra historia del mundo (2017, screenplay, feature film based on the novel Alivio de luto by Mario Delgado Aparaín, with the author and Guillermo Casanova) ; El fin del mundo (television series, 13 episodes, with Adrián Biniez, original idea with Juan Pablo Rebella and Pablo Stoll) ; Eight short testimonials for TV Ciudad in Montevideo about menarche, first sexual relations, first childbirth, and menopause (2001, direction, research, and production) ; Tokyo Boogie (participated in writing the screenplay, Pablo Casacuberta and Yuki Goto) ", "Adriano Bolzoni\nI'm the Capataz (1951) ; Minnesota Clay (1964) Screenwriter ; Savage Gringo (1966) Screenwriter ; Avenger X (1967) Story ", "Chiquititas (2013 Brazilian TV series)\n although praising its portrayal previously done by Fernanda Souza, which catapulted Souza's career. Ana Paula was originally played by Argentine actress Agustina Cherri. Isabela auditioned seven times until definitely getting the role. Actor Gésio Amadeu, who portrayed Chico the Chef in Chiquititas Brasil, was asked by SBT to reprise his role, which he could not accept due to commitments with Rede Globo's telenovela Flor do Caribe. Fellow actor João Acaiabe was then suggested by Amadeu for the part. The character was originally portrayed by actor Alberto Fernández de Rosa (named Saverio the Chef), who was also a supervising producer of Chiquititas Brasil. The series is directed by Reynaldo Boury, produced by Fernando Pelegio, and written by author Íris Abravanel, all of them responsible for the creation of Carrossel. Chiquititas is unique for having no involvement of creator Cris Morena.", "Alejandro Licona\n de Escritores (\"Mexican Writers' Center\"). In 1987, he assumed charge of the playwriting workshop of the National Polytechnic Institute, and in 1990, was admitted as professor of television screenwriting in the school of the Mexican Writers' Guild. He also taught screenwriting at the Ibero-American University. In 1995, he headed the dramatic workshop for Mexican multimedia conglomerate Televisa's Centro de Capacitación de Escritores (\"writer training center\"). Among his better known works, Guau, vidas de perros (\"Bow-wow, the Lives of Dogs\") has been performed 75 times under the direction of Juan Silva López. In 1997, as Licona celebrated his 25th year as a writer, his play El espectáculo macarenazo (\"The Macarena-Nose Show,\" co-written with Tomás Urtusástegui) received a 200th performance in the Foro Coyoacanense.", "Carlos Pintado\n Carlos Pintado (born 1974 in Cuba) is a Cuban–American writer, playwright and award-winning poet who immigrated to the United States in the early 90s. He received the prestigious 2014 Paz Prize for Poetry for his book Nine coins/Nueve Monedas awarded by the National Poetry Series and published in a bilingual edition by Akashic Press. His book Autorretrato en azul received the Sant Jordi's International Prize for Poetry and his El azar y los tesoros was one of the finalists for Adonais Prize in 2008. He also contributed to the book The exile Experience: a journey to freedom, coordinated by Cuban American music producer Emilio Estefan. In September 2015, The New York Times Magazine published his poem \"The moon\", selected by US Poet Laureate Natasha Trethewey. Some of ", "Sergio Vodanović\n In 1982, he wrote a miniseries for Canal 13 entitled Una familia feliz. It was not until 1984, when his first telenovela Los títeres aired that he became known as a screenwriter. His television series were commercially successful while also intellectual, carefully disguising references to the Chilean socio-political context of the 1980s.", "Álex Pina\n Born in Pamplona in 1967, Pina began his career as a journalist in the press such as Diario Vasco and Diario de Mallorca and later in the Europa Press Agency. Between 1993 and 1996, he worked as a scriptwriter and editor for Videomedia until he then joined Globomedia in 1996. In 1997, at the same production company, he started his career as a screenwriter in the television series Más que amigos, from there, he began to play the roles of creator and executive producer in iconic Spanish series such as Los Serrano, Los hombres de Paco, and El barco. At the end of 2016, after the launch of Vis a vis by Antena 3, Pina left Globomedia and founded Vancouver Media, his own production company. The first production was La Casa de Papel (Money Heist), which premiered on Antena 3 on 2 May 2017 with more than four million viewers. The series was distributed worldwide by Netflix and became the biggest success of his career, leading to the signing of an exclusive contract with the streaming platform for the creation and production of an original series. In 2020 Alex Pina produced White Lines.", "Pedro Peirano\nNo (2012) ; Joven y alocada (2012); co-writer. ; Gatos viejos (2010), co-writer. ; La nana (2009), co-writer. ; 31 Minutos, la película (2008); co-writer. ; La vida me mata (2007) ; Los dibujos de Bruno Kulczewski (2004); co-writer. ", "Juan Zanotto\nHenga, el cazador (1974, written by Ray Collins) ; Wakantanka (1976, written by Héctor Germán Oesterheld) ; Barbara (1979, written by Ricardo Barreiro) ; Nueva York año cero (1984, written by Ricardo Barreiro) ; Cronicas del Tiempo Medio (written by Emilio Balcarce) ; Penitenciario (1989, written by Ricardo Barreiro) ; Horizontes Perdidos (Falka, 1993) ; Los Ladrones del Tiempo, (1998) ", "Betrayed by Rita Hayworth\n Betrayed by Rita Hayworth (La traición de Rita Hayworth) is a 1968 novel by the Argentine novelist Manuel Puig. It was Puig's first novel. Literary critic Jean Franco writes that the book \"was a revelation when it appeared, exploding once and for all the simplistic notions of American cultural imperialism.\" The book features what would become Puig's customary interests in mass culture, particularly Hollywood film. As Franco observes, \"Set in a small provincial town in Buenos Aires province, the novel traces the intense affective relationship between Toto and his mother and friends, a relationship in which Hollywood films such as Blood and Sand and The Great Waltz provide somewhat bizarre models for an affective life which is not satisfied either by religion or the state.\" With Puig's subsequent novel, Boquitas pintadas (Heartbreak Tango) of 1969, the book was a key text in the transition from Boom to post-Boom in Latin American fiction.", "Pintada\nPintada was the third project given to Lemuel Pelayo by ABS-CBN next to the Hiyas and Angelito. ; Lemuel Pelayo admitted that he knew that PHR Series contain daring scenes, and that he was ready to spice-up Pintada. ", "Los Olvidados\n Journalist Verónica Calderón, in an article published on August 14, 2010 in the Spanish newspaper El País, collects statements by Morelia Guerrero, daughter of Mexican journalist and writer Jesús R. Guerrero (Numarán, Michoacán, 1911-1979), in which Morelia points out that the script and the film are based on a novel written by her father, entitled Los Olvidados, published in 1944, with a prologue by Mexican writer José Revueltas. The National Polytechnic Institute of Mexico (IPN) published, in December 2009, a second edition of the novel penned by Jesús R. Guerrero. However, comparative studies have been made between the film and the novel, and no trace of any plagiarism by Buñuel has been found.", "Carlos A. Petit\n Carlos A. Petit was one of the most prominent screenwriters in the Cinema of Argentina, writing for over 30 films between 1941 and 1984. He wrote for acclaimed films such as Alma de bohemio (1949), A La Habana me voy and Con la música en el alma. (1951) and Las Apariencias engañan (1958)", "Los archivos del cardenal\nJosefina Fernández (writer) – original idea ; Nicolás Acuña – director ; Rony Goldhmied – executive producer ; Nona Fernández – screenwriter ; Luis Emilio Guzmán – screenwriter ; Enrique Videla – screenwriter ; Valeria Vargas – screenwriter ; Larissa Contreras – screenwriter " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Pilot?
[ "Nell Scovell", "Helen Vivian Scovell" ]
screenwriter
Pilot (Sabrina the Teenage Witch)
5,453,555
16
[ { "id": "27684084", "title": "Jeff Martin (writer)", "text": "\"Pilot\" ", "score": "1.6747477" }, { "id": "26447225", "title": "Pilot (Revenge)", "text": " \"Pilot\" was written by series creator Mike Kelley and directed by Salt director Phillip Noyce it was filmed in North Carolina between March–April 2011.", "score": "1.6121113" }, { "id": "14920510", "title": "Pilot (The Americans)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.", "score": "1.5877508" }, { "id": "2971117", "title": "Pilot (Lost)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ", "score": "1.5862477" }, { "id": "13589525", "title": "Pilot (Manifest)", "text": " On August 23, 2017, it was announced that NBC had given Manifest a put pilot commitment, to be written by Jeff Rake and produced by Rake, Robert Zemeckis, Jack Rapke, and Jackie Levine. On January 23, 2018, it was reported that NBC had given the production a formal pilot order. The pilot was directed by David Frankel, who also executive produced. Manifest was ordered to series in May 2018.", "score": "1.5693038" }, { "id": "14175609", "title": "Pilot (Preacher)", "text": " \"Pilot\" was written by the series' creators Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg and Sam Catlin. Some elements in the episode are based on the first seven issues in the Preacher series, Gone to Texas, of which the script was first read and reviewed by Preacher co-creator Garth Ennis, as with the other episodes of the series. It also adapts, or at least provides allusions to Jesse's father John Custer from Until the End of the World, in the form of various black and white flashback sequences. Goldberg described the process of translating the main characters’ emotional stories from the comic to television as the biggest challenge. \"We had to make sure that you understood who each ", "score": "1.5691059" }, { "id": "14554449", "title": "Pilot (Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the television series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. The episode was first aired in the United States on the NBC network on September 18, 2006. Written by series creator Aaron Sorkin, and directed by executive producer Thomas Schlamme, the episode introduces the chaotic behind-the-scenes depiction of a fictional Saturday Night Live type show also called Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip.", "score": "1.5678561" }, { "id": "26447212", "title": "Pilot (Revenge)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.", "score": "1.559042" }, { "id": "27706150", "title": "Pilot (Homeland)", "text": " The episode was co-written by executive producers Alex Gansa, Gideon Raff, and Howard Gordon, while executive producer Michael Cuesta directed.", "score": "1.5585873" }, { "id": "1827185", "title": "Pilot (Dirty Sexy Money)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the ABC television series, Dirty Sexy Money. The episode was written by Craig Wright and was directed by Peter Horton. It originally aired on Wednesday, September 26, 2007.", "score": "1.5584645" }, { "id": "31589573", "title": "Pilot (The Shield)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the FX crime drama television series \"The Shield\". It was written by series creator Shawn Ryan, directed by Clark Johnson, and originally aired on March 12, 2002. The episode received Emmy Award nominations for both its writing and directing.", "score": "1.5550297" }, { "id": "11339621", "title": "Pilot (Awake)", "text": " Within a few weeks, Killen sent a rough draft of the script to his agent Marc Korman. Korman was so impressed by the script that, though it was after midnight, he went into the room where his sick wife was sleeping, and got into bed with her. Korman phoned Salke, and stated that the script was \"remarkable\", and praised Killen claiming that \"for a guy who has never written a procedural show in his life\", he is \"making two cases work\". Initially, Salke and Korman looked to sell acquisition rights to the Fox Broadcasting Company. Although it successfully made its way ", "score": "1.5502557" }, { "id": "27932156", "title": "Pilot (Person of Interest)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.", "score": "1.549762" }, { "id": "29325635", "title": "Pilot (About a Boy)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the pilot and first episode of the American television comedy series About a Boy, which premiered on February 22, 2014 on NBC in the United States. The series is based on the 1998 novel of the same name by British writer Nick Hornby and the 2002 film starring Hugh Grant. The episode is written by series developer Jason Katims and is directed by Jon Favreau. In the episode, a young boy named Marcus (Benjamin Stockham) and his single mother Fiona (Minnie Driver) move in next door to Will (David Walton), an unemployed bachelor living in San Francisco. Will woos a woman by pretending Marcus is his son.", "score": "1.5465884" }, { "id": "32838478", "title": "Pilot (Nikita)", "text": " The episode was written by developer and executive producer Craig Silverstein, while being directed by CSI: Crime Scene Investigation veteran Danny Cannon.", "score": "1.5454023" }, { "id": "11645394", "title": "Pilot (V)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ", "score": "1.5446973" }, { "id": "12129054", "title": "Pilot (Legends of Tomorrow)", "text": " \"Pilot, Part 1\" was revealed to be premiering in January 2016 in May 2015. The title of the episode, along with its writing credits of Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, Andrew Kreisberg, and Phil Klemmer, and the directing credit for Glen Winter was revealed on Twitter by Guggenheim. The credits and title for \"Pilot, Part 2\" was announced in September 2015.", "score": "1.5412674" }, { "id": "26346018", "title": "Pilot (The Deuce)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television drama series The Deuce. It premiered on September 10, 2017, on premium cable network HBO; the pilot was released in advance on HBO streaming service HBO Go on August 25. The episode was written by creators and showrunners George Pelecanos and David Simon, and was directed by Michelle MacLaren.", "score": "1.5410523" }, { "id": "5427365", "title": "Pilot (Gotham)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the television series Gotham. It premiered on FOX on September 22, 2014 and was written by series developer Bruno Heller and directed by Danny Cannon. The episode, and the series as a whole, are based on characters appearing in and published by DC Comics in the Batman franchise, primarily those of James Gordon and Bruce Wayne. FOX gave the pilot a straight-to-series order with an order of 16 episodes. The pilot was watched by 8.21 million viewers, a strong number and received generally positive reviews for its acting and plot, but received criticism for its pace and subplots.", "score": "1.5409176" }, { "id": "2971127", "title": "Pilot (Lost)", "text": " write a script, but Braun wound up rejecting Lieber's draft and subsequent rewrites. In January 2004 Braun contacted J. J. Abrams, who developed the TV series Alias for ABC, to write a new pilot script, which would retain the title Lost. Although initially hesitant, Abrams warmed up to the idea on the condition that the series would have a supernatural angle to it and he was assigned a writing partner. ABC executive Heather Kadin sent him Damon Lindelof, who had long intended to meet Abrams as he wished to write for Alias. Together, Abrams and Lindelof developed the characters and plot of Lost, along with creating a series \"bible\" which would store the ", "score": "1.5395453" } ]
[ "Jeff Martin (writer)\n\"Pilot\" ", "Pilot (Revenge)\n \"Pilot\" was written by series creator Mike Kelley and directed by Salt director Phillip Noyce it was filmed in North Carolina between March–April 2011.", "Pilot (The Americans)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.", "Pilot (Lost)\n \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ", "Pilot (Manifest)\n On August 23, 2017, it was announced that NBC had given Manifest a put pilot commitment, to be written by Jeff Rake and produced by Rake, Robert Zemeckis, Jack Rapke, and Jackie Levine. On January 23, 2018, it was reported that NBC had given the production a formal pilot order. The pilot was directed by David Frankel, who also executive produced. Manifest was ordered to series in May 2018.", "Pilot (Preacher)\n \"Pilot\" was written by the series' creators Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg and Sam Catlin. Some elements in the episode are based on the first seven issues in the Preacher series, Gone to Texas, of which the script was first read and reviewed by Preacher co-creator Garth Ennis, as with the other episodes of the series. It also adapts, or at least provides allusions to Jesse's father John Custer from Until the End of the World, in the form of various black and white flashback sequences. Goldberg described the process of translating the main characters’ emotional stories from the comic to television as the biggest challenge. \"We had to make sure that you understood who each ", "Pilot (Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the television series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. The episode was first aired in the United States on the NBC network on September 18, 2006. Written by series creator Aaron Sorkin, and directed by executive producer Thomas Schlamme, the episode introduces the chaotic behind-the-scenes depiction of a fictional Saturday Night Live type show also called Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip.", "Pilot (Revenge)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.", "Pilot (Homeland)\n The episode was co-written by executive producers Alex Gansa, Gideon Raff, and Howard Gordon, while executive producer Michael Cuesta directed.", "Pilot (Dirty Sexy Money)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the ABC television series, Dirty Sexy Money. The episode was written by Craig Wright and was directed by Peter Horton. It originally aired on Wednesday, September 26, 2007.", "Pilot (The Shield)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the FX crime drama television series \"The Shield\". It was written by series creator Shawn Ryan, directed by Clark Johnson, and originally aired on March 12, 2002. The episode received Emmy Award nominations for both its writing and directing.", "Pilot (Awake)\n Within a few weeks, Killen sent a rough draft of the script to his agent Marc Korman. Korman was so impressed by the script that, though it was after midnight, he went into the room where his sick wife was sleeping, and got into bed with her. Korman phoned Salke, and stated that the script was \"remarkable\", and praised Killen claiming that \"for a guy who has never written a procedural show in his life\", he is \"making two cases work\". Initially, Salke and Korman looked to sell acquisition rights to the Fox Broadcasting Company. Although it successfully made its way ", "Pilot (Person of Interest)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.", "Pilot (About a Boy)\n \"Pilot\" is the pilot and first episode of the American television comedy series About a Boy, which premiered on February 22, 2014 on NBC in the United States. The series is based on the 1998 novel of the same name by British writer Nick Hornby and the 2002 film starring Hugh Grant. The episode is written by series developer Jason Katims and is directed by Jon Favreau. In the episode, a young boy named Marcus (Benjamin Stockham) and his single mother Fiona (Minnie Driver) move in next door to Will (David Walton), an unemployed bachelor living in San Francisco. Will woos a woman by pretending Marcus is his son.", "Pilot (Nikita)\n The episode was written by developer and executive producer Craig Silverstein, while being directed by CSI: Crime Scene Investigation veteran Danny Cannon.", "Pilot (V)\n \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ", "Pilot (Legends of Tomorrow)\n \"Pilot, Part 1\" was revealed to be premiering in January 2016 in May 2015. The title of the episode, along with its writing credits of Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, Andrew Kreisberg, and Phil Klemmer, and the directing credit for Glen Winter was revealed on Twitter by Guggenheim. The credits and title for \"Pilot, Part 2\" was announced in September 2015.", "Pilot (The Deuce)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television drama series The Deuce. It premiered on September 10, 2017, on premium cable network HBO; the pilot was released in advance on HBO streaming service HBO Go on August 25. The episode was written by creators and showrunners George Pelecanos and David Simon, and was directed by Michelle MacLaren.", "Pilot (Gotham)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the television series Gotham. It premiered on FOX on September 22, 2014 and was written by series developer Bruno Heller and directed by Danny Cannon. The episode, and the series as a whole, are based on characters appearing in and published by DC Comics in the Batman franchise, primarily those of James Gordon and Bruce Wayne. FOX gave the pilot a straight-to-series order with an order of 16 episodes. The pilot was watched by 8.21 million viewers, a strong number and received generally positive reviews for its acting and plot, but received criticism for its pace and subplots.", "Pilot (Lost)\n write a script, but Braun wound up rejecting Lieber's draft and subsequent rewrites. In January 2004 Braun contacted J. J. Abrams, who developed the TV series Alias for ABC, to write a new pilot script, which would retain the title Lost. Although initially hesitant, Abrams warmed up to the idea on the condition that the series would have a supernatural angle to it and he was assigned a writing partner. ABC executive Heather Kadin sent him Damon Lindelof, who had long intended to meet Abrams as he wished to write for Alias. Together, Abrams and Lindelof developed the characters and plot of Lost, along with creating a series \"bible\" which would store the " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Goodbye?
[ "Heddy Honigmann" ]
screenwriter
Goodbye (1995 film)
1,808,819
82
[ { "id": "28422169", "title": "Spenser Cohen", "text": " In March 2012, Cohen directed Diana DeGarmo's music video \"Good Goodbye\". Cohen began his writing career by drafting the screenplay for Extinction. In December 2013, it was revealed that the screenplay had been included in the 2013 Black List of the year's best unproduced scripts in Hollywood. In 2019, Cohen was writing the script for Moonfall. On February 21, 2019, Amblin Partners announced it had bought Cohen's script for the science fiction film Distant. In August 2021, Cohen wrote the most recent screenplay and story for The Expendables 4. He wrote the script for the upcoming horror film Horrorscope.", "score": "1.6221937" }, { "id": "10521786", "title": "Robert Towne", "text": " Towne received great acclaim for his film scripts The Last Detail (1973), Chinatown (1974), and Shampoo (1975). He was nominated for an Oscar for all three scripts, winning for Chinatown. According to Sam Wasson's The Big Goodbye: Chinatown and the Last Years of Hollywood, Towne \"secretly employed an old college friend named Edward Taylor as his uncredited writing partner for more than 40 years.\" Towne was credited for his work on The Yakuza (1975) and did script doctoring on The Missouri Breaks (1976), Orca (1977) and Heaven Can Wait (1978).", "score": "1.5863829" }, { "id": "27380307", "title": "Arnold Schulman", "text": " Schulman received Oscar nominations for Best Original Screenplay for Love with the Proper Stranger in 1963 and for Best Adapted Screenplay for Goodbye, Columbus in 1969. He also received three Writers Guild nominations for Best Screenplay for Wild Is the Wind, A Hole in the Head and Love with the Proper Stranger, and a Writers Guild award for Goodbye, Columbus. He was also the recipient of a Humanitas Prize award in 1994 for his work on And the Band Played On. He is credited as the screenwriter of Players, although the script was rewritten without his consent, and by contract he wasn't able to take his name off.", "score": "1.5801113" }, { "id": "31187932", "title": "The Long Goodbye (film)", "text": " They commissioned the screenplay from Leigh Brackett, who had been Kastner's client when he was an agent and had written the script for the Humphrey Bogart version of The Big Sleep. Brackett: \"... set the deal with United Artists, and they had a commitment for a film with Elliott Gould, so either you take Elliott Gould or you don't make the film. Elliott Gould was not exactly my idea of Philip Marlowe, but anyway there we were. Also, as far as the story was concerned, time had gone by—it was twenty-odd years since the novel was written, and the private eye had become a cliché. It had become funny. You had to watch out what you were doing. If you had Humphrey Bogart at the same ", "score": "1.5729135" }, { "id": "7398479", "title": "Robert Gregory Browne", "text": " In 1990, Browne took up writing again and completed a feature-length screenplay, which was a winner in the Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting competition. The program is sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences and is designed to give aspiring screenwriters a way into the film industry. Browne was one of five winners that year and received a twenty thousand dollar grant for his screenplay, Low Tide. Several weeks after winning, that screenplay sold to Showtime and was slated to be produced by the network. After two years of development, executives overseeing production left the network and the screenplay was put into turnaround. Browne continued working in Hollywood for many years. In the late 1990s, he worked with producer-writer Larry Brody, and was hired by Saban/Fox Kids as a staff writer for the animated show, Diabolik, based on the famed Italian comic book. He and Brody later worked together on the Marvel production, Spider-Man Unlimited. In 2010, CBS Television and Sony Pictures produced a television pilot based on Browne's novel, Kiss Her Goodbye. The pilot starred Dylan Walsh, Michael Rapaport, Sandrine Holt, and Terry Kinney, with a script written and directed by Michael Dinner.", "score": "1.5587754" }, { "id": "7536288", "title": "Goodbye Promise", "text": " Gary W. Goldstein of the Los Angeles Times called Goodbye Promise a \"richly emotional look at a failed actor's introspective last days in Hollywood.\" Film Producer Fred Roos: \"On a micro budget David Branin and Gregor Collins created a perceptive and touching portrait of the lives of struggling actors working on the fringes of Hollywood.\" Television Producer Elizabeth Yoffe called it \"A story that is completely accurate both in its harsh quality and sense of continual possibility.\"", "score": "1.5484068" }, { "id": "737929", "title": "Geoff LaTulippe", "text": " Shortly after moving to Los Angeles, California, LaTulippe was hired as a script reader at New Line Cinema, a job he was offered by his friend who worked at the studio. After working there for two years, he tired of the job, saying that it \"start[ed] to suck away [my] creativity\". In July 2008, he sold a spec script titled Going the Distance to New Line Cinema, a story based on his friend David Neustadter's previous long-term relationship. The film was ultimately directed by Nanette Burstein and released in September 2010. After selling his first screenplay, he quit his job as a script reader and became a full-time writer. It was ", "score": "1.5438187" }, { "id": "12144725", "title": "The Goodbye Girl (2004 film)", "text": " The Goodbye Girl is a 2004 American television comedy film directed by Richard Benjamin and written by Neil Simon, based on Simon's screenplay to the 1977 film of the same name. It stars Jeff Daniels and Patricia Heaton. It aired on TNT on January 16, 2004. Like the original film, it follows an actor who lives in an apartment along with his friend's ex-girlfriend, whom the friend has just abandoned, and her preteen daughter.", "score": "1.5367718" }, { "id": "26771689", "title": "The Goodbye People (film)", "text": " The Goodbye People is a 1984 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Herb Gardner, based on his 1968 play The Goodbye People. The film stars Judd Hirsch, Martin Balsam, Pamela Reed, Vincent Gugleotti, Gene Saks and Ron Silver. First screened at the Toronto International Film Festival in 1984, the film was released on January 31, 1986, by Embassy Pictures (by a fitting coincidence, it would be their final theatrical release before the company was merged into Columbia Pictures).", "score": "1.5366397" }, { "id": "7339703", "title": "Samantha Rebillet", "text": " Rebillets's approach to filmmaking is influenced by the handheld and improvisational approach preferred by filmmakers such as Darren Aronofsky, Alejandro González Iñárritu and Gus Van Sant. According to an interview with Filmink in February 2014, this is still a 'developing style'. Using this improvisational approach for her film The Last Goodbye, Rebillet wrote the script in 'broad brushstrokes', allowing for the finer details to be further developed during filming itself.", "score": "1.5362155" }, { "id": "31187925", "title": "The Long Goodbye (film)", "text": " The Long Goodbye is a 1973 American neo-noir thriller film directed by Robert Altman and based on Raymond Chandler's 1953 novel. The screenplay was written by Leigh Brackett, who co-wrote the screenplay for Chandler's The Big Sleep in 1946. The film stars Elliott Gould as Philip Marlowe and features Sterling Hayden, Nina Van Pallandt, Jim Bouton (in a rare acting role), Mark Rydell and an early uncredited appearance by Arnold Schwarzenegger. The story's period was moved from 1949–50 to 1970s Hollywood. The Long Goodbye has been described as \"a study of a moral and decent man cast adrift in a selfish, self-obsessed society where lives can be thrown away without a backward glance ... and any notions of friendship and loyalty are meaningless.\" In 2021, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant\".", "score": "1.5350454" }, { "id": "2033146", "title": "Goodbye (Grey's Anatomy)", "text": " \"Goodbye\" is the second episode of the sixth season of the American television medical drama Grey's Anatomy, and the show's 104th episode overall. It was written by Krista Vernoff and directed by Bill D'Elia. The episode was originally broadcast on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in the United States on September 24, 2009. In \"Goodbye\", the staff at Seattle Grace Hospital come to terms with the death of their colleague Dr. George O'Malley (T.R. Knight). Further storylines include Dr. Richard Webber (James Pickens, Jr.) being engaged in a vehicular collision, Dr. Callie Torres (Sara Ramirez) receiving a job as an attending physician at a neighboring hospital, and Dr. Alex Karev's (Justin Chambers) marriage with Dr. Izzie Stevens (Katherine Heigl) taking a toll after her near-death experience. The episode was the ", "score": "1.5118759" }, { "id": "30719447", "title": "Michael Connelly", "text": " planned on following his father's early choice of career in building construction and started out at the University of Florida in Gainesville, at the Rinker School of Building Construction, studying construction management. After earning grades that were lower than expected, Connelly went to see Robert Altman's film The Long Goodbye (1973). The film, based on Raymond Chandler's eponymous 1953 novel, inspired Connelly to want to become a mystery writer. Connelly went home and read all of Chandler's works featuring Philip Marlowe, and decided to transfer to the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications, major in journalism, and minor in creative writing.", "score": "1.5096822" }, { "id": "9507605", "title": "George Axelrod", "text": " of Axelrod's characters except Rita Marlowe (with Mansfield recreating her stage role). Axelrod was contemptuous of the 1957 film version, saying that he did not go to see it because the studio \"never used my story, my play or my script.\" In 1959–60, Lauren Bacall starred in his comic play Goodbye Charlie which ran for 109 performances, followed by a film version with Debbie Reynolds. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, Axelrod was one of the best paid screenwriters in Hollywood, and he was nominated for an Academy Award for his 1961 adaptation of Truman Capote's Breakfast at Tiffany's. He was highly regarded for his adaptation of Richard Condon's novel for director John Frankenheimer's Cold War thriller The Manchurian Candidate (1962) starring Laurence Harvey and Frank Sinatra. Axelrod, ", "score": "1.5065677" }, { "id": "11658285", "title": "The Dresden Files short fiction", "text": " Jared Kincaid is hired to shoot Harry Dresden. For this, The Archive informs him that his services will no longer be required. Set at the end of Changes, Goodbye is a microfiction, and was published on author's website in blog post Microfiction #3, Con Swap, and Virtual Signing as part of the \"Year of Dresden\" celebration for The Dresden Files’ 20th anniversary.", "score": "1.5060389" }, { "id": "7536279", "title": "Goodbye Promise", "text": " When Matt moved to Hollywood he made a pact with himself that if he wasn't a working actor in exactly seven years he'd quit the business and move back to Washington, DC. As the film opens Matt finds himself seven days shy of his self-prescribed deadline, and he's just as anonymous as the day he arrived into town. After an afternoon of soul searching in the mountains he decides to honor his deadline, and plans to spend his final week in Hollywood visiting friends to tell them he's leaving for good and that he'll have a going away party to cap it all off. With ", "score": "1.5058366" }, { "id": "16292877", "title": "Good Morning and... Goodbye!", "text": " Good Morning and... Goodbye! is a 1967 American exploitation film directed by Russ Meyer. It features Alaina Capri, Karen Ciral, as well as Meyer regular Jack Moran, who co-wrote the script.", "score": "1.5033617" }, { "id": "28157720", "title": "Douglas Z. Doty", "text": " Douglas Zabriskie Doty (October 15, 1874 &ndash; February 20, 1935) was an American screenwriter and editor. Doty wrote the screenplays for more than 60 films between 1920 and 1938, the last one being Always Goodbye released in 1938, three years after his death. Doty also worked as an editor for The Century Company. Together with his co-writers Harry d'Abbadie d'Arrast and Donald Ogden Stewart, he was nominated for the 1931 Academy Award for Best Writing (Original Story) for the film ''Laughter. He was born in New York, New York and died in Los Angeles, California.", "score": "1.5008342" }, { "id": "31017988", "title": "John Graves (author)", "text": " John Alexander Graves III (August 6, 1920 – July 31, 2013) was an American writer known for his book Goodbye to a River.", "score": "1.4981929" }, { "id": "4144831", "title": "Goodbye Paradise", "text": " Bob Ellis and Denny Lawrence wrote a sequel for the film called Goodbye Adelaide. The plot involved Stacy finishing the book he is writing in the first movie and visiting the Adelaide Festival to promote it, where he is caught up in an attempted defection by a Russian poet. In January 1985 The Age reported the film would be made that year with a budget of $3 million. However, the movie was never made.", "score": "1.4967442" } ]
[ "Spenser Cohen\n In March 2012, Cohen directed Diana DeGarmo's music video \"Good Goodbye\". Cohen began his writing career by drafting the screenplay for Extinction. In December 2013, it was revealed that the screenplay had been included in the 2013 Black List of the year's best unproduced scripts in Hollywood. In 2019, Cohen was writing the script for Moonfall. On February 21, 2019, Amblin Partners announced it had bought Cohen's script for the science fiction film Distant. In August 2021, Cohen wrote the most recent screenplay and story for The Expendables 4. He wrote the script for the upcoming horror film Horrorscope.", "Robert Towne\n Towne received great acclaim for his film scripts The Last Detail (1973), Chinatown (1974), and Shampoo (1975). He was nominated for an Oscar for all three scripts, winning for Chinatown. According to Sam Wasson's The Big Goodbye: Chinatown and the Last Years of Hollywood, Towne \"secretly employed an old college friend named Edward Taylor as his uncredited writing partner for more than 40 years.\" Towne was credited for his work on The Yakuza (1975) and did script doctoring on The Missouri Breaks (1976), Orca (1977) and Heaven Can Wait (1978).", "Arnold Schulman\n Schulman received Oscar nominations for Best Original Screenplay for Love with the Proper Stranger in 1963 and for Best Adapted Screenplay for Goodbye, Columbus in 1969. He also received three Writers Guild nominations for Best Screenplay for Wild Is the Wind, A Hole in the Head and Love with the Proper Stranger, and a Writers Guild award for Goodbye, Columbus. He was also the recipient of a Humanitas Prize award in 1994 for his work on And the Band Played On. He is credited as the screenwriter of Players, although the script was rewritten without his consent, and by contract he wasn't able to take his name off.", "The Long Goodbye (film)\n They commissioned the screenplay from Leigh Brackett, who had been Kastner's client when he was an agent and had written the script for the Humphrey Bogart version of The Big Sleep. Brackett: \"... set the deal with United Artists, and they had a commitment for a film with Elliott Gould, so either you take Elliott Gould or you don't make the film. Elliott Gould was not exactly my idea of Philip Marlowe, but anyway there we were. Also, as far as the story was concerned, time had gone by—it was twenty-odd years since the novel was written, and the private eye had become a cliché. It had become funny. You had to watch out what you were doing. If you had Humphrey Bogart at the same ", "Robert Gregory Browne\n In 1990, Browne took up writing again and completed a feature-length screenplay, which was a winner in the Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting competition. The program is sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences and is designed to give aspiring screenwriters a way into the film industry. Browne was one of five winners that year and received a twenty thousand dollar grant for his screenplay, Low Tide. Several weeks after winning, that screenplay sold to Showtime and was slated to be produced by the network. After two years of development, executives overseeing production left the network and the screenplay was put into turnaround. Browne continued working in Hollywood for many years. In the late 1990s, he worked with producer-writer Larry Brody, and was hired by Saban/Fox Kids as a staff writer for the animated show, Diabolik, based on the famed Italian comic book. He and Brody later worked together on the Marvel production, Spider-Man Unlimited. In 2010, CBS Television and Sony Pictures produced a television pilot based on Browne's novel, Kiss Her Goodbye. The pilot starred Dylan Walsh, Michael Rapaport, Sandrine Holt, and Terry Kinney, with a script written and directed by Michael Dinner.", "Goodbye Promise\n Gary W. Goldstein of the Los Angeles Times called Goodbye Promise a \"richly emotional look at a failed actor's introspective last days in Hollywood.\" Film Producer Fred Roos: \"On a micro budget David Branin and Gregor Collins created a perceptive and touching portrait of the lives of struggling actors working on the fringes of Hollywood.\" Television Producer Elizabeth Yoffe called it \"A story that is completely accurate both in its harsh quality and sense of continual possibility.\"", "Geoff LaTulippe\n Shortly after moving to Los Angeles, California, LaTulippe was hired as a script reader at New Line Cinema, a job he was offered by his friend who worked at the studio. After working there for two years, he tired of the job, saying that it \"start[ed] to suck away [my] creativity\". In July 2008, he sold a spec script titled Going the Distance to New Line Cinema, a story based on his friend David Neustadter's previous long-term relationship. The film was ultimately directed by Nanette Burstein and released in September 2010. After selling his first screenplay, he quit his job as a script reader and became a full-time writer. It was ", "The Goodbye Girl (2004 film)\n The Goodbye Girl is a 2004 American television comedy film directed by Richard Benjamin and written by Neil Simon, based on Simon's screenplay to the 1977 film of the same name. It stars Jeff Daniels and Patricia Heaton. It aired on TNT on January 16, 2004. Like the original film, it follows an actor who lives in an apartment along with his friend's ex-girlfriend, whom the friend has just abandoned, and her preteen daughter.", "The Goodbye People (film)\n The Goodbye People is a 1984 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Herb Gardner, based on his 1968 play The Goodbye People. The film stars Judd Hirsch, Martin Balsam, Pamela Reed, Vincent Gugleotti, Gene Saks and Ron Silver. First screened at the Toronto International Film Festival in 1984, the film was released on January 31, 1986, by Embassy Pictures (by a fitting coincidence, it would be their final theatrical release before the company was merged into Columbia Pictures).", "Samantha Rebillet\n Rebillets's approach to filmmaking is influenced by the handheld and improvisational approach preferred by filmmakers such as Darren Aronofsky, Alejandro González Iñárritu and Gus Van Sant. According to an interview with Filmink in February 2014, this is still a 'developing style'. Using this improvisational approach for her film The Last Goodbye, Rebillet wrote the script in 'broad brushstrokes', allowing for the finer details to be further developed during filming itself.", "The Long Goodbye (film)\n The Long Goodbye is a 1973 American neo-noir thriller film directed by Robert Altman and based on Raymond Chandler's 1953 novel. The screenplay was written by Leigh Brackett, who co-wrote the screenplay for Chandler's The Big Sleep in 1946. The film stars Elliott Gould as Philip Marlowe and features Sterling Hayden, Nina Van Pallandt, Jim Bouton (in a rare acting role), Mark Rydell and an early uncredited appearance by Arnold Schwarzenegger. The story's period was moved from 1949–50 to 1970s Hollywood. The Long Goodbye has been described as \"a study of a moral and decent man cast adrift in a selfish, self-obsessed society where lives can be thrown away without a backward glance ... and any notions of friendship and loyalty are meaningless.\" In 2021, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant\".", "Goodbye (Grey's Anatomy)\n \"Goodbye\" is the second episode of the sixth season of the American television medical drama Grey's Anatomy, and the show's 104th episode overall. It was written by Krista Vernoff and directed by Bill D'Elia. The episode was originally broadcast on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in the United States on September 24, 2009. In \"Goodbye\", the staff at Seattle Grace Hospital come to terms with the death of their colleague Dr. George O'Malley (T.R. Knight). Further storylines include Dr. Richard Webber (James Pickens, Jr.) being engaged in a vehicular collision, Dr. Callie Torres (Sara Ramirez) receiving a job as an attending physician at a neighboring hospital, and Dr. Alex Karev's (Justin Chambers) marriage with Dr. Izzie Stevens (Katherine Heigl) taking a toll after her near-death experience. The episode was the ", "Michael Connelly\n planned on following his father's early choice of career in building construction and started out at the University of Florida in Gainesville, at the Rinker School of Building Construction, studying construction management. After earning grades that were lower than expected, Connelly went to see Robert Altman's film The Long Goodbye (1973). The film, based on Raymond Chandler's eponymous 1953 novel, inspired Connelly to want to become a mystery writer. Connelly went home and read all of Chandler's works featuring Philip Marlowe, and decided to transfer to the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications, major in journalism, and minor in creative writing.", "George Axelrod\n of Axelrod's characters except Rita Marlowe (with Mansfield recreating her stage role). Axelrod was contemptuous of the 1957 film version, saying that he did not go to see it because the studio \"never used my story, my play or my script.\" In 1959–60, Lauren Bacall starred in his comic play Goodbye Charlie which ran for 109 performances, followed by a film version with Debbie Reynolds. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, Axelrod was one of the best paid screenwriters in Hollywood, and he was nominated for an Academy Award for his 1961 adaptation of Truman Capote's Breakfast at Tiffany's. He was highly regarded for his adaptation of Richard Condon's novel for director John Frankenheimer's Cold War thriller The Manchurian Candidate (1962) starring Laurence Harvey and Frank Sinatra. Axelrod, ", "The Dresden Files short fiction\n Jared Kincaid is hired to shoot Harry Dresden. For this, The Archive informs him that his services will no longer be required. Set at the end of Changes, Goodbye is a microfiction, and was published on author's website in blog post Microfiction #3, Con Swap, and Virtual Signing as part of the \"Year of Dresden\" celebration for The Dresden Files’ 20th anniversary.", "Goodbye Promise\n When Matt moved to Hollywood he made a pact with himself that if he wasn't a working actor in exactly seven years he'd quit the business and move back to Washington, DC. As the film opens Matt finds himself seven days shy of his self-prescribed deadline, and he's just as anonymous as the day he arrived into town. After an afternoon of soul searching in the mountains he decides to honor his deadline, and plans to spend his final week in Hollywood visiting friends to tell them he's leaving for good and that he'll have a going away party to cap it all off. With ", "Good Morning and... Goodbye!\n Good Morning and... Goodbye! is a 1967 American exploitation film directed by Russ Meyer. It features Alaina Capri, Karen Ciral, as well as Meyer regular Jack Moran, who co-wrote the script.", "Douglas Z. Doty\n Douglas Zabriskie Doty (October 15, 1874 &ndash; February 20, 1935) was an American screenwriter and editor. Doty wrote the screenplays for more than 60 films between 1920 and 1938, the last one being Always Goodbye released in 1938, three years after his death. Doty also worked as an editor for The Century Company. Together with his co-writers Harry d'Abbadie d'Arrast and Donald Ogden Stewart, he was nominated for the 1931 Academy Award for Best Writing (Original Story) for the film ''Laughter. He was born in New York, New York and died in Los Angeles, California.", "John Graves (author)\n John Alexander Graves III (August 6, 1920 – July 31, 2013) was an American writer known for his book Goodbye to a River.", "Goodbye Paradise\n Bob Ellis and Denny Lawrence wrote a sequel for the film called Goodbye Adelaide. The plot involved Stacy finishing the book he is writing in the first movie and visiting the Adelaide Festival to promote it, where he is caught up in an attempted defection by a Russian poet. In January 1985 The Age reported the film would be made that year with a budget of $3 million. However, the movie was never made." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Party?
[ "Jay Woelfel" ]
screenwriter
Party (1994 film)
5,386,404
64
[ { "id": "1078209", "title": "Party (1994 film)", "text": " Party is a 1994 short film starring Gary Coleman, Floyd Harden, DeAnna Hawkins, Ron Litman and Greg Nassief. The film was directed by Eric Swelstad and produced by Johnnie J. Young of J&E Studio Productions, from a script by Jay Woelfel based on a story by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The film was shot in 1994 on location in Lucerne Valley in the Mojave Desert in California.", "score": "1.6452224" }, { "id": "5970689", "title": "Party Girl (1958 film)", "text": " Slightly in advance of the film's release, as was the custom of the era, a paperback novelization of the film was published by Gold Medal Books. The author was renowned crime and western novelist Marvin H. Albert, who also made something of a cottage industry out of movie tie-ins. He seems to have been the most prolific screenplay novelizer of the late '50s through mid '60s, and, during that time, the preeminent specialist at light comedy.", "score": "1.631182" }, { "id": "26368247", "title": "The Party (play)", "text": " The Party is a play by the British dramatist, actor and director Jane Arden (1927–82) which was first staged at the New Theatre, London on 28 May 1958. The play was directed by Charles Laughton and starred, in addition to Laughton himself, Albert Finney, Laughton's wife Elsa Lanchester, Ann Lynn, Joyce Redman, and John Welch. Following generally enthusiastic reviews The Party ran for six months at the New Theatre and has occasionally been performed in repertory since. The play was published by Samuel French Limited.", "score": "1.604949" }, { "id": "13405050", "title": "The Party (2017 film)", "text": " The Party is a 2017 British black comedy film written and directed by Sally Potter. The film was shot in black and white and features a seven-actor ensemble of Patricia Clarkson, Bruno Ganz, Cherry Jones, Emily Mortimer, Cillian Murphy, Kristin Scott Thomas and Timothy Spall. It was selected to compete for the Golden Bear in the main competition section of the 67th Berlin International Film Festival and was awarded the Guild Film Prize. The film received positive reviews from critics. ", "score": "1.5993385" }, { "id": "2679714", "title": "The Party (TV play)", "text": " The Party is a 1969 Australian TV play. It was made by the ABC in Melbourne under the direction of Chris Muir. It was written for the ABC by the head of Victorian religious broadcasts, John Nicholson. It aired in Melbourne and Sydney on 12 October 1969. It ran for 45 minutes.", "score": "1.5941848" }, { "id": "12423216", "title": "Party (upcoming film)", "text": " Party is an upcoming Indian comedy thriller film written and directed by Venkat Prabhu and produced by T. Siva. The film stars Jai, Jayaram, Shiva, Shaam, Sathyaraj, Ramya Krishna and Regina Cassandra, with Sanchita Shetty, Nivetha Pethuraj, Nandha Durairaj, Nassar and Kayal Chandran appear in supporting roles. After the release of his seventh directorial and debut production venture, it was announced that director Venkat Prabhu will do a film for Amma Creations banner of T.Siva which is celebrating its 25th year in film industry. It was reported that the producer of the film, T Siva of Amma creations, has confirmed the film is seeking a theatrical release.", "score": "1.5814415" }, { "id": "32049468", "title": "The Party (1968 film)", "text": " The Party was the only non-Pink Panther collaboration between Sellers and Edwards. Producer Walter Mirisch knew that Sellers and Edwards were considered liabilities; in his autobiography, Mirisch wrote \"Blake had achieved a reputation as a very expensive director, particularly after The Great Race.\" Sellers had played an Indian man (Dr. Ahmed el Kabir) in his hit film The Millionairess (1960), and another Indian physician in The Road to Hong Kong (1962). He is mostly remembered as a similar klutz as Inspector Clouseau in The Pink Panther series. The film started shooting in May under the title RSVP. The film's interiors were shot on a set, at the MGM lot, though this may be a mistake as IMDb lists the Samuel Goldwyn Studios on ", "score": "1.5780838" }, { "id": "27643305", "title": "Party Going", "text": " Party Going is a 1939 novel by British writer Henry Green (real name Henry Vincent Yorke). It tells the story of a group of wealthy people travelling by train to a house party. Due to a fog, however, the train is much delayed and the group takes rooms in the adjacent large railway hotel. All the action of the story takes place in the hotel.", "score": "1.5758603" }, { "id": "32658053", "title": "Francis Hsueh and Steven Hahn", "text": " In fall 2005, Hsueh and Hahn completed their first film, Party, a feature-length documentary about New York's Asian nightlife. They shot, directed, edited, scored, produced and financed it themselves. The film features intersecting stories of several party promoters and partygoers, as well as a voiceover narration provided by Prof. Gary Okihiro of Columbia University. Party appeared at the 2007 Rotterdam Asiascope Overseas Asian Film Festival and was chosen for distribution by Pathfinder Pictures in 2006.", "score": "1.5639174" }, { "id": "3135662", "title": "The Party's Just Beginning", "text": " In November 2016, it was announced Karen Gillan would direct, write, and star in her first directorial feature film titled Tupperware Party. Mali Elfman, Tien Huei Grace Yeh and Claire Mundell, serving as producers on the film, while R. Andre Davies, Albert Davies, Albert Gersten and Sloan Martin serve as executive producers under their Mt. Hollywood Films banner. In January 2017, Lee Pace, Matthew Beard, Paul Higgins and Siobhan Redmond joined the cast of the film. Kreng composed the film's score. The film was shot in January and February 2017, and the title was changed from Tupperware Party to The Party's Just Beginning.", "score": "1.5623248" }, { "id": "32049458", "title": "The Party (1968 film)", "text": " The Party is a 1968 American comedy film directed by Blake Edwards, and starring Peter Sellers and Claudine Longet. The film has a very loose structure, and essentially serves as a series of set pieces for Sellers's improvisational comedy talents. Based on a fish-out-of-water premise, the film is about a bungling actor from India, Hrundi V. Bakshi (portrayed by Sellers), who accidentally gets invited to a lavish Hollywood dinner party and \"makes terrible mistakes based upon ignorance of Western ways\". The protagonist Hrundi Bakshi was influenced by two of Sellers' earlier characters: the Indian doctor Ahmed el Kabir in The Millionairess (1960) and Inspector Clouseau in The Pink Panther series. In turn, the character Hrundi Bakshi went on to be influential, inspiring several later popular characters, including Amitabh Bachchan's character Arjun Singh in the 1982 Bollywood blockbuster Namak Halaal, Rowan Atkinson's character Mr. Bean in the 1990s British sitcom of the same name, and Hank Azaria's character Apu Nahasapeemapetilon in the American animated sitcom The Simpsons.", "score": "1.5618052" }, { "id": "12082756", "title": "Tom Basden", "text": " In 2010 his play Party was performed, about a group of rather childish university students holding a meeting to found their own political party. The Guardian gave it a positive review calling it \"an idiosyncratic and highly enjoyable piece performed beautifully by a crack cast of upcoming comics\"; they praised the quality of the jokes, while noting that the satire was light and subtle. It was adapted into a Radio 4 sitcom, also called Party, broadcast for three series and a Christmas special from 2010 to 2018 and written by and starring Basden. It also stars Tim Key, Jonny Sweet, Anna Crilly and Katy Wix. He was longlisted for the 2011 Evening Standard Theatre Awards Most Promising Playwright for his stage adaption of Franz Kafka's novel The Trial, called Joseph K. It also received positive reviews from The Guardian and the Daily Telegraph.", "score": "1.5587392" }, { "id": "26727026", "title": "Life of the Party (2005 film)", "text": " Life of the Party is a 2005 film with Eion Bailey and Ellen Pompeo. It was written and directed by Barra Grant.", "score": "1.552177" }, { "id": "5675395", "title": "Killer Party", "text": " The screenplay for Killer Party was written by Barney Cohen, who had recently completed the screenplay for Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984). The film had the working titles of Fool's Night and April Fool, but it was ultimately changed to Killer Party when Paramount Pictures announced their own horror film called April Fool's Day. Actress Sherry Willis-Burch revealed in an interview that her character \"Vivia\" was initially meant to be killed early in the film when she first was given the role, but was rewritten to survive until the very end.", "score": "1.5491941" }, { "id": "29671766", "title": "Party (2006 film)", "text": " Party is a 2006 Indian Telugu film, directed by Ravi Babu in the genre of comedy that makes a statement on the corporate environment shaping the IT world in the new millennium. It stars Allari Naresh, Shashank, Ravi Babu and Madhu Sharma. The plot of the film is heavily inspired from the Hollywood film Weekend at Bernie's.", "score": "1.5487521" }, { "id": "11247537", "title": "James Matthews (writer)", "text": "The Party is Over (1997), Kwela ", "score": "1.547202" }, { "id": "3498518", "title": "Dance Party USA (film)", "text": " Dance Party USA is a 2006 film written and directed by Aaron Katz. It stars Cole Pensinger and Anna Kavan. The film and director have also been mentioned by the media as an important part of the \"mumblecore\" movement in independent cinema.", "score": "1.5408466" }, { "id": "32049471", "title": "The Party (1968 film)", "text": " The Party is considered a classic comedic cult film. Edwards' biographers Peter Lehman and William Luhr said, \"The Party may very well be one of the most radically experimental films in Hollywood history; in fact it may be the single most radical film since D.W. Griffith's style came to dominate the American cinema.\" Saul Austerlitz wrote \"Despite the offensiveness of Sellers's brownface routine, The Party is one of his very best films...Taking a page from Tati, this is neorealist comedy, purposefully lacking a director's guiding eye: look here, look there. The screen is crammed full of activity, and the audience's eyes are left to wander where they may.\"", "score": "1.5400457" }, { "id": "3260452", "title": "Life of the Party (2018 film)", "text": " In September 2020, Melissa McCarthy, Ben Falcone and the film's producers were sued for $10 million by Eva Kowalski, who claimed she pitched the concept for the film to the studio in 2014 and they breached an implied-in-fact contract by producing it without compensation.", "score": "1.5380316" }, { "id": "9959289", "title": "Party plan", "text": " The party plan is regarded as primarily the invention of Norman W. Squires, who developed it for Stanley Home Products in Westfield, MA, which company was founded by Stanley Beveridge and Catherine O'Brien in the mid-1930s. Mr. Beveridge and Ms. O'Brien were former employees of the Fuller Brush Company, which sold its products with door-to-door salespersons.", "score": "1.5368825" } ]
[ "Party (1994 film)\n Party is a 1994 short film starring Gary Coleman, Floyd Harden, DeAnna Hawkins, Ron Litman and Greg Nassief. The film was directed by Eric Swelstad and produced by Johnnie J. Young of J&E Studio Productions, from a script by Jay Woelfel based on a story by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The film was shot in 1994 on location in Lucerne Valley in the Mojave Desert in California.", "Party Girl (1958 film)\n Slightly in advance of the film's release, as was the custom of the era, a paperback novelization of the film was published by Gold Medal Books. The author was renowned crime and western novelist Marvin H. Albert, who also made something of a cottage industry out of movie tie-ins. He seems to have been the most prolific screenplay novelizer of the late '50s through mid '60s, and, during that time, the preeminent specialist at light comedy.", "The Party (play)\n The Party is a play by the British dramatist, actor and director Jane Arden (1927–82) which was first staged at the New Theatre, London on 28 May 1958. The play was directed by Charles Laughton and starred, in addition to Laughton himself, Albert Finney, Laughton's wife Elsa Lanchester, Ann Lynn, Joyce Redman, and John Welch. Following generally enthusiastic reviews The Party ran for six months at the New Theatre and has occasionally been performed in repertory since. The play was published by Samuel French Limited.", "The Party (2017 film)\n The Party is a 2017 British black comedy film written and directed by Sally Potter. The film was shot in black and white and features a seven-actor ensemble of Patricia Clarkson, Bruno Ganz, Cherry Jones, Emily Mortimer, Cillian Murphy, Kristin Scott Thomas and Timothy Spall. It was selected to compete for the Golden Bear in the main competition section of the 67th Berlin International Film Festival and was awarded the Guild Film Prize. The film received positive reviews from critics. ", "The Party (TV play)\n The Party is a 1969 Australian TV play. It was made by the ABC in Melbourne under the direction of Chris Muir. It was written for the ABC by the head of Victorian religious broadcasts, John Nicholson. It aired in Melbourne and Sydney on 12 October 1969. It ran for 45 minutes.", "Party (upcoming film)\n Party is an upcoming Indian comedy thriller film written and directed by Venkat Prabhu and produced by T. Siva. The film stars Jai, Jayaram, Shiva, Shaam, Sathyaraj, Ramya Krishna and Regina Cassandra, with Sanchita Shetty, Nivetha Pethuraj, Nandha Durairaj, Nassar and Kayal Chandran appear in supporting roles. After the release of his seventh directorial and debut production venture, it was announced that director Venkat Prabhu will do a film for Amma Creations banner of T.Siva which is celebrating its 25th year in film industry. It was reported that the producer of the film, T Siva of Amma creations, has confirmed the film is seeking a theatrical release.", "The Party (1968 film)\n The Party was the only non-Pink Panther collaboration between Sellers and Edwards. Producer Walter Mirisch knew that Sellers and Edwards were considered liabilities; in his autobiography, Mirisch wrote \"Blake had achieved a reputation as a very expensive director, particularly after The Great Race.\" Sellers had played an Indian man (Dr. Ahmed el Kabir) in his hit film The Millionairess (1960), and another Indian physician in The Road to Hong Kong (1962). He is mostly remembered as a similar klutz as Inspector Clouseau in The Pink Panther series. The film started shooting in May under the title RSVP. The film's interiors were shot on a set, at the MGM lot, though this may be a mistake as IMDb lists the Samuel Goldwyn Studios on ", "Party Going\n Party Going is a 1939 novel by British writer Henry Green (real name Henry Vincent Yorke). It tells the story of a group of wealthy people travelling by train to a house party. Due to a fog, however, the train is much delayed and the group takes rooms in the adjacent large railway hotel. All the action of the story takes place in the hotel.", "Francis Hsueh and Steven Hahn\n In fall 2005, Hsueh and Hahn completed their first film, Party, a feature-length documentary about New York's Asian nightlife. They shot, directed, edited, scored, produced and financed it themselves. The film features intersecting stories of several party promoters and partygoers, as well as a voiceover narration provided by Prof. Gary Okihiro of Columbia University. Party appeared at the 2007 Rotterdam Asiascope Overseas Asian Film Festival and was chosen for distribution by Pathfinder Pictures in 2006.", "The Party's Just Beginning\n In November 2016, it was announced Karen Gillan would direct, write, and star in her first directorial feature film titled Tupperware Party. Mali Elfman, Tien Huei Grace Yeh and Claire Mundell, serving as producers on the film, while R. Andre Davies, Albert Davies, Albert Gersten and Sloan Martin serve as executive producers under their Mt. Hollywood Films banner. In January 2017, Lee Pace, Matthew Beard, Paul Higgins and Siobhan Redmond joined the cast of the film. Kreng composed the film's score. The film was shot in January and February 2017, and the title was changed from Tupperware Party to The Party's Just Beginning.", "The Party (1968 film)\n The Party is a 1968 American comedy film directed by Blake Edwards, and starring Peter Sellers and Claudine Longet. The film has a very loose structure, and essentially serves as a series of set pieces for Sellers's improvisational comedy talents. Based on a fish-out-of-water premise, the film is about a bungling actor from India, Hrundi V. Bakshi (portrayed by Sellers), who accidentally gets invited to a lavish Hollywood dinner party and \"makes terrible mistakes based upon ignorance of Western ways\". The protagonist Hrundi Bakshi was influenced by two of Sellers' earlier characters: the Indian doctor Ahmed el Kabir in The Millionairess (1960) and Inspector Clouseau in The Pink Panther series. In turn, the character Hrundi Bakshi went on to be influential, inspiring several later popular characters, including Amitabh Bachchan's character Arjun Singh in the 1982 Bollywood blockbuster Namak Halaal, Rowan Atkinson's character Mr. Bean in the 1990s British sitcom of the same name, and Hank Azaria's character Apu Nahasapeemapetilon in the American animated sitcom The Simpsons.", "Tom Basden\n In 2010 his play Party was performed, about a group of rather childish university students holding a meeting to found their own political party. The Guardian gave it a positive review calling it \"an idiosyncratic and highly enjoyable piece performed beautifully by a crack cast of upcoming comics\"; they praised the quality of the jokes, while noting that the satire was light and subtle. It was adapted into a Radio 4 sitcom, also called Party, broadcast for three series and a Christmas special from 2010 to 2018 and written by and starring Basden. It also stars Tim Key, Jonny Sweet, Anna Crilly and Katy Wix. He was longlisted for the 2011 Evening Standard Theatre Awards Most Promising Playwright for his stage adaption of Franz Kafka's novel The Trial, called Joseph K. It also received positive reviews from The Guardian and the Daily Telegraph.", "Life of the Party (2005 film)\n Life of the Party is a 2005 film with Eion Bailey and Ellen Pompeo. It was written and directed by Barra Grant.", "Killer Party\n The screenplay for Killer Party was written by Barney Cohen, who had recently completed the screenplay for Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984). The film had the working titles of Fool's Night and April Fool, but it was ultimately changed to Killer Party when Paramount Pictures announced their own horror film called April Fool's Day. Actress Sherry Willis-Burch revealed in an interview that her character \"Vivia\" was initially meant to be killed early in the film when she first was given the role, but was rewritten to survive until the very end.", "Party (2006 film)\n Party is a 2006 Indian Telugu film, directed by Ravi Babu in the genre of comedy that makes a statement on the corporate environment shaping the IT world in the new millennium. It stars Allari Naresh, Shashank, Ravi Babu and Madhu Sharma. The plot of the film is heavily inspired from the Hollywood film Weekend at Bernie's.", "James Matthews (writer)\nThe Party is Over (1997), Kwela ", "Dance Party USA (film)\n Dance Party USA is a 2006 film written and directed by Aaron Katz. It stars Cole Pensinger and Anna Kavan. The film and director have also been mentioned by the media as an important part of the \"mumblecore\" movement in independent cinema.", "The Party (1968 film)\n The Party is considered a classic comedic cult film. Edwards' biographers Peter Lehman and William Luhr said, \"The Party may very well be one of the most radically experimental films in Hollywood history; in fact it may be the single most radical film since D.W. Griffith's style came to dominate the American cinema.\" Saul Austerlitz wrote \"Despite the offensiveness of Sellers's brownface routine, The Party is one of his very best films...Taking a page from Tati, this is neorealist comedy, purposefully lacking a director's guiding eye: look here, look there. The screen is crammed full of activity, and the audience's eyes are left to wander where they may.\"", "Life of the Party (2018 film)\n In September 2020, Melissa McCarthy, Ben Falcone and the film's producers were sued for $10 million by Eva Kowalski, who claimed she pitched the concept for the film to the studio in 2014 and they breached an implied-in-fact contract by producing it without compensation.", "Party plan\n The party plan is regarded as primarily the invention of Norman W. Squires, who developed it for Stanley Home Products in Westfield, MA, which company was founded by Stanley Beveridge and Catherine O'Brien in the mid-1930s. Mr. Beveridge and Ms. O'Brien were former employees of the Fuller Brush Company, which sold its products with door-to-door salespersons." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Grace?
[ "Melinda Hsu Taylor" ]
screenwriter
Grace (Falling Skies)
4,271,609
85
[ { "id": "30179437", "title": "Grace of Monaco (film)", "text": " The script, written by Arash Amel, was listed in the 2011 Hollywood Black List of the most liked screenplays written in that year and sold to French-based producer Pierre-Ange Le Pogam in a competitive bid.", "score": "1.8254697" }, { "id": "32812924", "title": "Arash Amel", "text": " Amel wrote and produced the controversial Princess Grace period drama Grace of Monaco, starring Nicole Kidman, Tim Roth and Frank Langella, and directed by Olivier Dahan. The script was listed in the 2011 Black List of the most liked Hollywood screenplays written in that year. The film opened the Cannes Film Festival 2014, where it was heavily criticised. Harvey Weinstein, whose company owns the distribution rights to Grace of Monaco, was absent from the Cannes premier of the movie. Weinstein was said to have been doing charity work with his wife Georgina Chapman. Weinstein stated that the director's cut of the film was missing a key scene that would address the ", "score": "1.8026581" }, { "id": "29627622", "title": "Howard A. Rodman", "text": " published in Fallen Angels: Six Noir Tales Told for Television. Rodman then wrote Joe Gould's Secret, which opened the 2000 Sundance festival and was subsequently released by October/USA Films. Rodman's original screenplay F. was selected by Premiere Magazine as one of Hollywood's Ten Best Unproduced Screenplays. Other films include Savage Grace, starring Julianne Moore, and August, with Josh Hartnett, Rip Torn, and David Bowie—both of which had their US premieres at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. They were released in 2008 from IFC and First Look, respectively. Rodman's screenplay for Savage Grace was nominated for a Spirit Award in the Best Screenplay category.", "score": "1.7633374" }, { "id": "2988670", "title": "Running for Grace", "text": " The original screenplay The Medicine Runner by Christian Parkes was a 2003 Nicholl Fellowship Semi-Finalist.", "score": "1.7037582" }, { "id": "8229878", "title": "Grace Neville", "text": " Grace Neville (1898–1973) was an American screenwriter.", "score": "1.6634595" }, { "id": "30179451", "title": "Grace of Monaco (film)", "text": " In January 2015, Harvey Weinstein clarified the events leading to the conflict between himself and the director. He indicated that the US release will be a \"Writer's Cut\", restoring the movie to the spirit of the screenplay The Weinstein Company signed on for, which he compared to The King's Speech. He said, \"The writer, Arash Amel, called me and said, what happened to my script. It’s like welcome to Hollywood. Writers don’t have any say, but we decided to pair him up with a team of people and see what he could do about restoring the movie to the way it looked when he wrote it. He did a wonderful job.\"", "score": "1.6265917" }, { "id": "13074193", "title": "Micky Levy", "text": " Prize nomination and won the Epiphany Prize. Micky wrote “Amish Grace” under the pseudonym Sylvie White. The film was co-written by Teena Booth. Micky wrote, directed and produced the documentary short \"The First Time: Writing and Sex\" that was lensed by Svetlana Cvetko. Micky wrote, directed and produced the narrative short film Page’s Great and Grand Escape. The short played the festival circuit including the Newport Beach Film Festival, Raindance Film Festival and HollyShorts Film Festival. Micky’s adaptation of Caryl Phillips’ novel, Dancing in the Dark (novel), placed in the top ten of the Showtime Tony Cox Screenplay Competition.", "score": "1.6131997" }, { "id": "31175749", "title": "Peter James (writer)", "text": " His 1992 novel Prophecy was adapted into the first episode of the 1995 Chiller tv series. In 2021, the first two novels in his Roy Grace series, Dead Simple and Looking Good Dead were adapted into two feature-length films for ITV. The show has been called Grace, and the role of Roy Grace is played by John Simm.", "score": "1.6125714" }, { "id": "32937171", "title": "Michael MacLennan", "text": " 1996 Grace won the Theatre BC National Playwriting Competition, and has been produced across Canada and internationally. During this era, he also wrote a number of short one-act plays, including Wake No Clocks and Come On!. He then began to study screenwriting at the Canadian Film Centre, although he continued to write plays during this time. He won the Herman Voaden Playwrighting Competition in 1998 for his play The Shooting Stage, and in 2001 for Last Romantics. Both plays were later nominated for the Governor General's Award for English drama, The Shooting Stage at the 2002 Governor General's Awards and Last Romantics at the 2003 Governor General's Awards. He began his television career as writer and story editor for ", "score": "1.6051903" }, { "id": "30179446", "title": "Grace of Monaco (film)", "text": " At the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, notable absences at the press conference and official photo-call were Weinstein and the film's screenwriter Amel. Weinstein cited charitable work in Syria as the reason for his absence, while Amel told The Hollywood Reporter that \"he doesn't want his 'big first Cannes moment' undermined by the controversy surrounding the dueling cuts.\"", "score": "1.5988754" }, { "id": "14213026", "title": "Stephen J. Cannell", "text": " the subject. According to an episode of Paul Harvey's The Rest of the Story, Cannell frequently had to dictate ideas or even complete scripts with the help of his personal secretary Grace Curcio, an employee of 20 years. Following Grace's retirement in 2003, Kathy Ezso became his editor and executive assistant. He discussed his experiences as a dyslexic in the 2009 documentary Dislecksia: The Movie. Cannell wrote on a typewriter, an IBM Selectric, when not dictating to an assistant, and only used a computer for research purposes. Cannell died on September 30, 2010, from complications of melanoma. He is interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles.", "score": "1.5902754" }, { "id": "4780298", "title": "Adam Barr", "text": " Adam Barr is a television screenwriter and producer best known for his comedy credits including the hit NBC series Will & Grace. In the early nineties he teamed up with best friend Peter Ocko, with whom he wrote 12 episodes of Parker Lewis Can't Lose. Later in the decade the writing duo scripted ten episodes of Weird Science, the series spun off the 1985 sci-fi comedy film of the same name. Perhaps Barr's most notable work was on Will & Grace, the long-running situation comedy about a gay man and his best friend, which first aired in the US from 1998 to 2006. Barr ", "score": "1.5891247" }, { "id": "13528831", "title": "Topher Grace", "text": " and written by Richard Greenberg. In 2014, Grace starred in the indie thriller The Calling, alongside Susan Sarandon, and appeared in Christopher Nolan's sci-fi adventure Interstellar, in a supporting role. In October 2013, Grace joined HBO comedy pilot People in New Jersey with Sarah Silverman, but in January 2014, the pilot was passed on. Grace co-starred in the comedy film American Ultra (2015), alongside Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart, playing a CIA agent. That same year, he co-starred in Truth, with Robert Redford and Cate Blanchett, and based on the story of CBS's 60 Minutes report that George W. Bush had received preferential treatment to keep ", "score": "1.5881058" }, { "id": "10557069", "title": "Grace (play)", "text": " Grace is a 21st-century play written by Mick Gordon and A. C. Grayling.", "score": "1.5864494" }, { "id": "27220785", "title": "Grace Antony", "text": " Films ", "score": "1.5847135" }, { "id": "33134021", "title": "Caroline Grace-Cassidy", "text": " Love Story Of Lexie Byrne due in 2021. Grace-Cassidy has been a regular panelist with Midday, later renamed The Elaine Show, on TV3, now Virgin Media One, since 2012. She is a creative director at Document Films and a co-founder of the TV and film house Park Pictures. She has written eight short films: Princess Rehab (2013), Galway Fleadh-winning I AM JESUS (2014), Torn (2014), Even Droids Have Friends (2015), Cineuropa award-winning Love At First Light (2015), Blackbird (2016), Reach (2017), and Run (2019). She is the co-writer of The Quiet Woman, which is currently in development with Park Films, supported by Screen Ireland. As of 2016, Grace-Cassidy's seventh novel, Bride Squad Runaway, was being adapted as a television drama, and a film adaptation of her fifth novel, The Week I Ruined My Life, was announced in 2017.", "score": "1.5845097" }, { "id": "5513935", "title": "Seven Days of Grace (2006 film)", "text": " Filming began on March 17, 1996, 10 years before the eventual 2006 release of the film. Seven Days of Grace was shot on location in the California towns of Malibu and Montrose, with filming concluding in August 1996. The FauntLeRoy family was instrumental in the production of the film. Don E. FauntLeRoy served as the director, cinematographer and one of the producers, while his wife Lesley-Anne Down was both a featured actress and writer of the screenplay. Don's daughters, Juliana and Season, served respectively as second assistant camera operator and still photographer. Actors Peter Evans and Ria Coyne, playing the parts of Alex and Grace, wrote the original screenplay together before it was adapted by Lesley-Anne Down. Evans also served as the executive producer to the film. Coyne, who had appeared in Batman Forever the previous year, additionally served as a producer. Diamond Pleshaw appeared as an actor but additionally worked behind the scenes as assistant art director. The following year, he worked as a production assistant for the popular television series Seinfeld, the same year that actress Olivia Hussey appeared on the comedy series Boy Meets World.", "score": "1.575413" }, { "id": "9510822", "title": "Alias Grace", "text": " Grace Marks, the convicted murderess, has been hired out from prison to serve as a domestic servant in the home of the Governor of the penitentiary. A Committee of gentlemen and ladies from the Methodist church, led by the minister, hopes to have her pardoned and released. Grace cannot remember what happened on the day of the murders, and she exhibits symptoms of hysteria, so the minister hires Dr. Simon Jordan, a psychiatrist, to interview her, hoping he will find her to be a hysteric, and not a criminal. An arrangement is made so that Dr. Jordan will interview Grace ", "score": "1.5753613" }, { "id": "10456990", "title": "Venom (2018 film)", "text": " had written a script for the film, but the studio chose to seek out new writers for a different approach from that draft. Sony was also not yet convinced that Grace could serve as the lead actor in the film. That September, Sony hired Paul Wernick and Rhett Reese to write a new script, while industry insiders suggested that Grace should return for the spin-off \"because the likeable actor could be a sympathetic evildoer\", in response to Venom co-creator Todd McFarlane suggesting that a Venom film could not do well with a villain as the central character. Wernick and Reese had pitched an original ", "score": "1.5734065" }, { "id": "6642120", "title": "Grace Cunard", "text": " written by William M. Henry about the \"king and queen of movie melodrama\". The article, titled \"Her Grace and Francis I\", includes interviews with both Ford and Cunard. \"Ford freely admits\", writes Henry, \"that Miss Cunard provides most of the ideas for the stories.\" He then quotes Ford regarding his and Cunard's methodology for developing their films: \"'It takes us about two hours to make a two reel scenario, once we get an idea...If we both agree on the plan for the story, we make the scenario together; if we disagree, each writes a scenario and then we either take the best one or combine the two.'\"", "score": "1.5731099" } ]
[ "Grace of Monaco (film)\n The script, written by Arash Amel, was listed in the 2011 Hollywood Black List of the most liked screenplays written in that year and sold to French-based producer Pierre-Ange Le Pogam in a competitive bid.", "Arash Amel\n Amel wrote and produced the controversial Princess Grace period drama Grace of Monaco, starring Nicole Kidman, Tim Roth and Frank Langella, and directed by Olivier Dahan. The script was listed in the 2011 Black List of the most liked Hollywood screenplays written in that year. The film opened the Cannes Film Festival 2014, where it was heavily criticised. Harvey Weinstein, whose company owns the distribution rights to Grace of Monaco, was absent from the Cannes premier of the movie. Weinstein was said to have been doing charity work with his wife Georgina Chapman. Weinstein stated that the director's cut of the film was missing a key scene that would address the ", "Howard A. Rodman\n published in Fallen Angels: Six Noir Tales Told for Television. Rodman then wrote Joe Gould's Secret, which opened the 2000 Sundance festival and was subsequently released by October/USA Films. Rodman's original screenplay F. was selected by Premiere Magazine as one of Hollywood's Ten Best Unproduced Screenplays. Other films include Savage Grace, starring Julianne Moore, and August, with Josh Hartnett, Rip Torn, and David Bowie—both of which had their US premieres at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. They were released in 2008 from IFC and First Look, respectively. Rodman's screenplay for Savage Grace was nominated for a Spirit Award in the Best Screenplay category.", "Running for Grace\n The original screenplay The Medicine Runner by Christian Parkes was a 2003 Nicholl Fellowship Semi-Finalist.", "Grace Neville\n Grace Neville (1898–1973) was an American screenwriter.", "Grace of Monaco (film)\n In January 2015, Harvey Weinstein clarified the events leading to the conflict between himself and the director. He indicated that the US release will be a \"Writer's Cut\", restoring the movie to the spirit of the screenplay The Weinstein Company signed on for, which he compared to The King's Speech. He said, \"The writer, Arash Amel, called me and said, what happened to my script. It’s like welcome to Hollywood. Writers don’t have any say, but we decided to pair him up with a team of people and see what he could do about restoring the movie to the way it looked when he wrote it. He did a wonderful job.\"", "Micky Levy\n Prize nomination and won the Epiphany Prize. Micky wrote “Amish Grace” under the pseudonym Sylvie White. The film was co-written by Teena Booth. Micky wrote, directed and produced the documentary short \"The First Time: Writing and Sex\" that was lensed by Svetlana Cvetko. Micky wrote, directed and produced the narrative short film Page’s Great and Grand Escape. The short played the festival circuit including the Newport Beach Film Festival, Raindance Film Festival and HollyShorts Film Festival. Micky’s adaptation of Caryl Phillips’ novel, Dancing in the Dark (novel), placed in the top ten of the Showtime Tony Cox Screenplay Competition.", "Peter James (writer)\n His 1992 novel Prophecy was adapted into the first episode of the 1995 Chiller tv series. In 2021, the first two novels in his Roy Grace series, Dead Simple and Looking Good Dead were adapted into two feature-length films for ITV. The show has been called Grace, and the role of Roy Grace is played by John Simm.", "Michael MacLennan\n 1996 Grace won the Theatre BC National Playwriting Competition, and has been produced across Canada and internationally. During this era, he also wrote a number of short one-act plays, including Wake No Clocks and Come On!. He then began to study screenwriting at the Canadian Film Centre, although he continued to write plays during this time. He won the Herman Voaden Playwrighting Competition in 1998 for his play The Shooting Stage, and in 2001 for Last Romantics. Both plays were later nominated for the Governor General's Award for English drama, The Shooting Stage at the 2002 Governor General's Awards and Last Romantics at the 2003 Governor General's Awards. He began his television career as writer and story editor for ", "Grace of Monaco (film)\n At the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, notable absences at the press conference and official photo-call were Weinstein and the film's screenwriter Amel. Weinstein cited charitable work in Syria as the reason for his absence, while Amel told The Hollywood Reporter that \"he doesn't want his 'big first Cannes moment' undermined by the controversy surrounding the dueling cuts.\"", "Stephen J. Cannell\n the subject. According to an episode of Paul Harvey's The Rest of the Story, Cannell frequently had to dictate ideas or even complete scripts with the help of his personal secretary Grace Curcio, an employee of 20 years. Following Grace's retirement in 2003, Kathy Ezso became his editor and executive assistant. He discussed his experiences as a dyslexic in the 2009 documentary Dislecksia: The Movie. Cannell wrote on a typewriter, an IBM Selectric, when not dictating to an assistant, and only used a computer for research purposes. Cannell died on September 30, 2010, from complications of melanoma. He is interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles.", "Adam Barr\n Adam Barr is a television screenwriter and producer best known for his comedy credits including the hit NBC series Will & Grace. In the early nineties he teamed up with best friend Peter Ocko, with whom he wrote 12 episodes of Parker Lewis Can't Lose. Later in the decade the writing duo scripted ten episodes of Weird Science, the series spun off the 1985 sci-fi comedy film of the same name. Perhaps Barr's most notable work was on Will & Grace, the long-running situation comedy about a gay man and his best friend, which first aired in the US from 1998 to 2006. Barr ", "Topher Grace\n and written by Richard Greenberg. In 2014, Grace starred in the indie thriller The Calling, alongside Susan Sarandon, and appeared in Christopher Nolan's sci-fi adventure Interstellar, in a supporting role. In October 2013, Grace joined HBO comedy pilot People in New Jersey with Sarah Silverman, but in January 2014, the pilot was passed on. Grace co-starred in the comedy film American Ultra (2015), alongside Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart, playing a CIA agent. That same year, he co-starred in Truth, with Robert Redford and Cate Blanchett, and based on the story of CBS's 60 Minutes report that George W. Bush had received preferential treatment to keep ", "Grace (play)\n Grace is a 21st-century play written by Mick Gordon and A. C. Grayling.", "Grace Antony\n Films ", "Caroline Grace-Cassidy\n Love Story Of Lexie Byrne due in 2021. Grace-Cassidy has been a regular panelist with Midday, later renamed The Elaine Show, on TV3, now Virgin Media One, since 2012. She is a creative director at Document Films and a co-founder of the TV and film house Park Pictures. She has written eight short films: Princess Rehab (2013), Galway Fleadh-winning I AM JESUS (2014), Torn (2014), Even Droids Have Friends (2015), Cineuropa award-winning Love At First Light (2015), Blackbird (2016), Reach (2017), and Run (2019). She is the co-writer of The Quiet Woman, which is currently in development with Park Films, supported by Screen Ireland. As of 2016, Grace-Cassidy's seventh novel, Bride Squad Runaway, was being adapted as a television drama, and a film adaptation of her fifth novel, The Week I Ruined My Life, was announced in 2017.", "Seven Days of Grace (2006 film)\n Filming began on March 17, 1996, 10 years before the eventual 2006 release of the film. Seven Days of Grace was shot on location in the California towns of Malibu and Montrose, with filming concluding in August 1996. The FauntLeRoy family was instrumental in the production of the film. Don E. FauntLeRoy served as the director, cinematographer and one of the producers, while his wife Lesley-Anne Down was both a featured actress and writer of the screenplay. Don's daughters, Juliana and Season, served respectively as second assistant camera operator and still photographer. Actors Peter Evans and Ria Coyne, playing the parts of Alex and Grace, wrote the original screenplay together before it was adapted by Lesley-Anne Down. Evans also served as the executive producer to the film. Coyne, who had appeared in Batman Forever the previous year, additionally served as a producer. Diamond Pleshaw appeared as an actor but additionally worked behind the scenes as assistant art director. The following year, he worked as a production assistant for the popular television series Seinfeld, the same year that actress Olivia Hussey appeared on the comedy series Boy Meets World.", "Alias Grace\n Grace Marks, the convicted murderess, has been hired out from prison to serve as a domestic servant in the home of the Governor of the penitentiary. A Committee of gentlemen and ladies from the Methodist church, led by the minister, hopes to have her pardoned and released. Grace cannot remember what happened on the day of the murders, and she exhibits symptoms of hysteria, so the minister hires Dr. Simon Jordan, a psychiatrist, to interview her, hoping he will find her to be a hysteric, and not a criminal. An arrangement is made so that Dr. Jordan will interview Grace ", "Venom (2018 film)\n had written a script for the film, but the studio chose to seek out new writers for a different approach from that draft. Sony was also not yet convinced that Grace could serve as the lead actor in the film. That September, Sony hired Paul Wernick and Rhett Reese to write a new script, while industry insiders suggested that Grace should return for the spin-off \"because the likeable actor could be a sympathetic evildoer\", in response to Venom co-creator Todd McFarlane suggesting that a Venom film could not do well with a villain as the central character. Wernick and Reese had pitched an original ", "Grace Cunard\n written by William M. Henry about the \"king and queen of movie melodrama\". The article, titled \"Her Grace and Francis I\", includes interviews with both Ford and Cunard. \"Ford freely admits\", writes Henry, \"that Miss Cunard provides most of the ideas for the stories.\" He then quotes Ford regarding his and Cunard's methodology for developing their films: \"'It takes us about two hours to make a two reel scenario, once we get an idea...If we both agree on the plan for the story, we make the scenario together; if we disagree, each writes a scenario and then we either take the best one or combine the two.'\"" ]
Who was the screenwriter for Ghost?
[ "Hossein Shahabi" ]
screenwriter
Ghost (1998 film)
1,398,876
85
[ { "id": "32955434", "title": "The Ghost Writer (film)", "text": " A ghostwriter (Ewan McGregor) is hired by a publishing firm to complete the autobiography of the former British Prime Minister Adam Lang (Pierce Brosnan). The Ghost's predecessor and Lang's aide, Mike McAra, has recently died in a drowning accident. The Ghost travels to Old Haven on Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, where Lang and his wife Ruth (Olivia Williams) are staying. Originally staying at a hotel, The Ghost is relocated to Lang's estate when the media descend on the island since he has learned of Lang's presence there. The former British Foreign Secretary Richard Rycart (Robert Pugh) accuses Lang of authorizing the ", "score": "1.6899992" }, { "id": "7205027", "title": "The Ghost (novel)", "text": " The Ghost is a 2007 contemporary political thriller by the best-selling English novelist and journalist Robert Harris. In 2010, the novel was adapted into a film, The Ghost Writer, directed by Roman Polanski and starring Pierce Brosnan, for which Polanski and Harris co-wrote the screenplay.", "score": "1.6375709" }, { "id": "32955433", "title": "The Ghost Writer (film)", "text": " The Ghost Writer (released as The Ghost in the United Kingdom and Ireland) is a 2010 neo-noir political thriller film directed by Roman Polanski. The film is an adaptation of a 2007 Robert Harris novel, The Ghost, with the screenplay written by Polanski and Harris. It stars Ewan McGregor, Pierce Brosnan, Kim Cattrall, and Olivia Williams. The film was a critical and commercial success and won numerous cinematic awards including Best Director for Polanski at the 60th Berlin International Film Festival and also at the 23rd European Film Awards in 2010.", "score": "1.634031" }, { "id": "32955440", "title": "The Ghost Writer (film)", "text": " The Ghost is asked to complete the book for posthumous publication. At the book's launch party in London, the Ghost learns that Emmett, who is in attendance, was Ruth's tutor when she was at Harvard University. While going through the original manuscript, he learns that it was suspected of being a security risk and that the truth was in the beginnings. Going through the manuscript in a back room, The Ghost discovers that McAra wrote the truth by using the first few words of the beginnings of the first few chapters. That spells out, \"Lang's wife Ruth was recruited ", "score": "1.6125153" }, { "id": "32955444", "title": "The Ghost Writer (film)", "text": " Polanski had originally teamed with Robert Harris for a film of Harris's novel Pompeii, but the project was cancelled because of the looming actors' strike that autumn. Polanski and Harris then turned to Harris' current best seller, The Ghost. They co-wrote a script and in November 2007, just after the book's release, Polanski announced filming for autumn 2008. In June 2008, Nicolas Cage, Pierce Brosnan, Tilda Swinton, and Kim Cattrall were announced as the stars. Production was then postponed by a number of months, with Ewan McGregor and Olivia Williams replacing Cage and Swinton, respectively, as a result. The film finally began production in February 2009 in Germany, ", "score": "1.6115065" }, { "id": "32955441", "title": "The Ghost Writer (film)", "text": " a CIA agent by Professor Paul Emmett of Harvard University.\" He concludes that Ruth ensured that every decision Lang made as Prime Minister directly benefited the US. The Ghost passes a note to Ruth that reveals his discovery. She unfolds the note and is devastated. She sees the Ghost raising a glass to her. The Ghost leaves the party and Ruth tries to follow him, but Emmett stops her. He crosses the street as a car accelerates in his direction, and a thud is heard. Witnesses react in horror, and the pages containing McAra's manuscript scatter in the wind.", "score": "1.5895498" }, { "id": "6042886", "title": "The Ghost Writer", "text": " In 1983 a television adaptation was made of the book in the UK. It was directed by Tristram Powell and starred Rose Arrick, Claire Bloom, Sam Wanamaker, Cecile Mann, MacIntyre Dixon, Mark Linn-Baker, Ralph Morse, Joseph Wiseman, and Patricia Fellows.", "score": "1.5835471" }, { "id": "6042884", "title": "The Ghost Writer", "text": " Not to be confused with the 2010 film The Ghost Writer, which was based on the novel The Ghost by Robert Harris. The Ghost Writer is a 1979 novel by the American author Philip Roth. It is the first of Roth's novels narrated by Nathan Zuckerman, one of the author's putative fictional alter egos, and constitutes the first book in his Zuckerman Bound trilogy. The novel touches on themes common to many Roth works, including identity, the responsibilities of authors to their subjects, and the condition of Jews in America. Parts of the novel are a reprise of The Diary of Anne Frank.", "score": "1.5751609" }, { "id": "32955442", "title": "The Ghost Writer (film)", "text": "Ewan McGregor as the unnamed ghostwriter. ; Pierce Brosnan as Adam Peter Benet Lang, a former British Prime Minister. ; Olivia Williams as Ruth Lang, Lang's wife. ; Kim Cattrall as Amelia Bly, Lang's personal assistant. ; Timothy Hutton as Sidney Kroll, Lang's American lawyer. ; Tom Wilkinson as Paul Emmett, a professor at Harvard Law School. ; Jon Bernthal as Rick Ricardelli, the ghostwriter's agent. ; James Belushi as John Maddox, Rhinehart's New York executive. ; Robert Pugh as Richard Rycart, UN Envoy and former British foreign secretary. ; Tim Preece as Roy Quigley, managing director of Rhinehart's London business. ; David Rintoul as The Stranger, a grieving father who lost his son during the War in Afghanistan. ; Eli Wallach as The Old Man at Martha's Vineyard. ", "score": "1.5749512" }, { "id": "31621637", "title": "Ghostwriter (1992 TV series)", "text": " Ghostwriter producer and writer Kermit Frazier revealed in a 2010 interview that Ghostwriter was the ghost of a runaway slave during the American Civil War. He taught other slaves how to read and write and was killed by slave catchers and their dogs. His spirit was kept in the book that Jamal first discovered in the pilot episode, and when Jamal opened the book he was freed.", "score": "1.5666106" }, { "id": "1822201", "title": "Ghostwriter", "text": "Philip Roth's 1979 novel The Ghost Writer ; Chico Buarque's 2003 novel Budapeste about the tribulations of José Costa, its protagonist, between Rio de Janeiro and Budapest ; Jennie Erdal's 2004 memoirs Ghosting: a Memoir about working as ghostwriter of Naim Attallah for 20 years ; Claude Lelouch's 2006 film Roman de gare ; Robert Harris's 2007 novel The Ghost and its 2010 film adaptation The Ghost Writer by Roman Polanski ; Alan Cumming's 2007 horror film Ghost Writer, formerly Suffering Man's Charity ; Jason Reitman's 2011 comedy-drama film Young Adult ; The plot of the first season of the animated comedy-drama BoJack Horseman involves the title character BoJack dictating his memoirs to Diane Nguyen, a ghostwriter assigned by his publisher. ; David Mitchell's first novel Ghostwritten (1999) plays on the notion of characters ghostwriting their own lives. ; Haruki Murakami's 2009 novel 1Q84, in which one of the main plot lines revolves around a ghostwriter. ; Kyoto Animation’s 2018 anime television series, Violet Evergarden, as well as the light novel of the same name, written by Kana Akatsuki. Movies and novels about ghostwriters include: ", "score": "1.5650101" }, { "id": "8427872", "title": "Ghost Story (Straub novel)", "text": " Ghost Story is a horror novel by American writer Peter Straub. It was published on January 1, 1979, by Coward, McCann and Geoghegan, and adapted as a 1981 horror film, minus the fifth protagonist, Lewis Benedikt. It was a watershed in Straub's career, becoming a national bestseller and cementing his reputation.", "score": "1.5621861" }, { "id": "28640571", "title": "Rylend Grant", "text": " Rylend worked briefly in script development for directors Oliver Stone and Hal Hartley before embarking on a writing career of his own. Rylend was twice a finalist for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting (2003 and 2004) and he won the Final Draft Big Break Competition in 2004. His scripts appeared on Franklin Leonard's Black List in 2005 and 2009, an annual list of Hollywood's best unproduced screenplays as voted by studio and film executives. In 2009, Total Film called his script The Ghost and the Wolf one of the top 50 unproduced scripts in Hollywood. Grant has been a working Guild screenwriter for over a decade, developing film and television projects with JJ Abrams, Ridley Scott, Howard Gordon, Lorenzo di Bonaventura, Johnny Depp, John Woo, Adam Wingard, Dean Devlin, Luc Besson, Daveed Diggs, and Penélope Cruz, among others. A script for Haunted Heart, co-written with Academy Award winning director Fernando Trueba, was announced in 2006 and is set to begin production in fall of 2020. State of Consciousness is an upcoming film that he co-wrote with by Giacomo Arrigoni, Silvio Muraglia, Dikran Ornekian and Guillaume Tunzini.", "score": "1.5410206" }, { "id": "32955451", "title": "The Ghost Writer (film)", "text": " The movie has won numerous awards, particularly for Roman Polanski as director, Ewan McGregor in the lead role, and Olivia Williams as Ruth Lang.", "score": "1.532023" }, { "id": "7730454", "title": "Barry Gifford", "text": "Wild at Heart (novel only) (1990) ; Hotel Room (screenplay, episodes \"Blackout\" and \"Tricks\") (1993) ; Lost Highway (screenplay, with David Lynch) (1997) ; Perdita Durango (screenplay, with David Trueba, Álex de la Iglesia, and Jorge Guerricaechevarría) (1997) ; City of Ghosts (screenplay with Matt Dillon and Mike Jones) (2002) ; The Phantom Father (2011) ", "score": "1.5319879" }, { "id": "16373148", "title": "Summer of 84", "text": " In October 2021, screenwriters Matthew Leslie and Stephen J Smith appeared on The Ghost of Hollywood, where they would discuss their work on Summer of 84’ in detail.", "score": "1.5208561" }, { "id": "27738382", "title": "Steven-Charles Jaffe", "text": " Steven-Charles Jaffe (born 1951) is an American film producer, director, and screenwriter known for his work on such films as Motel Hell (1980), Near Dark (1987), Strange Days (1995), and the Best Picture-nominated romantic fantasy film Ghost. He is a long-time friend and collaborator of directors Nicholas Meyer and Kathryn Bigelow, and has worked with them on films like Time After Time (1979), Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991), and K-19: The Widowmaker (2002). He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.", "score": "1.5174131" }, { "id": "5464753", "title": "A Ghost Story", "text": " A Ghost Story is a 2017 American supernatural drama film written and directed by David Lowery. It stars Casey Affleck, Rooney Mara, Will Oldham, Sonia Acevedo, Rob Zabrecky, Liz Franke and Kesha. Affleck plays a man who becomes a ghost and remains in the house he shares with his wife (Mara). The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2017, and was released by A24 on July 7, 2017. A Ghost Story received positive reviews from critics.", "score": "1.5171406" }, { "id": "1593427", "title": "Marc Platt (writer)", "text": "Ghost Light ", "score": "1.5113333" }, { "id": "393450", "title": "Ghost (1990 film)", "text": " Ghost was the first film Jerry Zucker directed on his own. He had previously been part of the Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker directing team, known for their screwball comedies. Zucker stated that his decision to direct Ghost was not made to distance himself from comedies or to mark a new chapter in his career, but was merely “just looking for a good film to direct.\" Harrison Ford, Michael J. Fox, Paul Hogan, Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, Kevin Kline, Alec Baldwin and Tom Cruise were considered for the role of Sam Wheat. Bruce Willis turned down the role of Sam Wheat as he did not understand the script and later called himself a \"knucklehead\" for turning it down. Michelle Pfeiffer, Molly Ringwald, Meg Ryan, Julia Roberts and Nicole Kidman were considered for the role of Molly Jensen. Tina Turner and Oprah Winfrey auditioned for the role ", "score": "1.5092654" } ]
[ "The Ghost Writer (film)\n A ghostwriter (Ewan McGregor) is hired by a publishing firm to complete the autobiography of the former British Prime Minister Adam Lang (Pierce Brosnan). The Ghost's predecessor and Lang's aide, Mike McAra, has recently died in a drowning accident. The Ghost travels to Old Haven on Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, where Lang and his wife Ruth (Olivia Williams) are staying. Originally staying at a hotel, The Ghost is relocated to Lang's estate when the media descend on the island since he has learned of Lang's presence there. The former British Foreign Secretary Richard Rycart (Robert Pugh) accuses Lang of authorizing the ", "The Ghost (novel)\n The Ghost is a 2007 contemporary political thriller by the best-selling English novelist and journalist Robert Harris. In 2010, the novel was adapted into a film, The Ghost Writer, directed by Roman Polanski and starring Pierce Brosnan, for which Polanski and Harris co-wrote the screenplay.", "The Ghost Writer (film)\n The Ghost Writer (released as The Ghost in the United Kingdom and Ireland) is a 2010 neo-noir political thriller film directed by Roman Polanski. The film is an adaptation of a 2007 Robert Harris novel, The Ghost, with the screenplay written by Polanski and Harris. It stars Ewan McGregor, Pierce Brosnan, Kim Cattrall, and Olivia Williams. The film was a critical and commercial success and won numerous cinematic awards including Best Director for Polanski at the 60th Berlin International Film Festival and also at the 23rd European Film Awards in 2010.", "The Ghost Writer (film)\n The Ghost is asked to complete the book for posthumous publication. At the book's launch party in London, the Ghost learns that Emmett, who is in attendance, was Ruth's tutor when she was at Harvard University. While going through the original manuscript, he learns that it was suspected of being a security risk and that the truth was in the beginnings. Going through the manuscript in a back room, The Ghost discovers that McAra wrote the truth by using the first few words of the beginnings of the first few chapters. That spells out, \"Lang's wife Ruth was recruited ", "The Ghost Writer (film)\n Polanski had originally teamed with Robert Harris for a film of Harris's novel Pompeii, but the project was cancelled because of the looming actors' strike that autumn. Polanski and Harris then turned to Harris' current best seller, The Ghost. They co-wrote a script and in November 2007, just after the book's release, Polanski announced filming for autumn 2008. In June 2008, Nicolas Cage, Pierce Brosnan, Tilda Swinton, and Kim Cattrall were announced as the stars. Production was then postponed by a number of months, with Ewan McGregor and Olivia Williams replacing Cage and Swinton, respectively, as a result. The film finally began production in February 2009 in Germany, ", "The Ghost Writer (film)\n a CIA agent by Professor Paul Emmett of Harvard University.\" He concludes that Ruth ensured that every decision Lang made as Prime Minister directly benefited the US. The Ghost passes a note to Ruth that reveals his discovery. She unfolds the note and is devastated. She sees the Ghost raising a glass to her. The Ghost leaves the party and Ruth tries to follow him, but Emmett stops her. He crosses the street as a car accelerates in his direction, and a thud is heard. Witnesses react in horror, and the pages containing McAra's manuscript scatter in the wind.", "The Ghost Writer\n In 1983 a television adaptation was made of the book in the UK. It was directed by Tristram Powell and starred Rose Arrick, Claire Bloom, Sam Wanamaker, Cecile Mann, MacIntyre Dixon, Mark Linn-Baker, Ralph Morse, Joseph Wiseman, and Patricia Fellows.", "The Ghost Writer\n Not to be confused with the 2010 film The Ghost Writer, which was based on the novel The Ghost by Robert Harris. The Ghost Writer is a 1979 novel by the American author Philip Roth. It is the first of Roth's novels narrated by Nathan Zuckerman, one of the author's putative fictional alter egos, and constitutes the first book in his Zuckerman Bound trilogy. The novel touches on themes common to many Roth works, including identity, the responsibilities of authors to their subjects, and the condition of Jews in America. Parts of the novel are a reprise of The Diary of Anne Frank.", "The Ghost Writer (film)\nEwan McGregor as the unnamed ghostwriter. ; Pierce Brosnan as Adam Peter Benet Lang, a former British Prime Minister. ; Olivia Williams as Ruth Lang, Lang's wife. ; Kim Cattrall as Amelia Bly, Lang's personal assistant. ; Timothy Hutton as Sidney Kroll, Lang's American lawyer. ; Tom Wilkinson as Paul Emmett, a professor at Harvard Law School. ; Jon Bernthal as Rick Ricardelli, the ghostwriter's agent. ; James Belushi as John Maddox, Rhinehart's New York executive. ; Robert Pugh as Richard Rycart, UN Envoy and former British foreign secretary. ; Tim Preece as Roy Quigley, managing director of Rhinehart's London business. ; David Rintoul as The Stranger, a grieving father who lost his son during the War in Afghanistan. ; Eli Wallach as The Old Man at Martha's Vineyard. ", "Ghostwriter (1992 TV series)\n Ghostwriter producer and writer Kermit Frazier revealed in a 2010 interview that Ghostwriter was the ghost of a runaway slave during the American Civil War. He taught other slaves how to read and write and was killed by slave catchers and their dogs. His spirit was kept in the book that Jamal first discovered in the pilot episode, and when Jamal opened the book he was freed.", "Ghostwriter\nPhilip Roth's 1979 novel The Ghost Writer ; Chico Buarque's 2003 novel Budapeste about the tribulations of José Costa, its protagonist, between Rio de Janeiro and Budapest ; Jennie Erdal's 2004 memoirs Ghosting: a Memoir about working as ghostwriter of Naim Attallah for 20 years ; Claude Lelouch's 2006 film Roman de gare ; Robert Harris's 2007 novel The Ghost and its 2010 film adaptation The Ghost Writer by Roman Polanski ; Alan Cumming's 2007 horror film Ghost Writer, formerly Suffering Man's Charity ; Jason Reitman's 2011 comedy-drama film Young Adult ; The plot of the first season of the animated comedy-drama BoJack Horseman involves the title character BoJack dictating his memoirs to Diane Nguyen, a ghostwriter assigned by his publisher. ; David Mitchell's first novel Ghostwritten (1999) plays on the notion of characters ghostwriting their own lives. ; Haruki Murakami's 2009 novel 1Q84, in which one of the main plot lines revolves around a ghostwriter. ; Kyoto Animation’s 2018 anime television series, Violet Evergarden, as well as the light novel of the same name, written by Kana Akatsuki. Movies and novels about ghostwriters include: ", "Ghost Story (Straub novel)\n Ghost Story is a horror novel by American writer Peter Straub. It was published on January 1, 1979, by Coward, McCann and Geoghegan, and adapted as a 1981 horror film, minus the fifth protagonist, Lewis Benedikt. It was a watershed in Straub's career, becoming a national bestseller and cementing his reputation.", "Rylend Grant\n Rylend worked briefly in script development for directors Oliver Stone and Hal Hartley before embarking on a writing career of his own. Rylend was twice a finalist for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting (2003 and 2004) and he won the Final Draft Big Break Competition in 2004. His scripts appeared on Franklin Leonard's Black List in 2005 and 2009, an annual list of Hollywood's best unproduced screenplays as voted by studio and film executives. In 2009, Total Film called his script The Ghost and the Wolf one of the top 50 unproduced scripts in Hollywood. Grant has been a working Guild screenwriter for over a decade, developing film and television projects with JJ Abrams, Ridley Scott, Howard Gordon, Lorenzo di Bonaventura, Johnny Depp, John Woo, Adam Wingard, Dean Devlin, Luc Besson, Daveed Diggs, and Penélope Cruz, among others. A script for Haunted Heart, co-written with Academy Award winning director Fernando Trueba, was announced in 2006 and is set to begin production in fall of 2020. State of Consciousness is an upcoming film that he co-wrote with by Giacomo Arrigoni, Silvio Muraglia, Dikran Ornekian and Guillaume Tunzini.", "The Ghost Writer (film)\n The movie has won numerous awards, particularly for Roman Polanski as director, Ewan McGregor in the lead role, and Olivia Williams as Ruth Lang.", "Barry Gifford\nWild at Heart (novel only) (1990) ; Hotel Room (screenplay, episodes \"Blackout\" and \"Tricks\") (1993) ; Lost Highway (screenplay, with David Lynch) (1997) ; Perdita Durango (screenplay, with David Trueba, Álex de la Iglesia, and Jorge Guerricaechevarría) (1997) ; City of Ghosts (screenplay with Matt Dillon and Mike Jones) (2002) ; The Phantom Father (2011) ", "Summer of 84\n In October 2021, screenwriters Matthew Leslie and Stephen J Smith appeared on The Ghost of Hollywood, where they would discuss their work on Summer of 84’ in detail.", "Steven-Charles Jaffe\n Steven-Charles Jaffe (born 1951) is an American film producer, director, and screenwriter known for his work on such films as Motel Hell (1980), Near Dark (1987), Strange Days (1995), and the Best Picture-nominated romantic fantasy film Ghost. He is a long-time friend and collaborator of directors Nicholas Meyer and Kathryn Bigelow, and has worked with them on films like Time After Time (1979), Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991), and K-19: The Widowmaker (2002). He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.", "A Ghost Story\n A Ghost Story is a 2017 American supernatural drama film written and directed by David Lowery. It stars Casey Affleck, Rooney Mara, Will Oldham, Sonia Acevedo, Rob Zabrecky, Liz Franke and Kesha. Affleck plays a man who becomes a ghost and remains in the house he shares with his wife (Mara). The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2017, and was released by A24 on July 7, 2017. A Ghost Story received positive reviews from critics.", "Marc Platt (writer)\nGhost Light ", "Ghost (1990 film)\n Ghost was the first film Jerry Zucker directed on his own. He had previously been part of the Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker directing team, known for their screwball comedies. Zucker stated that his decision to direct Ghost was not made to distance himself from comedies or to mark a new chapter in his career, but was merely “just looking for a good film to direct.\" Harrison Ford, Michael J. Fox, Paul Hogan, Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, Kevin Kline, Alec Baldwin and Tom Cruise were considered for the role of Sam Wheat. Bruce Willis turned down the role of Sam Wheat as he did not understand the script and later called himself a \"knucklehead\" for turning it down. Michelle Pfeiffer, Molly Ringwald, Meg Ryan, Julia Roberts and Nicole Kidman were considered for the role of Molly Jensen. Tina Turner and Oprah Winfrey auditioned for the role " ]
Who was the screenwriter for By og land hand i hand?
[ "Olav Dalgard" ]
screenwriter
By og land hand i hand
3,609,667
77
[ { "id": "30729838", "title": "By og land hand i hand", "text": " By og land hand i hand (Town and Country Hand in Hand) is a 1937 Norwegian drama film written and directed by Olav Dalgard, starring Hans Bille and Lars Tvinde. The film was made by the Norwegian Labour Party for the 1937 local elections.", "score": "1.9694481" }, { "id": "9197104", "title": "Graham Greene", "text": " Mario Soldati, a Piedmontese novelist and film director, believed it had the makings of a suspense film about Yugoslav spies in postwar Venice. Upon Soldati's prompting, Greene continued writing the story as the basis for a film script. Apparently he lost interest in the project, leaving it as a substantial fragment that was published posthumously in The Graham Greene Film Reader (1993) and No Man's Land (2005). A script for The Stranger's Hand was written by Guy Elmes on the basis of Greene's unfinished story, and filmed by Soldati in 1954. In 1965, Greene again entered a similar New Statesman competition pseudonymously, and won an honourable mention.", "score": "1.6362005" }, { "id": "30729839", "title": "By og land hand i hand", "text": " The wealthy landowner Hans Bjørnstad (Bille) is approached by his workers for a raise, but is shocked by their radical socialist ideas. Later he talks to another landowner, Nils Tveit (Tvinde), who is more sympathetic to the workers' case. Through conversations with family members in Oslo, the two realise the advantages Labour government has brought, and the necessity of cooperation between town and country for the prosperity of the country.", "score": "1.6260979" }, { "id": "13316", "title": "The Writer with No Hands", "text": " The Writer with No Hands is a 2017 British documentary feature film, which follows writer Matthew Alford as he tries to establish that the accidental death of Hollywood screenwriter Gary DeVore was, in fact, an assassination by the United States government. The film was screened at venues on 27 June 2017 to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of DeVore's fate and a television edit subsequently shown on VGTV, Rialto Channel, and Means TV. It began streaming on Scottish Television in February 2021.", "score": "1.5429819" }, { "id": "593605", "title": "Stephen Harrigan", "text": " Stephen Harrigan has also been a prolific screenwriter, principally in the field of made-for-television movies, a career he recounted in a Slate essay titled \"I Was an A-List Writer of B-List Productions.\" Among the films he has written are The Last of His Tribe (HBO), Beyond the Prairie: The True Story of Laura Ingalls Wilder (CBS), King of Texas (TNT) and The Colt (The Hallmark Channel.) He worked with Robert Altman on a feature version of S. R. Bindler's documentary, Hands on a Hard Body, about an endurance contest to win a pickup truck. Altman was in pre-production on the movie at the time of his death in November 2006. More recently, he has collaborated with William Broyles Jr. on a screenplay based on Conn Igulden's series of novels about Julius Caesar. That project is in development with Exclusive Media. Robert Duvall optioned—as producer and star—another screenplay, The Which Way Tree, based on the novel by Elizabeth Crook. Harrigan and Crook co-wrote the screenplay.", "score": "1.533474" }, { "id": "30602580", "title": "Klaus Hagerup", "text": "Rivalen (screenplay), 1970 ; Helten på den grøne øya (actor), 1971 ; Betrayal (actor) ; I denne verden er alt mulig (screenplay), 1983 ; Høvdingen (Chieftain) (actor), 1984 ; Nikkerne (TV series) (screenplay, co-director), 1984 ; Noe Helt Annet (Something Completely Different) (actor), 1985 ; Plastposen (actor), 1986 ; Måker (actor), 1991 ; Høyere enn himmelen (Beyond the sky) (screenplay), 1993 ; Markus og Diana (actor, assistant director, screenplay), 1996 ", "score": "1.5310228" }, { "id": "2946691", "title": "Bobby Florsheim", "text": " Robert Florsheim (born December 19, 1969) is an American screenwriter, best known for co-writing The Passion Of The Ark with Josh Stolberg, (the basis for the film \"Evan Almighty\"). Their original script was reported by Daily Variety as the highest priced spec script ever sold by unproduced screenwriters (April, 2004). In refashioning the script into \"Evan Almighty\", Universal Studios discarded the script and then hired screenwriter Steve Oedekerk, who received sole writing credit on the finished film. He also co-wrote the scripts for Man-Witch (starring Jack Black and directed by Todd Phillips), the book adaptation of The Spellman Files, produced by Laura Ziskin, as well as a remake of Alfred Hitchcock's \"To Catch a Thief\". In addition, Florsheim has written scripts for Steven Spielberg, Mike Myers, Michael Keaton, Jerry Bruckheimer, John Davis, Bette Midler, and others. Born in Chicago, to Carol Levy and Jim Florsheim, he attended the Francis W. Parker School. He graduated with honors from Stanford University with a degree in Drama in 1992. In 1995, Florsheim received his Master of Fine Arts from the USC School of Cinema-Television. He lives in Los Angeles. He is married to former Judge Joe Brown reporter Jacque Kessler.", "score": "1.5294497" }, { "id": "27527378", "title": "She Grazed Horses on Concrete", "text": " Milka Zimková's (b. 1951, Okružná) collection of short stories She Grazed Horses on Concrete (Pásla kone na betóne, 1980) was an instant success and has been republished least six times through the 2000s. Documentary film director Fero Fenič wrote a literary-narrative screenplay on themes from the last of the fifteen stories, \"A Ticket to Heaven\" (Vstupenka do neba), but when he began to work with Zimková on a shooting script, she disagreed with his bleak take on the story and the demotion of Johanka's character to a supporting role and refused him as the film's potential director. Fenič stuck to his approach and directed his reworked screenplay under the title A Juice Novel (Džusový román, 1984, released 1988) at the Barrandov Studios. Zimková then found an accommodating co-writer in Uher who knew her from ", "score": "1.5281799" }, { "id": "31772413", "title": "Howard Klausner", "text": "Outlaw Dreams (2008, also script writer and producer) ; The Secret Handshake (2015, also writer and producer) ", "score": "1.5087934" }, { "id": "30729840", "title": "By og land hand i hand", "text": "Rønnaug Alten as Tora Larsen ; Hans Bille as Hans Bjørnstad, a farmer from Eastern Norway ; Kolbjørn Brenda as Anton ; Oscar Egede-Nissen as Ole Larsen, a speculator ; Hilda Fredriksen as the woman from Ullern ; Jens Holstad as Larsen ; Tryggve Larssen as Svart-Pelle ; Georg Løkkeberg as Georg Larsen, an engineer ; Ida Rothmann as Sonja, a working girl ; Toralf Sandø as Knudsen, a workshop foreman ; Gunnar Simenstad as Adolf, a construction worker ; Eva Steen as Katrina Larsen ; Lars Tvinde as Nils Tveit, a farmer from Western Norway ", "score": "1.5082457" }, { "id": "33150092", "title": "Trouble with the Curve", "text": " A year after the film's release, another producer, Ryan Brooks, filed a lawsuit in federal district court against Warner, the producers, two talent agencies, screenwriter Brown and Don Handfield, an actor and former partner of Brooks. He alleged copyright infringement and conspiracy, claiming the produced screenplay of the film bore striking similarities to Omaha, an unproduced screenplay he had commissioned from Handfield that had as its main character an older college baseball coach working through a difficult relationship with his grown daughter, as well as other plot elements. Brooks, a former minor league baseball player himself, claimed that Handfield took the unfinished Omaha script with him after the two ", "score": "1.5080055" }, { "id": "12627842", "title": "Cool Hand Luke", "text": " Pearce, a merchant seaman who later became a counterfeiter and safe cracker, wrote the novel Cool Hand Luke about his experiences working on a chain gang while serving in a Florida prison. He sold the story to Warner Bros. for $80,000 and received another $15,000 to write the screenplay. After working in television for over a decade, Rosenberg chose it to make it his directorial debut in cinema. He took the idea to Jalem Productions, owned by Jack Lemmon. Since Pearce had no experience writing screenplays, his draft was reworked by Frank Pierson. Conrad Hall was hired as the cinematographer, while Paul Newman's brother, Arthur, was hired as the unit production manager. Newman's biographer Marie Edelman Borden wrote that the \"tough, honest\" script drew together threads from earlier movies, especially Hombre, Newman's earlier film of 1967. Rosenberg altered the script's original ending, adding \"an upbeat ending that would reprise Luke's (and Newman's) trademark smile.\"", "score": "1.5061368" }, { "id": "9200455", "title": "Craig Rice (author)", "text": "Telefair (1942) ; Home Sweet Homicide (1944) ; Crime on My Hands (1944; ghostwritten for and published as by George Sanders) ; Innocent Bystander (1949) The G-String Murders (1941, featuring and published as by Gypsy Rose Lee). This book was ghostwritten by Janet Flanner, who collaborated with Lee after she ended her initial discussions about such a project with Dorothy Wheelock. It has been suggested that Craig Rice ghostwrote this novel; this has been soundly and fully debunked. The confusion may have arisen because Craig Rice was initially signed to write the script for G-String Murders, a movie based on the novel which was eventually scripted by James Gunn and released as Lady of Burlesque with Barbara Stanwyck. At the time of the novel's original publication, the publishers \"printed a private pamphlet, containing Gypsy's over frank correspondence about the book\". Note", "score": "1.5036293" }, { "id": "9966756", "title": "Ang Lee", "text": " with Lin's support and understanding, Lee did not abandon his career in film but continued to generate new ideas from movies and performances. He also wrote several screenplays during this time. In 1990, Lee submitted two screenplays, Pushing Hands and The Wedding Banquet, to a competition sponsored by Government Information Office of R.O.C., and they came in first and second, respectively. The winning screenplays brought Lee to the attention of Hsu Li-kong, a recently promoted senior manager in a major studio who had a strong interest in Lee's unique style and freshness. Hsu, a first-time producer, invited Lee to direct Pushing Hands, a full-length feature that debuted in 1991.", "score": "1.5001326" }, { "id": "32449147", "title": "Diana Morgan (screenwriter)", "text": " Also during the 1940s, Morgan made significant script contributions to several Ealing screenplays. She is currently better known for her screenplays than her stage work. A contract writer, her film work included Went the Day Well? (1942) and additional dialogue for A Run for Your Money (1949). In 1960 she scripted Philip Leacock's film Hand in Hand about a Roman Catholic child and his Jewish friend, for which she won several international awards. Her television work included Emergency – Ward 10 and its spin-off Call Oxbridge 2000, while she also made contributions to radio and wrote two novels: Delia (1974) and Thomas the Fish (1976).", "score": "1.4939765" }, { "id": "2556466", "title": "The Stranger's Hand", "text": " The Stranger's Hand (La mano dello straniero) is a 1954 British-Italian international co-production thriller-drama film directed by Mario Soldati. It is based on the draft novel with the same name written by Graham Greene. The plot follows the son of a British MI5 agent kidnapped in Venice by agents of Yugoslavia as he searches for his father. The first two chapters of The Stranger's Hand had been entered by Greene anonymously under a pseudonym to a competition in the New Statesman to write a book in the style of Graham Greene – a competition in which Greene was amused to win second prize. Soldati had seen the chapters and persuaded Greene to complete the novella to make the basis for a film. Greene expanded it to 30 pages of a \"film story\", on which Giorgio Bassani and Guy Elmes completed the screenplay.", "score": "1.4883726" }, { "id": "29263053", "title": "Helge Hagerup", "text": " Helge Hagerup (21 April 1933 &ndash; 12 August 2008) was a Norwegian playwright, poet and novelist. He was born in Trondheim, a son of Inger Hagerup, and brother of Klaus Hagerup. He made his literary debut in 1949 with the short story collection Vi fem i annen etasje. He was best known as playwright. Among his plays staged at Nationaltheatret are Løfter om kjærlighet from 1960, Superboy from 1968, and Camp from 1976. He was awarded the Prix Italia in 1973 for his audio play Den dagen du aldri skal glemme. He also wrote crime fiction, and the collection Hvorfor skrek morderen? was published in 1982.", "score": "1.4882469" }, { "id": "15666661", "title": "One-Hand Clapping", "text": " One-Hand Clapping (At klappe med een hånd) is a 2001 Danish comedy film written and directed by Gert Fredholm, and starring Jens Okking, Peter Gantzler, and. The film was produced by Zentropa.", "score": "1.4852192" }, { "id": "28430597", "title": "Robert Presnell, Jr.", "text": " which was about the international refugee crisis. In the 1960s, he wrote the films Let No Man Write My Epitaph (1960), 13 West Street (1962), and The Third Day (1965). In the 1970s, he wrote the scripts of the so-called TV Movies such as The Secret Night Caller (1975) and Smash-Up on Highway 5 (1976) as well as two episodes of the miniseries Rich Man, Poor Man – Book II. Presnell served on the board of directors of the Writers Guild of America/West as well as in its arbitration committee. He was also able to complete a novel called Edgell’s Island, which was published by Dial Press in 1951.", "score": "1.4806877" }, { "id": "30915039", "title": "Gunnar Larsen", "text": " Gunnar Otterbech Larsen (5 February 1900, in Oslo – 5 November 1958) was a Norwegian journalist, writer, and translator. He worked in the newspaper Dagbladet from 1923 to 1958, where he was news editor from 1930 and became editor-in-chief with Helge Seip in 1954. His first novel, I sommer, was published in 1932. It was followed by To mistenkelige personer (1933), a crime novel based on actual events that took place in 1926. To mistenkelige personer was praised by many critics, including Sigurd Hoel. Both I sommer and To mistenkelige personer were inspired by Ernest Hemingway's writings. Larsen's third novel, Week-end i evigheten (1934), was much more experimental. His later novels were Bull (1938) and Sneen som falt i fjor (1948). His poetry has been published in the books Dikt (1959) and En avismanns samlede poesi (2000). A film version of To mistenkelige personer was directed by Tancred Ibsen in 1950, but showing the film in public was forbidden in the Supreme Court of Norway in 1952, in order to protect one of the persons whose story it was based on. In 2007, the film was allowed to be shown in public again.", "score": "1.480305" } ]
[ "By og land hand i hand\n By og land hand i hand (Town and Country Hand in Hand) is a 1937 Norwegian drama film written and directed by Olav Dalgard, starring Hans Bille and Lars Tvinde. The film was made by the Norwegian Labour Party for the 1937 local elections.", "Graham Greene\n Mario Soldati, a Piedmontese novelist and film director, believed it had the makings of a suspense film about Yugoslav spies in postwar Venice. Upon Soldati's prompting, Greene continued writing the story as the basis for a film script. Apparently he lost interest in the project, leaving it as a substantial fragment that was published posthumously in The Graham Greene Film Reader (1993) and No Man's Land (2005). A script for The Stranger's Hand was written by Guy Elmes on the basis of Greene's unfinished story, and filmed by Soldati in 1954. In 1965, Greene again entered a similar New Statesman competition pseudonymously, and won an honourable mention.", "By og land hand i hand\n The wealthy landowner Hans Bjørnstad (Bille) is approached by his workers for a raise, but is shocked by their radical socialist ideas. Later he talks to another landowner, Nils Tveit (Tvinde), who is more sympathetic to the workers' case. Through conversations with family members in Oslo, the two realise the advantages Labour government has brought, and the necessity of cooperation between town and country for the prosperity of the country.", "The Writer with No Hands\n The Writer with No Hands is a 2017 British documentary feature film, which follows writer Matthew Alford as he tries to establish that the accidental death of Hollywood screenwriter Gary DeVore was, in fact, an assassination by the United States government. The film was screened at venues on 27 June 2017 to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of DeVore's fate and a television edit subsequently shown on VGTV, Rialto Channel, and Means TV. It began streaming on Scottish Television in February 2021.", "Stephen Harrigan\n Stephen Harrigan has also been a prolific screenwriter, principally in the field of made-for-television movies, a career he recounted in a Slate essay titled \"I Was an A-List Writer of B-List Productions.\" Among the films he has written are The Last of His Tribe (HBO), Beyond the Prairie: The True Story of Laura Ingalls Wilder (CBS), King of Texas (TNT) and The Colt (The Hallmark Channel.) He worked with Robert Altman on a feature version of S. R. Bindler's documentary, Hands on a Hard Body, about an endurance contest to win a pickup truck. Altman was in pre-production on the movie at the time of his death in November 2006. More recently, he has collaborated with William Broyles Jr. on a screenplay based on Conn Igulden's series of novels about Julius Caesar. That project is in development with Exclusive Media. Robert Duvall optioned—as producer and star—another screenplay, The Which Way Tree, based on the novel by Elizabeth Crook. Harrigan and Crook co-wrote the screenplay.", "Klaus Hagerup\nRivalen (screenplay), 1970 ; Helten på den grøne øya (actor), 1971 ; Betrayal (actor) ; I denne verden er alt mulig (screenplay), 1983 ; Høvdingen (Chieftain) (actor), 1984 ; Nikkerne (TV series) (screenplay, co-director), 1984 ; Noe Helt Annet (Something Completely Different) (actor), 1985 ; Plastposen (actor), 1986 ; Måker (actor), 1991 ; Høyere enn himmelen (Beyond the sky) (screenplay), 1993 ; Markus og Diana (actor, assistant director, screenplay), 1996 ", "Bobby Florsheim\n Robert Florsheim (born December 19, 1969) is an American screenwriter, best known for co-writing The Passion Of The Ark with Josh Stolberg, (the basis for the film \"Evan Almighty\"). Their original script was reported by Daily Variety as the highest priced spec script ever sold by unproduced screenwriters (April, 2004). In refashioning the script into \"Evan Almighty\", Universal Studios discarded the script and then hired screenwriter Steve Oedekerk, who received sole writing credit on the finished film. He also co-wrote the scripts for Man-Witch (starring Jack Black and directed by Todd Phillips), the book adaptation of The Spellman Files, produced by Laura Ziskin, as well as a remake of Alfred Hitchcock's \"To Catch a Thief\". In addition, Florsheim has written scripts for Steven Spielberg, Mike Myers, Michael Keaton, Jerry Bruckheimer, John Davis, Bette Midler, and others. Born in Chicago, to Carol Levy and Jim Florsheim, he attended the Francis W. Parker School. He graduated with honors from Stanford University with a degree in Drama in 1992. In 1995, Florsheim received his Master of Fine Arts from the USC School of Cinema-Television. He lives in Los Angeles. He is married to former Judge Joe Brown reporter Jacque Kessler.", "She Grazed Horses on Concrete\n Milka Zimková's (b. 1951, Okružná) collection of short stories She Grazed Horses on Concrete (Pásla kone na betóne, 1980) was an instant success and has been republished least six times through the 2000s. Documentary film director Fero Fenič wrote a literary-narrative screenplay on themes from the last of the fifteen stories, \"A Ticket to Heaven\" (Vstupenka do neba), but when he began to work with Zimková on a shooting script, she disagreed with his bleak take on the story and the demotion of Johanka's character to a supporting role and refused him as the film's potential director. Fenič stuck to his approach and directed his reworked screenplay under the title A Juice Novel (Džusový román, 1984, released 1988) at the Barrandov Studios. Zimková then found an accommodating co-writer in Uher who knew her from ", "Howard Klausner\nOutlaw Dreams (2008, also script writer and producer) ; The Secret Handshake (2015, also writer and producer) ", "By og land hand i hand\nRønnaug Alten as Tora Larsen ; Hans Bille as Hans Bjørnstad, a farmer from Eastern Norway ; Kolbjørn Brenda as Anton ; Oscar Egede-Nissen as Ole Larsen, a speculator ; Hilda Fredriksen as the woman from Ullern ; Jens Holstad as Larsen ; Tryggve Larssen as Svart-Pelle ; Georg Løkkeberg as Georg Larsen, an engineer ; Ida Rothmann as Sonja, a working girl ; Toralf Sandø as Knudsen, a workshop foreman ; Gunnar Simenstad as Adolf, a construction worker ; Eva Steen as Katrina Larsen ; Lars Tvinde as Nils Tveit, a farmer from Western Norway ", "Trouble with the Curve\n A year after the film's release, another producer, Ryan Brooks, filed a lawsuit in federal district court against Warner, the producers, two talent agencies, screenwriter Brown and Don Handfield, an actor and former partner of Brooks. He alleged copyright infringement and conspiracy, claiming the produced screenplay of the film bore striking similarities to Omaha, an unproduced screenplay he had commissioned from Handfield that had as its main character an older college baseball coach working through a difficult relationship with his grown daughter, as well as other plot elements. Brooks, a former minor league baseball player himself, claimed that Handfield took the unfinished Omaha script with him after the two ", "Cool Hand Luke\n Pearce, a merchant seaman who later became a counterfeiter and safe cracker, wrote the novel Cool Hand Luke about his experiences working on a chain gang while serving in a Florida prison. He sold the story to Warner Bros. for $80,000 and received another $15,000 to write the screenplay. After working in television for over a decade, Rosenberg chose it to make it his directorial debut in cinema. He took the idea to Jalem Productions, owned by Jack Lemmon. Since Pearce had no experience writing screenplays, his draft was reworked by Frank Pierson. Conrad Hall was hired as the cinematographer, while Paul Newman's brother, Arthur, was hired as the unit production manager. Newman's biographer Marie Edelman Borden wrote that the \"tough, honest\" script drew together threads from earlier movies, especially Hombre, Newman's earlier film of 1967. Rosenberg altered the script's original ending, adding \"an upbeat ending that would reprise Luke's (and Newman's) trademark smile.\"", "Craig Rice (author)\nTelefair (1942) ; Home Sweet Homicide (1944) ; Crime on My Hands (1944; ghostwritten for and published as by George Sanders) ; Innocent Bystander (1949) The G-String Murders (1941, featuring and published as by Gypsy Rose Lee). This book was ghostwritten by Janet Flanner, who collaborated with Lee after she ended her initial discussions about such a project with Dorothy Wheelock. It has been suggested that Craig Rice ghostwrote this novel; this has been soundly and fully debunked. The confusion may have arisen because Craig Rice was initially signed to write the script for G-String Murders, a movie based on the novel which was eventually scripted by James Gunn and released as Lady of Burlesque with Barbara Stanwyck. At the time of the novel's original publication, the publishers \"printed a private pamphlet, containing Gypsy's over frank correspondence about the book\". Note", "Ang Lee\n with Lin's support and understanding, Lee did not abandon his career in film but continued to generate new ideas from movies and performances. He also wrote several screenplays during this time. In 1990, Lee submitted two screenplays, Pushing Hands and The Wedding Banquet, to a competition sponsored by Government Information Office of R.O.C., and they came in first and second, respectively. The winning screenplays brought Lee to the attention of Hsu Li-kong, a recently promoted senior manager in a major studio who had a strong interest in Lee's unique style and freshness. Hsu, a first-time producer, invited Lee to direct Pushing Hands, a full-length feature that debuted in 1991.", "Diana Morgan (screenwriter)\n Also during the 1940s, Morgan made significant script contributions to several Ealing screenplays. She is currently better known for her screenplays than her stage work. A contract writer, her film work included Went the Day Well? (1942) and additional dialogue for A Run for Your Money (1949). In 1960 she scripted Philip Leacock's film Hand in Hand about a Roman Catholic child and his Jewish friend, for which she won several international awards. Her television work included Emergency – Ward 10 and its spin-off Call Oxbridge 2000, while she also made contributions to radio and wrote two novels: Delia (1974) and Thomas the Fish (1976).", "The Stranger's Hand\n The Stranger's Hand (La mano dello straniero) is a 1954 British-Italian international co-production thriller-drama film directed by Mario Soldati. It is based on the draft novel with the same name written by Graham Greene. The plot follows the son of a British MI5 agent kidnapped in Venice by agents of Yugoslavia as he searches for his father. The first two chapters of The Stranger's Hand had been entered by Greene anonymously under a pseudonym to a competition in the New Statesman to write a book in the style of Graham Greene – a competition in which Greene was amused to win second prize. Soldati had seen the chapters and persuaded Greene to complete the novella to make the basis for a film. Greene expanded it to 30 pages of a \"film story\", on which Giorgio Bassani and Guy Elmes completed the screenplay.", "Helge Hagerup\n Helge Hagerup (21 April 1933 &ndash; 12 August 2008) was a Norwegian playwright, poet and novelist. He was born in Trondheim, a son of Inger Hagerup, and brother of Klaus Hagerup. He made his literary debut in 1949 with the short story collection Vi fem i annen etasje. He was best known as playwright. Among his plays staged at Nationaltheatret are Løfter om kjærlighet from 1960, Superboy from 1968, and Camp from 1976. He was awarded the Prix Italia in 1973 for his audio play Den dagen du aldri skal glemme. He also wrote crime fiction, and the collection Hvorfor skrek morderen? was published in 1982.", "One-Hand Clapping\n One-Hand Clapping (At klappe med een hånd) is a 2001 Danish comedy film written and directed by Gert Fredholm, and starring Jens Okking, Peter Gantzler, and. The film was produced by Zentropa.", "Robert Presnell, Jr.\n which was about the international refugee crisis. In the 1960s, he wrote the films Let No Man Write My Epitaph (1960), 13 West Street (1962), and The Third Day (1965). In the 1970s, he wrote the scripts of the so-called TV Movies such as The Secret Night Caller (1975) and Smash-Up on Highway 5 (1976) as well as two episodes of the miniseries Rich Man, Poor Man – Book II. Presnell served on the board of directors of the Writers Guild of America/West as well as in its arbitration committee. He was also able to complete a novel called Edgell’s Island, which was published by Dial Press in 1951.", "Gunnar Larsen\n Gunnar Otterbech Larsen (5 February 1900, in Oslo – 5 November 1958) was a Norwegian journalist, writer, and translator. He worked in the newspaper Dagbladet from 1923 to 1958, where he was news editor from 1930 and became editor-in-chief with Helge Seip in 1954. His first novel, I sommer, was published in 1932. It was followed by To mistenkelige personer (1933), a crime novel based on actual events that took place in 1926. To mistenkelige personer was praised by many critics, including Sigurd Hoel. Both I sommer and To mistenkelige personer were inspired by Ernest Hemingway's writings. Larsen's third novel, Week-end i evigheten (1934), was much more experimental. His later novels were Bull (1938) and Sneen som falt i fjor (1948). His poetry has been published in the books Dikt (1959) and En avismanns samlede poesi (2000). A film version of To mistenkelige personer was directed by Tancred Ibsen in 1950, but showing the film in public was forbidden in the Supreme Court of Norway in 1952, in order to protect one of the persons whose story it was based on. In 2007, the film was allowed to be shown in public again." ]
Who was the screenwriter for The Accused?
[ "Mario Soffici", "Marco Denevi", "Marco Denev" ]
screenwriter
The Accused (1960 film)
5,907,057
56
[ { "id": "427160", "title": "The Accused (1960 film)", "text": " The Accused (Los Acusados) is a 1960 Argentine crime drama directed and written by Antonio Cunill Jr.. The film was based on a screen play by Marco Denevi. The film starred Mario Soffici and Silvia Legrand.", "score": "1.6364481" }, { "id": "13692940", "title": "Accused (1936 film)", "text": " Accused is a 1936 British mystery film directed by Thornton Freeland and starring Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Dolores del Río and Florence Desmond. It was made at Isleworth Studios by the independent Criterion Films, which Fairbanks was a co-owner of. The film's sets were designed by Edward Carrick.", "score": "1.6215749" }, { "id": "7095259", "title": "Linda Arvidson", "text": " Arvidson wrote screenplays, including the one for the five-reel Who's Guilty Now? She was an associate editor of Film Fun and a film critic for Leslie's Magazine, and she wrote the book When the Movies Were Young.", "score": "1.6100729" }, { "id": "13582564", "title": "I Stand Accused", "text": " I Stand Accused is a 1938 American drama film directed by John H. Auer and written by Gordon Kahn and Alex Gottlieb. The film stars Robert Cummings, Helen Mack, Lyle Talbot, Thomas Beck, Gordon Jones and Robert Paige. The film was released by Republic Pictures.", "score": "1.588519" }, { "id": "31283321", "title": "Accused (1964 film)", "text": " Accused (Czech: Obžalovaný) is a 1964 film directed by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos. The film has won a Crystal Globe at 1964 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.", "score": "1.5783151" }, { "id": "5527850", "title": "The Narrowing Circle", "text": " The screenplay concerns a crime writer who finds himself accused of murder, and has to clear his name.", "score": "1.5744126" }, { "id": "2056642", "title": "Accused (2010 TV series)", "text": " be here. We see the crime and we see the punishment. Nothing else. No police procedure, thanks very much, no coppers striding along corridors with coats flapping. Just crime and punishment – the two things that matter most in any crime drama.\" McGovern was the lead writer for the series, with co-writers Alice Nutter, Danny Brocklehurst and Esther Wilson for episodes three, four and five respectively. The series was directed by David Blair (episodes 1, 2, 5 and 6) and Richard Laxton (episodes 3 and 4), and produced by RSJ Films, a company founded by Jimmy McGovern, Sita Williams and Roxy Spencer. RSJ Films is also known ", "score": "1.565541" }, { "id": "28096444", "title": "Accused (1958 TV series)", "text": " The show was produced by Selig J. Seligman, a former U.S. Army lawyer who served at the Nuremberg Trials. He later became an ABC Vice President as well as executive producer of Combat! and Garrison's Gorillas.", "score": "1.5654855" }, { "id": "28096443", "title": "Accused (1958 TV series)", "text": "Edgar Allan Jones, Jr. as the Judge ; William Gwinn as the Substitute Judge ; Jim Hodson as the Clerk ; Tim Farrell as the Bailiff ; Violet Gillmore as the Court Reporter (and Announcer) Similar to other courtroom dramas of the time, the defendants and witnesses were actors (including, for example, Pamela Mason and Robert Culp). However, the defense and prosecution attorneys were real-life lawyers. The court was presided over by Edgar Allan Jones, Jr. Jones had a law degree from the University of Virginia, was a member of the UCLA law faculty and a labor arbitrator. ", "score": "1.5636237" }, { "id": "8651339", "title": "Accused of Murder", "text": " Accused of Murder is a 1956 American Trucolor film noir crime film directed by Joseph Kane and starring David Brian and Vera Ralston, Sidney Blackmer.", "score": "1.5536051" }, { "id": "14450299", "title": "Accused (2014 film)", "text": " Accused (Lucia de B.) is a 2014 Dutch drama film directed by Paula van der Oest and written by Moniek Kramer. It was selected as the Dutch entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards, making the January Shortlist.", "score": "1.5446019" }, { "id": "2056640", "title": "Accused (2010 TV series)", "text": " Accused is a British television anthology series created by Jimmy McGovern. The drama series first aired on 15 November 2010 on BBC One and has run for two series. Each episode follows a different character as they await their verdict in court, and tells the story behind how they find themselves accused. The series has featured actors and actresses such as Christopher Eccleston, Benjamin Smith, Juliet Stevenson, Andy Serkis, Marc Warren, Naomie Harris, Sean Bean and Anne-Marie Duff as the accused in each episode. The series follows previous drama series by McGovern, including anthology series The Street and Moving On. After the cancellation of The Street in 2009 by Granada Television, McGovern formed RSJ Films to produce independent drama programmes and subsequently devised the Accused anthology series. Accused was written by McGovern, Danny Brocklehurst and Alice Nutter and was filmed in Manchester. In 2011 it won an International Emmy for best drama series.", "score": "1.5387542" }, { "id": "185197", "title": "Acquitted (1929 film)", "text": " In early September 1929, it was announced that Frank Strayer had been slated to direct the picture. In late August it was announced that Lloyd Hughes, Margaret Livingston, and Sam Hardy were attached to the project. With Lloyd Hughes and Margaret Livingston already cast in the lead roles, Charles Wilson and Otto Hoffman were added to the cast in early October. The film was released on November 15, 1929.", "score": "1.5383453" }, { "id": "27825235", "title": "The Woman Accused", "text": " The Woman Accused is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film directed by Paul Sloane and starring Nancy Carroll and Cary Grant as a young engaged couple on a sea cruise, with the woman being implicated in the death of her former lover. The supporting cast includes Jack La Rue in a sequence opposite Grant in which the latter violently whips him.", "score": "1.5383415" }, { "id": "13692942", "title": "Accused (1936 film)", "text": "Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. as Tony Seymour ; Dolores del Río as Gaby Seymour ; Florence Desmond as Yvette Delange ; Edward Rigby as Alphonse de la Riveire ; Basil Sydney as Eugene Roget ; Googie Withers as Ninette Duval ; J.H. Roberts as President of Court ; Cecil Humphreys as Prosecuting Counsel ; Esme Percy as Morel ; Moore Marriott as Dubec ; Cyril Raymond as Guy Henry ; Roland Culver as Henry Capelle ; Leo Genn as Man ", "score": "1.5359726" }, { "id": "2056644", "title": "Accused (2010 TV series)", "text": " On 24 February 2011, BBC Drama Controller Ben Stephenson announced that Accused has been renewed for a second series of four episodes, to be broadcast sometime in 2012. Despite the relatively low viewing figures from the first series, the second was commissioned in the hopes that it would have the potential to find a broader audience. Filming for the first two episodes of the second series began around November 2011. The new cast members confirmed to appear in these episodes included Anne-Marie Duff, Olivia Colman, Robert Sheehan, Joe Dempsie, Sheridan Smith, Paul Popplewell and comedian John Bishop. The first episode, starring Colman and Duff, would be written by McGovern and Carol Cullington, while writing credits on the second episode (starring Sheehan, Bishop and Smith) would again be shared by Daniel Brocklehurst and McGovern. In January 2012 it was confirmed that Anna Maxwell Martin would join Sheehan ", "score": "1.5316672" }, { "id": "2056649", "title": "Accused (2010 TV series)", "text": " In May 2021, it was announced that Fox had given a straight-to-order to an American adaptation of the series. The series will be co-produced between Sony Pictures Television and Fox Entertainment and scheduled for premiere in the 2022–23 television season with Howard Gordon, Alex Gansa and David Shore will be executive producing.", "score": "1.5248181" }, { "id": "8811339", "title": "The Guilty (1947 film)", "text": " The Guilty is a 1947 film noir directed by John Reinhardt, based on Cornell Woolrich's short story \"Two Men in a Furnished Room\". The film was produced by oil millionaire Jack Wrather, the husband of lead actress Bonita Granville.", "score": "1.520185" }, { "id": "427161", "title": "The Accused (1960 film)", "text": " Based on a real-life case in 1925, two great lawyers argue the case for and against a science teacher accused of the crime of teaching evolution.", "score": "1.5159563" }, { "id": "25479732", "title": "Trial (film)", "text": " Trial is a 1955 American film directed by Mark Robson and starring Glenn Ford, Dorothy McGuire, Arthur Kennedy and Juano Hernandez. Based on the novel written by Don Mankiewicz, it is about a Mexican boy accused of rape and murder; originally victimized by prejudiced accusers, he becomes a pawn of his communist defender, whose propaganda purposes would be best served by a verdict of guilty.", "score": "1.5128546" } ]
[ "The Accused (1960 film)\n The Accused (Los Acusados) is a 1960 Argentine crime drama directed and written by Antonio Cunill Jr.. The film was based on a screen play by Marco Denevi. The film starred Mario Soffici and Silvia Legrand.", "Accused (1936 film)\n Accused is a 1936 British mystery film directed by Thornton Freeland and starring Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Dolores del Río and Florence Desmond. It was made at Isleworth Studios by the independent Criterion Films, which Fairbanks was a co-owner of. The film's sets were designed by Edward Carrick.", "Linda Arvidson\n Arvidson wrote screenplays, including the one for the five-reel Who's Guilty Now? She was an associate editor of Film Fun and a film critic for Leslie's Magazine, and she wrote the book When the Movies Were Young.", "I Stand Accused\n I Stand Accused is a 1938 American drama film directed by John H. Auer and written by Gordon Kahn and Alex Gottlieb. The film stars Robert Cummings, Helen Mack, Lyle Talbot, Thomas Beck, Gordon Jones and Robert Paige. The film was released by Republic Pictures.", "Accused (1964 film)\n Accused (Czech: Obžalovaný) is a 1964 film directed by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos. The film has won a Crystal Globe at 1964 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.", "The Narrowing Circle\n The screenplay concerns a crime writer who finds himself accused of murder, and has to clear his name.", "Accused (2010 TV series)\n be here. We see the crime and we see the punishment. Nothing else. No police procedure, thanks very much, no coppers striding along corridors with coats flapping. Just crime and punishment – the two things that matter most in any crime drama.\" McGovern was the lead writer for the series, with co-writers Alice Nutter, Danny Brocklehurst and Esther Wilson for episodes three, four and five respectively. The series was directed by David Blair (episodes 1, 2, 5 and 6) and Richard Laxton (episodes 3 and 4), and produced by RSJ Films, a company founded by Jimmy McGovern, Sita Williams and Roxy Spencer. RSJ Films is also known ", "Accused (1958 TV series)\n The show was produced by Selig J. Seligman, a former U.S. Army lawyer who served at the Nuremberg Trials. He later became an ABC Vice President as well as executive producer of Combat! and Garrison's Gorillas.", "Accused (1958 TV series)\nEdgar Allan Jones, Jr. as the Judge ; William Gwinn as the Substitute Judge ; Jim Hodson as the Clerk ; Tim Farrell as the Bailiff ; Violet Gillmore as the Court Reporter (and Announcer) Similar to other courtroom dramas of the time, the defendants and witnesses were actors (including, for example, Pamela Mason and Robert Culp). However, the defense and prosecution attorneys were real-life lawyers. The court was presided over by Edgar Allan Jones, Jr. Jones had a law degree from the University of Virginia, was a member of the UCLA law faculty and a labor arbitrator. ", "Accused of Murder\n Accused of Murder is a 1956 American Trucolor film noir crime film directed by Joseph Kane and starring David Brian and Vera Ralston, Sidney Blackmer.", "Accused (2014 film)\n Accused (Lucia de B.) is a 2014 Dutch drama film directed by Paula van der Oest and written by Moniek Kramer. It was selected as the Dutch entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards, making the January Shortlist.", "Accused (2010 TV series)\n Accused is a British television anthology series created by Jimmy McGovern. The drama series first aired on 15 November 2010 on BBC One and has run for two series. Each episode follows a different character as they await their verdict in court, and tells the story behind how they find themselves accused. The series has featured actors and actresses such as Christopher Eccleston, Benjamin Smith, Juliet Stevenson, Andy Serkis, Marc Warren, Naomie Harris, Sean Bean and Anne-Marie Duff as the accused in each episode. The series follows previous drama series by McGovern, including anthology series The Street and Moving On. After the cancellation of The Street in 2009 by Granada Television, McGovern formed RSJ Films to produce independent drama programmes and subsequently devised the Accused anthology series. Accused was written by McGovern, Danny Brocklehurst and Alice Nutter and was filmed in Manchester. In 2011 it won an International Emmy for best drama series.", "Acquitted (1929 film)\n In early September 1929, it was announced that Frank Strayer had been slated to direct the picture. In late August it was announced that Lloyd Hughes, Margaret Livingston, and Sam Hardy were attached to the project. With Lloyd Hughes and Margaret Livingston already cast in the lead roles, Charles Wilson and Otto Hoffman were added to the cast in early October. The film was released on November 15, 1929.", "The Woman Accused\n The Woman Accused is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film directed by Paul Sloane and starring Nancy Carroll and Cary Grant as a young engaged couple on a sea cruise, with the woman being implicated in the death of her former lover. The supporting cast includes Jack La Rue in a sequence opposite Grant in which the latter violently whips him.", "Accused (1936 film)\nDouglas Fairbanks, Jr. as Tony Seymour ; Dolores del Río as Gaby Seymour ; Florence Desmond as Yvette Delange ; Edward Rigby as Alphonse de la Riveire ; Basil Sydney as Eugene Roget ; Googie Withers as Ninette Duval ; J.H. Roberts as President of Court ; Cecil Humphreys as Prosecuting Counsel ; Esme Percy as Morel ; Moore Marriott as Dubec ; Cyril Raymond as Guy Henry ; Roland Culver as Henry Capelle ; Leo Genn as Man ", "Accused (2010 TV series)\n On 24 February 2011, BBC Drama Controller Ben Stephenson announced that Accused has been renewed for a second series of four episodes, to be broadcast sometime in 2012. Despite the relatively low viewing figures from the first series, the second was commissioned in the hopes that it would have the potential to find a broader audience. Filming for the first two episodes of the second series began around November 2011. The new cast members confirmed to appear in these episodes included Anne-Marie Duff, Olivia Colman, Robert Sheehan, Joe Dempsie, Sheridan Smith, Paul Popplewell and comedian John Bishop. The first episode, starring Colman and Duff, would be written by McGovern and Carol Cullington, while writing credits on the second episode (starring Sheehan, Bishop and Smith) would again be shared by Daniel Brocklehurst and McGovern. In January 2012 it was confirmed that Anna Maxwell Martin would join Sheehan ", "Accused (2010 TV series)\n In May 2021, it was announced that Fox had given a straight-to-order to an American adaptation of the series. The series will be co-produced between Sony Pictures Television and Fox Entertainment and scheduled for premiere in the 2022–23 television season with Howard Gordon, Alex Gansa and David Shore will be executive producing.", "The Guilty (1947 film)\n The Guilty is a 1947 film noir directed by John Reinhardt, based on Cornell Woolrich's short story \"Two Men in a Furnished Room\". The film was produced by oil millionaire Jack Wrather, the husband of lead actress Bonita Granville.", "The Accused (1960 film)\n Based on a real-life case in 1925, two great lawyers argue the case for and against a science teacher accused of the crime of teaching evolution.", "Trial (film)\n Trial is a 1955 American film directed by Mark Robson and starring Glenn Ford, Dorothy McGuire, Arthur Kennedy and Juano Hernandez. Based on the novel written by Don Mankiewicz, it is about a Mexican boy accused of rape and murder; originally victimized by prejudiced accusers, he becomes a pawn of his communist defender, whose propaganda purposes would be best served by a verdict of guilty." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Exit the Vamp?
[ "Clara Beranger", "Clara Strouse", "Clara S. Beranger" ]
screenwriter
Exit the Vamp
1,450,554
74
[ { "id": "6739855", "title": "EXIT (magazine)", "text": " Publisher and editor George Petros was a writer, illustrator and graphic artist. Editor Adam Parfrey was a writer and montage artist. Associate editor Kim Seltzer was a painter and illustrator. Associate editor R. Bruce Ritchie was a writer and graphic artist. Editor Salvatore Canzonieri was a writer, graphic artist, musician and healer. Several contributing editors worked on the magazine: Michael Andros was a montage artist, poet and archivist. Nancy Keating was an art director and illustrator. Robert N. Taylor was a writer, illustrator, graphic artist and musician. John Aes-Nihil was a filmmaker and archivist. Among the many others who contributed to EXIT were Robert Williams, Mark Mothersbaugh, Genesis P-Orridge, Joe Coleman, Steven Cerio, Mike Diana, Alex Grey, Richard Kern, Lydia Lunch, Nick Zedd, Raymond Pettibon, Nick Bougas, Boyd Rice, S. Clay Wilson, GG Allin, H.R. Giger, Marilyn Manson, Nikolas Schreck, Zeena LaVey, Jim Blanchard and Jonathan Shaw. Notorious criminals whose artwork appeared in the magazine include John Wayne Gacy, Henry Lee Lucas, Richard Ramirez, James Earl Ray and Ottis Toole.", "score": "1.5856286" }, { "id": "29448581", "title": "Steven A. Katz", "text": " 2000 Bram Stoker Award for Best Screenwriter for Shadow of the Vampire.", "score": "1.5353518" }, { "id": "9509652", "title": "S. P. Somtow", "text": " He wrote Vampire Junction and a series of related novels and stories. He was president of the Horror Writers Association from 1998 to 2000. His other horror books include the werewolf-Western novel Moon Dance, the zombie-American Civil War novel Darker Angels, and the collections Tagging the Moon: Fairy Tales of L.A. and The Pavilion of Frozen Women. In 1997, he wrote the juvenile vampire novel, The Vampire's Beautiful Daughter. He also wrote and directed the cult horror film The Laughing Dead and co-wrote the Roger Corman-produced Bram Stoker's Burial of the Rats (1995).", "score": "1.507032" }, { "id": "10906813", "title": "Guy Endore", "text": " in the New York Times. He worked on the screenplay for Mark of the Vampire starring Bela Lugosi. He also wrote the 19-page treatment that eventually became The Raven, for which he was not credited. A number of other horror films followed, interspersed with more mainstream films including the Oscar-nominated (The Story of G.I. Joe), a John Wayne movie (Lady from Louisiana), and Carefree. His Hollywood career ended in 1969 with a made for TV movie entitled Fear No Evil, for which he wrote the story. It was the first US television “Movie of the Week” and a success in the ratings, spawning a sequel a year later.", "score": "1.5054473" }, { "id": "11427600", "title": "Michael Alan Lerner", "text": " Lerner co-wrote (with Daphna Kastner) the 1997 film French Exit, starring Jonathan Silverman and Mädchen Amick.", "score": "1.4885015" }, { "id": "25858275", "title": "French Exit (novel)", "text": " In May 2019, it was announced that a movie adaptation of the novel was in the works with deWitt writing the screenplay, Azazel Jacobs directing, and Michelle Pfeiffer and Lucas Hedges in the lead roles. In September 2019, Sony Pictures Classics acquired distribution rights to the film. The film was the Closing Night of the 2020 New York Film Festival and celebrated as \"A mostly satisfying feast for Pfeiffer fans.\"", "score": "1.4876066" }, { "id": "27812188", "title": "Exit: una storia personale", "text": " The screenplay was completed in 2001 and had already been optioned by two producers and presented to MiBAC. The huge production delays were the main reason that led Massimiliano Amato to decide to produce it independently. The entire film was filmed without any crew and background support at all, Amato has described the production model \"a complete lack of structure\".", "score": "1.4723828" }, { "id": "13006797", "title": "Dracula 2000", "text": " The initial draft was penned by producer Joel Soisson. After Harvey Weinstein purchased the screenplay, he called script doctor Scott Derrickson to tell him he had purchased the script solely on the basis of its title and thought that it \"sucked.\" Derrickson, along with Ehren Kruger and Paul Harris Boardman, heavily rewrote the screenplay, though none are credited in the final film.", "score": "1.4647597" }, { "id": "29448578", "title": "Steven A. Katz", "text": " Steven Katz (born October 8, 1959) is an American writer best known for his work on Shadow of the Vampire. He received a B. A. in English and Art History from Brown University in 1982 and an M. A. in English from Columbia University in 1984. He currently lives in New York City.", "score": "1.4646795" }, { "id": "31037644", "title": "Exiting the Vampire Castle", "text": " Exiting the Vampire Castle is an essay written in 2013 by social theorist Mark Fisher arguing for increased Leftist solidarity by reducing online callout culture and returning to organization of efforts around economic class, rather than around identity.", "score": "1.4574456" }, { "id": "16528905", "title": "Jeremy Paul (screenwriter)", "text": "Countess Dracula (1971) ", "score": "1.4478145" }, { "id": "14089794", "title": "French Exit (2020 film)", "text": " It was announced in May 2019 that Michelle Pfeiffer, Lucas Hedges and Tracy Letts were cast in the film, with Azazel Jacobs directing and the novel's author Patrick deWitt writing the screenplay. Danielle Macdonald was cast in October.", "score": "1.4474633" }, { "id": "14492848", "title": "Vampire literature", "text": " Southern Vampire Mysteries (2001&ndash;). In the field of juvenile and young adult literature, Darren Shan wrote a 12-book series (The Saga of Darren Shan) about a boy who becomes a vampire's assistant, beginning with Cirque Du Freak (2000) and ending with Sons of Destiny (2006). A film adaptation has been made of the first three books called Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant (2009). He is also currently writing a prequel to the Saga, a series of four books all about Larten Crepsley (one of the main characters) starting with Birth of a Killer (2010) and finishing with Brothers to the Death (2012). Ellen Schreiber created a young adult series about ", "score": "1.446595" }, { "id": "11066925", "title": "Exit Dying", "text": " Exit Dying (also referred to at Exit, Dying) is a 1976 made for TV film that was written, directed, produced, and edited by University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh professor Bob Jacobs. The film starred Henry Darrow and centered upon a man caught up in supernatural happenings at an opera house. Exit Dying was filmed in Oshkosh, Wisconsin at the Grand Opera House. The film premiered on October 31, 1976 at the Oshkosh Grand Opera House and received a positive review from the Daily Northwestern.", "score": "1.4434075" }, { "id": "25406016", "title": "George Petros", "text": " and inclinations manifested as political pornography, psychosexual terrorism, scientific threats and infernal texts. It was graced by contributions from the best artists and writers in America — famous, infamous, and unknown.\" Among the many artists and writers who contributed to EXIT were Robert Williams, Mark Mothersbaugh, JG Thirlwell, Genesis P-Orridge, Joe Coleman, Steven Cerio, Mike Diana, Alex Grey, Richard Kern, Lydia Lunch, Nick Zedd, Raymond Pettibon, Boyd Rice, S. Clay Wilson, GG Allin, H. R. Giger, Marilyn Manson, Nikolas Schreck, Zeena LaVey, Jim Blanchard and Jonathan Shaw. Notorious criminals whose artwork appeared in the magazine include John Wayne Gacy, Henry Lee Lucas, Richard Ramirez, James Earl Ray and Ottis Toole.", "score": "1.4410307" }, { "id": "9972170", "title": "Anne Rice", "text": " Following the publication of Interview with the Vampire, while living in California, Rice wrote two historical novels, The Feast of All Saints and Cry to Heaven, along with three erotic novels (The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty, Beauty's Punishment, and Beauty's Release) under the pseudonym A. N. Roquelaure, and two more under the pseudonym Anne Rampling (Exit to Eden and Belinda). Rice then returned to the vampire genre with The Vampire Lestat and The Queen of the Damned, her bestselling sequels to Interview with the Vampire. Shortly after her June 1988 return to New Orleans, Rice penned The Witching Hour as an expression of her joy at coming ", "score": "1.437321" }, { "id": "6739852", "title": "EXIT (magazine)", "text": " EXIT was a New York-based large-format alternative comic art and graphics magazine published from 1984 through 1992. It was founded in 1983 by George Petros and Adam Parfrey, with Kim Seltzer joining shortly afterward. Five issues were released; a sixth was partially completed. The magazine's history is divided into two eras: the first, from inception through 1987, was characterized by the collaboration of Petros and Parfrey; and the second, spanning from Parfrey's 1987 departure until the project's end, was characterized by Petros's work with J.G. Thirlwell, Robert N. Taylor, Michael Andros and Salvatore Canzonieri.", "score": "1.4346721" }, { "id": "25715284", "title": "Anthony Hinds", "text": " a prolific screenwriter and from the mid-1960s he concentrated on this activity, though he produced the TV series Journey to the Unknown for LWT (1968–69) and The Lost Continent (1968). The horror script The Unquenchable Thirst of Dracula, which he wrote in the 1970s for Hammer, was never filmed. In October 2015 it was presented as a live stage reading by the Mayhem Film Festival at the Broadway Cinema in Nottingham, featuring the actor and film historian Jonathan Rigby as narrator. In October 2017 a studio production of the script was broadcast on BBC Radio 4, with narration by Michael Sheen.", "score": "1.4274518" }, { "id": "31152983", "title": "Paul Monette", "text": " Monette also wrote the novelizations of the films Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979), Scarface (1983), Predator (1987) and Midnight Run (1988), as well as the novels Taking Care of Mrs. Carroll (1978), Afterlife (1990) and Halfway Home (1991). He wrote Afterlife (1990) and Halfway Home (1991) which were centered around people with AIDS and their families' experiences. He once said in an interview that \"One person’s truth, if told well, does not leave anyone out.\" Because of this belief, he tried to tell the truth in a way that gave a voice to a community that was usually left out.", "score": "1.4269238" }, { "id": "14846009", "title": "Justin Somper", "text": " He was born in St Albans and graduated from the University of Warwick. He worked as a publicist before starting his writing career. He wrote six books in the Vampirates series. He then wrote two books in a series called Allies and Assassins (though there was no conclusion to the series and he is not intending to write any further entries to the series. This was highly criticized by readers who had invested their time and money on the first two volumes.).", "score": "1.4264749" } ]
[ "EXIT (magazine)\n Publisher and editor George Petros was a writer, illustrator and graphic artist. Editor Adam Parfrey was a writer and montage artist. Associate editor Kim Seltzer was a painter and illustrator. Associate editor R. Bruce Ritchie was a writer and graphic artist. Editor Salvatore Canzonieri was a writer, graphic artist, musician and healer. Several contributing editors worked on the magazine: Michael Andros was a montage artist, poet and archivist. Nancy Keating was an art director and illustrator. Robert N. Taylor was a writer, illustrator, graphic artist and musician. John Aes-Nihil was a filmmaker and archivist. Among the many others who contributed to EXIT were Robert Williams, Mark Mothersbaugh, Genesis P-Orridge, Joe Coleman, Steven Cerio, Mike Diana, Alex Grey, Richard Kern, Lydia Lunch, Nick Zedd, Raymond Pettibon, Nick Bougas, Boyd Rice, S. Clay Wilson, GG Allin, H.R. Giger, Marilyn Manson, Nikolas Schreck, Zeena LaVey, Jim Blanchard and Jonathan Shaw. Notorious criminals whose artwork appeared in the magazine include John Wayne Gacy, Henry Lee Lucas, Richard Ramirez, James Earl Ray and Ottis Toole.", "Steven A. Katz\n 2000 Bram Stoker Award for Best Screenwriter for Shadow of the Vampire.", "S. P. Somtow\n He wrote Vampire Junction and a series of related novels and stories. He was president of the Horror Writers Association from 1998 to 2000. His other horror books include the werewolf-Western novel Moon Dance, the zombie-American Civil War novel Darker Angels, and the collections Tagging the Moon: Fairy Tales of L.A. and The Pavilion of Frozen Women. In 1997, he wrote the juvenile vampire novel, The Vampire's Beautiful Daughter. He also wrote and directed the cult horror film The Laughing Dead and co-wrote the Roger Corman-produced Bram Stoker's Burial of the Rats (1995).", "Guy Endore\n in the New York Times. He worked on the screenplay for Mark of the Vampire starring Bela Lugosi. He also wrote the 19-page treatment that eventually became The Raven, for which he was not credited. A number of other horror films followed, interspersed with more mainstream films including the Oscar-nominated (The Story of G.I. Joe), a John Wayne movie (Lady from Louisiana), and Carefree. His Hollywood career ended in 1969 with a made for TV movie entitled Fear No Evil, for which he wrote the story. It was the first US television “Movie of the Week” and a success in the ratings, spawning a sequel a year later.", "Michael Alan Lerner\n Lerner co-wrote (with Daphna Kastner) the 1997 film French Exit, starring Jonathan Silverman and Mädchen Amick.", "French Exit (novel)\n In May 2019, it was announced that a movie adaptation of the novel was in the works with deWitt writing the screenplay, Azazel Jacobs directing, and Michelle Pfeiffer and Lucas Hedges in the lead roles. In September 2019, Sony Pictures Classics acquired distribution rights to the film. The film was the Closing Night of the 2020 New York Film Festival and celebrated as \"A mostly satisfying feast for Pfeiffer fans.\"", "Exit: una storia personale\n The screenplay was completed in 2001 and had already been optioned by two producers and presented to MiBAC. The huge production delays were the main reason that led Massimiliano Amato to decide to produce it independently. The entire film was filmed without any crew and background support at all, Amato has described the production model \"a complete lack of structure\".", "Dracula 2000\n The initial draft was penned by producer Joel Soisson. After Harvey Weinstein purchased the screenplay, he called script doctor Scott Derrickson to tell him he had purchased the script solely on the basis of its title and thought that it \"sucked.\" Derrickson, along with Ehren Kruger and Paul Harris Boardman, heavily rewrote the screenplay, though none are credited in the final film.", "Steven A. Katz\n Steven Katz (born October 8, 1959) is an American writer best known for his work on Shadow of the Vampire. He received a B. A. in English and Art History from Brown University in 1982 and an M. A. in English from Columbia University in 1984. He currently lives in New York City.", "Exiting the Vampire Castle\n Exiting the Vampire Castle is an essay written in 2013 by social theorist Mark Fisher arguing for increased Leftist solidarity by reducing online callout culture and returning to organization of efforts around economic class, rather than around identity.", "Jeremy Paul (screenwriter)\nCountess Dracula (1971) ", "French Exit (2020 film)\n It was announced in May 2019 that Michelle Pfeiffer, Lucas Hedges and Tracy Letts were cast in the film, with Azazel Jacobs directing and the novel's author Patrick deWitt writing the screenplay. Danielle Macdonald was cast in October.", "Vampire literature\n Southern Vampire Mysteries (2001&ndash;). In the field of juvenile and young adult literature, Darren Shan wrote a 12-book series (The Saga of Darren Shan) about a boy who becomes a vampire's assistant, beginning with Cirque Du Freak (2000) and ending with Sons of Destiny (2006). A film adaptation has been made of the first three books called Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant (2009). He is also currently writing a prequel to the Saga, a series of four books all about Larten Crepsley (one of the main characters) starting with Birth of a Killer (2010) and finishing with Brothers to the Death (2012). Ellen Schreiber created a young adult series about ", "Exit Dying\n Exit Dying (also referred to at Exit, Dying) is a 1976 made for TV film that was written, directed, produced, and edited by University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh professor Bob Jacobs. The film starred Henry Darrow and centered upon a man caught up in supernatural happenings at an opera house. Exit Dying was filmed in Oshkosh, Wisconsin at the Grand Opera House. The film premiered on October 31, 1976 at the Oshkosh Grand Opera House and received a positive review from the Daily Northwestern.", "George Petros\n and inclinations manifested as political pornography, psychosexual terrorism, scientific threats and infernal texts. It was graced by contributions from the best artists and writers in America — famous, infamous, and unknown.\" Among the many artists and writers who contributed to EXIT were Robert Williams, Mark Mothersbaugh, JG Thirlwell, Genesis P-Orridge, Joe Coleman, Steven Cerio, Mike Diana, Alex Grey, Richard Kern, Lydia Lunch, Nick Zedd, Raymond Pettibon, Boyd Rice, S. Clay Wilson, GG Allin, H. R. Giger, Marilyn Manson, Nikolas Schreck, Zeena LaVey, Jim Blanchard and Jonathan Shaw. Notorious criminals whose artwork appeared in the magazine include John Wayne Gacy, Henry Lee Lucas, Richard Ramirez, James Earl Ray and Ottis Toole.", "Anne Rice\n Following the publication of Interview with the Vampire, while living in California, Rice wrote two historical novels, The Feast of All Saints and Cry to Heaven, along with three erotic novels (The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty, Beauty's Punishment, and Beauty's Release) under the pseudonym A. N. Roquelaure, and two more under the pseudonym Anne Rampling (Exit to Eden and Belinda). Rice then returned to the vampire genre with The Vampire Lestat and The Queen of the Damned, her bestselling sequels to Interview with the Vampire. Shortly after her June 1988 return to New Orleans, Rice penned The Witching Hour as an expression of her joy at coming ", "EXIT (magazine)\n EXIT was a New York-based large-format alternative comic art and graphics magazine published from 1984 through 1992. It was founded in 1983 by George Petros and Adam Parfrey, with Kim Seltzer joining shortly afterward. Five issues were released; a sixth was partially completed. The magazine's history is divided into two eras: the first, from inception through 1987, was characterized by the collaboration of Petros and Parfrey; and the second, spanning from Parfrey's 1987 departure until the project's end, was characterized by Petros's work with J.G. Thirlwell, Robert N. Taylor, Michael Andros and Salvatore Canzonieri.", "Anthony Hinds\n a prolific screenwriter and from the mid-1960s he concentrated on this activity, though he produced the TV series Journey to the Unknown for LWT (1968–69) and The Lost Continent (1968). The horror script The Unquenchable Thirst of Dracula, which he wrote in the 1970s for Hammer, was never filmed. In October 2015 it was presented as a live stage reading by the Mayhem Film Festival at the Broadway Cinema in Nottingham, featuring the actor and film historian Jonathan Rigby as narrator. In October 2017 a studio production of the script was broadcast on BBC Radio 4, with narration by Michael Sheen.", "Paul Monette\n Monette also wrote the novelizations of the films Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979), Scarface (1983), Predator (1987) and Midnight Run (1988), as well as the novels Taking Care of Mrs. Carroll (1978), Afterlife (1990) and Halfway Home (1991). He wrote Afterlife (1990) and Halfway Home (1991) which were centered around people with AIDS and their families' experiences. He once said in an interview that \"One person’s truth, if told well, does not leave anyone out.\" Because of this belief, he tried to tell the truth in a way that gave a voice to a community that was usually left out.", "Justin Somper\n He was born in St Albans and graduated from the University of Warwick. He worked as a publicist before starting his writing career. He wrote six books in the Vampirates series. He then wrote two books in a series called Allies and Assassins (though there was no conclusion to the series and he is not intending to write any further entries to the series. This was highly criticized by readers who had invested their time and money on the first two volumes.)." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Mary's Ankle?
[ "Luther Reed" ]
screenwriter
Mary's Ankle
1,450,805
87
[ { "id": "2942156", "title": "Mary (2019 film)", "text": " In June 2016, Anthony Jaswinski was announced to write the script for the film, with Tucker Tooley producing. In September 2017, it was announced Gary Oldman, Emily Mortimer, Owen Teague, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Stefanie Scott and Chloe Perrin had joined the cast of the film, with Michael Goi, directing from a screenplay by Anthony Jaswinski. In August 2018, Jennifer Esposito joined the cast of the film.", "score": "1.5608115" }, { "id": "27859605", "title": "Mary Sue Price", "text": "Scriptwriter: 1997 - 1999 Scriptwriter: 1997 Screenwriter: 1999 - December 24, 2007; March 14, 2008 - September 9, 2012) Another World As the World Turns General Hospital (hired by Robert Guza Jr.)", "score": "1.5301001" }, { "id": "9252780", "title": "Across the River and into the Trees", "text": " to ski: she broke her ankle and, bored, Hemingway began the draft of the book. Hemingway himself then became ill with an eye infection and was hospitalized. In the spring he went to Venice where he ate lunch with Adriana a few times. In May he returned to Cuba and carried out a protracted correspondence with her while working on the manuscript. In the autumn he had returned to Europe and he finished the draft at the Ritz in Paris. Once done, he and Mary went again to Cortina to ski: for the second time she broke her ankle and he contracted an eye infection. By February the ", "score": "1.5125566" }, { "id": "28184522", "title": "Malcolm Marmorstein", "text": "The Doctors (1963 – head writer) ; Dark Shadows (1966–67 – 82 episodes) ; Peyton Place (1968 – 15 episodes) ; Night Gallery (1971 – 1 episode) ; S*P*Y*S (1974 – screenplay) ; Mary, Mary, Bloody Mary (1975 – screenplay) ; Whiffs (1975 – screenplay) ; Pete's Dragon (1977 – screenplay) ; Return from Witch Mountain (1978 – screenplay) ; Poochie (TV film) (1984 – teleplay) ; Rose Petal Place (TV special) (1984 – teleplay) ; Rose Petal Place: Real Friends (TV film) (1985 – teleplay) ; Konrad (TV film) (1985 – teleplay) ; CBS Storybreak (1985–87 – 2 episodes) ; ABC Weekend Special (1984–88 – 9 episodes) ; The Witching of Ben Wagner (TV film) (1990 – teleplay) ; Dead Men Don't Die (1991 – screenplay and director) ; Love Bites (1993 – screenplay and director) ", "score": "1.491781" }, { "id": "32807534", "title": "Sarah Kernochan", "text": " (about evangelist Marjoe Gortner), which won an Academy Award for Documentary Feature. Kernochan's first screen credit as a screenwriter came with the 1986 film 9½ Weeks. She followed that film with the script for Dancers (1987), starring Mikhail Baryshnikov and directed by Herbert Ross, which chronicled the backstage drama of a ballet company (played by American Ballet Theatre dancers) and their director during the staging of the ballet Giselle. By the time she was brought in to work on the 1993 film Sommersby, she had become known for a particular style of writing in Hollywood. She commented in an interview with Salon.com: Since then, she has been primarily a screenwriter for such films as Dancers (1987); ", "score": "1.4476596" }, { "id": "5933746", "title": "Silencing Mary", "text": " Silencing Mary is a 1998 American television film directed by Craig R. Baxley and written by Steve Johnson. It stars Melissa Joan Hart as a college newspaper reporter determined to get justice after her best friend is raped by one of the school's star athletes. The film was produced by Hartbreak Films and Viacom Productions and filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It aired on NBC in the United States on March 8, 1998.", "score": "1.4409539" }, { "id": "7985629", "title": "Richard Curtis", "text": " re-edited the film for its US release where it was re-titled Pirate Radio, but also failed to find an audience. He followed that with War Horse, which he rewrote for director Steven Spielberg based on an earlier script by playwright Lee Hall. Curtis was recommended to Spielberg by DreamWorks Studio executive Stacey Snider, who had worked with Curtis during her time at Universal Studios. Curtis's work on the World War I-set Blackadder Goes Forth meant he was already familiar with the period. Curtis then wrote Mary and Martha, a BBC/HBO television film directed by Phillip Noyce. The film starred Hilary Swank and Brenda Blethyn ", "score": "1.4405888" }, { "id": "1192543", "title": "Mary C. McCall Jr.", "text": " Mary C. McCall Jr. (April 4, 1904 – April 3, 1986) was an American writer best known for her screenwriting. She was a charter member and the first woman president of the Writers Guild of America (then known as the Screen Writers Guild), serving from 1942–44 and 1951–52.", "score": "1.4373659" }, { "id": "5821151", "title": "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry", "text": " According to Unekis' son, the rights to the book were originally bought for very little money by director Howard Hawks, who had Steve McQueen in mind for the title role of a future film project. Hawks commissioned three scripts, from Antonio Santean, who turned a male character into the character of Mary, from Leigh Brackett and from Leigh Chapman.", "score": "1.4371014" }, { "id": "25402538", "title": "Frank Beddor", "text": " students to write the scene the character is in before stepping onstage. Beddor became frustrated with the lack of good scripts he was being given and began to try producing. His most notable work as a producer was on the 1998 film There's Something About Mary starring Cameron Diaz and Ben Stiller. However, Beddor found not being the creative force behind projects frustrating and then turned to writing. Beddor spent five years writing The Looking Glass Wars after being inspired by playing cards in the Museum of London. The book was rejected by every major publisher in the US before Beddor was accepted by Egmont Books in the UK. The Looking Glass Wars became popular and was ", "score": "1.436949" }, { "id": "14617326", "title": "Mary Christmas (film)", "text": " Mary Christmas is a 2002 American Christmas movie written by Stanley M. Brooks and Betty G. Birney. It was directed by and stars John Schneider.", "score": "1.4325447" }, { "id": "16228658", "title": "Mary Rider", "text": " Mary Rider (sometimes credited as Mary Rider Mechtold) was an American screenwriter, playwright, and short story writer active primarily during the 1910s.", "score": "1.4298319" }, { "id": "15869213", "title": "Mary Alice Scully", "text": " Mary Alice Scully was an American screenwriter active during the 1920s.", "score": "1.4291419" }, { "id": "2522550", "title": "Eric Bergren", "text": " Bergren was born 1954 in Pasadena, California. He studied theatre arts at the University of Southern California. Based on works of Frederick Treves and Ashley Montagu about Joseph Merrick, Bergren wrote the script for the 1980 film The Elephant Man together with director David Lynch and fellow screenwriter Christopher De Vore. At the 53rd Academy Awards, Bergren, Lynch and De Vore were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. It was also nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay, the BAFTA Award for Best Screenplay and the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. Together with Christopher De Vore and Nicholas Kazan, Bergren also wrote the script for Frances, a biopic about American actress and television host Frances Farmer. In 1988, he directed the short film ...They Haven't Seen This..., based on his own script.", "score": "1.4250314" }, { "id": "11768300", "title": "James L. Brooks", "text": " the best TV episode ever and in 1999, Entertainment Weekly picked Mary's hat toss in the opening credits as television's second greatest moment. With Mary Tyler Moore going strong, Brooks produced and wrote the TV film Thursday's Game, before creating the short-lived series Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers in 1974. He and Burns moved on to Rhoda, a spin-off of Mary Tyler Moore, taking Valerie Harper's character Rhoda Morgenstern into her own show. It was well received, lasting four years and earning Brooks several Emmys. The duo's next project came in 1977 in the shape of Lou Grant, a second Mary ", "score": "1.4241114" }, { "id": "31941015", "title": "Mary Loos", "text": " After graduating from Stanford, Loos worked in the publicity department of Fox Films. In the mid-1930s she turned to acting, and had roles in several Fox pictures. She began her career as a publicist in New York before moving out to the West Coast and working as a screenwriter in 1941. She and her first husband, Richard Sale, wrote about 20 successful screenplays together before divorcing. After working with her husband, Loos continued in the written field. She became a story editor for Mike Frankovich Productions. She was both co-creator and one of the writers for Yancy Derringer (1958-1959), an American Western TV series. Bantam Books also published some of her novels. In her lifetime she wrote four total: \"The Beggars Are Coming,\" \"Belinda,\" \"Barstow Legend\" and \"Pride of Lovers.\"", "score": "1.4221282" }, { "id": "6301681", "title": "Treva Silverman", "text": "1964: The Entertainers (TV series) – writer ; 1967: NBC Experiment in Television (TV series) – writer (episode: \"We Interrupt This Season\") ; 1967: That Girl (TV series) – writer ; 1967: Captain Nice (TV series) – writer ; 1966-1967: The Monkees (TV series) – writer ; 1967: Accidental Family (TV series) – writer (episode: \"A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Playground\") ; 1968: He & She (TV series) – writer (episode: \"A Rock by Any Other Name\") ; 1968: The Dean Martin Show (TV series) – writer ; 1969: Room 222 (TV series) – writer ; 1970: Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp (TV series) – writer ; 1970: The Many Moods of Perry Como (TV series) – writer ; 1971: The Bill Cosby Show (TV series) – writer ; 1972: Oh, Nurse (TV movie) – writer ; 1970-1974: The Mary Tyler Moore Show (TV series) – writer, executive story consultant ; 1977: Vanities (TV movie) – writer ; 1984: Romancing the Stone – writer ; 1990: The Fanelli Boys (TV series) – producer, writer ; 1994: De Sylvia Millecam Show (TV series) – writer ", "score": "1.4212685" }, { "id": "29611126", "title": "Anita Loos", "text": " story) ; Getting Mary Married (1919; writer) ; The Isle of Conquest (1919; writer) ; The Branded Woman (1920; adaptation) ; Dangerous Business (1920; producer; writer) ; Two Weeks (1920; scenario) ; The Perfect Woman (1920; screenplay; story) ; The Love Expert (1920; writer; producer) ; In Search of a Sinner (1920; writer; producer; uncredited) ; Woman's Place (1921; story) ; Mama's Affair (1921; writer) ; Polly of the Follies (1922; screenplay; story) ; Red Hot Romance (1922; screenplay; story; executive producer) ; Dulcy (1923; writer) ; Three Miles Out (1924; writer) ; Learning to Love (1925; screenplay; story) ; The Whole Town's Talking (1926; play) ; Stranded ", "score": "1.4205608" }, { "id": "4211398", "title": "Leigh Chapman", "text": " When she returned from Hawaii she decided not to work in TV and to focus on features. Chapman wrote an early treatment for Truck Turner (1974). She wrote the unproduced Blackfather (1974) for producer Norman T. Herman. She was hired to rewrite a script, Pursuit which became Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (1974), a huge success. She also wrote How Come Nobody's on Our Side? (1974), less widely seen. She sold a spec script to Dino De Laurentiis, Detroit Boogie (1974) and did a prison film, The Tin Walls (1975) for Robert Ellis Miller. Neither was made. Chapman later said she drifted to action films because there ", "score": "1.4204875" }, { "id": "10363894", "title": "The Leather Boys", "text": " The book was published in 1961 under the pseudonym Eliot George —an inversion of the pen-name of the famous 19th century female author, Mary Ann Evans, who published as George Eliot. Freeman is credited under her own name in the film as the author of the screenplay based on the novel of \"Eliot George\". The original novel is explicit about the sexual relationship between the two male characters, and about the odds that the hero's wife is pregnant by another man. It also portrays the gang to which they belong as a criminal network, and ends with a botched robbery committed by the two main characters. The ", "score": "1.420306" } ]
[ "Mary (2019 film)\n In June 2016, Anthony Jaswinski was announced to write the script for the film, with Tucker Tooley producing. In September 2017, it was announced Gary Oldman, Emily Mortimer, Owen Teague, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Stefanie Scott and Chloe Perrin had joined the cast of the film, with Michael Goi, directing from a screenplay by Anthony Jaswinski. In August 2018, Jennifer Esposito joined the cast of the film.", "Mary Sue Price\nScriptwriter: 1997 - 1999 Scriptwriter: 1997 Screenwriter: 1999 - December 24, 2007; March 14, 2008 - September 9, 2012) Another World As the World Turns General Hospital (hired by Robert Guza Jr.)", "Across the River and into the Trees\n to ski: she broke her ankle and, bored, Hemingway began the draft of the book. Hemingway himself then became ill with an eye infection and was hospitalized. In the spring he went to Venice where he ate lunch with Adriana a few times. In May he returned to Cuba and carried out a protracted correspondence with her while working on the manuscript. In the autumn he had returned to Europe and he finished the draft at the Ritz in Paris. Once done, he and Mary went again to Cortina to ski: for the second time she broke her ankle and he contracted an eye infection. By February the ", "Malcolm Marmorstein\nThe Doctors (1963 – head writer) ; Dark Shadows (1966–67 – 82 episodes) ; Peyton Place (1968 – 15 episodes) ; Night Gallery (1971 – 1 episode) ; S*P*Y*S (1974 – screenplay) ; Mary, Mary, Bloody Mary (1975 – screenplay) ; Whiffs (1975 – screenplay) ; Pete's Dragon (1977 – screenplay) ; Return from Witch Mountain (1978 – screenplay) ; Poochie (TV film) (1984 – teleplay) ; Rose Petal Place (TV special) (1984 – teleplay) ; Rose Petal Place: Real Friends (TV film) (1985 – teleplay) ; Konrad (TV film) (1985 – teleplay) ; CBS Storybreak (1985–87 – 2 episodes) ; ABC Weekend Special (1984–88 – 9 episodes) ; The Witching of Ben Wagner (TV film) (1990 – teleplay) ; Dead Men Don't Die (1991 – screenplay and director) ; Love Bites (1993 – screenplay and director) ", "Sarah Kernochan\n (about evangelist Marjoe Gortner), which won an Academy Award for Documentary Feature. Kernochan's first screen credit as a screenwriter came with the 1986 film 9½ Weeks. She followed that film with the script for Dancers (1987), starring Mikhail Baryshnikov and directed by Herbert Ross, which chronicled the backstage drama of a ballet company (played by American Ballet Theatre dancers) and their director during the staging of the ballet Giselle. By the time she was brought in to work on the 1993 film Sommersby, she had become known for a particular style of writing in Hollywood. She commented in an interview with Salon.com: Since then, she has been primarily a screenwriter for such films as Dancers (1987); ", "Silencing Mary\n Silencing Mary is a 1998 American television film directed by Craig R. Baxley and written by Steve Johnson. It stars Melissa Joan Hart as a college newspaper reporter determined to get justice after her best friend is raped by one of the school's star athletes. The film was produced by Hartbreak Films and Viacom Productions and filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It aired on NBC in the United States on March 8, 1998.", "Richard Curtis\n re-edited the film for its US release where it was re-titled Pirate Radio, but also failed to find an audience. He followed that with War Horse, which he rewrote for director Steven Spielberg based on an earlier script by playwright Lee Hall. Curtis was recommended to Spielberg by DreamWorks Studio executive Stacey Snider, who had worked with Curtis during her time at Universal Studios. Curtis's work on the World War I-set Blackadder Goes Forth meant he was already familiar with the period. Curtis then wrote Mary and Martha, a BBC/HBO television film directed by Phillip Noyce. The film starred Hilary Swank and Brenda Blethyn ", "Mary C. McCall Jr.\n Mary C. McCall Jr. (April 4, 1904 – April 3, 1986) was an American writer best known for her screenwriting. She was a charter member and the first woman president of the Writers Guild of America (then known as the Screen Writers Guild), serving from 1942–44 and 1951–52.", "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry\n According to Unekis' son, the rights to the book were originally bought for very little money by director Howard Hawks, who had Steve McQueen in mind for the title role of a future film project. Hawks commissioned three scripts, from Antonio Santean, who turned a male character into the character of Mary, from Leigh Brackett and from Leigh Chapman.", "Frank Beddor\n students to write the scene the character is in before stepping onstage. Beddor became frustrated with the lack of good scripts he was being given and began to try producing. His most notable work as a producer was on the 1998 film There's Something About Mary starring Cameron Diaz and Ben Stiller. However, Beddor found not being the creative force behind projects frustrating and then turned to writing. Beddor spent five years writing The Looking Glass Wars after being inspired by playing cards in the Museum of London. The book was rejected by every major publisher in the US before Beddor was accepted by Egmont Books in the UK. The Looking Glass Wars became popular and was ", "Mary Christmas (film)\n Mary Christmas is a 2002 American Christmas movie written by Stanley M. Brooks and Betty G. Birney. It was directed by and stars John Schneider.", "Mary Rider\n Mary Rider (sometimes credited as Mary Rider Mechtold) was an American screenwriter, playwright, and short story writer active primarily during the 1910s.", "Mary Alice Scully\n Mary Alice Scully was an American screenwriter active during the 1920s.", "Eric Bergren\n Bergren was born 1954 in Pasadena, California. He studied theatre arts at the University of Southern California. Based on works of Frederick Treves and Ashley Montagu about Joseph Merrick, Bergren wrote the script for the 1980 film The Elephant Man together with director David Lynch and fellow screenwriter Christopher De Vore. At the 53rd Academy Awards, Bergren, Lynch and De Vore were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. It was also nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay, the BAFTA Award for Best Screenplay and the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. Together with Christopher De Vore and Nicholas Kazan, Bergren also wrote the script for Frances, a biopic about American actress and television host Frances Farmer. In 1988, he directed the short film ...They Haven't Seen This..., based on his own script.", "James L. Brooks\n the best TV episode ever and in 1999, Entertainment Weekly picked Mary's hat toss in the opening credits as television's second greatest moment. With Mary Tyler Moore going strong, Brooks produced and wrote the TV film Thursday's Game, before creating the short-lived series Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers in 1974. He and Burns moved on to Rhoda, a spin-off of Mary Tyler Moore, taking Valerie Harper's character Rhoda Morgenstern into her own show. It was well received, lasting four years and earning Brooks several Emmys. The duo's next project came in 1977 in the shape of Lou Grant, a second Mary ", "Mary Loos\n After graduating from Stanford, Loos worked in the publicity department of Fox Films. In the mid-1930s she turned to acting, and had roles in several Fox pictures. She began her career as a publicist in New York before moving out to the West Coast and working as a screenwriter in 1941. She and her first husband, Richard Sale, wrote about 20 successful screenplays together before divorcing. After working with her husband, Loos continued in the written field. She became a story editor for Mike Frankovich Productions. She was both co-creator and one of the writers for Yancy Derringer (1958-1959), an American Western TV series. Bantam Books also published some of her novels. In her lifetime she wrote four total: \"The Beggars Are Coming,\" \"Belinda,\" \"Barstow Legend\" and \"Pride of Lovers.\"", "Treva Silverman\n1964: The Entertainers (TV series) – writer ; 1967: NBC Experiment in Television (TV series) – writer (episode: \"We Interrupt This Season\") ; 1967: That Girl (TV series) – writer ; 1967: Captain Nice (TV series) – writer ; 1966-1967: The Monkees (TV series) – writer ; 1967: Accidental Family (TV series) – writer (episode: \"A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Playground\") ; 1968: He & She (TV series) – writer (episode: \"A Rock by Any Other Name\") ; 1968: The Dean Martin Show (TV series) – writer ; 1969: Room 222 (TV series) – writer ; 1970: Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp (TV series) – writer ; 1970: The Many Moods of Perry Como (TV series) – writer ; 1971: The Bill Cosby Show (TV series) – writer ; 1972: Oh, Nurse (TV movie) – writer ; 1970-1974: The Mary Tyler Moore Show (TV series) – writer, executive story consultant ; 1977: Vanities (TV movie) – writer ; 1984: Romancing the Stone – writer ; 1990: The Fanelli Boys (TV series) – producer, writer ; 1994: De Sylvia Millecam Show (TV series) – writer ", "Anita Loos\n story) ; Getting Mary Married (1919; writer) ; The Isle of Conquest (1919; writer) ; The Branded Woman (1920; adaptation) ; Dangerous Business (1920; producer; writer) ; Two Weeks (1920; scenario) ; The Perfect Woman (1920; screenplay; story) ; The Love Expert (1920; writer; producer) ; In Search of a Sinner (1920; writer; producer; uncredited) ; Woman's Place (1921; story) ; Mama's Affair (1921; writer) ; Polly of the Follies (1922; screenplay; story) ; Red Hot Romance (1922; screenplay; story; executive producer) ; Dulcy (1923; writer) ; Three Miles Out (1924; writer) ; Learning to Love (1925; screenplay; story) ; The Whole Town's Talking (1926; play) ; Stranded ", "Leigh Chapman\n When she returned from Hawaii she decided not to work in TV and to focus on features. Chapman wrote an early treatment for Truck Turner (1974). She wrote the unproduced Blackfather (1974) for producer Norman T. Herman. She was hired to rewrite a script, Pursuit which became Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (1974), a huge success. She also wrote How Come Nobody's on Our Side? (1974), less widely seen. She sold a spec script to Dino De Laurentiis, Detroit Boogie (1974) and did a prison film, The Tin Walls (1975) for Robert Ellis Miller. Neither was made. Chapman later said she drifted to action films because there ", "The Leather Boys\n The book was published in 1961 under the pseudonym Eliot George —an inversion of the pen-name of the famous 19th century female author, Mary Ann Evans, who published as George Eliot. Freeman is credited under her own name in the film as the author of the screenplay based on the novel of \"Eliot George\". The original novel is explicit about the sexual relationship between the two male characters, and about the odds that the hero's wife is pregnant by another man. It also portrays the gang to which they belong as a criminal network, and ends with a botched robbery committed by the two main characters. The " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Democracy?
[ "Sidney Morgan" ]
screenwriter
Democracy (film)
1,413,015
82
[ { "id": "31289617", "title": "Democracy (Numbers)", "text": " \"Democracy\" marked the return of Oswald Kittner. Originally a one-time role, fans and executive producer Cheryl Heuton enjoyed having Jay Baruchel's performance as Oswald Kittner on the show. As a result of fans' request for a return appearance of Kittner, writers wrote \"Democracy\" and decided to feature Kittner.", "score": "1.6144009" }, { "id": "31289609", "title": "Democracy (Numbers)", "text": " \"Democracy\" is the 18th episode of the third season of the American television show Numbers. Written by Cheryl Heuton and Nicolas Falacci, the episode highlights a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigation into the murder of one of their math consultant's friends while an agent learns that she has been selected for a United States Department of Justice (DOJ) assignment. Heuton and Falacci also brought back fan favorite Oswald Kittner, portrayed by Jay Baruchel. The episode marks series regular Diane Farr's final appearance before delivering her baby. Her pregnancy during season three presented writers and producers with the challenge of deciding whether to include a pregnancy into the season's storyline. They decided against it and opted to hide her pregnancy. While filming \"Democracy\", Farr had her baby. \"Democracy\" first aired in the United States on March 9, 2007. Critics gave the episode positive reviews.", "score": "1.6098521" }, { "id": "2581280", "title": "The Movies", "text": " Using The Movies, Alex Chan, a French resident with no previous filmmaking experience, took four days to create The French Democracy, a short machinima political film about the 2005 civil unrest in France.", "score": "1.5966703" }, { "id": "31289615", "title": "Democracy (Numbers)", "text": " \"Democracy\" marks the temporary exit of Diane Farr. During the start of season three, series regular Diane Farr learned that she was pregnant. The series' writers and producers discussed whether to include the pregnancy in the storyline for the season. At the time, series writers and producers planned for Larry to romance Megan during season three. They decided against a story involving pregnancy, feeling that it was too early in Larry and Megan's relationship to discuss pregnancy. They also felt that it was too early in the series to explore working mothers in the FBI. Furthermore, series regular Peter MacNicol's temporary departure for 24 complicated the storyline even further, as the potential father would be absent for part of a season.", "score": "1.5469344" }, { "id": "25552089", "title": "Democracy (play)", "text": " 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.", "score": "1.5356935" }, { "id": "1341043", "title": "Democracy: An American Novel", "text": " Democracy: An American Novel is a political novel written by Henry Brooks Adams and published anonymously in 1880. Only after the writer's death in 1918 did his publisher reveal Adams's authorship although, upon publication, the novel had immediately become popular. Contemporaneous conjecture placed the book under the joint authorship of Clarence King, John Hay and Henry Adams and their spouses who lived side by side on H street in Washington, D.C. and were collectively sometimes called \"the Five of Hearts.\" In January 2005, the Washington National Opera premiered Democracy: An American Comedy, an opera by Scott Wheeler and Romulus Linney based upon Henry Adams' book. Democracy is a novel about political power, its acquisition, ", "score": "1.5321351" }, { "id": "26278318", "title": "Robert Ellis (author)", "text": " the New York Film Festival. His work in film continued, particularly in advertising where he won a regional Emmy in Philadelphia for CBS News. In 1988, Ellis found representation as a writer-director in feature films and moved to Los Angeles where he ghostwrote the final draft of A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master. Maintaining a keen interest in politics ever since the Vietnam War, Ellis became associated with The Campaign Group. During political years, he wrote, produced, directed, and often shot and edited, more than fifteen hundred television ads for political candidates seeking every type of office, including President of the United States, and won numerous Pollie Awards from the AAPC, and the esteemed My Opponent Is Not A Nice Person Award from the Democratic Caucus.", "score": "1.5198009" }, { "id": "32399194", "title": "David Kuo (author)", "text": " at one time learning how to write screenplays. Kuo also had experience working in the political arena. For example, he worked on the Presidential Commission on Women in the Military and after the 1992 election, he was hired as Deputy Policy Director of Empower America (an organization started by Bill Bennett and Jack Kemp). A speechwriter during this period, he worked with politicians and businessmen ranging from Bob Dole to Steve Case. Kuo left politics in 1996 to help start a now defunct charity, The American Compass, which was created to distribute money to small charities that served the poor.", "score": "1.5138209" }, { "id": "1013403", "title": "Brad Mays", "text": " a Los Angeles distribution company dedicated to serving the independent film community. It was subsequently awarded a 2010 California Film Awards \"Diamond Award.\" In 2009, Brad Mays finished work on the feature-length political documentary The Audacity of Democracy, which followed the 2008 race for the Democratic Presidential Nomination and focused in particular on the notorious PUMA movement. In multiple Blog-Radio interviews, the director expressed dissatisfaction with the project, revealing that he had not been allowed to complete shooting in the manner originally agreed to. On June 6, 2011, Brad Mays discussed his personal and working relationship with his late wife Lorenda ", "score": "1.5115061" }, { "id": "32787764", "title": "Richard Burton (comics)", "text": "\"Democracy,\" a Judge Dredd storyline inherited from MacManus and published through 1991 ; Zenith (Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell), launched in 1987 ; Friday (Dave Gibbons and Will Simpson), launched in 1989 ; The Dead Man (John Wagner and John Ridgway), published in 1989–1990 ; \"Necropolis\" (John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra), 26-part Judge Dredd storyline published in 1990 ; Time Flies (Garth Ennis and Philip Bond), launched in 1990 ; Finn (Pat Mills), acquired in 1991 ; \"Judgement Day\" (Garth Ennis), published in 1992 ; Firekind (John Smith and Paul Marshall), published in 1993 After turning down a job offer with DC Comics, Burton was hired as an assistant editor at Marvel UK in March 1978, working for top editor Dez Skinn ", "score": "1.5090597" }, { "id": "31691538", "title": "Alexander Payne", "text": " Constantine Alexander Payne (born February 10, 1961) is an American film director, screenwriter and producer, He is best known for the films, Citizen Ruth (1996), Election (1999), About Schmidt (2002), Sideways (2004), The Descendants (2011), Nebraska (2013) and Downsizing (2017). They are noted for their dark humor and satirical depictions of contemporary American society. Payne is a two-time winner of the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and a three-time nominee of the Academy Award for Best Director. In 2017, Metacritic ranked Payne 2nd on its list of the 25 best film directors of the 21st century.", "score": "1.5041754" }, { "id": "8246251", "title": "Jai Ho Democracy", "text": " 'Jai Ho! Democracy', is a 2015 Indian comedy film written and directed by Ranjit Kapoor, who was also the dialogue writer of Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro and has been produced by Bikramjeet Bhullar of Indian Production House. It is a dark satire on Indian politics and takes a dig at the existing social and political morass India is staring at currently. It stars an ensemble cast that includes the likes of Om Puri, Annu Kapoor, Satish Kaushik, Adil Hussain and Seema Biswas. The film's trailer was released on 18 March 2015. and is scheduled to release on 24 April 2015. It is about the murky world of India's political class, where ministers and leaders procrastinate over everything, even on something as grave as border security. Jai Ho! Democracy also takes a satirical look at the media's desperation to stay ahead in the TRP game, sensationalizing even the most trivial situation without any qualms.", "score": "1.4976637" }, { "id": "1396851", "title": "Paul D. Zimmerman", "text": " He was a film critic for Newsweek magazine from 1967 to 1975, and also wrote for television shows including Sesame Street, but is best known for writing The King of Comedy (1982), directed by Martin Scorsese. He was also the co-writer of Lovers and Liars (1979) and Consuming Passions (1988) Zimmerman was the author of many other screenplays, mostly unproduced, as well as the books The Open Man, The Year the Mets Lost Last Place and The Marx Brothers at the Movies (1968). Active in the Nuclear Freeze movement, he managed to become a member of the Pennsylvania delegation to the Republican Party convention in 1984 in order to be the only person to vote against Ronald Reagan. Zimmerman died of colon cancer.", "score": "1.4962602" }, { "id": "4508634", "title": "Anthony Barnett (writer)", "text": " Barnett was a student at Cambridge University, where he was active in the Labour Club, and lodged with Nicholas Kaldor. A former member of the editorial committee of New Left Review, Barnett has written for the New Statesman, The Guardian and Prospect. He conceived the television film England's Henry Moore (1988), which concerned the sculptor's co-option by the British establishment. Barnett is a campaigner for democracy. He was the first Director of Charter 88 from 1988 to 1995 and Co-Director of the Convention on Modern Liberty (2008–2009) with Henry Porter. In 2001 he founded openDemocracy with Paul Hilder, Susie Richards and David Hayes and was ", "score": "1.4957416" }, { "id": "2445996", "title": "Lincoln (film)", "text": " While consulting on a Steven Spielberg project in 1999, Goodwin told Spielberg she was planning to write Team of Rivals, and Spielberg immediately told her he wanted the film rights. DreamWorks finalized the deal in 2001, and by the end of the year, John Logan signed on to write the script. His draft focused on Lincoln's friendship with Frederick Douglass. Playwright Paul Webb was hired to rewrite, and filming was set to begin in January 2006, but Spielberg delayed it out of dissatisfaction with the script. Liam Neeson said Webb's draft covered the entirety of Lincoln's term as president. Tony Kushner replaced Webb. Kushner considered Lincoln \"the greatest democratic leader in the world\" and found the writing assignment daunting because ", "score": "1.4920808" }, { "id": "4814109", "title": "Robert E. Sherwood", "text": " that eventually evolved to \"arsenal of democracy\", a frequent catchphrase in Roosevelt's wartime speeches. Sherwood was quoted on May 12, 1940 by The New York Times\" \"This country is already, in effect, an arsenal for the democratic Allies.\" After serving as director of the Overseas Branch of the Office of War Information from 1943 until the conclusion of the war, he returned to dramatic writing with the movie The Best Years of Our Lives, directed by William Wyler. The 1946 film, which explores changes in the lives of three soldiers after they return home from war, earned Sherwood an Academy Award for Best Screenplay.", "score": "1.4919894" }, { "id": "32305332", "title": "Democracy (film)", "text": " Democracy is a 1918 British silent war film directed by Sidney Morgan and starring Bruce Gordon, Queenie Thomas and Alice O'Brien.", "score": "1.4910057" }, { "id": "26232963", "title": "Lee Hae-jun", "text": "Coming Out (2000) - screenwriter ; Kick the Moon (2001) - original idea ; Conduct Zero (2002) - screenwriter ; Au Revoir, UFO (2004) - screenwriter ; Arahan (2004) - script editor ; Antarctic Journal (2005) - screenwriter ; Like a Virgin (2006) - director, screenwriter ; Castaway on the Moon (2009) - director, screenwriter ; A Hard Day (2014) - script editor ; My Dictator (2014) - director, screenwriter ; Golden Slumber (2017) - screenwriter ; Ashfall (2019) - director ", "score": "1.4894083" }, { "id": "7648185", "title": "Ron Dermer", "text": " Dermer worked as a political consultant for Natan Sharansky in the 1999 campaign, and from January 2001 for nearly three years he wrote a column \"The Numbers Game\" for The Jerusalem Post. In 2004, he and Sharansky co-wrote the best-selling book The Case For Democracy: The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny and Terror, famously endorsed by then US-President George W. Bush. In 2005, while Benjamin Netanyahu served as Finance Minister under Ariel Sharon, Dermer was appointed economic envoy at the Israeli embassy in Washington, a post for which he had to give up his American citizenship. In 2008, after his return ", "score": "1.4852014" }, { "id": "1341049", "title": "Democracy: An American Novel", "text": " When, on December 1, Madeleine Lee boards the train that takes her from New York to the capital she wants to find \"the mysterious gem which must lie hidden somewhere in politics\". However, what she encounters both in her parlour and elsewhere is an ill-assorted group of men corrupted by greed, money and power; protégés and office-seekers; and, generally, people who, for various reasons, are wholly unsuited for any political office. Her suitor, 50-year-old Silas P. Ratcliffe, is a case in point. A former governor of Illinois, he now serves as Senator from that state but is toying with the idea of running ", "score": "1.4835021" } ]
[ "Democracy (Numbers)\n \"Democracy\" marked the return of Oswald Kittner. Originally a one-time role, fans and executive producer Cheryl Heuton enjoyed having Jay Baruchel's performance as Oswald Kittner on the show. As a result of fans' request for a return appearance of Kittner, writers wrote \"Democracy\" and decided to feature Kittner.", "Democracy (Numbers)\n \"Democracy\" is the 18th episode of the third season of the American television show Numbers. Written by Cheryl Heuton and Nicolas Falacci, the episode highlights a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigation into the murder of one of their math consultant's friends while an agent learns that she has been selected for a United States Department of Justice (DOJ) assignment. Heuton and Falacci also brought back fan favorite Oswald Kittner, portrayed by Jay Baruchel. The episode marks series regular Diane Farr's final appearance before delivering her baby. Her pregnancy during season three presented writers and producers with the challenge of deciding whether to include a pregnancy into the season's storyline. They decided against it and opted to hide her pregnancy. While filming \"Democracy\", Farr had her baby. \"Democracy\" first aired in the United States on March 9, 2007. Critics gave the episode positive reviews.", "The Movies\n Using The Movies, Alex Chan, a French resident with no previous filmmaking experience, took four days to create The French Democracy, a short machinima political film about the 2005 civil unrest in France.", "Democracy (Numbers)\n \"Democracy\" marks the temporary exit of Diane Farr. During the start of season three, series regular Diane Farr learned that she was pregnant. The series' writers and producers discussed whether to include the pregnancy in the storyline for the season. At the time, series writers and producers planned for Larry to romance Megan during season three. They decided against a story involving pregnancy, feeling that it was too early in Larry and Megan's relationship to discuss pregnancy. They also felt that it was too early in the series to explore working mothers in the FBI. Furthermore, series regular Peter MacNicol's temporary departure for 24 complicated the storyline even further, as the potential father would be absent for part of a season.", "Democracy (play)\n 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.", "Democracy: An American Novel\n Democracy: An American Novel is a political novel written by Henry Brooks Adams and published anonymously in 1880. Only after the writer's death in 1918 did his publisher reveal Adams's authorship although, upon publication, the novel had immediately become popular. Contemporaneous conjecture placed the book under the joint authorship of Clarence King, John Hay and Henry Adams and their spouses who lived side by side on H street in Washington, D.C. and were collectively sometimes called \"the Five of Hearts.\" In January 2005, the Washington National Opera premiered Democracy: An American Comedy, an opera by Scott Wheeler and Romulus Linney based upon Henry Adams' book. Democracy is a novel about political power, its acquisition, ", "Robert Ellis (author)\n the New York Film Festival. His work in film continued, particularly in advertising where he won a regional Emmy in Philadelphia for CBS News. In 1988, Ellis found representation as a writer-director in feature films and moved to Los Angeles where he ghostwrote the final draft of A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master. Maintaining a keen interest in politics ever since the Vietnam War, Ellis became associated with The Campaign Group. During political years, he wrote, produced, directed, and often shot and edited, more than fifteen hundred television ads for political candidates seeking every type of office, including President of the United States, and won numerous Pollie Awards from the AAPC, and the esteemed My Opponent Is Not A Nice Person Award from the Democratic Caucus.", "David Kuo (author)\n at one time learning how to write screenplays. Kuo also had experience working in the political arena. For example, he worked on the Presidential Commission on Women in the Military and after the 1992 election, he was hired as Deputy Policy Director of Empower America (an organization started by Bill Bennett and Jack Kemp). A speechwriter during this period, he worked with politicians and businessmen ranging from Bob Dole to Steve Case. Kuo left politics in 1996 to help start a now defunct charity, The American Compass, which was created to distribute money to small charities that served the poor.", "Brad Mays\n a Los Angeles distribution company dedicated to serving the independent film community. It was subsequently awarded a 2010 California Film Awards \"Diamond Award.\" In 2009, Brad Mays finished work on the feature-length political documentary The Audacity of Democracy, which followed the 2008 race for the Democratic Presidential Nomination and focused in particular on the notorious PUMA movement. In multiple Blog-Radio interviews, the director expressed dissatisfaction with the project, revealing that he had not been allowed to complete shooting in the manner originally agreed to. On June 6, 2011, Brad Mays discussed his personal and working relationship with his late wife Lorenda ", "Richard Burton (comics)\n\"Democracy,\" a Judge Dredd storyline inherited from MacManus and published through 1991 ; Zenith (Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell), launched in 1987 ; Friday (Dave Gibbons and Will Simpson), launched in 1989 ; The Dead Man (John Wagner and John Ridgway), published in 1989–1990 ; \"Necropolis\" (John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra), 26-part Judge Dredd storyline published in 1990 ; Time Flies (Garth Ennis and Philip Bond), launched in 1990 ; Finn (Pat Mills), acquired in 1991 ; \"Judgement Day\" (Garth Ennis), published in 1992 ; Firekind (John Smith and Paul Marshall), published in 1993 After turning down a job offer with DC Comics, Burton was hired as an assistant editor at Marvel UK in March 1978, working for top editor Dez Skinn ", "Alexander Payne\n Constantine Alexander Payne (born February 10, 1961) is an American film director, screenwriter and producer, He is best known for the films, Citizen Ruth (1996), Election (1999), About Schmidt (2002), Sideways (2004), The Descendants (2011), Nebraska (2013) and Downsizing (2017). They are noted for their dark humor and satirical depictions of contemporary American society. Payne is a two-time winner of the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and a three-time nominee of the Academy Award for Best Director. In 2017, Metacritic ranked Payne 2nd on its list of the 25 best film directors of the 21st century.", "Jai Ho Democracy\n 'Jai Ho! Democracy', is a 2015 Indian comedy film written and directed by Ranjit Kapoor, who was also the dialogue writer of Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro and has been produced by Bikramjeet Bhullar of Indian Production House. It is a dark satire on Indian politics and takes a dig at the existing social and political morass India is staring at currently. It stars an ensemble cast that includes the likes of Om Puri, Annu Kapoor, Satish Kaushik, Adil Hussain and Seema Biswas. The film's trailer was released on 18 March 2015. and is scheduled to release on 24 April 2015. It is about the murky world of India's political class, where ministers and leaders procrastinate over everything, even on something as grave as border security. Jai Ho! Democracy also takes a satirical look at the media's desperation to stay ahead in the TRP game, sensationalizing even the most trivial situation without any qualms.", "Paul D. Zimmerman\n He was a film critic for Newsweek magazine from 1967 to 1975, and also wrote for television shows including Sesame Street, but is best known for writing The King of Comedy (1982), directed by Martin Scorsese. He was also the co-writer of Lovers and Liars (1979) and Consuming Passions (1988) Zimmerman was the author of many other screenplays, mostly unproduced, as well as the books The Open Man, The Year the Mets Lost Last Place and The Marx Brothers at the Movies (1968). Active in the Nuclear Freeze movement, he managed to become a member of the Pennsylvania delegation to the Republican Party convention in 1984 in order to be the only person to vote against Ronald Reagan. Zimmerman died of colon cancer.", "Anthony Barnett (writer)\n Barnett was a student at Cambridge University, where he was active in the Labour Club, and lodged with Nicholas Kaldor. A former member of the editorial committee of New Left Review, Barnett has written for the New Statesman, The Guardian and Prospect. He conceived the television film England's Henry Moore (1988), which concerned the sculptor's co-option by the British establishment. Barnett is a campaigner for democracy. He was the first Director of Charter 88 from 1988 to 1995 and Co-Director of the Convention on Modern Liberty (2008–2009) with Henry Porter. In 2001 he founded openDemocracy with Paul Hilder, Susie Richards and David Hayes and was ", "Lincoln (film)\n While consulting on a Steven Spielberg project in 1999, Goodwin told Spielberg she was planning to write Team of Rivals, and Spielberg immediately told her he wanted the film rights. DreamWorks finalized the deal in 2001, and by the end of the year, John Logan signed on to write the script. His draft focused on Lincoln's friendship with Frederick Douglass. Playwright Paul Webb was hired to rewrite, and filming was set to begin in January 2006, but Spielberg delayed it out of dissatisfaction with the script. Liam Neeson said Webb's draft covered the entirety of Lincoln's term as president. Tony Kushner replaced Webb. Kushner considered Lincoln \"the greatest democratic leader in the world\" and found the writing assignment daunting because ", "Robert E. Sherwood\n that eventually evolved to \"arsenal of democracy\", a frequent catchphrase in Roosevelt's wartime speeches. Sherwood was quoted on May 12, 1940 by The New York Times\" \"This country is already, in effect, an arsenal for the democratic Allies.\" After serving as director of the Overseas Branch of the Office of War Information from 1943 until the conclusion of the war, he returned to dramatic writing with the movie The Best Years of Our Lives, directed by William Wyler. The 1946 film, which explores changes in the lives of three soldiers after they return home from war, earned Sherwood an Academy Award for Best Screenplay.", "Democracy (film)\n Democracy is a 1918 British silent war film directed by Sidney Morgan and starring Bruce Gordon, Queenie Thomas and Alice O'Brien.", "Lee Hae-jun\nComing Out (2000) - screenwriter ; Kick the Moon (2001) - original idea ; Conduct Zero (2002) - screenwriter ; Au Revoir, UFO (2004) - screenwriter ; Arahan (2004) - script editor ; Antarctic Journal (2005) - screenwriter ; Like a Virgin (2006) - director, screenwriter ; Castaway on the Moon (2009) - director, screenwriter ; A Hard Day (2014) - script editor ; My Dictator (2014) - director, screenwriter ; Golden Slumber (2017) - screenwriter ; Ashfall (2019) - director ", "Ron Dermer\n Dermer worked as a political consultant for Natan Sharansky in the 1999 campaign, and from January 2001 for nearly three years he wrote a column \"The Numbers Game\" for The Jerusalem Post. In 2004, he and Sharansky co-wrote the best-selling book The Case For Democracy: The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny and Terror, famously endorsed by then US-President George W. Bush. In 2005, while Benjamin Netanyahu served as Finance Minister under Ariel Sharon, Dermer was appointed economic envoy at the Israeli embassy in Washington, a post for which he had to give up his American citizenship. In 2008, after his return ", "Democracy: An American Novel\n When, on December 1, Madeleine Lee boards the train that takes her from New York to the capital she wants to find \"the mysterious gem which must lie hidden somewhere in politics\". However, what she encounters both in her parlour and elsewhere is an ill-assorted group of men corrupted by greed, money and power; protégés and office-seekers; and, generally, people who, for various reasons, are wholly unsuited for any political office. Her suitor, 50-year-old Silas P. Ratcliffe, is a case in point. A former governor of Illinois, he now serves as Senator from that state but is toying with the idea of running " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Revelations?
[ "Tony Gayton" ]
screenwriter
Revelations (Hell on Wheels)
5,563,710
86
[ { "id": "13445551", "title": "The Revelations of 'Becka Paulson", "text": " The story was adapted into an episode of 1995 television series The Outer Limits. Brad Wright wrote the teleplay, and Steven Weber directed. In July 2020, Deadline Hollywood announced that The CW is adapting the story into a one-hour drama series titled Revelations.", "score": "1.6043764" }, { "id": "31536551", "title": "Revelations (2005 TV series)", "text": " Revelations is an American apocalyptic drama television miniseries created by David Seltzer and based on the Book of Revelation. The series follows two central characters, an astrophysicist (Bill Pullman) and a nun (Natascha McElhone), in a race against time to see if the end of the world can be averted. It also stars Michael Massee, Mark Rendall, Chelsey Coyle, Brittney Coyle, John Rhys-Davies, Orla Brady, Alexa Nikolas, Tobin Bell, Martin Starr, Fred Durst, and Caryn Green.", "score": "1.5605173" }, { "id": "27271112", "title": "Erik Hoel", "text": " Erik also authored a literary fiction novel The Revelations, a mystery set at New York University concerning a fictional scholarship program that brings together eight young consciousness researchers, one of whom is murdered. Publishers Weekly called it \"a dizzying, impressive debut\".", "score": "1.558885" }, { "id": "1325217", "title": "Revelations Entertainment", "text": " Revelations Entertainment is an independent movie production company founded by actor Morgan Freeman and business partner Lori McCreary in 1996. Its mission statement, to \"reveal truth,\" drives to company produce thought-provoking entertainment with artistic integrity and \"soul.\" In 2006, Revelations became the first film production company in history to distribute a film (10 Items or Less) online while the movie was still playing in theaters. This was achieved by using ClickStar (also founded by Freeman and McCreary as a joint venture with Intel Corporation) as their online distribution site.", "score": "1.5315797" }, { "id": "12298434", "title": "Revelations (The X-Files)", "text": " \"Revelations\" was written by Kim Newton and directed by David Nutter, his final episode of The X-Files. Nutter decided that, after the episode, he wished to pursue different things and that the series was in excellent hands with fellow directors Rob Bowman and Kim Manners. Actor Kenneth Welsh, who appears in the episode as the demonic Simon Gates, had previously portrayed a chief antagonist in the critically acclaimed 1990 serial drama Twin Peaks, alongside Duchovny. The episode contains a role reversal with Dana Scully the believer and Fox Mulder the skeptic, which David Duchovny called \"a refreshing change of pace.\" Nutter believed that by examining faith, the show's creators were able to explore the nuances and seeming contradictions of Scully and her worldview. The episode was ", "score": "1.4779081" }, { "id": "29798488", "title": "Michael Tolkin", "text": "Gleaming the Cube (1989 – screenplay) ; The Rapture (1991 – screenplay/director) ; The Player (1992 – screenplay, from his novel) ; Deep Cover (1992 – co-screenplay) ; The New Age (1994 – screenplay/director) ; The Burning Season (1994 – co-teleplay) ; Deep Impact (1998 – co-screenplay) ; The Haunting (1999 – co-screenplay, uncredited) ; Changing Lanes (2002 – co-screenplay) ; Dawn of the Dead (2004 – co-screenplay, uncredited) ; Nine (2009 – co-screenplay) ; Escape at Dannemora (2018 - miniseries, co-creator, writer) ", "score": "1.4750118" }, { "id": "14272730", "title": "Marc Shmuger", "text": "1987: Dead of Winter (also scriptwriter) ; 2013: We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks (documentary) ; 2016: Zero Days (documentary) ; 2019: Anna 2013: The Spectacular Now ; 2014: Lucy ; 2017: The Circle Producer Executive Producer", "score": "1.4748183" }, { "id": "27544152", "title": "Gerard Maguire", "text": " While producing a film adaptation of a novel during the mid-1980s, he replaced the screenwriter originally working on the screenplay. Contacted by Columbia Pictures, he flew to California to discuss the project, he met producer and then Senior Vice-President Jane Alsobrook. He soon began a romantic relationship and Maguire ended up staying in Los Angeles for the next several years. In 1993, he and Lance Peters co-wrote Gross Misconduct later directed by George T. Miller and, the following year, wrote Seduce Me: Pamela Principle 2 and was the script supervisor for Tunnel Vision. He was also involved in acting workshops with actors such as Jon Voight among others.", "score": "1.4557272" }, { "id": "7930191", "title": "Lori McCreary", "text": " McCreary graduated from UCLA with a degree in Computer Science. While still in college, she co-founded software company CompuLaw, now a part of Aderant. McCreary's appreciation for the stage play Bopha! inspired her to go into motion picture production. Actor Morgan Freeman was signed to direct the film. Later, the pair partnered in the formation of Revelations Entertainment in 1996 with a mission to produce entertainment that reveals truth. As Revelations CEO, McCreary produced The Magic of Belle Isle, directed by Rob Reiner. Before that, she produced Invictus, directed by Clint Eastwood, with Freeman starring in the long-awaited portrayal of Nelson Mandela and co-starring Matt Damon. She is currently Executive Producer of CBS's hit series Madam Secretary starring Téa Leoni. She is also Executive producer of The Story ", "score": "1.4553028" }, { "id": "10603306", "title": "Revelations (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)", "text": " \"Revelations\" is the seventh episode of season three of the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It was written by Doug Petrie, directed by James A. Contner, and first broadcast on November 17, 1998.", "score": "1.4547575" }, { "id": "7930190", "title": "Lori McCreary", "text": " Lori McCreary (born in Antioch, California) is an American motion picture producer and computer scientist. She is CEO of the production company Revelations Entertainment, which she co-founded with actor Morgan Freeman.", "score": "1.4463571" }, { "id": "30996107", "title": "Beyond the Law (1993 film)", "text": " Larry Ferguson wrote the screenplay after reading the article \"Undercover Angel\" by Lawrence Linderman in the July, 1981 issue of Playboy on an undercover agent named Dan Black. Black served as a technical advisor on the film and appeared as an extra in the movie.", "score": "1.444941" }, { "id": "14433677", "title": "John Hopkins (writer)", "text": " the latter is a rare exploration of homosexuality in the 1960s. Hour of Darkness featured Glenda Jackson and Nicol Williamson in the lead roles. Hopkins made his feature film debut with the screenplay he co-wrote with director Roy Ward Baker Two Left Feet (1963), a lightweight comedy-drama with Michael Crawford. He received co-screenwriter credit with Richard Maibaum for the fourth James Bond film James Bond movie Thunderball (1965). He co-wrote the screenplay for Leslie Thomas' boys-in-uniform comedy The Virgin Soldiers (1969) and worked on the screenplay for the film adaptation of Man of La Mancha (1972), although he was removed from this project ", "score": "1.4408135" }, { "id": "3222985", "title": "Russell T Davies", "text": " so poorly received his other scripts for the show would be written under the pseudonym Leo Vaughn. In 1994, Davies quit all of his producing jobs, and was offered a scriptwriting role on the late-night soap opera Revelations, created by him, Tony Wood, and Brian B. Thompson. The series was a tongue-in-cheek deconstruction of organised religion, and featured his first overtly homosexual character: a lesbian vicar portrayed by Sue Holderness, who came out of the closet in a two-hander episode with Carole Nimmons. Davies attributes the revelation about Holderness's character as a consequence of both the \"pressure cooker nature\" of the show and the recent ordination of female vicars ", "score": "1.4400525" }, { "id": "2946691", "title": "Bobby Florsheim", "text": " Robert Florsheim (born December 19, 1969) is an American screenwriter, best known for co-writing The Passion Of The Ark with Josh Stolberg, (the basis for the film \"Evan Almighty\"). Their original script was reported by Daily Variety as the highest priced spec script ever sold by unproduced screenwriters (April, 2004). In refashioning the script into \"Evan Almighty\", Universal Studios discarded the script and then hired screenwriter Steve Oedekerk, who received sole writing credit on the finished film. He also co-wrote the scripts for Man-Witch (starring Jack Black and directed by Todd Phillips), the book adaptation of The Spellman Files, produced by Laura Ziskin, as well as a remake of Alfred Hitchcock's \"To Catch a Thief\". In addition, Florsheim has written scripts for Steven Spielberg, Mike Myers, Michael Keaton, Jerry Bruckheimer, John Davis, Bette Midler, and others. Born in Chicago, to Carol Levy and Jim Florsheim, he attended the Francis W. Parker School. He graduated with honors from Stanford University with a degree in Drama in 1992. In 1995, Florsheim received his Master of Fine Arts from the USC School of Cinema-Television. He lives in Los Angeles. He is married to former Judge Joe Brown reporter Jacque Kessler.", "score": "1.4398031" }, { "id": "27523978", "title": "Aperture Entertainment", "text": " Aperture Entertainment reps a wide array of writers, directors and actors including Cory Goodman (Priest, Lore, The Brood, The Last Witch Hunter), Jeremy Passmore (Special, Red Dawn) & Andre Fabrizio (San Andreas 3D The Prince, Nocturne), Tao Ruspoli (Fix), Simon Rumley (Red White & Blue, The Living and the Dead), Scott Mann (Heist), Steven C. Miller (Escape Plan 2, Marauders) and Jeremy Lott (Man At Arms, Lore''). The company also reps a number of actors including actress/singer Jessica Lowndes (90210, Altitude), actress Alex Essoe (Starry Eyes). Aperture Entertainment is currently producing several films including Vice written by his clients Jeremy Passmore & Andre Fabrizio and starring Bruce Willis, and The Prince also written by Passmore and Fabrizio and starring Bruce Willis, Jason Patric, John Cusack, 50 Cent and Aperture client Jessica Lowndes, ", "score": "1.4368013" }, { "id": "5139778", "title": "Kristin Kuhns Alexandre", "text": " Kristin Kuhns Alexandre (born July 15, 1948, in Dayton, Ohio; died September 12, 2021 in New York City) was an American writer, journalist, author, screenwriter, and producer. She is best known for her work as a WGA screenwriter and her role as executive producer for the action thriller, \"Altar Rock,\" directed by Andrzej Bartkowiak.", "score": "1.4355917" }, { "id": "15365635", "title": "John Hodge (screenwriter)", "text": "Shallow Grave (1994, writer) ; Trainspotting (1996, screenplay) ; A Life Less Ordinary (1997, writer) ; The Beach (2000, screenplay) ; The Final Curtain (2002, writer) ; The Seeker: The Dark Is Rising (2007, screenplay) ; Alien Love Triangle (2008, short, writer) ; The Sweeney (2012, story) ; Trance (2013, screenplay) ; The Program (2015) ; T2 Trainspotting (2017) ", "score": "1.4271206" }, { "id": "4097978", "title": "Resident Evil: Revelations", "text": " Revelations was developed by Capcom and directed by Koshi Nakanishi, who had worked as a game designer for Resident Evil 5. The game was developed simultaneously with Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D and the team in charge of the project was not involved in the production of Resident Evil 6. The team chose to develop the game for the Nintendo 3DS because they felt that its 3D capabilities could produce a \"tense, scary experience with a realistic atmosphere that could make players feel like there could be something lurking around every corner.\" They decided to give the game an episodic structure with short and ", "score": "1.4270852" }, { "id": "28831430", "title": "Scriptment", "text": "Writer-director-producer James Cameron delivered a 57-page scriptment that he was contracted to write during the development phase of the first Spider-Man (2002) theatrical movie, which he was also going to direct. When Cameron left the project, screenwriter David Koepp expanded it into a first draft script, which was later worked on by other uncredited writers. ; In 2005, Sony Pictures paid screenwriter Ken Nolan US $3 million for his 75-page scriptment that was an adaptation of the then-unpublished Whitley Strieber novel The Grays. Nolan had only one produced writing credit at the time, the screenplay for the military film Black Hawk Down, a project for which he had submitted three different scriptments to producer Jerry Bruckheimer and executive producers Mike Stenson, and Chad Oman for approval during the writing process. Filmmakers Kriv Stenders ", "score": "1.4249741" } ]
[ "The Revelations of 'Becka Paulson\n The story was adapted into an episode of 1995 television series The Outer Limits. Brad Wright wrote the teleplay, and Steven Weber directed. In July 2020, Deadline Hollywood announced that The CW is adapting the story into a one-hour drama series titled Revelations.", "Revelations (2005 TV series)\n Revelations is an American apocalyptic drama television miniseries created by David Seltzer and based on the Book of Revelation. The series follows two central characters, an astrophysicist (Bill Pullman) and a nun (Natascha McElhone), in a race against time to see if the end of the world can be averted. It also stars Michael Massee, Mark Rendall, Chelsey Coyle, Brittney Coyle, John Rhys-Davies, Orla Brady, Alexa Nikolas, Tobin Bell, Martin Starr, Fred Durst, and Caryn Green.", "Erik Hoel\n Erik also authored a literary fiction novel The Revelations, a mystery set at New York University concerning a fictional scholarship program that brings together eight young consciousness researchers, one of whom is murdered. Publishers Weekly called it \"a dizzying, impressive debut\".", "Revelations Entertainment\n Revelations Entertainment is an independent movie production company founded by actor Morgan Freeman and business partner Lori McCreary in 1996. Its mission statement, to \"reveal truth,\" drives to company produce thought-provoking entertainment with artistic integrity and \"soul.\" In 2006, Revelations became the first film production company in history to distribute a film (10 Items or Less) online while the movie was still playing in theaters. This was achieved by using ClickStar (also founded by Freeman and McCreary as a joint venture with Intel Corporation) as their online distribution site.", "Revelations (The X-Files)\n \"Revelations\" was written by Kim Newton and directed by David Nutter, his final episode of The X-Files. Nutter decided that, after the episode, he wished to pursue different things and that the series was in excellent hands with fellow directors Rob Bowman and Kim Manners. Actor Kenneth Welsh, who appears in the episode as the demonic Simon Gates, had previously portrayed a chief antagonist in the critically acclaimed 1990 serial drama Twin Peaks, alongside Duchovny. The episode contains a role reversal with Dana Scully the believer and Fox Mulder the skeptic, which David Duchovny called \"a refreshing change of pace.\" Nutter believed that by examining faith, the show's creators were able to explore the nuances and seeming contradictions of Scully and her worldview. The episode was ", "Michael Tolkin\nGleaming the Cube (1989 – screenplay) ; The Rapture (1991 – screenplay/director) ; The Player (1992 – screenplay, from his novel) ; Deep Cover (1992 – co-screenplay) ; The New Age (1994 – screenplay/director) ; The Burning Season (1994 – co-teleplay) ; Deep Impact (1998 – co-screenplay) ; The Haunting (1999 – co-screenplay, uncredited) ; Changing Lanes (2002 – co-screenplay) ; Dawn of the Dead (2004 – co-screenplay, uncredited) ; Nine (2009 – co-screenplay) ; Escape at Dannemora (2018 - miniseries, co-creator, writer) ", "Marc Shmuger\n1987: Dead of Winter (also scriptwriter) ; 2013: We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks (documentary) ; 2016: Zero Days (documentary) ; 2019: Anna 2013: The Spectacular Now ; 2014: Lucy ; 2017: The Circle Producer Executive Producer", "Gerard Maguire\n While producing a film adaptation of a novel during the mid-1980s, he replaced the screenwriter originally working on the screenplay. Contacted by Columbia Pictures, he flew to California to discuss the project, he met producer and then Senior Vice-President Jane Alsobrook. He soon began a romantic relationship and Maguire ended up staying in Los Angeles for the next several years. In 1993, he and Lance Peters co-wrote Gross Misconduct later directed by George T. Miller and, the following year, wrote Seduce Me: Pamela Principle 2 and was the script supervisor for Tunnel Vision. He was also involved in acting workshops with actors such as Jon Voight among others.", "Lori McCreary\n McCreary graduated from UCLA with a degree in Computer Science. While still in college, she co-founded software company CompuLaw, now a part of Aderant. McCreary's appreciation for the stage play Bopha! inspired her to go into motion picture production. Actor Morgan Freeman was signed to direct the film. Later, the pair partnered in the formation of Revelations Entertainment in 1996 with a mission to produce entertainment that reveals truth. As Revelations CEO, McCreary produced The Magic of Belle Isle, directed by Rob Reiner. Before that, she produced Invictus, directed by Clint Eastwood, with Freeman starring in the long-awaited portrayal of Nelson Mandela and co-starring Matt Damon. She is currently Executive Producer of CBS's hit series Madam Secretary starring Téa Leoni. She is also Executive producer of The Story ", "Revelations (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)\n \"Revelations\" is the seventh episode of season three of the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It was written by Doug Petrie, directed by James A. Contner, and first broadcast on November 17, 1998.", "Lori McCreary\n Lori McCreary (born in Antioch, California) is an American motion picture producer and computer scientist. She is CEO of the production company Revelations Entertainment, which she co-founded with actor Morgan Freeman.", "Beyond the Law (1993 film)\n Larry Ferguson wrote the screenplay after reading the article \"Undercover Angel\" by Lawrence Linderman in the July, 1981 issue of Playboy on an undercover agent named Dan Black. Black served as a technical advisor on the film and appeared as an extra in the movie.", "John Hopkins (writer)\n the latter is a rare exploration of homosexuality in the 1960s. Hour of Darkness featured Glenda Jackson and Nicol Williamson in the lead roles. Hopkins made his feature film debut with the screenplay he co-wrote with director Roy Ward Baker Two Left Feet (1963), a lightweight comedy-drama with Michael Crawford. He received co-screenwriter credit with Richard Maibaum for the fourth James Bond film James Bond movie Thunderball (1965). He co-wrote the screenplay for Leslie Thomas' boys-in-uniform comedy The Virgin Soldiers (1969) and worked on the screenplay for the film adaptation of Man of La Mancha (1972), although he was removed from this project ", "Russell T Davies\n so poorly received his other scripts for the show would be written under the pseudonym Leo Vaughn. In 1994, Davies quit all of his producing jobs, and was offered a scriptwriting role on the late-night soap opera Revelations, created by him, Tony Wood, and Brian B. Thompson. The series was a tongue-in-cheek deconstruction of organised religion, and featured his first overtly homosexual character: a lesbian vicar portrayed by Sue Holderness, who came out of the closet in a two-hander episode with Carole Nimmons. Davies attributes the revelation about Holderness's character as a consequence of both the \"pressure cooker nature\" of the show and the recent ordination of female vicars ", "Bobby Florsheim\n Robert Florsheim (born December 19, 1969) is an American screenwriter, best known for co-writing The Passion Of The Ark with Josh Stolberg, (the basis for the film \"Evan Almighty\"). Their original script was reported by Daily Variety as the highest priced spec script ever sold by unproduced screenwriters (April, 2004). In refashioning the script into \"Evan Almighty\", Universal Studios discarded the script and then hired screenwriter Steve Oedekerk, who received sole writing credit on the finished film. He also co-wrote the scripts for Man-Witch (starring Jack Black and directed by Todd Phillips), the book adaptation of The Spellman Files, produced by Laura Ziskin, as well as a remake of Alfred Hitchcock's \"To Catch a Thief\". In addition, Florsheim has written scripts for Steven Spielberg, Mike Myers, Michael Keaton, Jerry Bruckheimer, John Davis, Bette Midler, and others. Born in Chicago, to Carol Levy and Jim Florsheim, he attended the Francis W. Parker School. He graduated with honors from Stanford University with a degree in Drama in 1992. In 1995, Florsheim received his Master of Fine Arts from the USC School of Cinema-Television. He lives in Los Angeles. He is married to former Judge Joe Brown reporter Jacque Kessler.", "Aperture Entertainment\n Aperture Entertainment reps a wide array of writers, directors and actors including Cory Goodman (Priest, Lore, The Brood, The Last Witch Hunter), Jeremy Passmore (Special, Red Dawn) & Andre Fabrizio (San Andreas 3D The Prince, Nocturne), Tao Ruspoli (Fix), Simon Rumley (Red White & Blue, The Living and the Dead), Scott Mann (Heist), Steven C. Miller (Escape Plan 2, Marauders) and Jeremy Lott (Man At Arms, Lore''). The company also reps a number of actors including actress/singer Jessica Lowndes (90210, Altitude), actress Alex Essoe (Starry Eyes). Aperture Entertainment is currently producing several films including Vice written by his clients Jeremy Passmore & Andre Fabrizio and starring Bruce Willis, and The Prince also written by Passmore and Fabrizio and starring Bruce Willis, Jason Patric, John Cusack, 50 Cent and Aperture client Jessica Lowndes, ", "Kristin Kuhns Alexandre\n Kristin Kuhns Alexandre (born July 15, 1948, in Dayton, Ohio; died September 12, 2021 in New York City) was an American writer, journalist, author, screenwriter, and producer. She is best known for her work as a WGA screenwriter and her role as executive producer for the action thriller, \"Altar Rock,\" directed by Andrzej Bartkowiak.", "John Hodge (screenwriter)\nShallow Grave (1994, writer) ; Trainspotting (1996, screenplay) ; A Life Less Ordinary (1997, writer) ; The Beach (2000, screenplay) ; The Final Curtain (2002, writer) ; The Seeker: The Dark Is Rising (2007, screenplay) ; Alien Love Triangle (2008, short, writer) ; The Sweeney (2012, story) ; Trance (2013, screenplay) ; The Program (2015) ; T2 Trainspotting (2017) ", "Resident Evil: Revelations\n Revelations was developed by Capcom and directed by Koshi Nakanishi, who had worked as a game designer for Resident Evil 5. The game was developed simultaneously with Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D and the team in charge of the project was not involved in the production of Resident Evil 6. The team chose to develop the game for the Nintendo 3DS because they felt that its 3D capabilities could produce a \"tense, scary experience with a realistic atmosphere that could make players feel like there could be something lurking around every corner.\" They decided to give the game an episodic structure with short and ", "Scriptment\nWriter-director-producer James Cameron delivered a 57-page scriptment that he was contracted to write during the development phase of the first Spider-Man (2002) theatrical movie, which he was also going to direct. When Cameron left the project, screenwriter David Koepp expanded it into a first draft script, which was later worked on by other uncredited writers. ; In 2005, Sony Pictures paid screenwriter Ken Nolan US $3 million for his 75-page scriptment that was an adaptation of the then-unpublished Whitley Strieber novel The Grays. Nolan had only one produced writing credit at the time, the screenplay for the military film Black Hawk Down, a project for which he had submitted three different scriptments to producer Jerry Bruckheimer and executive producers Mike Stenson, and Chad Oman for approval during the writing process. Filmmakers Kriv Stenders " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Ending It?
[ "Val Gielgud", "Val Henry Gielgud", "Val H. Gielgud" ]
screenwriter
Ending It
1,134,562
69
[ { "id": "9538575", "title": "Broadway Bill", "text": " happy ending of the original script, wanting instead a more bittersweet and ambivalent ending comment on the American success ethic. With Riskin on vacation in Europe and unavailable, Capra invited former Paramount screenwriter Sidney Buchman to Palo Alto to discuss changes to the end of the film. By the end of the evening, Buchman wrote four pages of new scenes depicting the horse's death after crossing the finish line, the subsequent funeral, and new ending. Buchman, who finished the new scenes only a few hours before the final race scene was filmed, was never credited for his contribution. He would later write the screenplay for Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939).", "score": "1.478337" }, { "id": "1396851", "title": "Paul D. Zimmerman", "text": " He was a film critic for Newsweek magazine from 1967 to 1975, and also wrote for television shows including Sesame Street, but is best known for writing The King of Comedy (1982), directed by Martin Scorsese. He was also the co-writer of Lovers and Liars (1979) and Consuming Passions (1988) Zimmerman was the author of many other screenplays, mostly unproduced, as well as the books The Open Man, The Year the Mets Lost Last Place and The Marx Brothers at the Movies (1968). Active in the Nuclear Freeze movement, he managed to become a member of the Pennsylvania delegation to the Republican Party convention in 1984 in order to be the only person to vote against Ronald Reagan. Zimmerman died of colon cancer.", "score": "1.4564009" }, { "id": "6970857", "title": "Michael McDowell (author)", "text": " and featured three different endings; however, the novelization was based on the shooting script and includes an additional fourth ending that was cut from the film. He also contributed screenplays to a number of television horror anthologies, including Tales from the Darkside. McDowell was one of seventeen contemporary British and American horror writers interviewed by Douglas E. Winter in his 1985 interview book Faces of Fear. Of his writing, McDowell says in this book: \"I am a commercial writer and I'm proud of that. I am writing things to be put in the bookstore next month. I think it is a mistake to try to write for the ages.\" Stephen King described McDowell as \"the finest writer of paperback originals in America today\".", "score": "1.4473163" }, { "id": "29768827", "title": "The Last One (Friends)", "text": " The series' creators completed the first draft of the hour-long finale in January 2004, four months prior to its airing on May 6. Before writing the episode, David Crane, Marta Kauffman and Kevin S. Bright decided to watch the series finales of other sitcoms, paying attention to what worked and what did not. Kauffman found that they liked the ones which stayed true to the series, and they found the finale of The Mary Tyler Moore Show to be the gold standard. The writers had difficulty writing the finale, and spent several days thinking about the final scene without being ", "score": "1.4461304" }, { "id": "6888164", "title": "Entertainment Experience", "text": " Seven of the eight scripts are based on various separate scripts, contributed by the audience. Based on these contributions, Paul Verhoeven and Robert Alberdingk Thijm composed a script each time, which formed the basis for the next script. In total 85 participants contributed to the final scripts. Several recurring contributors are mentioned below. The teams could write their own ending. The winning screenplay was written by Stephan Brenninkmeijer and Fleur Jansen.", "score": "1.4446075" }, { "id": "28422169", "title": "Spenser Cohen", "text": " In March 2012, Cohen directed Diana DeGarmo's music video \"Good Goodbye\". Cohen began his writing career by drafting the screenplay for Extinction. In December 2013, it was revealed that the screenplay had been included in the 2013 Black List of the year's best unproduced scripts in Hollywood. In 2019, Cohen was writing the script for Moonfall. On February 21, 2019, Amblin Partners announced it had bought Cohen's script for the science fiction film Distant. In August 2021, Cohen wrote the most recent screenplay and story for The Expendables 4. He wrote the script for the upcoming horror film Horrorscope.", "score": "1.4334567" }, { "id": "10966421", "title": "Duane Adler", "text": " Duane Adler wrote the original screenplay for the 2001 film Save the Last Dance. Paramount Pictures hired Cheryl Edwards to rewrite the screenplay, and she worked on it in the course of nine months. Paramount tentatively gave both writers their first screenplay credits, and Adler requested arbitration to claim sole screenplay credit based on his primary contribution. The first arbitration case was inconclusive due to a factual error, and a second arbitration case led to Adler receiving story credit, with both Adler and Edwards receiving screenplay credit. Adler also wrote the film's 2006 sequel Save the Last Dance 2 and co-wrote the 2006 film Step Up with Melissa Rosenberg. In 2008, he began writing Venice Beach, a \"music-driven romance\" starring singer Ne-Yo, who had ", "score": "1.4269146" }, { "id": "10521786", "title": "Robert Towne", "text": " Towne received great acclaim for his film scripts The Last Detail (1973), Chinatown (1974), and Shampoo (1975). He was nominated for an Oscar for all three scripts, winning for Chinatown. According to Sam Wasson's The Big Goodbye: Chinatown and the Last Years of Hollywood, Towne \"secretly employed an old college friend named Edward Taylor as his uncredited writing partner for more than 40 years.\" Towne was credited for his work on The Yakuza (1975) and did script doctoring on The Missouri Breaks (1976), Orca (1977) and Heaven Can Wait (1978).", "score": "1.423193" }, { "id": "15410390", "title": "Ronald M. Cohen", "text": " Ronald M. Cohen (December 23, 1939, Chicago, Illinois – April 21, 1998, Los Angeles, California) was a US American screen writer and film producer. His screenwriting career started in the 1960s and he studied Film at New York University. His screenwriting career encompassed Blue (1968 film), the 1977 film Twilight's Last Gleaming and the 1984 TV series Call to Glory. In 1977 he wrote a script for the movie adaption of Lothar-Günther Buchheims novel Das Boot, but it was rejected by Buchheim. For his screenwriting for the Series American Dream he was nominated for an Emmy in 1981. His last finished work was the screenwriting for the successful 1997 TV film Last Stand at Saber River starring Tom Selleck. He was in a relationship with actress Julie Adams.", "score": "1.4084009" }, { "id": "31616578", "title": "Alex Gordon (writer-producer)", "text": " Alex Gordon (8 September 1922 &ndash; 24 June 2003) was a British film producer and screenwriter. He produced eighteen films, including the American International Pictures films Day the World Ended (1955) and The She Creature (1956). He wrote screenplays for three films, two of them with B-movie director Ed Wood, Jail Bait (1954) and Bride of the Monster (1956). Gordon's brother Richard Gordon was also a film producer.", "score": "1.4014101" }, { "id": "28604744", "title": "Al Reinert", "text": " In the mid-1990s, Reinert teamed up with his former editor Bill Broyles to write the screenplay for the space docudrama Apollo 13. Directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks, the movie dramatizes the aborted 1970 lunar mission. In 1996, the film was nominated for nine Oscars, including Best Adapted Screenplay, but Broyles' and Reinert's effort lost to Emma Thompson's work on Sense and Sensibility. Reinert eventually moved to Los Angeles to continue his screen writing career. He would spend 15 years there. Projects included a two-year stint on an unrealized James Cameron movie about Mars, an uncredited rewrite on the 1998 film Armageddon and preliminary work on the 2013 film Gravity. He co-wrote and shared an Emmy Award for the 1998 HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon. During this time frame, Reinert also traveled to Japan, where he co-wrote the screenplay for the video game-to-film Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within.", "score": "1.397964" }, { "id": "29452337", "title": "Henry Slesar", "text": " Henry Slesar (June 12, 1927 – April 2, 2002) was an American author, playwright, and copywriter. He is famous for his use of irony and twist endings. After reading Slesar's \"M Is for the Many\" in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock bought it for adaptation and they began many successful collaborations. Slesar wrote hundreds of scripts for television series and soap operas, leading TV Guide to call him \"the writer with the largest audience in America.\"", "score": "1.3975415" }, { "id": "25983860", "title": "The Verdict", "text": " Lindsay Crouse, who was then married to Mamet, the film was actually a big deal for him. Crouse also recalled Mamet struggling initially with Galvin's closing summation, but he finally came up with the scene after staying up an entire evening working on it. Mamet's original draft ended the film right after the jury left the courtroom for deliberations, giving no resolution to the case. Neither Zanuck and Brown believed they could make the film without showing what happened, and Zanuck met with Mamet to convince him to re-write the ending. However, Mamet told Zanuck that the ending he wanted ", "score": "1.3971729" }, { "id": "10737690", "title": "Stephen Schiff", "text": " screenplay [...] sensitive to Nabokov's wit as well as his lyricism.\" Schiff became a full-time screenwriter, leaving The New Yorker in 2003. His subsequent films include The Deep End of the Ocean (1999), starring Michelle Pfeiffer; True Crime (1999), directed by and starring Clint Eastwood; Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010), Oliver Stone's sequel to the 1987 film Wall Street; and American Assassin (2017). In 2013, Schiff became a writer and consulting producer of the FX television series The Americans, starring Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys. He continued with the show for the rest of its six-season run, rising to the position of writer/executive ", "score": "1.3934424" }, { "id": "28529028", "title": "David Freeman (screenwriter)", "text": " David Freeman is an American novelist, screenwriter, playwright, and journalist who studied playwriting and dramatic literature at the Yale Drama School and currently teaches screenwriting seminars in Los Angeles, where he lives with his wife Judith Gingold. Freeman wrote the last draft for Alfred Hitchcock's final project, The Short Night, a projected spy thriller which was never produced due to Hitchcock's failing health. Freeman wrote about his experiences in the 1984 book The Last Days of Alfred Hitchcock, which includes his completed screenplay.", "score": "1.3931004" }, { "id": "12834966", "title": "The Day the Earth Stood Still", "text": " Producer Julian Blaustein originally set out to make a film under the working titles of Farewell to the Master and Journey to the World which illustrated the fear and suspicion that characterized the early Cold War and Atomic Age. He reviewed more than two hundred science fiction short stories and novels in search of a storyline that could be used because this film genre was well suited for a metaphorical discussion of such grave issues. Studio head Darryl F. Zanuck gave the go-ahead for this project, and Blaustein hired Edmund North to write the screenplay based on elements from Harry Bates's 1940 short story \"Farewell to the Master\". The revised final screenplay was completed on February 21, 1951. Science fiction writer Raymond F. Jones worked as an uncredited adviser.", "score": "1.3892982" }, { "id": "4476947", "title": "Stanley Mann", "text": "The Butler's Night Off (1951 - co-screenplay) ; Death of a Salesman (1957) (television) ; Another Time, Another Place (1958) ; The Mouse That Roared (1959 - co-screenplay) ; His and Hers (1961 - co-screenplay) ; The Mark (1961 - co-screenplay) ; Woman of Straw (1964 - co-screenplay) ; Up from the Beach (1965 - co-screenplay) ; The Collector (1965 - co-screenplay) ; A High Wind in Jamaica (1965 - co-screenplay) ; Rapture (1965) ; The Naked Runner (1967) ; The Strange Affair (1968 - co-screenplay) ; Fräulein Doktor (1969 - writer) ; Theatre of Blood (1973-idea) ; Russian Roulette (1975 - co-screenplay) ; Sky Riders (1976 - co-screenplay) ; Breaking Point (1976 - co-screenplay) ; Damien: Omen II (1978 - co-screenplay) ; Circle of Iron (1978 - co-screenplay) ; Meteor (1979 - co-screenplay) ; Eye of the Needle (1981) ; Draw! (1984) ; Firestarter (1984) ; Conan the Destroyer (1984) ; Tai-Pan (1986 - co-screenplay) ; Hanna's War (1988 - co-screenplay) ", "score": "1.3867464" }, { "id": "4365895", "title": "James Cameron's unrealized projects", "text": " On the 1991 American buddy cop action crime thriller film Point Break, only W. Peter Iliff is credited for the screenplay, but Cameron has said that he did a considerable amount of writing with the film's director Kathryn Bigelow for the final film. Cameron is only credited as an executive producer on the final product.", "score": "1.3857158" }, { "id": "33011670", "title": "Richard Friedenberg", "text": " Richard Friedenberg is an American screenwriter and film director. He wrote the screenplay for A River Runs Through It (1992), starring Brad Pitt, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award, and the screenplay for the Hallmark Hall of Fame television film Promise (1986), starring James Garner and James Woods, for which he won an Emmy Award. He also wrote the screenplay for Dying Young starring Julia Roberts and wrote and directed The Education of Little Tree (1997).", "score": "1.3848432" }, { "id": "3320121", "title": "Second Ending", "text": " Second Ending is a science fiction novel by northern Irish writer James White, published in June 1961. It first appeared in Fantastic Stories of Imagination edited by Cele Goldsmith and publish by Ziff Davis. Short listed for the Hugo Award, it tells the story of the only human survivor on Earth after a series of nuclear wars, accompanied by a robot and a group of androids.", "score": "1.3823504" } ]
[ "Broadway Bill\n happy ending of the original script, wanting instead a more bittersweet and ambivalent ending comment on the American success ethic. With Riskin on vacation in Europe and unavailable, Capra invited former Paramount screenwriter Sidney Buchman to Palo Alto to discuss changes to the end of the film. By the end of the evening, Buchman wrote four pages of new scenes depicting the horse's death after crossing the finish line, the subsequent funeral, and new ending. Buchman, who finished the new scenes only a few hours before the final race scene was filmed, was never credited for his contribution. He would later write the screenplay for Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939).", "Paul D. Zimmerman\n He was a film critic for Newsweek magazine from 1967 to 1975, and also wrote for television shows including Sesame Street, but is best known for writing The King of Comedy (1982), directed by Martin Scorsese. He was also the co-writer of Lovers and Liars (1979) and Consuming Passions (1988) Zimmerman was the author of many other screenplays, mostly unproduced, as well as the books The Open Man, The Year the Mets Lost Last Place and The Marx Brothers at the Movies (1968). Active in the Nuclear Freeze movement, he managed to become a member of the Pennsylvania delegation to the Republican Party convention in 1984 in order to be the only person to vote against Ronald Reagan. Zimmerman died of colon cancer.", "Michael McDowell (author)\n and featured three different endings; however, the novelization was based on the shooting script and includes an additional fourth ending that was cut from the film. He also contributed screenplays to a number of television horror anthologies, including Tales from the Darkside. McDowell was one of seventeen contemporary British and American horror writers interviewed by Douglas E. Winter in his 1985 interview book Faces of Fear. Of his writing, McDowell says in this book: \"I am a commercial writer and I'm proud of that. I am writing things to be put in the bookstore next month. I think it is a mistake to try to write for the ages.\" Stephen King described McDowell as \"the finest writer of paperback originals in America today\".", "The Last One (Friends)\n The series' creators completed the first draft of the hour-long finale in January 2004, four months prior to its airing on May 6. Before writing the episode, David Crane, Marta Kauffman and Kevin S. Bright decided to watch the series finales of other sitcoms, paying attention to what worked and what did not. Kauffman found that they liked the ones which stayed true to the series, and they found the finale of The Mary Tyler Moore Show to be the gold standard. The writers had difficulty writing the finale, and spent several days thinking about the final scene without being ", "Entertainment Experience\n Seven of the eight scripts are based on various separate scripts, contributed by the audience. Based on these contributions, Paul Verhoeven and Robert Alberdingk Thijm composed a script each time, which formed the basis for the next script. In total 85 participants contributed to the final scripts. Several recurring contributors are mentioned below. The teams could write their own ending. The winning screenplay was written by Stephan Brenninkmeijer and Fleur Jansen.", "Spenser Cohen\n In March 2012, Cohen directed Diana DeGarmo's music video \"Good Goodbye\". Cohen began his writing career by drafting the screenplay for Extinction. In December 2013, it was revealed that the screenplay had been included in the 2013 Black List of the year's best unproduced scripts in Hollywood. In 2019, Cohen was writing the script for Moonfall. On February 21, 2019, Amblin Partners announced it had bought Cohen's script for the science fiction film Distant. In August 2021, Cohen wrote the most recent screenplay and story for The Expendables 4. He wrote the script for the upcoming horror film Horrorscope.", "Duane Adler\n Duane Adler wrote the original screenplay for the 2001 film Save the Last Dance. Paramount Pictures hired Cheryl Edwards to rewrite the screenplay, and she worked on it in the course of nine months. Paramount tentatively gave both writers their first screenplay credits, and Adler requested arbitration to claim sole screenplay credit based on his primary contribution. The first arbitration case was inconclusive due to a factual error, and a second arbitration case led to Adler receiving story credit, with both Adler and Edwards receiving screenplay credit. Adler also wrote the film's 2006 sequel Save the Last Dance 2 and co-wrote the 2006 film Step Up with Melissa Rosenberg. In 2008, he began writing Venice Beach, a \"music-driven romance\" starring singer Ne-Yo, who had ", "Robert Towne\n Towne received great acclaim for his film scripts The Last Detail (1973), Chinatown (1974), and Shampoo (1975). He was nominated for an Oscar for all three scripts, winning for Chinatown. According to Sam Wasson's The Big Goodbye: Chinatown and the Last Years of Hollywood, Towne \"secretly employed an old college friend named Edward Taylor as his uncredited writing partner for more than 40 years.\" Towne was credited for his work on The Yakuza (1975) and did script doctoring on The Missouri Breaks (1976), Orca (1977) and Heaven Can Wait (1978).", "Ronald M. Cohen\n Ronald M. Cohen (December 23, 1939, Chicago, Illinois – April 21, 1998, Los Angeles, California) was a US American screen writer and film producer. His screenwriting career started in the 1960s and he studied Film at New York University. His screenwriting career encompassed Blue (1968 film), the 1977 film Twilight's Last Gleaming and the 1984 TV series Call to Glory. In 1977 he wrote a script for the movie adaption of Lothar-Günther Buchheims novel Das Boot, but it was rejected by Buchheim. For his screenwriting for the Series American Dream he was nominated for an Emmy in 1981. His last finished work was the screenwriting for the successful 1997 TV film Last Stand at Saber River starring Tom Selleck. He was in a relationship with actress Julie Adams.", "Alex Gordon (writer-producer)\n Alex Gordon (8 September 1922 &ndash; 24 June 2003) was a British film producer and screenwriter. He produced eighteen films, including the American International Pictures films Day the World Ended (1955) and The She Creature (1956). He wrote screenplays for three films, two of them with B-movie director Ed Wood, Jail Bait (1954) and Bride of the Monster (1956). Gordon's brother Richard Gordon was also a film producer.", "Al Reinert\n In the mid-1990s, Reinert teamed up with his former editor Bill Broyles to write the screenplay for the space docudrama Apollo 13. Directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks, the movie dramatizes the aborted 1970 lunar mission. In 1996, the film was nominated for nine Oscars, including Best Adapted Screenplay, but Broyles' and Reinert's effort lost to Emma Thompson's work on Sense and Sensibility. Reinert eventually moved to Los Angeles to continue his screen writing career. He would spend 15 years there. Projects included a two-year stint on an unrealized James Cameron movie about Mars, an uncredited rewrite on the 1998 film Armageddon and preliminary work on the 2013 film Gravity. He co-wrote and shared an Emmy Award for the 1998 HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon. During this time frame, Reinert also traveled to Japan, where he co-wrote the screenplay for the video game-to-film Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within.", "Henry Slesar\n Henry Slesar (June 12, 1927 – April 2, 2002) was an American author, playwright, and copywriter. He is famous for his use of irony and twist endings. After reading Slesar's \"M Is for the Many\" in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock bought it for adaptation and they began many successful collaborations. Slesar wrote hundreds of scripts for television series and soap operas, leading TV Guide to call him \"the writer with the largest audience in America.\"", "The Verdict\n Lindsay Crouse, who was then married to Mamet, the film was actually a big deal for him. Crouse also recalled Mamet struggling initially with Galvin's closing summation, but he finally came up with the scene after staying up an entire evening working on it. Mamet's original draft ended the film right after the jury left the courtroom for deliberations, giving no resolution to the case. Neither Zanuck and Brown believed they could make the film without showing what happened, and Zanuck met with Mamet to convince him to re-write the ending. However, Mamet told Zanuck that the ending he wanted ", "Stephen Schiff\n screenplay [...] sensitive to Nabokov's wit as well as his lyricism.\" Schiff became a full-time screenwriter, leaving The New Yorker in 2003. His subsequent films include The Deep End of the Ocean (1999), starring Michelle Pfeiffer; True Crime (1999), directed by and starring Clint Eastwood; Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010), Oliver Stone's sequel to the 1987 film Wall Street; and American Assassin (2017). In 2013, Schiff became a writer and consulting producer of the FX television series The Americans, starring Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys. He continued with the show for the rest of its six-season run, rising to the position of writer/executive ", "David Freeman (screenwriter)\n David Freeman is an American novelist, screenwriter, playwright, and journalist who studied playwriting and dramatic literature at the Yale Drama School and currently teaches screenwriting seminars in Los Angeles, where he lives with his wife Judith Gingold. Freeman wrote the last draft for Alfred Hitchcock's final project, The Short Night, a projected spy thriller which was never produced due to Hitchcock's failing health. Freeman wrote about his experiences in the 1984 book The Last Days of Alfred Hitchcock, which includes his completed screenplay.", "The Day the Earth Stood Still\n Producer Julian Blaustein originally set out to make a film under the working titles of Farewell to the Master and Journey to the World which illustrated the fear and suspicion that characterized the early Cold War and Atomic Age. He reviewed more than two hundred science fiction short stories and novels in search of a storyline that could be used because this film genre was well suited for a metaphorical discussion of such grave issues. Studio head Darryl F. Zanuck gave the go-ahead for this project, and Blaustein hired Edmund North to write the screenplay based on elements from Harry Bates's 1940 short story \"Farewell to the Master\". The revised final screenplay was completed on February 21, 1951. Science fiction writer Raymond F. Jones worked as an uncredited adviser.", "Stanley Mann\nThe Butler's Night Off (1951 - co-screenplay) ; Death of a Salesman (1957) (television) ; Another Time, Another Place (1958) ; The Mouse That Roared (1959 - co-screenplay) ; His and Hers (1961 - co-screenplay) ; The Mark (1961 - co-screenplay) ; Woman of Straw (1964 - co-screenplay) ; Up from the Beach (1965 - co-screenplay) ; The Collector (1965 - co-screenplay) ; A High Wind in Jamaica (1965 - co-screenplay) ; Rapture (1965) ; The Naked Runner (1967) ; The Strange Affair (1968 - co-screenplay) ; Fräulein Doktor (1969 - writer) ; Theatre of Blood (1973-idea) ; Russian Roulette (1975 - co-screenplay) ; Sky Riders (1976 - co-screenplay) ; Breaking Point (1976 - co-screenplay) ; Damien: Omen II (1978 - co-screenplay) ; Circle of Iron (1978 - co-screenplay) ; Meteor (1979 - co-screenplay) ; Eye of the Needle (1981) ; Draw! (1984) ; Firestarter (1984) ; Conan the Destroyer (1984) ; Tai-Pan (1986 - co-screenplay) ; Hanna's War (1988 - co-screenplay) ", "James Cameron's unrealized projects\n On the 1991 American buddy cop action crime thriller film Point Break, only W. Peter Iliff is credited for the screenplay, but Cameron has said that he did a considerable amount of writing with the film's director Kathryn Bigelow for the final film. Cameron is only credited as an executive producer on the final product.", "Richard Friedenberg\n Richard Friedenberg is an American screenwriter and film director. He wrote the screenplay for A River Runs Through It (1992), starring Brad Pitt, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award, and the screenplay for the Hallmark Hall of Fame television film Promise (1986), starring James Garner and James Woods, for which he won an Emmy Award. He also wrote the screenplay for Dying Young starring Julia Roberts and wrote and directed The Education of Little Tree (1997).", "Second Ending\n Second Ending is a science fiction novel by northern Irish writer James White, published in June 1961. It first appeared in Fantastic Stories of Imagination edited by Cele Goldsmith and publish by Ziff Davis. Short listed for the Hugo Award, it tells the story of the only human survivor on Earth after a series of nuclear wars, accompanied by a robot and a group of androids." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Hoppa högst?
[ "Astrid Lindgren", "Astrid Anna Emilia Lindgren" ]
screenwriter
Hoppa högst
4,495,198
91
[ { "id": "6356472", "title": "Robert Klane", "text": " Robert Klane (born 1941) is an American screenwriter, novelist and filmmaker, best known for early iconoclastic novels and for his screenplays for dark comedies such as Where's Poppa? (1970) and Weekend at Bernie's (1989).", "score": "1.6546218" }, { "id": "6356474", "title": "Robert Klane", "text": "Where's Poppa? (1970) - wrote screenplay based on his novel ; Every Little Crook and Nanny (1972) - co-wrote screenplay ; Fire Sale (1977) - wrote screenplay based on his novel ; Thank God It's Friday (1978) - directed ; Unfaithfully Yours (1984) - co-wrote screenplay ; The Man with One Red Shoe (1985) - wrote screenplay ; National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985) - co-wrote screenplay ; Walk Like a Man - wrote screenplay ; Weekend at Bernie's (1989) - wrote screenplay ; Folks! (1992) - wrote screenplay ; Weekend at Bernie's II (1993) - wrote screenplay and directed ", "score": "1.6302751" }, { "id": "6356473", "title": "Robert Klane", "text": " A 1963 graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Klane first rose to prominence with his debut novel, the acerbic comedy The Horse is Dead (1968). His second novel, Where's Poppa? (1970), was adapted by Klane into a feature film directed by Carl Reiner and starring George Segal. For his screenplay, Klane received a Writers Guild of America Award nomination. His third novel was also adapted into a feature film, Fire Sale (1977), starring Alan Arkin. Klane went on to write screenplays for various films such as The Man with One Red Shoe (1985), National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985), and Weekend at Bernie's. He also directed several films including Thank God It's Friday (1978) and Weekend at Bernie's II (1993). Additionally, he wrote for several television shows including M*A*S*H and Tracey Takes On....", "score": "1.6021807" }, { "id": "12883115", "title": "Clements Ripley", "text": " Love, Honor and Behave (1938), co-writer ; Jezebel (1938), co-writer, for which Bette Davis received the Academy Award for Best Actress and Fay Bainter for Best Supporting Actress. It was also made into an episode of the same name of the TV series Lux Video Theatre in 1956, for which he wrote the screenplay. ; Pioneer Woman (1940) ; Buffalo Bill (1944) with Joel McCrea, Maureen O'Hara and Anthony Quinn ; Old Los Angeles (1948) (screenplay and story) ", "score": "1.4611044" }, { "id": "15042676", "title": "Philip Rapp", "text": " Philip Rapp (March 26, 1907 – January 23, 1996) was a film and television director and screenwriter. He wrote for Eddie Cantor and for a brief period, wrote film scripts for Danny Kaye. Rapp is perhaps best known as the creator of Baby Snooks and The Bickersons. He died on January 23, 1996 in Beverly Hills, California. Rapp was a writer, director and producer and he directed popular long running radio series called The Batting Bickersons. He also introduced the Baby Snooks character for Fanny Brice of the Ziegfeld Follies. Topper (1953) is also directed by Rapp.", "score": "1.4499218" }, { "id": "29795221", "title": "Anne Rapp", "text": " Anne Rapp is a script supervisor and screenwriter in the American film industry. She has worked on more than 50 feature films since 1981. Her work with Robert Altman in 1999 on the film \"Cookie's Fortune\" led to her nomination for an Independent Spirit Award and an Edgar Allan Poe Award.", "score": "1.437524" }, { "id": "5009153", "title": "William W. Norton", "text": " He wrote for the television series The Big Valley, which was broadcast from 1965 to 1968. His big screen breakthrough came with his script for the 1968 film The Scalphunters, set in the antebellum West, with the movie starring Burt Lancaster, Ossie Davis and Shelley Winters. Other screenplays that Norton wrote included the Angie Dickinson vehicle Big Bad Mama, produced by Roger Corman, and the John Wayne detective film Brannigan (1975). He wrote the Burt Reynolds vehicles Sam Whiskey, The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing, White Lightning and Gator. When asked by a nurse the day before he died if she would know any of Norton's films, he replied \"I don't think your I.Q. is low enough\".", "score": "1.4356524" }, { "id": "30801240", "title": "Harriet Frank Jr.", "text": " Award (WGA Award) for Best Written American Drama. They were nominated for an Academy Award in the category of Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium. Frank worked alongside her husband and Ritt on Hombre (1967), a Revisionist Western based on the novel of the same name. The next year, Frank and Ravetch wrote the screenplay for House of Cards (1968, released in the U.S. the following year and directed by John Guillermin. For House of Cards, Frank was credited, together with her husband, under the pen name of James P. Bonner. Frank and Ravetch returned to the works of William Faulkner, writing the screenplay for a film adaptation of his last novel The Reivers (1969). Frank and Ravetch wrote the ", "score": "1.4349389" }, { "id": "4103749", "title": "Jerry Rapp", "text": " Jerry Rapp is a screenwriter, director, and producer.", "score": "1.430686" }, { "id": "29690131", "title": "Tapio Vilpponen", "text": " Tapio Vilpponen (31 May 1913 − 31 August 1994) was a Finnish screenwriter, set designer, costume designer, painter, graphic artist, interior designer, sculptor, copywriter, journalist, cartoonist and columnist. He also starred in a few films. Vilpponen used the pseudonyms Roy and Juan Batiste Montauban.", "score": "1.427038" }, { "id": "535860", "title": "Eric Roth", "text": " Roth won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for Forrest Gump. He is known for writing his scripts in a DOS program without Internet access, as well as distributing the scripts only in hard copy formats. He followed his Academy Award win by co-writing screenplays for several Oscar-nominated films, including The Insider, Munich, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, and A Star Is Born. While writing The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, he lost both of his parents, and as a result views the film as \"...my most personal movie.\"", "score": "1.4260466" }, { "id": "15046052", "title": "Harry Spalding", "text": " Harry Spalding (1913-2008) was an American writer best known for the films he wrote for Robert L. Lippert and director Maury Dexter. He later worked for the Walt Disney Company. He sometimes wrote under the name \"Henry Cross\".", "score": "1.4250743" }, { "id": "30991014", "title": "Franklin Lacey", "text": " Franklin Lacey (1917–1988) was an American playwright and screenwriter. He is best known for co-authoring the story for The Music Man (1957), together with collaborator Meredith Willson, and later collaborating on the screenplay with Marion Hargrove for the 1962 film version. One of his first major works was the play Pagan in the Parlor in 1949; it was directed for the stage by Frankenstein director James Whale. He also wrote the screenplay for the film Rain for a Dusty Summer (1971), which starred Ernest Borgnine. He worked closely with the author Aldous Huxley on a musical version of his novel Brave New World, but the project was eventually shelved.", "score": "1.4226289" }, { "id": "31273049", "title": "Nat Perrin", "text": " Nat Perrin (March 15, 1905 – May 9, 1998) was an American comedy film, television and radio screenwriter, producer and director who contributed gags and storylines to several Marx Brothers films and co-wrote the script for the film Hellzapoppin' (1941) adapted from the stage musical. He is credited with writing the screenplay or story outline for over 25 films, including The Big Store (1941), The Great Morgan (1945), and Song of the Thin Man (1947), as well as several television series.", "score": "1.4225667" }, { "id": "7837720", "title": "Hellzapoppin' (film)", "text": " A mousy screenwriter, Harry Selby, played outlines his script for the screen adaptation of Olson and Johnson’s Broadway play Hellzapoppin, and the rest of the movie’s “plot” depicts Selby’s proposed script — a sappy romance typical of the kind found in other films at the time. In it, a producer and composer, Jeff Hunter, wants to marry an ingenue, Kitty Rand, but he has to compete with her bland fiancee Woody Taylor. However, this story is undercut with elaborate dance sequences, fourth-wall breaks mocking the Jeff/Kitty/Woody story, arguments with Louie the projectionist, and random anarchic chaos that threatens to overwhelm conventional narrative.", "score": "1.4160482" }, { "id": "535858", "title": "Eric Roth", "text": " Eric R. Roth (born March 22, 1945) is an American screenwriter. He has been nominated five times for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay — for Forrest Gump (1994), The Insider (1999), Munich (2005), The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008), and A Star Is Born (2018) — winning for Forrest Gump. He also wrote the screenplay for the Oscar-nominated film Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (2011) and co-wrote Denis Villeneuve's Dune (2021) with Jon Spaihts and Villeneuve. Roth also contributed to Martin Scorsese's upcoming film Killers of the Flower Moon.", "score": "1.4120536" }, { "id": "4764382", "title": "Art Hoppe", "text": " Arthur Watterson Hoppe (April 23, 1925 – February 1, 2000) was a popular columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle for more than 40 years. He was known for satirical and allegorical columns that skewered the self-important. Many columns featured whimsical characters such as expert-in-all-things Homer T. Pettibone and a presidential candidate named Nobody. Occasionally, Hoppe reined in his humor for poignant columns on serious topics, such as \"To Root Against Your Country,\" a noted 1971 column against the Vietnam War.", "score": "1.4114859" }, { "id": "6278514", "title": "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS", "text": " Several key members of the cast and crew were credited under pseudonyms. David F. Friedman is credited as “Herman Traeger”, screenwriter John C.W. Saxton as “Jonah Royston”, and actors George Buck Flower as “C.D. Lafleuer” and Richard Kennedy as “Wolfgang Roehm”. The credited editor, Kurt Schnit, was likely also a pseudonym, as no such film editor of the time is known to have existed, and he does not hold any other credits of any kind.", "score": "1.4114081" }, { "id": "2584157", "title": "Jay Cocks", "text": " John C. \"Jay\" Cocks, Jr. (born January 12, 1944) is an American film critic and screenwriter. He is a graduate of Kenyon College. He was a critic for Time, Newsweek, and Rolling Stone, among other magazines, before shifting to screenplay writing. He was married to actress Verna Bloom (1938–2019). As a screenwriter, he is notable for his collaborations with director Martin Scorsese, particularly The Age of Innocence and Gangs of New York — a screenplay he started working on in 1976 — as well as Kathryn Bigelow's Strange Days. He did an uncredited rewrite of James Cameron's screenplay for Titanic and was, with Scorsese, the co-screenwriter of Silence. Cocks and Scorsese approached author Philip K. Dick in 1969 for an adaptation of his 1968 novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Though the duo never optioned the book, it was later developed into the movie Blade Runner by screenwriter Hampton Fancher and director Ridley Scott.", "score": "1.4106967" }, { "id": "14978141", "title": "Pen Densham", "text": " Densham became a published author with his book about screenplay writing and selling creativity in Hollywood, Riding the Alligator: Strategies for a Career in Screenplay Writing (And Not Getting Eaten), published by Michael Wiese Books in January 2011. The title comes from the cover photo of Densham at the age of four astride a live seven-foot alligator in one of his parents' theatrical short films. Written with the goal of supporting emerging creative people finding their own voice and path through the Hollywood industry as well as artistic endeavors in general, the book includes supportive essays by professional screenwriters Shane Black, Nia Vardalos, Andrea Berloff, Eric Roth, John Watson, Robin Swicord, Todd Robinson, Alan McElroy, Anthony Peckham, Ron Shelton and Laeta Kalogridis. The book received positive reviews from Academy Award-winning writer-director-producers like Paul Haggis and Ron Howard, as well as actors like Jeff Bridges, Morgan Freeman, Robin Wright and Emile Hirsch.", "score": "1.4096718" } ]
[ "Robert Klane\n Robert Klane (born 1941) is an American screenwriter, novelist and filmmaker, best known for early iconoclastic novels and for his screenplays for dark comedies such as Where's Poppa? (1970) and Weekend at Bernie's (1989).", "Robert Klane\nWhere's Poppa? (1970) - wrote screenplay based on his novel ; Every Little Crook and Nanny (1972) - co-wrote screenplay ; Fire Sale (1977) - wrote screenplay based on his novel ; Thank God It's Friday (1978) - directed ; Unfaithfully Yours (1984) - co-wrote screenplay ; The Man with One Red Shoe (1985) - wrote screenplay ; National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985) - co-wrote screenplay ; Walk Like a Man - wrote screenplay ; Weekend at Bernie's (1989) - wrote screenplay ; Folks! (1992) - wrote screenplay ; Weekend at Bernie's II (1993) - wrote screenplay and directed ", "Robert Klane\n A 1963 graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Klane first rose to prominence with his debut novel, the acerbic comedy The Horse is Dead (1968). His second novel, Where's Poppa? (1970), was adapted by Klane into a feature film directed by Carl Reiner and starring George Segal. For his screenplay, Klane received a Writers Guild of America Award nomination. His third novel was also adapted into a feature film, Fire Sale (1977), starring Alan Arkin. Klane went on to write screenplays for various films such as The Man with One Red Shoe (1985), National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985), and Weekend at Bernie's. He also directed several films including Thank God It's Friday (1978) and Weekend at Bernie's II (1993). Additionally, he wrote for several television shows including M*A*S*H and Tracey Takes On....", "Clements Ripley\n Love, Honor and Behave (1938), co-writer ; Jezebel (1938), co-writer, for which Bette Davis received the Academy Award for Best Actress and Fay Bainter for Best Supporting Actress. It was also made into an episode of the same name of the TV series Lux Video Theatre in 1956, for which he wrote the screenplay. ; Pioneer Woman (1940) ; Buffalo Bill (1944) with Joel McCrea, Maureen O'Hara and Anthony Quinn ; Old Los Angeles (1948) (screenplay and story) ", "Philip Rapp\n Philip Rapp (March 26, 1907 – January 23, 1996) was a film and television director and screenwriter. He wrote for Eddie Cantor and for a brief period, wrote film scripts for Danny Kaye. Rapp is perhaps best known as the creator of Baby Snooks and The Bickersons. He died on January 23, 1996 in Beverly Hills, California. Rapp was a writer, director and producer and he directed popular long running radio series called The Batting Bickersons. He also introduced the Baby Snooks character for Fanny Brice of the Ziegfeld Follies. Topper (1953) is also directed by Rapp.", "Anne Rapp\n Anne Rapp is a script supervisor and screenwriter in the American film industry. She has worked on more than 50 feature films since 1981. Her work with Robert Altman in 1999 on the film \"Cookie's Fortune\" led to her nomination for an Independent Spirit Award and an Edgar Allan Poe Award.", "William W. Norton\n He wrote for the television series The Big Valley, which was broadcast from 1965 to 1968. His big screen breakthrough came with his script for the 1968 film The Scalphunters, set in the antebellum West, with the movie starring Burt Lancaster, Ossie Davis and Shelley Winters. Other screenplays that Norton wrote included the Angie Dickinson vehicle Big Bad Mama, produced by Roger Corman, and the John Wayne detective film Brannigan (1975). He wrote the Burt Reynolds vehicles Sam Whiskey, The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing, White Lightning and Gator. When asked by a nurse the day before he died if she would know any of Norton's films, he replied \"I don't think your I.Q. is low enough\".", "Harriet Frank Jr.\n Award (WGA Award) for Best Written American Drama. They were nominated for an Academy Award in the category of Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium. Frank worked alongside her husband and Ritt on Hombre (1967), a Revisionist Western based on the novel of the same name. The next year, Frank and Ravetch wrote the screenplay for House of Cards (1968, released in the U.S. the following year and directed by John Guillermin. For House of Cards, Frank was credited, together with her husband, under the pen name of James P. Bonner. Frank and Ravetch returned to the works of William Faulkner, writing the screenplay for a film adaptation of his last novel The Reivers (1969). Frank and Ravetch wrote the ", "Jerry Rapp\n Jerry Rapp is a screenwriter, director, and producer.", "Tapio Vilpponen\n Tapio Vilpponen (31 May 1913 − 31 August 1994) was a Finnish screenwriter, set designer, costume designer, painter, graphic artist, interior designer, sculptor, copywriter, journalist, cartoonist and columnist. He also starred in a few films. Vilpponen used the pseudonyms Roy and Juan Batiste Montauban.", "Eric Roth\n Roth won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for Forrest Gump. He is known for writing his scripts in a DOS program without Internet access, as well as distributing the scripts only in hard copy formats. He followed his Academy Award win by co-writing screenplays for several Oscar-nominated films, including The Insider, Munich, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, and A Star Is Born. While writing The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, he lost both of his parents, and as a result views the film as \"...my most personal movie.\"", "Harry Spalding\n Harry Spalding (1913-2008) was an American writer best known for the films he wrote for Robert L. Lippert and director Maury Dexter. He later worked for the Walt Disney Company. He sometimes wrote under the name \"Henry Cross\".", "Franklin Lacey\n Franklin Lacey (1917–1988) was an American playwright and screenwriter. He is best known for co-authoring the story for The Music Man (1957), together with collaborator Meredith Willson, and later collaborating on the screenplay with Marion Hargrove for the 1962 film version. One of his first major works was the play Pagan in the Parlor in 1949; it was directed for the stage by Frankenstein director James Whale. He also wrote the screenplay for the film Rain for a Dusty Summer (1971), which starred Ernest Borgnine. He worked closely with the author Aldous Huxley on a musical version of his novel Brave New World, but the project was eventually shelved.", "Nat Perrin\n Nat Perrin (March 15, 1905 – May 9, 1998) was an American comedy film, television and radio screenwriter, producer and director who contributed gags and storylines to several Marx Brothers films and co-wrote the script for the film Hellzapoppin' (1941) adapted from the stage musical. He is credited with writing the screenplay or story outline for over 25 films, including The Big Store (1941), The Great Morgan (1945), and Song of the Thin Man (1947), as well as several television series.", "Hellzapoppin' (film)\n A mousy screenwriter, Harry Selby, played outlines his script for the screen adaptation of Olson and Johnson’s Broadway play Hellzapoppin, and the rest of the movie’s “plot” depicts Selby’s proposed script — a sappy romance typical of the kind found in other films at the time. In it, a producer and composer, Jeff Hunter, wants to marry an ingenue, Kitty Rand, but he has to compete with her bland fiancee Woody Taylor. However, this story is undercut with elaborate dance sequences, fourth-wall breaks mocking the Jeff/Kitty/Woody story, arguments with Louie the projectionist, and random anarchic chaos that threatens to overwhelm conventional narrative.", "Eric Roth\n Eric R. Roth (born March 22, 1945) is an American screenwriter. He has been nominated five times for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay — for Forrest Gump (1994), The Insider (1999), Munich (2005), The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008), and A Star Is Born (2018) — winning for Forrest Gump. He also wrote the screenplay for the Oscar-nominated film Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (2011) and co-wrote Denis Villeneuve's Dune (2021) with Jon Spaihts and Villeneuve. Roth also contributed to Martin Scorsese's upcoming film Killers of the Flower Moon.", "Art Hoppe\n Arthur Watterson Hoppe (April 23, 1925 – February 1, 2000) was a popular columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle for more than 40 years. He was known for satirical and allegorical columns that skewered the self-important. Many columns featured whimsical characters such as expert-in-all-things Homer T. Pettibone and a presidential candidate named Nobody. Occasionally, Hoppe reined in his humor for poignant columns on serious topics, such as \"To Root Against Your Country,\" a noted 1971 column against the Vietnam War.", "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS\n Several key members of the cast and crew were credited under pseudonyms. David F. Friedman is credited as “Herman Traeger”, screenwriter John C.W. Saxton as “Jonah Royston”, and actors George Buck Flower as “C.D. Lafleuer” and Richard Kennedy as “Wolfgang Roehm”. The credited editor, Kurt Schnit, was likely also a pseudonym, as no such film editor of the time is known to have existed, and he does not hold any other credits of any kind.", "Jay Cocks\n John C. \"Jay\" Cocks, Jr. (born January 12, 1944) is an American film critic and screenwriter. He is a graduate of Kenyon College. He was a critic for Time, Newsweek, and Rolling Stone, among other magazines, before shifting to screenplay writing. He was married to actress Verna Bloom (1938–2019). As a screenwriter, he is notable for his collaborations with director Martin Scorsese, particularly The Age of Innocence and Gangs of New York — a screenplay he started working on in 1976 — as well as Kathryn Bigelow's Strange Days. He did an uncredited rewrite of James Cameron's screenplay for Titanic and was, with Scorsese, the co-screenwriter of Silence. Cocks and Scorsese approached author Philip K. Dick in 1969 for an adaptation of his 1968 novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Though the duo never optioned the book, it was later developed into the movie Blade Runner by screenwriter Hampton Fancher and director Ridley Scott.", "Pen Densham\n Densham became a published author with his book about screenplay writing and selling creativity in Hollywood, Riding the Alligator: Strategies for a Career in Screenplay Writing (And Not Getting Eaten), published by Michael Wiese Books in January 2011. The title comes from the cover photo of Densham at the age of four astride a live seven-foot alligator in one of his parents' theatrical short films. Written with the goal of supporting emerging creative people finding their own voice and path through the Hollywood industry as well as artistic endeavors in general, the book includes supportive essays by professional screenwriters Shane Black, Nia Vardalos, Andrea Berloff, Eric Roth, John Watson, Robin Swicord, Todd Robinson, Alan McElroy, Anthony Peckham, Ron Shelton and Laeta Kalogridis. The book received positive reviews from Academy Award-winning writer-director-producers like Paul Haggis and Ron Howard, as well as actors like Jeff Bridges, Morgan Freeman, Robin Wright and Emile Hirsch." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Guilty?
[ "Howard Gordon", "Evan Katz" ]
screenwriter
Guilty (Awake)
4,294,776
69
[ { "id": "7095259", "title": "Linda Arvidson", "text": " Arvidson wrote screenplays, including the one for the five-reel Who's Guilty Now? She was an associate editor of Film Fun and a film critic for Leslie's Magazine, and she wrote the book When the Movies Were Young.", "score": "1.688261" }, { "id": "11706811", "title": "Guilty (Awake)", "text": " The episode was written by series executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon and consulting producer Evan Katz, and was directed by Jeffrey Reiner. It marked both Gordon and Katz's first writing credit in the series, and director Reiner's second directing credit, with the last episode he directed being \"The Little Guy\", the second episode aired on March 8, 2012. This is the first episode that was not written by series creator and executive producer Kyle Killen.", "score": "1.6059334" }, { "id": "30690905", "title": "The Guilty (2000 film)", "text": " The Guilty is a 2000 American crime film directed by Anthony Waller and starring Bill Pullman, Devon Sawa, Gabrielle Anwar, Angela Featherstone and Joanne Whalley. The film is a remake of the 1992 UK TV two-part telemovie of the same name and identical plot starring Michael Kitchen, Sean Gallagher, Caroline Catz and Carol Starks.", "score": "1.6019685" }, { "id": "8811339", "title": "The Guilty (1947 film)", "text": " The Guilty is a 1947 film noir directed by John Reinhardt, based on Cornell Woolrich's short story \"Two Men in a Furnished Room\". The film was produced by oil millionaire Jack Wrather, the husband of lead actress Bonita Granville.", "score": "1.575717" }, { "id": "28994992", "title": "Guilt (Revenge)", "text": " The episode was written by Nikki Toscano, while being directed by CSI: Crime Scene Investigation veteran Kenneth Fink.", "score": "1.5744259" }, { "id": "12556895", "title": "Guilty Conscience (film)", "text": " Guilty Conscience is a 1985 American television film, produced by Robert A. Papazian, written by Richard Levinson and William Link, directed by David Greene, starring Anthony Hopkins, Blythe Danner and Swoosie Kurtz. The film score was composed by Billy Goldenberg. It premiered on April 2, 1985 on CBS. The film is a drama, but also a mystery, with many plot twists and turns.", "score": "1.5699906" }, { "id": "31465599", "title": "The Guilty (Baldacci novel)", "text": " The Guilty is thriller novel written by David Baldacci. It is the fourth installment to feature Will Robie, a highly skilled U.S. Government assassin. The book was released on November 17, 2015 by Grand Central Publishing.", "score": "1.5636756" }, { "id": "31878464", "title": "The Guilty (2021 film)", "text": " The Guilty is a 2021 American crime thriller film directed and produced by Antoine Fuqua, from a screenplay by Nic Pizzolatto. A remake of the 2018 Danish film of the same name, the film stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Christina Vidal, with the voices of Ethan Hawke, Riley Keough, Eli Goree, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Paul Dano, and Peter Sarsgaard. The Guilty had its world premiere at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival on September 11, 2021. The film was released in a limited release on September 24, 2021, then digitally on Netflix on October 1. It received mostly positive reviews from critics, who praised Gyllenhaal's performance but still felt that the remake was inferior to the original film.", "score": "1.5515194" }, { "id": "30665023", "title": "The Guilty (2018 film)", "text": " The Guilty (Den skyldige) is a 2018 Danish crime thriller film co-written and directed by Gustav Möller, his debut film. It was screened in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition section at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. The film was distributed in the U.S. by Magnolia Pictures. It was selected as the Danish submission for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards, making the December shortlist.", "score": "1.5425892" }, { "id": "25536072", "title": "Guilty by Suspicion", "text": " Guilty by Suspicion is a 1991 American drama film about the Hollywood blacklist, McCarthyism, and the activities of the House Un-American Activities Committee. Written and directed by Irwin Winkler, it stars Robert De Niro, Annette Bening, and George Wendt. The character of David Merrill was inspired by the experiences of John Berry during the Hollywood blacklist era. The film was entered into the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.", "score": "1.5216393" }, { "id": "31878472", "title": "The Guilty (2021 film)", "text": " In December 2018, it was announced Jake Gyllenhaal had acquired rights to the 2018 Danish thriller film The Guilty, and would star in and produce a remake under his Nine Stories Productions banner, alongside Bold Films. In September 2020, it was announced Antoine Fuqua would direct and produce the film, from a screenplay by Nic Pizzolatto. Later that month, Netflix acquired worldwide rights to the film for $30 million. In November 2020, Ethan Hawke, Peter Sarsgaard, Riley Keough, Paul Dano, Byron Bowers, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, David Castaneda, Christina Vidal, Adrian Martinez, Bill Burr, Beau Knapp and Edi Patterson joined the cast of the film. Principal photography began in Los Angeles in November 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and lasted for 11 days. Three days before production was set to begin, a person in contact with director Antoine Fuqua tested positive for COVID-19. Fuqua tested negative subsequently, so the production was still on schedule. He directed the entire film from a van with screens that had access to the cameras, maintaining contact with the cast and the crew.", "score": "1.509596" }, { "id": "6601581", "title": "Presumed Guilty (film)", "text": " The film was produced chiefly by Roberto Hernández and Layda Negrete. Hernández and Negrete (LL.M. 1996, M.P.P. 1998) are candidates for PhDs in Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. They are married and have two daughters.", "score": "1.5076444" }, { "id": "11706804", "title": "Guilty (Awake)", "text": " \"Guilty\" is the third episode of the American police procedural drama television series Awake. The episode first aired on March 15, 2012 in the United States on NBC, and was simultaneously broadcast on Global in Canada. It was written by series executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon and consulting producer Evan Katz, and was directed by Jeffrey Reiner. \"Guilty\" was well received by television critics, who praised its storylines, noting the script to be interesting. The episode garnered 5.12 million viewers in the United States and a 1.6/4 rating in the 18–49 demographic, according to Nielsen ratings. It ranked second in its timeslot of the night, behind Private Practice on ABC. The show centers on Michael Britten ", "score": "1.5038229" }, { "id": "30665035", "title": "The Guilty (2018 film)", "text": " After The Guiltys debut, Möller received requests for remake rights from around the world, but declined personal involvement in any of them, preferring instead to work on new projects. In 2018, it was announced that Nine Stories and Jake Gyllenhaal had bought the American rights to The Guilty with Gyllenhaal set to star. In 2020, it was announced the film would be directed by Antoine Fuqua and be adapted by Nic Pizzolatto. The film was shot at a single Los Angeles location sometime in November. Peter Sarsgaard, Ethan Hawke, and Riley Keough were confirmed to join the cast. In September 2020, Netflix acquired worldwide distribution rights for the film for $30 million.", "score": "1.5033927" }, { "id": "12556896", "title": "Guilty Conscience (film)", "text": " Arthur Jamison (Anthony Hopkins), a wealthy criminal defence attorney, is facing a costly divorce from his wife, Louise (Blythe Danner). Arthur deals with the predicament by imagining numerous schemes in which he kills her. As a defense attorney, Arthur is familiar with both the courts and the minds of criminals, and he spends much of the film consulting an officious imaginary version of himself (a double played by Donegan Smith) for the perfect scheme to rid himself of Louise. Arthur runs each murder, or the subsequent trial, through in his mind, searching for problems, loopholes, and the elusive watertight alibi. Arthur's mistress, Jackie Willis (Swoosie Kurtz), meets up with Louise in secret. The two concoct a scheme to kill Arthur. They confront ", "score": "1.5026217" }, { "id": "6228853", "title": "Guilty (2011 film)", "text": " Guilty (Présumé coupable, ) is a 2011 French drama film directed by Vincent Garenq about the Outreau trial. Garenq was nominated for the 2012 Best Writing (Adaptation) César Award and Philippe Torreton was nominated as Best Actor.", "score": "1.5018814" }, { "id": "30463859", "title": "Richard Collins (screenwriter)", "text": " Richard J. Collins (July 20, 1914 – February 14, 2013) was an American producer, director and screenwriter prominent in Hollywood during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. He worked on several notable television programs including Bonanza, General Electric Theater, Matlock and Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre. He was married to actress Dorothy Comingore from 1939 until 1945. One of the characters in the film Guilty by Suspicion was based on his character although he and Dorothy Comingore were long divorced before the HUAC hearings.", "score": "1.4872954" }, { "id": "25983859", "title": "The Verdict", "text": " Film rights to the novel were bought by the team of Richard Zanuck and David Brown. A number of actors, including Roy Scheider, William Holden, Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant and Dustin Hoffman, expressed interest in the project because of the strength of the lead role. Arthur Hiller was originally attached to direct while David Mamet hired to write a screenplay. Though Mamet had already made a name for himself in the theater, he was still new to screenwriting. The producers were uncertain whether Mamet would take the job given the standards he set with his own previous work, but according ", "score": "1.4682133" }, { "id": "5797595", "title": "Guilty (2020 film)", "text": " Guilty is a 2020 Indian Hindi-language thriller drama film directed by Ruchi Narain and written by Ruchi Narain, Kanika Dhillon and Atika Chohan. Starring Kiara Advani and several others, the film follows the story of a songwriter whose boyfriend is accused of rape during the era of #MeToo. The film is the first production venture of Dharmatic, the digital arm of Karan Johar's Dharma Productions. It was released on 6 March 2020 on Netflix.", "score": "1.4655794" }, { "id": "16203085", "title": "Paul Chitlik", "text": " In 1984 he wrote his second play, “Casanova Goldberg,” which received a staged reading in Los Angeles, but before it could be produced, Chitlik did a career about-face and began to write for television, first as the executive story editor for a syndicated series, \"Guilty or Innocent,\" and later as a staff writer with writing partner, Jeremy Bertrand Finch, for the Showtime series,\"Brothers.\" Chitlik and Finch wrote for CBS' \"The Twilight Zone,\" \"Who's the Boss?,\" and NBC's \"Amen.\" Chitlik joined the Writers Guild of America, west, in 1986, and has been an active member since, serving on the Academic Liaison Committee, the Publications Board, and, most recently, on the Writers with Disabilities Committee. In 1999 he assisted the Guild’s public ", "score": "1.4654145" } ]
[ "Linda Arvidson\n Arvidson wrote screenplays, including the one for the five-reel Who's Guilty Now? She was an associate editor of Film Fun and a film critic for Leslie's Magazine, and she wrote the book When the Movies Were Young.", "Guilty (Awake)\n The episode was written by series executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon and consulting producer Evan Katz, and was directed by Jeffrey Reiner. It marked both Gordon and Katz's first writing credit in the series, and director Reiner's second directing credit, with the last episode he directed being \"The Little Guy\", the second episode aired on March 8, 2012. This is the first episode that was not written by series creator and executive producer Kyle Killen.", "The Guilty (2000 film)\n The Guilty is a 2000 American crime film directed by Anthony Waller and starring Bill Pullman, Devon Sawa, Gabrielle Anwar, Angela Featherstone and Joanne Whalley. The film is a remake of the 1992 UK TV two-part telemovie of the same name and identical plot starring Michael Kitchen, Sean Gallagher, Caroline Catz and Carol Starks.", "The Guilty (1947 film)\n The Guilty is a 1947 film noir directed by John Reinhardt, based on Cornell Woolrich's short story \"Two Men in a Furnished Room\". The film was produced by oil millionaire Jack Wrather, the husband of lead actress Bonita Granville.", "Guilt (Revenge)\n The episode was written by Nikki Toscano, while being directed by CSI: Crime Scene Investigation veteran Kenneth Fink.", "Guilty Conscience (film)\n Guilty Conscience is a 1985 American television film, produced by Robert A. Papazian, written by Richard Levinson and William Link, directed by David Greene, starring Anthony Hopkins, Blythe Danner and Swoosie Kurtz. The film score was composed by Billy Goldenberg. It premiered on April 2, 1985 on CBS. The film is a drama, but also a mystery, with many plot twists and turns.", "The Guilty (Baldacci novel)\n The Guilty is thriller novel written by David Baldacci. It is the fourth installment to feature Will Robie, a highly skilled U.S. Government assassin. The book was released on November 17, 2015 by Grand Central Publishing.", "The Guilty (2021 film)\n The Guilty is a 2021 American crime thriller film directed and produced by Antoine Fuqua, from a screenplay by Nic Pizzolatto. A remake of the 2018 Danish film of the same name, the film stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Christina Vidal, with the voices of Ethan Hawke, Riley Keough, Eli Goree, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Paul Dano, and Peter Sarsgaard. The Guilty had its world premiere at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival on September 11, 2021. The film was released in a limited release on September 24, 2021, then digitally on Netflix on October 1. It received mostly positive reviews from critics, who praised Gyllenhaal's performance but still felt that the remake was inferior to the original film.", "The Guilty (2018 film)\n The Guilty (Den skyldige) is a 2018 Danish crime thriller film co-written and directed by Gustav Möller, his debut film. It was screened in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition section at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. The film was distributed in the U.S. by Magnolia Pictures. It was selected as the Danish submission for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards, making the December shortlist.", "Guilty by Suspicion\n Guilty by Suspicion is a 1991 American drama film about the Hollywood blacklist, McCarthyism, and the activities of the House Un-American Activities Committee. Written and directed by Irwin Winkler, it stars Robert De Niro, Annette Bening, and George Wendt. The character of David Merrill was inspired by the experiences of John Berry during the Hollywood blacklist era. The film was entered into the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.", "The Guilty (2021 film)\n In December 2018, it was announced Jake Gyllenhaal had acquired rights to the 2018 Danish thriller film The Guilty, and would star in and produce a remake under his Nine Stories Productions banner, alongside Bold Films. In September 2020, it was announced Antoine Fuqua would direct and produce the film, from a screenplay by Nic Pizzolatto. Later that month, Netflix acquired worldwide rights to the film for $30 million. In November 2020, Ethan Hawke, Peter Sarsgaard, Riley Keough, Paul Dano, Byron Bowers, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, David Castaneda, Christina Vidal, Adrian Martinez, Bill Burr, Beau Knapp and Edi Patterson joined the cast of the film. Principal photography began in Los Angeles in November 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and lasted for 11 days. Three days before production was set to begin, a person in contact with director Antoine Fuqua tested positive for COVID-19. Fuqua tested negative subsequently, so the production was still on schedule. He directed the entire film from a van with screens that had access to the cameras, maintaining contact with the cast and the crew.", "Presumed Guilty (film)\n The film was produced chiefly by Roberto Hernández and Layda Negrete. Hernández and Negrete (LL.M. 1996, M.P.P. 1998) are candidates for PhDs in Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. They are married and have two daughters.", "Guilty (Awake)\n \"Guilty\" is the third episode of the American police procedural drama television series Awake. The episode first aired on March 15, 2012 in the United States on NBC, and was simultaneously broadcast on Global in Canada. It was written by series executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon and consulting producer Evan Katz, and was directed by Jeffrey Reiner. \"Guilty\" was well received by television critics, who praised its storylines, noting the script to be interesting. The episode garnered 5.12 million viewers in the United States and a 1.6/4 rating in the 18–49 demographic, according to Nielsen ratings. It ranked second in its timeslot of the night, behind Private Practice on ABC. The show centers on Michael Britten ", "The Guilty (2018 film)\n After The Guiltys debut, Möller received requests for remake rights from around the world, but declined personal involvement in any of them, preferring instead to work on new projects. In 2018, it was announced that Nine Stories and Jake Gyllenhaal had bought the American rights to The Guilty with Gyllenhaal set to star. In 2020, it was announced the film would be directed by Antoine Fuqua and be adapted by Nic Pizzolatto. The film was shot at a single Los Angeles location sometime in November. Peter Sarsgaard, Ethan Hawke, and Riley Keough were confirmed to join the cast. In September 2020, Netflix acquired worldwide distribution rights for the film for $30 million.", "Guilty Conscience (film)\n Arthur Jamison (Anthony Hopkins), a wealthy criminal defence attorney, is facing a costly divorce from his wife, Louise (Blythe Danner). Arthur deals with the predicament by imagining numerous schemes in which he kills her. As a defense attorney, Arthur is familiar with both the courts and the minds of criminals, and he spends much of the film consulting an officious imaginary version of himself (a double played by Donegan Smith) for the perfect scheme to rid himself of Louise. Arthur runs each murder, or the subsequent trial, through in his mind, searching for problems, loopholes, and the elusive watertight alibi. Arthur's mistress, Jackie Willis (Swoosie Kurtz), meets up with Louise in secret. The two concoct a scheme to kill Arthur. They confront ", "Guilty (2011 film)\n Guilty (Présumé coupable, ) is a 2011 French drama film directed by Vincent Garenq about the Outreau trial. Garenq was nominated for the 2012 Best Writing (Adaptation) César Award and Philippe Torreton was nominated as Best Actor.", "Richard Collins (screenwriter)\n Richard J. Collins (July 20, 1914 – February 14, 2013) was an American producer, director and screenwriter prominent in Hollywood during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. He worked on several notable television programs including Bonanza, General Electric Theater, Matlock and Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre. He was married to actress Dorothy Comingore from 1939 until 1945. One of the characters in the film Guilty by Suspicion was based on his character although he and Dorothy Comingore were long divorced before the HUAC hearings.", "The Verdict\n Film rights to the novel were bought by the team of Richard Zanuck and David Brown. A number of actors, including Roy Scheider, William Holden, Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant and Dustin Hoffman, expressed interest in the project because of the strength of the lead role. Arthur Hiller was originally attached to direct while David Mamet hired to write a screenplay. Though Mamet had already made a name for himself in the theater, he was still new to screenwriting. The producers were uncertain whether Mamet would take the job given the standards he set with his own previous work, but according ", "Guilty (2020 film)\n Guilty is a 2020 Indian Hindi-language thriller drama film directed by Ruchi Narain and written by Ruchi Narain, Kanika Dhillon and Atika Chohan. Starring Kiara Advani and several others, the film follows the story of a songwriter whose boyfriend is accused of rape during the era of #MeToo. The film is the first production venture of Dharmatic, the digital arm of Karan Johar's Dharma Productions. It was released on 6 March 2020 on Netflix.", "Paul Chitlik\n In 1984 he wrote his second play, “Casanova Goldberg,” which received a staged reading in Los Angeles, but before it could be produced, Chitlik did a career about-face and began to write for television, first as the executive story editor for a syndicated series, \"Guilty or Innocent,\" and later as a staff writer with writing partner, Jeremy Bertrand Finch, for the Showtime series,\"Brothers.\" Chitlik and Finch wrote for CBS' \"The Twilight Zone,\" \"Who's the Boss?,\" and NBC's \"Amen.\" Chitlik joined the Writers Guild of America, west, in 1986, and has been an active member since, serving on the Academic Liaison Committee, the Publications Board, and, most recently, on the Writers with Disabilities Committee. In 1999 he assisted the Guild’s public " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Salvation?
[ "Paul Cox", "Paulus Henriqus Benedictus Cox", "Paulus Henrique Benedictus Cox" ]
screenwriter
Salvation (2008 film)
5,674,281
99
[ { "id": "25255950", "title": "The Salvation (film)", "text": " The Salvation is a 2014 Danish Western film directed by Kristian Levring and written by Anders Thomas Jensen and Levring. The film stars Mads Mikkelsen, Eva Green, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Jonathan Pryce, Eric Cantona, Mikael Persbrandt, Douglas Henshall and Michael Raymond-James.", "score": "1.7343471" }, { "id": "180285", "title": "Salvation (2008 film)", "text": " Salvation is a 2008 Australian film directed by Paul Cox and starring Wendy Hughes and Bruce Myles. Cox was inspired to make the film after seeing a televangelist on TV late at night asking for money for a facelift.", "score": "1.6909497" }, { "id": "29827316", "title": "Salvation Boulevard", "text": " Salvation Boulevard is a 2011 comedy thriller film with religious satire undertones directed by George Ratliff and starring Pierce Brosnan, Jennifer Connelly, Ed Harris, Greg Kinnear, Marisa Tomei, and Jim Gaffigan. It is based on the novel of the same name by Larry Beinhart.", "score": "1.6504264" }, { "id": "11288401", "title": "Salvation!", "text": " Salvation! (also known as Salvation!: Have You Said Your Prayers Today?) is a 1987 American black comedy film directed by Beth B, and starring Viggo Mortensen, Exene Cervenka, and Stephen McHattie. The film is a parody of televangelism, and was released right after the real-life Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart scandals. The film was released on VHS, but not as yet on DVD.", "score": "1.6428857" }, { "id": "7810587", "title": "David C. Wilson (screenwriter)", "text": " David Campbell Wilson is an American screenwriter, probably best known for creating The Perfect Weapon and Supernova. He also credited for the screenplay of Terminator Salvation in early promotional material, but not for the final cut of the film. Mr. Wilson has worked with many directors, among them Francis Ford Coppola, John McTiernan, and Walter Hill. Most recently, he wrote the screen story for Guy Ritchie's adaptation of The Man from U.N.C.L.E..", "score": "1.629482" }, { "id": "180286", "title": "Salvation (2008 film)", "text": " The film received mixed reviews.", "score": "1.5975266" }, { "id": "25255958", "title": "The Salvation (film)", "text": " Principal photography began on 8 April 2013 in Johannesburg, South Africa.", "score": "1.5745621" }, { "id": "8398408", "title": "Forward Films", "text": "The Salvation (2014) ", "score": "1.5668801" }, { "id": "26228305", "title": "Noah K", "text": " K began working with writer Hampton Fancher in 2010 when they collaborated on the spoken word cantata Rat Lunch. In 2016 they began collaborating on an opera, Salvation, for which Fancher wrote the story and libretto. The DVD of Michael Almereyda's documentary of Fancher, Escapes (2017), includes a video portrait of Fancher shot by K.", "score": "1.5575237" }, { "id": "25392245", "title": "Union of Salvation (film)", "text": " The film's historical consultant was Oksana Ivanovna Kiyanskaya. The film Union of Salvation is a project of the Direktsiya kino (the main partner of which is Channel One of Russian television) and the company 20th Century Fox CIS. The project was initially announced in 2013. The script was written by Nikita Vysotskiy, he originally appeared as a director. And now in the director's chair Andrei Kravchuk, who worked with the Direktsiya kino on the films Admiral, a 2008 and Viking (film), a 2016 historical was film. The first teaser pictures have appeared in theaters. The film's cameraman, Igor Grinyakin, also previously worked on the projects of the Cinema Directorate Studio. Producers of the film were Konstantin Ernst and Anatoly Maksimov.", "score": "1.5556012" }, { "id": "8751672", "title": "Terminator Salvation", "text": " directing along with Chris Morgan as the screenwriter. The discussions for the film had been in the very early stages. On April 27, 2011, it was announced that a rights package to a Terminator film, to which Schwarzenegger, Lin, and producer Robert W. Cort were attached, but no screenwriter, had been circulating among the studios. Universal, Sony and Lionsgate, and CBS Films had been some of the interested companies. According to sources close to Schwarzenegger, he had only wanted to commit fully if a good script could be created. It was reported on May 13, 2011, that Megan Ellison and her ", "score": "1.5493609" }, { "id": "15228726", "title": "Salvation Jane (film)", "text": " Salvation Jane is a 1927 American crime film directed by Phil Rosen and written by Doris Schroeder. The film stars Viola Dana, J. Parks Jones, Fay Holderness and Erville Alderson. The film was released on March 1, 1927, by Film Booking Offices of America.", "score": "1.5476699" }, { "id": "26646371", "title": "Salvation (musical)", "text": "Drama Desk Most Promising Award ; Variety balloting for Best Composer and Best Lyricist ", "score": "1.5422859" }, { "id": "29471242", "title": "Salvation Group", "text": " Redemption showcases the best in European horror and sleaze cinema, with such titles as Killer Nun, Profondo Rosso and films by Jess Franco, Jean Rollin, Dario Argento, Mario Bava, Bruno Mattei, Lucio Fulci among others. They also release classics such as Nosferatu, Vampyr, The Phantom Carriage, M and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.", "score": "1.5408661" }, { "id": "29054618", "title": "Salvation (TV series)", "text": " Salvation is an American suspense drama television series, that premiered on July 12, 2017. The series was originally announced as being developed in September 2013, but received its straight-to-series 13-episode order in October 2016. On October 18, 2017, CBS renewed the series for a 13-episode second season, which premiered on June 25, 2018. On November 20, 2018, CBS canceled the series after two seasons.", "score": "1.5307951" }, { "id": "31509597", "title": "The Exquisite Sinner", "text": " On the basis of Sternberg's impressive directorial debut, The Salvation Hunters, actor-producer Mary Pickford invited him to direct her next feature and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer brought him under contract. When Sternberg presented her with a screenplay entitled Backwash that incorporated experimental camera techniques and in which she would play a blind girl, Pickford declined it. M-G-M assigned Sternberg, now under an eight-movie contract, to direct a more conventional project, The Exquisite Sinner.", "score": "1.5145365" }, { "id": "5255544", "title": "William Monahan", "text": " was captivated by Monahan's pitch and hired him to write the screenplay for Kingdom of Heaven. Tripoli was eventually shelved, but Monahan retained ownership of the screenplay and therefore the right to consider new offers at a later date. Monahan steadily secured work in the film industry throughout the 2000s. Brad Pitt's production company, Plan B, hired Monahan to write an adaptation of Hong Kong director Andrew Lau's gangster film Infernal Affairs. Monahan respun Infernal Affairs as a battle between Irish American gangsters and cops in Boston's Southie district, and Martin Scorsese directed the completed screenplay under the title The Departed for Warner Bros. Monahan's work on the film would later earn him two Best Adapted Screenplay awards, from the Writers Guild of America and the Academy Awards.", "score": "1.513573" }, { "id": "2240996", "title": "Charles Leavitt", "text": " Leavitt's screenwriting career began in 1996 when he wrote Sunchaser. He wrote the screen adaptation of the Rodman Philbrick novel Freak the Mighty for the screen in 1998. The Mighty starred Sharon Stone, Gena Rowlands, Harry Dean Stanton, Kieran Culkin and Elden Henson. The film received two Golden Globe Awards for Best Supporting Actress (Sharon Stone) and Best Original Song (\"The Mighty\"). After writing the script for the 2001 film K-PAX, Leavitt was hired by Warner Bros. in February 2004 to rewrite an early draft of the film Blood Diamond, then titled Okavango. The story had been stuck in \"development hell\" at the studio for years before producers Paula Weinstein and Gillian Gorfil finally decided on ", "score": "1.5090785" }, { "id": "5255550", "title": "William Monahan", "text": "Kingdom of Heaven (2005; screenplay) ; The Departed (2006; screenplay) ; Body of Lies (2008; screenplay) ; Edge of Darkness (2010; screenplay) ; London Boulevard (2010; director, screenplay) ; Oblivion (2013; first-draft screenplay) ; Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (2014; early screenplay) ; The Gambler (2014; screenplay) ; Mojave (2015; director, screenplay) ; The Tender Bar (2021; screenplay) ; Marlowe (TBA; screenplay) ", "score": "1.5079352" }, { "id": "29471240", "title": "Salvation Group", "text": " Salvation's origins can be traced back to 1993, when founder Nigel Wingrove started up a film distribution label under the name Redemption Films. Since then, the company has broadened its scope to include the distribution of music and literature and the online model community, the Satanic Sluts.", "score": "1.5012228" } ]
[ "The Salvation (film)\n The Salvation is a 2014 Danish Western film directed by Kristian Levring and written by Anders Thomas Jensen and Levring. The film stars Mads Mikkelsen, Eva Green, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Jonathan Pryce, Eric Cantona, Mikael Persbrandt, Douglas Henshall and Michael Raymond-James.", "Salvation (2008 film)\n Salvation is a 2008 Australian film directed by Paul Cox and starring Wendy Hughes and Bruce Myles. Cox was inspired to make the film after seeing a televangelist on TV late at night asking for money for a facelift.", "Salvation Boulevard\n Salvation Boulevard is a 2011 comedy thriller film with religious satire undertones directed by George Ratliff and starring Pierce Brosnan, Jennifer Connelly, Ed Harris, Greg Kinnear, Marisa Tomei, and Jim Gaffigan. It is based on the novel of the same name by Larry Beinhart.", "Salvation!\n Salvation! (also known as Salvation!: Have You Said Your Prayers Today?) is a 1987 American black comedy film directed by Beth B, and starring Viggo Mortensen, Exene Cervenka, and Stephen McHattie. The film is a parody of televangelism, and was released right after the real-life Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart scandals. The film was released on VHS, but not as yet on DVD.", "David C. Wilson (screenwriter)\n David Campbell Wilson is an American screenwriter, probably best known for creating The Perfect Weapon and Supernova. He also credited for the screenplay of Terminator Salvation in early promotional material, but not for the final cut of the film. Mr. Wilson has worked with many directors, among them Francis Ford Coppola, John McTiernan, and Walter Hill. Most recently, he wrote the screen story for Guy Ritchie's adaptation of The Man from U.N.C.L.E..", "Salvation (2008 film)\n The film received mixed reviews.", "The Salvation (film)\n Principal photography began on 8 April 2013 in Johannesburg, South Africa.", "Forward Films\nThe Salvation (2014) ", "Noah K\n K began working with writer Hampton Fancher in 2010 when they collaborated on the spoken word cantata Rat Lunch. In 2016 they began collaborating on an opera, Salvation, for which Fancher wrote the story and libretto. The DVD of Michael Almereyda's documentary of Fancher, Escapes (2017), includes a video portrait of Fancher shot by K.", "Union of Salvation (film)\n The film's historical consultant was Oksana Ivanovna Kiyanskaya. The film Union of Salvation is a project of the Direktsiya kino (the main partner of which is Channel One of Russian television) and the company 20th Century Fox CIS. The project was initially announced in 2013. The script was written by Nikita Vysotskiy, he originally appeared as a director. And now in the director's chair Andrei Kravchuk, who worked with the Direktsiya kino on the films Admiral, a 2008 and Viking (film), a 2016 historical was film. The first teaser pictures have appeared in theaters. The film's cameraman, Igor Grinyakin, also previously worked on the projects of the Cinema Directorate Studio. Producers of the film were Konstantin Ernst and Anatoly Maksimov.", "Terminator Salvation\n directing along with Chris Morgan as the screenwriter. The discussions for the film had been in the very early stages. On April 27, 2011, it was announced that a rights package to a Terminator film, to which Schwarzenegger, Lin, and producer Robert W. Cort were attached, but no screenwriter, had been circulating among the studios. Universal, Sony and Lionsgate, and CBS Films had been some of the interested companies. According to sources close to Schwarzenegger, he had only wanted to commit fully if a good script could be created. It was reported on May 13, 2011, that Megan Ellison and her ", "Salvation Jane (film)\n Salvation Jane is a 1927 American crime film directed by Phil Rosen and written by Doris Schroeder. The film stars Viola Dana, J. Parks Jones, Fay Holderness and Erville Alderson. The film was released on March 1, 1927, by Film Booking Offices of America.", "Salvation (musical)\nDrama Desk Most Promising Award ; Variety balloting for Best Composer and Best Lyricist ", "Salvation Group\n Redemption showcases the best in European horror and sleaze cinema, with such titles as Killer Nun, Profondo Rosso and films by Jess Franco, Jean Rollin, Dario Argento, Mario Bava, Bruno Mattei, Lucio Fulci among others. They also release classics such as Nosferatu, Vampyr, The Phantom Carriage, M and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.", "Salvation (TV series)\n Salvation is an American suspense drama television series, that premiered on July 12, 2017. The series was originally announced as being developed in September 2013, but received its straight-to-series 13-episode order in October 2016. On October 18, 2017, CBS renewed the series for a 13-episode second season, which premiered on June 25, 2018. On November 20, 2018, CBS canceled the series after two seasons.", "The Exquisite Sinner\n On the basis of Sternberg's impressive directorial debut, The Salvation Hunters, actor-producer Mary Pickford invited him to direct her next feature and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer brought him under contract. When Sternberg presented her with a screenplay entitled Backwash that incorporated experimental camera techniques and in which she would play a blind girl, Pickford declined it. M-G-M assigned Sternberg, now under an eight-movie contract, to direct a more conventional project, The Exquisite Sinner.", "William Monahan\n was captivated by Monahan's pitch and hired him to write the screenplay for Kingdom of Heaven. Tripoli was eventually shelved, but Monahan retained ownership of the screenplay and therefore the right to consider new offers at a later date. Monahan steadily secured work in the film industry throughout the 2000s. Brad Pitt's production company, Plan B, hired Monahan to write an adaptation of Hong Kong director Andrew Lau's gangster film Infernal Affairs. Monahan respun Infernal Affairs as a battle between Irish American gangsters and cops in Boston's Southie district, and Martin Scorsese directed the completed screenplay under the title The Departed for Warner Bros. Monahan's work on the film would later earn him two Best Adapted Screenplay awards, from the Writers Guild of America and the Academy Awards.", "Charles Leavitt\n Leavitt's screenwriting career began in 1996 when he wrote Sunchaser. He wrote the screen adaptation of the Rodman Philbrick novel Freak the Mighty for the screen in 1998. The Mighty starred Sharon Stone, Gena Rowlands, Harry Dean Stanton, Kieran Culkin and Elden Henson. The film received two Golden Globe Awards for Best Supporting Actress (Sharon Stone) and Best Original Song (\"The Mighty\"). After writing the script for the 2001 film K-PAX, Leavitt was hired by Warner Bros. in February 2004 to rewrite an early draft of the film Blood Diamond, then titled Okavango. The story had been stuck in \"development hell\" at the studio for years before producers Paula Weinstein and Gillian Gorfil finally decided on ", "William Monahan\nKingdom of Heaven (2005; screenplay) ; The Departed (2006; screenplay) ; Body of Lies (2008; screenplay) ; Edge of Darkness (2010; screenplay) ; London Boulevard (2010; director, screenplay) ; Oblivion (2013; first-draft screenplay) ; Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (2014; early screenplay) ; The Gambler (2014; screenplay) ; Mojave (2015; director, screenplay) ; The Tender Bar (2021; screenplay) ; Marlowe (TBA; screenplay) ", "Salvation Group\n Salvation's origins can be traced back to 1993, when founder Nigel Wingrove started up a film distribution label under the name Redemption Films. Since then, the company has broadened its scope to include the distribution of music and literature and the online model community, the Satanic Sluts." ]
Who was the screenwriter for The Last Word?
[ "Binka Zhelyazkova" ]
screenwriter
The Last Word (1973 film)
5,937,084
86
[ { "id": "27797493", "title": "The Last Word (2008 film)", "text": " The Last Word is an offbeat romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Geoffrey Haley. It stars Winona Ryder and Wes Bentley. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January, and had a wider release in 2008.", "score": "1.6407168" }, { "id": "5951660", "title": "The Last Word (1979 film)", "text": " The Last Word is a 1979 film starring Richard Harris. It was the last movie directed by Roy Boulting. It was also known as The Number.", "score": "1.6337228" }, { "id": "5951662", "title": "The Last Word (1979 film)", "text": "Richard Harris as Danny Travis ; Karen Black as Paula Herbert ; Martin Landau as Capt. Gerrity ; Dennis Christopher as Ben ; Christopher Guest as Roger ; Penelope Milford as Denise ", "score": "1.5813937" }, { "id": "3468066", "title": "Last Words (2020 film)", "text": " Last Words is a 2020 internationally co-produced drama film directed by Jonathan Nossiter. It was selected to be shown at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival. It premiered at the Deauville American Film Festival on 6 September 2020.", "score": "1.5784152" }, { "id": "27797494", "title": "The Last Word (2008 film)", "text": " An odd-but-gifted poet, Evan Merck (Wes Bentley) makes his living writing suicide notes for the soon-to-be departed. So when he meets Charlotte (Winona Ryder), the free-spirited sister of his latest client, Evan has no choice but to lie about his relationship to her late, lamented brother. Curiously attracted by his evasive charms, a smitten Charlotte begins her pursuit, forcing Evan to juggle an amorous new girlfriend, a sarcastic new client (Ray Romano) and an ever-increasing mountain of lies.", "score": "1.5421124" }, { "id": "29013322", "title": "The Last Word (Greene short story)", "text": " \"The Last Word\" is a dystopian short story by author Graham Greene, written in 1988 (see 1988 in literature). It first appeared in The Independent but can also be found in collections of his short fiction, notably the Penguin edition of The Last Word and Other Stories, for which it is the lead story. The story, written toward the end of Greene's life, reflects his frustration at the declining influence of religion, particularly Catholicism, in the modern world. The Last Word is Greene's final short story, before his death from leukemia in 1991.", "score": "1.5380204" }, { "id": "32145741", "title": "The Last Sentence (1951 film)", "text": " The Last Sentence (Italian: L&#39; ultima sentenza) is a 1951 Italian melodrama-crime film co-written and directed by Mario Bonnard and starring Charles Vanel, Antonella Lualdi and Eleonora Rossi Drago.", "score": "1.5065088" }, { "id": "29937761", "title": "Bad Words (film)", "text": " Andrew Dodge's screenplay for Bad Words first received attention after its inclusion on the 2011 Black List, an annual survey of the best unproduced screenplays in Hollywood. The script was sent to actor Jason Bateman, who had asked his agent to pursue directorial work, explaining that being able to direct films was \"really the only reason I've been acting for the last 20 years of this career\". After Bateman signed on to direct the film, he and Dodge spent a long time revising the script, particularly adjusting parts where the dark humor \"went a little bit too far\". In the original script, the story was intended to take place at the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C. The setting was changed to the fictional Golden Quill Spelling Bee in Los Angeles since Bateman did not expect to receive permission from Scripps to use their name in the film.", "score": "1.5038944" }, { "id": "8036766", "title": "The Last Sentence (1917 film)", "text": " The Last Sentence is a 1917 American silent drama film directed by Ben Turbett and starring Marc McDermott, Miriam Nesbitt and Herbert Prior.", "score": "1.5031692" }, { "id": "25190725", "title": "Mark Lane (author)", "text": " Lane later wrote A Citizen's Dissent, documenting his response to the Warren Commission's governmental findings on the Kennedy assassination. He also wrote the first screenplay of the 1973 film Executive Action (starring Burt Lancaster and Robert Ryan), with Donald Freed. Lane's associate, Steve Jaffe, was supervising producer and credited with supplying much of the research material for the film. Lane asserted in his 1991 book Plausible Denial that he only worked on the first draft of the screenplay which was ultimately credited to Dalton Trumbo. He noted that he collaborated with Donald Freed on it and after seeing subsequent drafts, they complained both privately to the producer and publicly at press conferences, pointing out errors in the work. In 1991, Lane described Plausible Denial as his \"last word\" on the subject and told Patricia Holt of the San Francisco Chronicle: \"I'll never write another sentence about the (JFK) assassination\". In November 2011, Lane published a third major book on the JFK assassination titled Last Word: My Indictment of the CIA in the Murder of JFK.", "score": "1.4977465" }, { "id": "27406797", "title": "The Final Word (novel)", "text": " The Final Word (Završna riječ) is a bestseller novel by Bosnian writer Zlatko Topčić. It was published in 2011 by Europapress Holding & Novi Liber (Hanza Media in 2016).", "score": "1.4921702" }, { "id": "28529028", "title": "David Freeman (screenwriter)", "text": " David Freeman is an American novelist, screenwriter, playwright, and journalist who studied playwriting and dramatic literature at the Yale Drama School and currently teaches screenwriting seminars in Los Angeles, where he lives with his wife Judith Gingold. Freeman wrote the last draft for Alfred Hitchcock's final project, The Short Night, a projected spy thriller which was never produced due to Hitchcock's failing health. Freeman wrote about his experiences in the 1984 book The Last Days of Alfred Hitchcock, which includes his completed screenplay.", "score": "1.4879054" }, { "id": "6950285", "title": "Simon Rumley", "text": " independent horror names such as Nacho Vigalondo, Ti West, Adam Wingard, Srdjan Spasojevic and Xavier Gens, the film premiered at Toronto's International Film Festival's Midnight Madness section in 2012. In 2013 Rumley was hired to direct his first 'Hollywood' feature by Boss Media and producer Frank Mancuso, Jr (Species, Ronin, Internal Affairs). The film was co-produced by Ai7le Films, run by actor Peter Facinelli (Twilight). The Last Word is a horror/curse movie based on the true story of Johnny Frank Garrett, executed in Texas in 1992 for the rape and murder of a 76-year-old nun. Garrett maintained his innocence until the end and left behind a curse ", "score": "1.4819186" }, { "id": "28311518", "title": "David Ruiz (screenwriter)", "text": "The Last Death (2011 film) ", "score": "1.4783792" }, { "id": "15081932", "title": "The Final Programme (film)", "text": " The Final Programme is a 1973 British fantasy science fiction-thriller film directed by Robert Fuest, and starring Jon Finch and Jenny Runacre. It was based on the 1968 Jerry Cornelius novel of the same name by Michael Moorcock. It was distributed in the United States and elsewhere as The Last Days of Man on Earth. It is the only Moorcock novel to have reached the screen.", "score": "1.4729365" }, { "id": "2674000", "title": "The Last Sentence", "text": " The Last Sentence (Dom över död man; Judgement on the dead) is a Swedish film from 2012, directed by Jan Troell and starring Jesper Christensen, Pernilla August, Björn Granath and Ulla Skoog. It is set between 1933 and 1945, and focuses on the life and career of Torgny Segerstedt, a Swedish newspaper editor who was a prominent critic of Hitler and the Nazis during a period when the Swedish government and monarch were intent on maintaining Sweden's neutrality and avoiding tensions with Germany. The film also deals with Segerstedt's relations with his wife, his mistress, and his mistress's husband (who was a close friend of Segerstedt). The film's Swedish title, Dom över död man, comes from a line in the Old Norse poem Hávamál: \"Cattle die, kinsmen die, thou wilt also die; but I know one thing that never dies: the judgment on the dead\".", "score": "1.4707812" }, { "id": "25652181", "title": "Darin Morgan", "text": " On August 11, 2004, it was announced that Morgan and screenwriter Sam Hamm were writing an untitled screenplay under development by DreamWorks SKG. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the story \"concerns a marriage counselor, whose daughter is about to get married, who discovers that his future son-in-law is suffering from the delusion that he's a superhero.\" Morgan worked on the second episode of former X-Files producer Frank Spotnitz's Kolchak: The Night Stalker remake, as consulting producer, though the show was canceled before any of Morgan's scripts were produced. The only script that Morgan wrote before the show was canceled was called \"The M Word\". It concerned a serial killer and a were-lizard, who may or may not be ", "score": "1.4706097" }, { "id": "29204119", "title": "Perfect Sense", "text": " Perfect Sense, formerly known as The Last Word, is a 2011 science fiction romantic drama film directed by David Mackenzie, written by Kim Fupz Aakeson and starring Eva Green and Ewan McGregor. In the film, a chef (McGregor) and a scientist (Green) fall in love as an epidemic begins to rob people of their sensory perceptions.", "score": "1.4687413" }, { "id": "27797495", "title": "The Last Word (2008 film)", "text": "Winona Ryder as Charlotte Morris ; Wes Bentley as Evan ; Ray Romano as Abel ; Gina Hecht as Hilde Morris ; A. J. Trauth as Greg ; John Billingsley as Brady ; Kurt Caceres as Sammy ; Michael Cornacchia as Client ", "score": "1.4671255" }, { "id": "7493750", "title": "Brett Sullivan", "text": " The Last Word Musical - Sullivan wrote the book, music and lyrics for The Last Word, musical staged at the 2016 New York Musical Festival. The musical was directed by Michael Bello and Choreographed by Nick Kenkel. Additional lyrics by Ryan Cunningham. Nominated for Best Choreography, and Best Supporting Actress in the festival awards. Sullivan played in Australian indie bands Broken Words, Mockingbird and Easy Brother.", "score": "1.4667351" } ]
[ "The Last Word (2008 film)\n The Last Word is an offbeat romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Geoffrey Haley. It stars Winona Ryder and Wes Bentley. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January, and had a wider release in 2008.", "The Last Word (1979 film)\n The Last Word is a 1979 film starring Richard Harris. It was the last movie directed by Roy Boulting. It was also known as The Number.", "The Last Word (1979 film)\nRichard Harris as Danny Travis ; Karen Black as Paula Herbert ; Martin Landau as Capt. Gerrity ; Dennis Christopher as Ben ; Christopher Guest as Roger ; Penelope Milford as Denise ", "Last Words (2020 film)\n Last Words is a 2020 internationally co-produced drama film directed by Jonathan Nossiter. It was selected to be shown at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival. It premiered at the Deauville American Film Festival on 6 September 2020.", "The Last Word (2008 film)\n An odd-but-gifted poet, Evan Merck (Wes Bentley) makes his living writing suicide notes for the soon-to-be departed. So when he meets Charlotte (Winona Ryder), the free-spirited sister of his latest client, Evan has no choice but to lie about his relationship to her late, lamented brother. Curiously attracted by his evasive charms, a smitten Charlotte begins her pursuit, forcing Evan to juggle an amorous new girlfriend, a sarcastic new client (Ray Romano) and an ever-increasing mountain of lies.", "The Last Word (Greene short story)\n \"The Last Word\" is a dystopian short story by author Graham Greene, written in 1988 (see 1988 in literature). It first appeared in The Independent but can also be found in collections of his short fiction, notably the Penguin edition of The Last Word and Other Stories, for which it is the lead story. The story, written toward the end of Greene's life, reflects his frustration at the declining influence of religion, particularly Catholicism, in the modern world. The Last Word is Greene's final short story, before his death from leukemia in 1991.", "The Last Sentence (1951 film)\n The Last Sentence (Italian: L&#39; ultima sentenza) is a 1951 Italian melodrama-crime film co-written and directed by Mario Bonnard and starring Charles Vanel, Antonella Lualdi and Eleonora Rossi Drago.", "Bad Words (film)\n Andrew Dodge's screenplay for Bad Words first received attention after its inclusion on the 2011 Black List, an annual survey of the best unproduced screenplays in Hollywood. The script was sent to actor Jason Bateman, who had asked his agent to pursue directorial work, explaining that being able to direct films was \"really the only reason I've been acting for the last 20 years of this career\". After Bateman signed on to direct the film, he and Dodge spent a long time revising the script, particularly adjusting parts where the dark humor \"went a little bit too far\". In the original script, the story was intended to take place at the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C. The setting was changed to the fictional Golden Quill Spelling Bee in Los Angeles since Bateman did not expect to receive permission from Scripps to use their name in the film.", "The Last Sentence (1917 film)\n The Last Sentence is a 1917 American silent drama film directed by Ben Turbett and starring Marc McDermott, Miriam Nesbitt and Herbert Prior.", "Mark Lane (author)\n Lane later wrote A Citizen's Dissent, documenting his response to the Warren Commission's governmental findings on the Kennedy assassination. He also wrote the first screenplay of the 1973 film Executive Action (starring Burt Lancaster and Robert Ryan), with Donald Freed. Lane's associate, Steve Jaffe, was supervising producer and credited with supplying much of the research material for the film. Lane asserted in his 1991 book Plausible Denial that he only worked on the first draft of the screenplay which was ultimately credited to Dalton Trumbo. He noted that he collaborated with Donald Freed on it and after seeing subsequent drafts, they complained both privately to the producer and publicly at press conferences, pointing out errors in the work. In 1991, Lane described Plausible Denial as his \"last word\" on the subject and told Patricia Holt of the San Francisco Chronicle: \"I'll never write another sentence about the (JFK) assassination\". In November 2011, Lane published a third major book on the JFK assassination titled Last Word: My Indictment of the CIA in the Murder of JFK.", "The Final Word (novel)\n The Final Word (Završna riječ) is a bestseller novel by Bosnian writer Zlatko Topčić. It was published in 2011 by Europapress Holding & Novi Liber (Hanza Media in 2016).", "David Freeman (screenwriter)\n David Freeman is an American novelist, screenwriter, playwright, and journalist who studied playwriting and dramatic literature at the Yale Drama School and currently teaches screenwriting seminars in Los Angeles, where he lives with his wife Judith Gingold. Freeman wrote the last draft for Alfred Hitchcock's final project, The Short Night, a projected spy thriller which was never produced due to Hitchcock's failing health. Freeman wrote about his experiences in the 1984 book The Last Days of Alfred Hitchcock, which includes his completed screenplay.", "Simon Rumley\n independent horror names such as Nacho Vigalondo, Ti West, Adam Wingard, Srdjan Spasojevic and Xavier Gens, the film premiered at Toronto's International Film Festival's Midnight Madness section in 2012. In 2013 Rumley was hired to direct his first 'Hollywood' feature by Boss Media and producer Frank Mancuso, Jr (Species, Ronin, Internal Affairs). The film was co-produced by Ai7le Films, run by actor Peter Facinelli (Twilight). The Last Word is a horror/curse movie based on the true story of Johnny Frank Garrett, executed in Texas in 1992 for the rape and murder of a 76-year-old nun. Garrett maintained his innocence until the end and left behind a curse ", "David Ruiz (screenwriter)\nThe Last Death (2011 film) ", "The Final Programme (film)\n The Final Programme is a 1973 British fantasy science fiction-thriller film directed by Robert Fuest, and starring Jon Finch and Jenny Runacre. It was based on the 1968 Jerry Cornelius novel of the same name by Michael Moorcock. It was distributed in the United States and elsewhere as The Last Days of Man on Earth. It is the only Moorcock novel to have reached the screen.", "The Last Sentence\n The Last Sentence (Dom över död man; Judgement on the dead) is a Swedish film from 2012, directed by Jan Troell and starring Jesper Christensen, Pernilla August, Björn Granath and Ulla Skoog. It is set between 1933 and 1945, and focuses on the life and career of Torgny Segerstedt, a Swedish newspaper editor who was a prominent critic of Hitler and the Nazis during a period when the Swedish government and monarch were intent on maintaining Sweden's neutrality and avoiding tensions with Germany. The film also deals with Segerstedt's relations with his wife, his mistress, and his mistress's husband (who was a close friend of Segerstedt). The film's Swedish title, Dom över död man, comes from a line in the Old Norse poem Hávamál: \"Cattle die, kinsmen die, thou wilt also die; but I know one thing that never dies: the judgment on the dead\".", "Darin Morgan\n On August 11, 2004, it was announced that Morgan and screenwriter Sam Hamm were writing an untitled screenplay under development by DreamWorks SKG. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the story \"concerns a marriage counselor, whose daughter is about to get married, who discovers that his future son-in-law is suffering from the delusion that he's a superhero.\" Morgan worked on the second episode of former X-Files producer Frank Spotnitz's Kolchak: The Night Stalker remake, as consulting producer, though the show was canceled before any of Morgan's scripts were produced. The only script that Morgan wrote before the show was canceled was called \"The M Word\". It concerned a serial killer and a were-lizard, who may or may not be ", "Perfect Sense\n Perfect Sense, formerly known as The Last Word, is a 2011 science fiction romantic drama film directed by David Mackenzie, written by Kim Fupz Aakeson and starring Eva Green and Ewan McGregor. In the film, a chef (McGregor) and a scientist (Green) fall in love as an epidemic begins to rob people of their sensory perceptions.", "The Last Word (2008 film)\nWinona Ryder as Charlotte Morris ; Wes Bentley as Evan ; Ray Romano as Abel ; Gina Hecht as Hilde Morris ; A. J. Trauth as Greg ; John Billingsley as Brady ; Kurt Caceres as Sammy ; Michael Cornacchia as Client ", "Brett Sullivan\n The Last Word Musical - Sullivan wrote the book, music and lyrics for The Last Word, musical staged at the 2016 New York Musical Festival. The musical was directed by Michael Bello and Choreographed by Nick Kenkel. Additional lyrics by Ryan Cunningham. Nominated for Best Choreography, and Best Supporting Actress in the festival awards. Sullivan played in Australian indie bands Broken Words, Mockingbird and Easy Brother." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Rang-ha?
[ "Abbas Kiarostami" ]
screenwriter
Rang-ha
2,110,964
73
[ { "id": "2971368", "title": "Song Hae-sung", "text": "Susanne Brink's Arirang (1991) - scripter ; The Story Inside the Handbag (1991) - assistant director ; The Rules of the Game (1994) - assistant director ; Born to Kill (1996) - screenplay, assistant director ; Calla (1999) - director ; Raybang (2001) - actor ; Failan (2001) - director, screenplay ; Rikidozan (2004) - director, screenplay, script editor ; Maundy Thursday (2006) - director ; A Better Tomorrow (2010) - director ; Boomerang Family (2013) - director, screenplay ", "score": "1.5992141" }, { "id": "12870535", "title": "Kong Su-chang", "text": "O Dreamland (1989) - screenwriter ; The Night Before the Strike (1990) - screenwriter ; White Badge (1992) - script editor ; No Emergency Exit (1993) - script editor ; A Casual Trip (1994) - screenwriter ; Naeireun Woldeukeop (1996) - screenwriter ; If It Snows on Christmas (1998) - screenwriter ; The Ring Virus (1999) - screenwriter ; Dulliui Baenangyeohaeng (short film, 1999) - screenwriter ; Tell Me Something (1999) - screenwriter ; R-Point (2004) - director, screenwriter, script editor ; The Guard Post (2008) - director, screenwriter, producer ", "score": "1.5715885" }, { "id": "11602873", "title": "Kang Dae-ha", "text": " Kang Dae-ha was born in Seogwipo, Jeju Island, Korea in 1942, and majored in creative writing at Seorabeol Arts University. He initially considered becoming a painter, but after graduating high school he turned to literature, writing poetry for coterie magazine The Cliff (Jeolbyeok). His poem, The Paean (Changa), was recommended in the December 1965 issue of the monthly literary magazine Contemporary Literature (Hyundae Munhak). Before going on to get a third recommendation—the last step to becoming a professional poet—he instead entered the film industry, gaining recognition for his 1970 screenplay, Somebody's' House (Tain-ui jip). Throughout his career he wrote more than fifty screenplays, including A Girl's First Love (Sonyeo-ui cheot-sarang, 1971), and Green Fallen-Leaves (Paran nagyeop, 1976). In 1976, Kang debuted as a film director with the ", "score": "1.5500593" }, { "id": "11602872", "title": "Kang Dae-ha", "text": " Kang Dae-ha (April 12, 1942 – 1995) was a South Korean screenwriter, producer, film and art director and poet.", "score": "1.547057" }, { "id": "26232963", "title": "Lee Hae-jun", "text": "Coming Out (2000) - screenwriter ; Kick the Moon (2001) - original idea ; Conduct Zero (2002) - screenwriter ; Au Revoir, UFO (2004) - screenwriter ; Arahan (2004) - script editor ; Antarctic Journal (2005) - screenwriter ; Like a Virgin (2006) - director, screenwriter ; Castaway on the Moon (2009) - director, screenwriter ; A Hard Day (2014) - script editor ; My Dictator (2014) - director, screenwriter ; Golden Slumber (2017) - screenwriter ; Ashfall (2019) - director ", "score": "1.5255997" }, { "id": "12870533", "title": "Kong Su-chang", "text": " Kong Su-chang (born 1961) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Kong started as a screenwriter and is behind hits such as White Badge (1992), The Ring Virus (1999) and Tell Me Something (1999). He debuted with the military-themed R-Point (2004), and then The Guard Post in 2008.", "score": "1.5015275" }, { "id": "10042127", "title": "Kim Young-ha", "text": " his fiction: My Right to Ravage Myself (2003) and The Scarlet Letter, and the cinematic adaptation of Your Republic Is Calling You is currently in progress. in 2014, his novel, Brother Has Returned was used as the basis of the movie Total Messed Family. His novel, The Quiz Show, was also made into a musical. In addition, Kim's work is popular with fans online who have made videos and animations of his work. In 2017, A Murderer's Guide to Memorization was also adapted into the film Memoir of a Murderer. Kim, along with John H. Lee, won Best Adapted Screenplay at the 2005 Grand Bell Awards for the script of A Moment to Remember.", "score": "1.4877183" }, { "id": "12870534", "title": "Kong Su-chang", "text": " Born in 1961, Kong Su-chang graduated from the Korean Literature Department at Hanyang University. Upon graduating, he joined 'Jang San Got Mae', an independent film union and wrote screenplays, such as O Dreamland (1989) and The Night Before the Strike (1990). Kong is known as a talented screenwriter of thriller and war movies, such White Badge (1992), The Ring Virus (1999) and Tell Me Something (1999). His adaptation of the novel White Badge: A Novel of Korea by Ahn Jung-hyo into the screenplay for White Badge was acclaimed as the best Vietnam War film in Korea. His directorial feature debut is the military-themed R-Point (2004), which Kong wanted as an anti-war movie, delves into the innermost psyche of soldiers who have to fight for their lives in the face of inexplicable threats and horror on a remote battlefield in Vietnam in 1972. His second feature, The Guard Post (2008), also military-themed is set at the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea.", "score": "1.480361" }, { "id": "2338484", "title": "Chang Yong-hak", "text": " Chang Yong-hak (25 April 1921 &ndash; 31 August 1999) was a Korean writer. Chang was born in Hamyeong Buk-do in what is now North Korea. He studied at Waseda University in Japan, before being drafted into the Japanese army. After the end of World War Two, he taught high school in Korea, writing fiction on the side. His short story, translated as \"The Poems of John the Baptist\" (available in English translation in Ten Korean Short Stories, edited by Ken O'Rouke, 1993), was a critical success in Korea. Chang has been characterized as an idea novelist influenced by Sartre and philosophical ideas both Oriental and Occidental and as a writer of fantasy.", "score": "1.4758302" }, { "id": "14929278", "title": "Cheon Myeong-kwan", "text": " Cheon was born in Yong-in South Korea in 1964. He debuted in 2003 with the short story “Frank and I.” Before becoming a writer, he worked for a movie production company and also wrote the screenplays for films like Gun and Gun (1995, 총잡이) and The Great Chef (1999, 북경반점). Although he wrote numerous screenplays and prepared to star in a few films himself, production on these movies was suspended. Although it was a bitter time of failure, it was no doubt an important period of his training and discipline as a writer. Cheon turned to writing fiction in an attempt to find another means of making money, spurred on by the words of his sibling who said that he should write novels instead of writing screenplays that would never be made into movies. The result was “Frank and I,” an absurd and hilarious story about ", "score": "1.4731112" }, { "id": "32570589", "title": "Mathias Woo", "text": "In 2008, Run Papa Run, the screenplay Woo co-wrote with Chan Suk Yin and Sylvia Chang, was nominated as the Best Screenplay in the 28th Hong Kong Films Award. ; In 2007, Happy Birthday, the screenplay Woo co-wrote with Sylvia Chang, was nominated as the Best Screenplay in the 26th Hong Kong Films Award. ", "score": "1.45466" }, { "id": "15397757", "title": "Hailji", "text": " with conservative literary critics—now widely known as the “Racetrack Controversy.” His subsequent works are characterized by fantastic or dreamy atmosphere and have helped to secure him a readership of avid admirers. Many of his works have been made into movies or plays. As such, Ha is also credited as an important contributor to the development of modern Korean cinema. In 1993, he published a ciné-romans entitled Mano Cabina Remembered. Ha is also active as a poet. A volume of his English poems, Blue Meditation of the Clocks, was published in the U.S. in 1994, and in 2003, his French poems were published in Paris under the title Les Hirondelles dans mon tiroir. He may be the only writer in Korea who has written and published his works in many different languages.", "score": "1.4546344" }, { "id": "26232957", "title": "Lee Hae-jun", "text": " Lee Hae-jun studied advertising at Seoul Institute of the Arts, but he soon made a name for himself in the Korean film industry for writing screenplays in various genres, such as Kim Jee-woon's vampire short film Coming Out, Jo Keun-shik's 1980s-set high school comedy Conduct Zero (2002), Kim Jin-min's small-town romance Au Revoir, UFO (2004), and Yim Pil-sung's psychological thriller Antarctic Journal (2005).", "score": "1.4534769" }, { "id": "27459103", "title": "Kim Soo-hyun (writer)", "text": " Kim Hee-ae later won the Grand Prize (\"Daesang\") at the 2004 Baeksang Arts Awards. Production on the TV drama Snow Flower was delayed because Kim, who had written the novel it was based on and had casting approval, opposed the proposal to cast singer Lee Hyori in one of the major roles (Go Ara was eventually cast). Kim had previously adapted her same-titled novel, which portrays the affection and conflict between a mother and her only daughter, into the 1992 film Flower in Snow starring Yoon Jeong-hee and Lee Mi-yeon. In 2010, she became involved in a public feud with director Im Sang-soo over the film The Housemaid. Kim had been hired to write the script ", "score": "1.4455957" }, { "id": "998548", "title": "Tang Ti-sheng", "text": " Nam Hoi Sup-sam Long (南海十三郎), two famous writers for the troupe. Encouraged by Sit Gok Sin, Tang began his career as a playwright in 1938 with his first (being taken as an announcement of his intention to be in the arena) opera The Consoling Lotus of Jiangcheng. Throughout the next twenty years Tang wrote a total of 446 opera scripts, while 80 of those were adapted for films. During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, Tang penned many scripts for his wife and her co-stars to stage in return for food (mostly rice) and found his footing eventually. #2 of #30Leaped into fame with the script White Poplar, Red ", "score": "1.4452618" }, { "id": "26339732", "title": "Rang-ha", "text": " The Colours is a 1976 Iranian short film directed by Abbas Kiarostami.", "score": "1.4441812" }, { "id": "5693541", "title": "Yoo Ha", "text": " Yoo Ha (or spelled Yu Ha; born February 9, 1963) is a South Korean film director, screenwriter and a contemporary poet. He directed the critically acclaimed films Marriage Is a Crazy Thing (2002), Once Upon a Time in High School (2004), A Dirty Carnival (2006) and Gangnam Blues (2015). The latter is a gangster movie with allusions to Martin Scorsese films like Gangs of New York, Mean Streets and Goodfellas.", "score": "1.4397069" }, { "id": "29011990", "title": "Yu Sun-ha", "text": " pieces of squared manuscript paper and began to write. Then in 1968, he was awarded a New Writer’s Award from Sasanggye for a one-act play entitled Inganiramyeon nuguna (인간이라면 누구나 Anyone If You Are a Human). However, due to political situations of the time, the play was canceled, which made him skeptical and unable to write for more than a decade. Yu resumed his writing in 1980 when he received an award from Hankook Munhak for his novel Heomangui pian (허망의 피안 Nirvana of Falsehood). However, he did not write many works, feeling shy about showing his works to the world. Then an unexplainable critical illness brought him to the verge of death, which, in turn, completely changed his attitude toward ", "score": "1.4354925" }, { "id": "11758970", "title": "Crossing (film)", "text": " Shortly after the film was released it became embroiled in controversy as it has been accused of plagiarism by Lee Kwang Hoon. He argued that the film was written on a screenplay titled \"The Conditions of Human\" based on the story of North Korean defector Yoo Sang-joon which he wrote. Lee's lawyer also said that director Lee and Yoo had signed a contract to make a film about Yoo's life and has been preparing for the past three years. The lawyer claimed that a court injunction was sought because director Kim has not discussed the matter with director Lee, although Kim had known about the existence of a screenplay about Yoo. The request for an injunction ", "score": "1.4314799" }, { "id": "15397755", "title": "Hailji", "text": " Hailji was born in 1955 and graduated from Jungang University with a degree in Creative Writing. He then taught high school until 1983, when he left Korea for France. In France he earned an M.A. from Poitiers University and a Ph.D. from University of Limoges. He returned to Korea in 1989. His career as an author began with the publication of his controversial, The Road to Racetracks. Many of his works have been made into movies or plays. As such, Ha is also credited as an important contributor to the development of modern Korean cinema.", "score": "1.4305468" } ]
[ "Song Hae-sung\nSusanne Brink's Arirang (1991) - scripter ; The Story Inside the Handbag (1991) - assistant director ; The Rules of the Game (1994) - assistant director ; Born to Kill (1996) - screenplay, assistant director ; Calla (1999) - director ; Raybang (2001) - actor ; Failan (2001) - director, screenplay ; Rikidozan (2004) - director, screenplay, script editor ; Maundy Thursday (2006) - director ; A Better Tomorrow (2010) - director ; Boomerang Family (2013) - director, screenplay ", "Kong Su-chang\nO Dreamland (1989) - screenwriter ; The Night Before the Strike (1990) - screenwriter ; White Badge (1992) - script editor ; No Emergency Exit (1993) - script editor ; A Casual Trip (1994) - screenwriter ; Naeireun Woldeukeop (1996) - screenwriter ; If It Snows on Christmas (1998) - screenwriter ; The Ring Virus (1999) - screenwriter ; Dulliui Baenangyeohaeng (short film, 1999) - screenwriter ; Tell Me Something (1999) - screenwriter ; R-Point (2004) - director, screenwriter, script editor ; The Guard Post (2008) - director, screenwriter, producer ", "Kang Dae-ha\n Kang Dae-ha was born in Seogwipo, Jeju Island, Korea in 1942, and majored in creative writing at Seorabeol Arts University. He initially considered becoming a painter, but after graduating high school he turned to literature, writing poetry for coterie magazine The Cliff (Jeolbyeok). His poem, The Paean (Changa), was recommended in the December 1965 issue of the monthly literary magazine Contemporary Literature (Hyundae Munhak). Before going on to get a third recommendation—the last step to becoming a professional poet—he instead entered the film industry, gaining recognition for his 1970 screenplay, Somebody's' House (Tain-ui jip). Throughout his career he wrote more than fifty screenplays, including A Girl's First Love (Sonyeo-ui cheot-sarang, 1971), and Green Fallen-Leaves (Paran nagyeop, 1976). In 1976, Kang debuted as a film director with the ", "Kang Dae-ha\n Kang Dae-ha (April 12, 1942 – 1995) was a South Korean screenwriter, producer, film and art director and poet.", "Lee Hae-jun\nComing Out (2000) - screenwriter ; Kick the Moon (2001) - original idea ; Conduct Zero (2002) - screenwriter ; Au Revoir, UFO (2004) - screenwriter ; Arahan (2004) - script editor ; Antarctic Journal (2005) - screenwriter ; Like a Virgin (2006) - director, screenwriter ; Castaway on the Moon (2009) - director, screenwriter ; A Hard Day (2014) - script editor ; My Dictator (2014) - director, screenwriter ; Golden Slumber (2017) - screenwriter ; Ashfall (2019) - director ", "Kong Su-chang\n Kong Su-chang (born 1961) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Kong started as a screenwriter and is behind hits such as White Badge (1992), The Ring Virus (1999) and Tell Me Something (1999). He debuted with the military-themed R-Point (2004), and then The Guard Post in 2008.", "Kim Young-ha\n his fiction: My Right to Ravage Myself (2003) and The Scarlet Letter, and the cinematic adaptation of Your Republic Is Calling You is currently in progress. in 2014, his novel, Brother Has Returned was used as the basis of the movie Total Messed Family. His novel, The Quiz Show, was also made into a musical. In addition, Kim's work is popular with fans online who have made videos and animations of his work. In 2017, A Murderer's Guide to Memorization was also adapted into the film Memoir of a Murderer. Kim, along with John H. Lee, won Best Adapted Screenplay at the 2005 Grand Bell Awards for the script of A Moment to Remember.", "Kong Su-chang\n Born in 1961, Kong Su-chang graduated from the Korean Literature Department at Hanyang University. Upon graduating, he joined 'Jang San Got Mae', an independent film union and wrote screenplays, such as O Dreamland (1989) and The Night Before the Strike (1990). Kong is known as a talented screenwriter of thriller and war movies, such White Badge (1992), The Ring Virus (1999) and Tell Me Something (1999). His adaptation of the novel White Badge: A Novel of Korea by Ahn Jung-hyo into the screenplay for White Badge was acclaimed as the best Vietnam War film in Korea. His directorial feature debut is the military-themed R-Point (2004), which Kong wanted as an anti-war movie, delves into the innermost psyche of soldiers who have to fight for their lives in the face of inexplicable threats and horror on a remote battlefield in Vietnam in 1972. His second feature, The Guard Post (2008), also military-themed is set at the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea.", "Chang Yong-hak\n Chang Yong-hak (25 April 1921 &ndash; 31 August 1999) was a Korean writer. Chang was born in Hamyeong Buk-do in what is now North Korea. He studied at Waseda University in Japan, before being drafted into the Japanese army. After the end of World War Two, he taught high school in Korea, writing fiction on the side. His short story, translated as \"The Poems of John the Baptist\" (available in English translation in Ten Korean Short Stories, edited by Ken O'Rouke, 1993), was a critical success in Korea. Chang has been characterized as an idea novelist influenced by Sartre and philosophical ideas both Oriental and Occidental and as a writer of fantasy.", "Cheon Myeong-kwan\n Cheon was born in Yong-in South Korea in 1964. He debuted in 2003 with the short story “Frank and I.” Before becoming a writer, he worked for a movie production company and also wrote the screenplays for films like Gun and Gun (1995, 총잡이) and The Great Chef (1999, 북경반점). Although he wrote numerous screenplays and prepared to star in a few films himself, production on these movies was suspended. Although it was a bitter time of failure, it was no doubt an important period of his training and discipline as a writer. Cheon turned to writing fiction in an attempt to find another means of making money, spurred on by the words of his sibling who said that he should write novels instead of writing screenplays that would never be made into movies. The result was “Frank and I,” an absurd and hilarious story about ", "Mathias Woo\nIn 2008, Run Papa Run, the screenplay Woo co-wrote with Chan Suk Yin and Sylvia Chang, was nominated as the Best Screenplay in the 28th Hong Kong Films Award. ; In 2007, Happy Birthday, the screenplay Woo co-wrote with Sylvia Chang, was nominated as the Best Screenplay in the 26th Hong Kong Films Award. ", "Hailji\n with conservative literary critics—now widely known as the “Racetrack Controversy.” His subsequent works are characterized by fantastic or dreamy atmosphere and have helped to secure him a readership of avid admirers. Many of his works have been made into movies or plays. As such, Ha is also credited as an important contributor to the development of modern Korean cinema. In 1993, he published a ciné-romans entitled Mano Cabina Remembered. Ha is also active as a poet. A volume of his English poems, Blue Meditation of the Clocks, was published in the U.S. in 1994, and in 2003, his French poems were published in Paris under the title Les Hirondelles dans mon tiroir. He may be the only writer in Korea who has written and published his works in many different languages.", "Lee Hae-jun\n Lee Hae-jun studied advertising at Seoul Institute of the Arts, but he soon made a name for himself in the Korean film industry for writing screenplays in various genres, such as Kim Jee-woon's vampire short film Coming Out, Jo Keun-shik's 1980s-set high school comedy Conduct Zero (2002), Kim Jin-min's small-town romance Au Revoir, UFO (2004), and Yim Pil-sung's psychological thriller Antarctic Journal (2005).", "Kim Soo-hyun (writer)\n Kim Hee-ae later won the Grand Prize (\"Daesang\") at the 2004 Baeksang Arts Awards. Production on the TV drama Snow Flower was delayed because Kim, who had written the novel it was based on and had casting approval, opposed the proposal to cast singer Lee Hyori in one of the major roles (Go Ara was eventually cast). Kim had previously adapted her same-titled novel, which portrays the affection and conflict between a mother and her only daughter, into the 1992 film Flower in Snow starring Yoon Jeong-hee and Lee Mi-yeon. In 2010, she became involved in a public feud with director Im Sang-soo over the film The Housemaid. Kim had been hired to write the script ", "Tang Ti-sheng\n Nam Hoi Sup-sam Long (南海十三郎), two famous writers for the troupe. Encouraged by Sit Gok Sin, Tang began his career as a playwright in 1938 with his first (being taken as an announcement of his intention to be in the arena) opera The Consoling Lotus of Jiangcheng. Throughout the next twenty years Tang wrote a total of 446 opera scripts, while 80 of those were adapted for films. During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, Tang penned many scripts for his wife and her co-stars to stage in return for food (mostly rice) and found his footing eventually. #2 of #30Leaped into fame with the script White Poplar, Red ", "Rang-ha\n The Colours is a 1976 Iranian short film directed by Abbas Kiarostami.", "Yoo Ha\n Yoo Ha (or spelled Yu Ha; born February 9, 1963) is a South Korean film director, screenwriter and a contemporary poet. He directed the critically acclaimed films Marriage Is a Crazy Thing (2002), Once Upon a Time in High School (2004), A Dirty Carnival (2006) and Gangnam Blues (2015). The latter is a gangster movie with allusions to Martin Scorsese films like Gangs of New York, Mean Streets and Goodfellas.", "Yu Sun-ha\n pieces of squared manuscript paper and began to write. Then in 1968, he was awarded a New Writer’s Award from Sasanggye for a one-act play entitled Inganiramyeon nuguna (인간이라면 누구나 Anyone If You Are a Human). However, due to political situations of the time, the play was canceled, which made him skeptical and unable to write for more than a decade. Yu resumed his writing in 1980 when he received an award from Hankook Munhak for his novel Heomangui pian (허망의 피안 Nirvana of Falsehood). However, he did not write many works, feeling shy about showing his works to the world. Then an unexplainable critical illness brought him to the verge of death, which, in turn, completely changed his attitude toward ", "Crossing (film)\n Shortly after the film was released it became embroiled in controversy as it has been accused of plagiarism by Lee Kwang Hoon. He argued that the film was written on a screenplay titled \"The Conditions of Human\" based on the story of North Korean defector Yoo Sang-joon which he wrote. Lee's lawyer also said that director Lee and Yoo had signed a contract to make a film about Yoo's life and has been preparing for the past three years. The lawyer claimed that a court injunction was sought because director Kim has not discussed the matter with director Lee, although Kim had known about the existence of a screenplay about Yoo. The request for an injunction ", "Hailji\n Hailji was born in 1955 and graduated from Jungang University with a degree in Creative Writing. He then taught high school until 1983, when he left Korea for France. In France he earned an M.A. from Poitiers University and a Ph.D. from University of Limoges. He returned to Korea in 1989. His career as an author began with the publication of his controversial, The Road to Racetracks. Many of his works have been made into movies or plays. As such, Ha is also credited as an important contributor to the development of modern Korean cinema." ]
Who was the screenwriter for White Gold?
[ "John Jopson", "John Charles Jopson" ]
screenwriter
White Gold (2003 film)
6,164,657
71
[ { "id": "1406989", "title": "White Gold (TV series)", "text": " The show is produced by BBC Comedy along with Fudge Park Productions, which was established in 2015 by the creators of The Inbetweeners – Damon Beesley and Iain Morris. Beesley created White Gold and acts as show runner and executive producer, in addition to having written eight of the 12 episodes. Joe Thomas and Chris Niel wrote two episodes each. Production of series 2 was suspended in November 2017 following allegations of sexual assault against Ed Westwick. Filming recommenced in November 2018.", "score": "1.62092" }, { "id": "6960426", "title": "James Gordon White", "text": " James Gordon White was a screenwriter best known for his work in the exploitation field.", "score": "1.6046026" }, { "id": "7348796", "title": "White Gold (2010 film)", "text": " White Gold is a 2010 South African film, directed by Jayan Moodley and Paul Railton, produced by African Lotus Productions in association with Serendipity Productions and African Mediums. Its release was timed to coincide with the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of Indian presence in South Africa. The film is a historical drama revolving around the experiences of Indian indentured labourers recruited for the sugar plantations of the 19th-century Colony of Natal, and their children and grandchildren. Jayan Moodley, who wrote the script and co-directed, was inspired by her own family history.", "score": "1.5963888" }, { "id": "14947818", "title": "Lloyd Gold", "text": " Lloyd \"Lucky\" Gold (born September 6, 1950) is an American screenwriter and playwright. Gold's plays have been produced at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre, the Seattle Repertory Theatre, the McCarter Theater and others. He wrote numerous film scripts for Miramax and was script doctor on Marvin's Room and Shakespeare in Love. He is co-creator of the PBS American Mystery Series, produced by Robert Redford and Rebecca Eaton. Gold has written both series and long form for television including USA Network's Stealing Christmas. He is the recipient of an NEA grant, 4 Emmys and 3 WGA Awards.", "score": "1.5928769" }, { "id": "10955227", "title": "James L. White", "text": " to pen the screenplay for a thriller called \"Red Money.\" The film was never made, but it marked White's breakthrough into screenwriting after decades of attempts. In a 2005 award acceptance speech before the Friends of the Black Oscar Nominees group, White publicly thanked Poitier, \"I would like to publicly thank Mr. Poitier, who was the first person in Hollywood to take a chance on me as a screenwriter.\" White was working on two screenplays at the time of his death in 2015 - a biopic on Bessie Smith titled \"Empress of the Blues\" and second film focusing on Dinah Washington, which is in pre-production. James L. White died from complications of liver and pancreatic cancer at his home in Santa Monica, California, on July 23, 2015, at the age of 67. He was survived by his wife, Elizabeth, two daughters and a son.", "score": "1.5923346" }, { "id": "30437171", "title": "Victor Gold (journalist)", "text": " Victor \"Vic\" Gold (September 25, 1928 &ndash; June 5, 2017) was an American journalist, author, and Republican political consultant. Gold began his career as a lawyer and advisor to the Democratic Party in Alabama before switching to the Republican Party. He worked as deputy press secretary for Senator Barry Goldwater during the 1964 presidential election and press secretary for Vice President Spiro T. Agnew from 1970 to 1973. Gold left politics for a time to work as a writer and political commentator, returning in 1979 as a speechwriter to the presidential campaign of George H. W. Bush and was an advisor to Bush's 1988 and 1992 campaigns. Later in life, Gold split with the Republicans over issues including the 2003 invasion of Iraq and formally left the party in 2016. He was the author of several published works of non-fiction. He co-wrote George H. W. Bush's 1987 autobiography and co-wrote a novel in 1988 with Lynne Cheney.", "score": "1.5898615" }, { "id": "28415889", "title": "Richard Price (writer)", "text": " to Raymond Chandler and Saul Bellow. In July 2010, a group art show inspired by Lush Life was held in nine galleries in New York City. Price wrote a detective novel entitled The Whites under the pen name Harry Brandt. The book was released February 17, 2015. Film producer Scott Rudin will be producing a film version of the novel. Price has written numerous screenplays, including The Color of Money (1986) (for which he was nominated for an Oscar), Life Lessons (the Martin Scorsese segment of New York Stories) (1989), Sea of Love (1989), Mad Dog and Glory (1993), Ransom (1996), and Shaft ", "score": "1.5822694" }, { "id": "6066789", "title": "White Gold (1927 film)", "text": " White Gold is a 1927 silent film dramatic western produced and distributed by Cecil B. DeMille and directed by William K. Howard.", "score": "1.5588473" }, { "id": "10955226", "title": "James L. White", "text": " James L. White (November 15, 1947 – July 23, 2015) was an American screenwriter best known for his original screenplay for the 2004 film, Ray, a biopic on Ray Charles. White received a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay for his work on Ray. White was born on November 15, 1947, in Mount Sterling, Kentucky. He was raised by his single mother in Mount Sterling, approximately 35 miles east of Lexington. A love of reading led White to pursue a career as a writer. He served in the U.S. Navy before enrolling at the University of Massachusetts. He left the university after a year and worked a series of jobs in the Boston area. He moved to Los Angeles during the 1970s to pursue screenwriting. White credited his friend, actor Sidney Poitier, with helping in get his first screenwriting job. Poitier hired White to ", "score": "1.5572791" }, { "id": "6147341", "title": "White Gold (1949 film)", "text": " White Gold (German: Weißes Gold) is a 1949 Austrian drama film directed by Eduard von Borsody and starring Heinrich Gretler, Alma Seidler and Robert Freitag. The film's art direction was by Julius von Borsody.", "score": "1.547535" }, { "id": "28145643", "title": "F. Clifton White", "text": " Frederick Clifton White Sr. (June 13, 1918 - January 9, 1993), was an American political consultant and campaign manager for candidates of the Republican Party, the New York Conservative Party, and some foreign clients. He is best remembered as the moving force behind the Draft Goldwater Committee from 1961 to 1964, which secured a majority of delegates to nominate U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona as the presidential candidate of the Republican Party.", "score": "1.5433555" }, { "id": "6934438", "title": "Gold (1974 film)", "text": " The movie is based on a 1970 novel by Wilbur Smith. The story was based on a real-life flooding of a gold mine near Johannesburg in 1968. Smith researched the book by working in a gold mine for a few weeks. \"I was a sort of privileged member of the team, I could ask questions and not be told to shut up,” he says. The New York Times said \"Mr Smith, an adventure writer disdainful of subtleties, blasts his way to a finale strewn with broken bodies and orange blossoms.\"", "score": "1.5327855" }, { "id": "31539882", "title": "Paul Dehn", "text": " Paul Edward Dehn (pronounced \"Dain\"; 5 November 1912 – 30 September 1976) was a British screenwriter, best known for Goldfinger, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, Planet of the Apes sequels and Murder on the Orient Express. Dehn and his partner, James Bernard, won the Academy Award for Best Story for Seven Days to Noon.", "score": "1.5305461" }, { "id": "7941434", "title": "Jim Lehrer", "text": "An adaptation of White Widow has been written by Luke Wilson ; Viva Max! (1969) writing credit with Elliott Baker ; The Last Debate (2000) writing credit with Jon Maas ", "score": "1.529402" }, { "id": "10192493", "title": "Jon Manchip White", "text": " brief, scene of a group of men and women, all naked, engaged in sexual congress. After a brief stint in the British Foreign Service, White went back to writing for television and film, including five years spent travelling and living in places such as Madrid and Paris, as a script doctor with Samuel Bronston Productions. There amongst other Bronston productions, he made contributions to such epic films as El Cid and 55 Days at Peking. He was also a script doctor on the science fiction film The Day of the Triffids. Later he finished his movie career as Walt Disney's European story editor, based in Berlin. By 1962, White was back to writing for television, including writing an episode of The Avengers ", "score": "1.5283244" }, { "id": "30391239", "title": "Alan White (novelist)", "text": " Alan White (born 23 February 1924) is an English novelist and journalist. He used his experiences as a Second World War commando leader in his writings. He also wrote using the names \"Alec Haig\", \"James Fraser\" and \"Alec Whitney\". Under the pseudonym \"Joe Balham\" he wrote seven novels based on The Sweeney television series. His novel The Long Day's Dying was made into a 1968 film directed by Peter Collinson. White wrote mysteries, as well as war and adventure novels.", "score": "1.5229604" }, { "id": "6362353", "title": "C. Gardner Sullivan", "text": " White Gold (1927) (producer) ; 179) Tempest (Taylor, 1928) (writer) ; 180) The Woman Disputed (H. King and Taylor, 1928) (screenplay) ; 181) Sadie Thompson (Walsh, 1928) (titles, editor) ; 182) Alibi (West, 1929) (screenplay) ; 183) The Locked Door (Fitzmaurice, 1929) (screen adaptation) ; 184) All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) (supervising story chief) ; 185) What Men Want (1930) (supervising story editor) ; 186) Hell's Heroes (1930) (chief story supervisor) ; 187) The Cuban Love Song (Van Dyke, 1931) (screenplay) ; 188) Huddle (Wood, 1932) (dialogue continuity) ; 189) Strange Interlude (Strange Interval) (Leonard, 1932) (dialogue ", "score": "1.5191991" }, { "id": "2298332", "title": "White Lightning (1973 film)", "text": " White Lightning is a 1973 American action film directed by Joseph Sargent and starring Burt Reynolds as the main character Robert \"Gator\" McKlusky, Jennifer Billingsley, Ned Beatty, Bo Hopkins, R.G. Armstrong, and Diane Ladd (erroneously billed in the opening and closing credits as “Diane Lad”). It was written by William W. Norton.", "score": "1.5074497" }, { "id": "13779579", "title": "Brian McDonald (screenwriter)", "text": " Brian McDonald has written numerous screenplays. Those produced include the mockumentary short film White Face in 2001, and a thriller feature called Inheritance in 2004.", "score": "1.5049667" }, { "id": "32301195", "title": "Stiles White", "text": " White began his career as a production assistant for Stan Winston Studios, working on projects ranging from Interview with the Vampire to Galaxy Quest. In 2004, he co-created the short-lived animated television series Da Boom Crew. White made his screenwriting debut co-writing the 2005 horror film Boogeyman with his future spouse, Juliet Snowden. In 2014, White made his directing debut with the supernatural horror film Ouija, based on the Hasbro's board game of same name whose script he once again co-wrote with Snowden. The film was released on October 24, 2014 by Universal Pictures, grossing more than $102 million with a budget of just $5 million.", "score": "1.504536" } ]
[ "White Gold (TV series)\n The show is produced by BBC Comedy along with Fudge Park Productions, which was established in 2015 by the creators of The Inbetweeners – Damon Beesley and Iain Morris. Beesley created White Gold and acts as show runner and executive producer, in addition to having written eight of the 12 episodes. Joe Thomas and Chris Niel wrote two episodes each. Production of series 2 was suspended in November 2017 following allegations of sexual assault against Ed Westwick. Filming recommenced in November 2018.", "James Gordon White\n James Gordon White was a screenwriter best known for his work in the exploitation field.", "White Gold (2010 film)\n White Gold is a 2010 South African film, directed by Jayan Moodley and Paul Railton, produced by African Lotus Productions in association with Serendipity Productions and African Mediums. Its release was timed to coincide with the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of Indian presence in South Africa. The film is a historical drama revolving around the experiences of Indian indentured labourers recruited for the sugar plantations of the 19th-century Colony of Natal, and their children and grandchildren. Jayan Moodley, who wrote the script and co-directed, was inspired by her own family history.", "Lloyd Gold\n Lloyd \"Lucky\" Gold (born September 6, 1950) is an American screenwriter and playwright. Gold's plays have been produced at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre, the Seattle Repertory Theatre, the McCarter Theater and others. He wrote numerous film scripts for Miramax and was script doctor on Marvin's Room and Shakespeare in Love. He is co-creator of the PBS American Mystery Series, produced by Robert Redford and Rebecca Eaton. Gold has written both series and long form for television including USA Network's Stealing Christmas. He is the recipient of an NEA grant, 4 Emmys and 3 WGA Awards.", "James L. White\n to pen the screenplay for a thriller called \"Red Money.\" The film was never made, but it marked White's breakthrough into screenwriting after decades of attempts. In a 2005 award acceptance speech before the Friends of the Black Oscar Nominees group, White publicly thanked Poitier, \"I would like to publicly thank Mr. Poitier, who was the first person in Hollywood to take a chance on me as a screenwriter.\" White was working on two screenplays at the time of his death in 2015 - a biopic on Bessie Smith titled \"Empress of the Blues\" and second film focusing on Dinah Washington, which is in pre-production. James L. White died from complications of liver and pancreatic cancer at his home in Santa Monica, California, on July 23, 2015, at the age of 67. He was survived by his wife, Elizabeth, two daughters and a son.", "Victor Gold (journalist)\n Victor \"Vic\" Gold (September 25, 1928 &ndash; June 5, 2017) was an American journalist, author, and Republican political consultant. Gold began his career as a lawyer and advisor to the Democratic Party in Alabama before switching to the Republican Party. He worked as deputy press secretary for Senator Barry Goldwater during the 1964 presidential election and press secretary for Vice President Spiro T. Agnew from 1970 to 1973. Gold left politics for a time to work as a writer and political commentator, returning in 1979 as a speechwriter to the presidential campaign of George H. W. Bush and was an advisor to Bush's 1988 and 1992 campaigns. Later in life, Gold split with the Republicans over issues including the 2003 invasion of Iraq and formally left the party in 2016. He was the author of several published works of non-fiction. He co-wrote George H. W. Bush's 1987 autobiography and co-wrote a novel in 1988 with Lynne Cheney.", "Richard Price (writer)\n to Raymond Chandler and Saul Bellow. In July 2010, a group art show inspired by Lush Life was held in nine galleries in New York City. Price wrote a detective novel entitled The Whites under the pen name Harry Brandt. The book was released February 17, 2015. Film producer Scott Rudin will be producing a film version of the novel. Price has written numerous screenplays, including The Color of Money (1986) (for which he was nominated for an Oscar), Life Lessons (the Martin Scorsese segment of New York Stories) (1989), Sea of Love (1989), Mad Dog and Glory (1993), Ransom (1996), and Shaft ", "White Gold (1927 film)\n White Gold is a 1927 silent film dramatic western produced and distributed by Cecil B. DeMille and directed by William K. Howard.", "James L. White\n James L. White (November 15, 1947 – July 23, 2015) was an American screenwriter best known for his original screenplay for the 2004 film, Ray, a biopic on Ray Charles. White received a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay for his work on Ray. White was born on November 15, 1947, in Mount Sterling, Kentucky. He was raised by his single mother in Mount Sterling, approximately 35 miles east of Lexington. A love of reading led White to pursue a career as a writer. He served in the U.S. Navy before enrolling at the University of Massachusetts. He left the university after a year and worked a series of jobs in the Boston area. He moved to Los Angeles during the 1970s to pursue screenwriting. White credited his friend, actor Sidney Poitier, with helping in get his first screenwriting job. Poitier hired White to ", "White Gold (1949 film)\n White Gold (German: Weißes Gold) is a 1949 Austrian drama film directed by Eduard von Borsody and starring Heinrich Gretler, Alma Seidler and Robert Freitag. The film's art direction was by Julius von Borsody.", "F. Clifton White\n Frederick Clifton White Sr. (June 13, 1918 - January 9, 1993), was an American political consultant and campaign manager for candidates of the Republican Party, the New York Conservative Party, and some foreign clients. He is best remembered as the moving force behind the Draft Goldwater Committee from 1961 to 1964, which secured a majority of delegates to nominate U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona as the presidential candidate of the Republican Party.", "Gold (1974 film)\n The movie is based on a 1970 novel by Wilbur Smith. The story was based on a real-life flooding of a gold mine near Johannesburg in 1968. Smith researched the book by working in a gold mine for a few weeks. \"I was a sort of privileged member of the team, I could ask questions and not be told to shut up,” he says. The New York Times said \"Mr Smith, an adventure writer disdainful of subtleties, blasts his way to a finale strewn with broken bodies and orange blossoms.\"", "Paul Dehn\n Paul Edward Dehn (pronounced \"Dain\"; 5 November 1912 – 30 September 1976) was a British screenwriter, best known for Goldfinger, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, Planet of the Apes sequels and Murder on the Orient Express. Dehn and his partner, James Bernard, won the Academy Award for Best Story for Seven Days to Noon.", "Jim Lehrer\nAn adaptation of White Widow has been written by Luke Wilson ; Viva Max! (1969) writing credit with Elliott Baker ; The Last Debate (2000) writing credit with Jon Maas ", "Jon Manchip White\n brief, scene of a group of men and women, all naked, engaged in sexual congress. After a brief stint in the British Foreign Service, White went back to writing for television and film, including five years spent travelling and living in places such as Madrid and Paris, as a script doctor with Samuel Bronston Productions. There amongst other Bronston productions, he made contributions to such epic films as El Cid and 55 Days at Peking. He was also a script doctor on the science fiction film The Day of the Triffids. Later he finished his movie career as Walt Disney's European story editor, based in Berlin. By 1962, White was back to writing for television, including writing an episode of The Avengers ", "Alan White (novelist)\n Alan White (born 23 February 1924) is an English novelist and journalist. He used his experiences as a Second World War commando leader in his writings. He also wrote using the names \"Alec Haig\", \"James Fraser\" and \"Alec Whitney\". Under the pseudonym \"Joe Balham\" he wrote seven novels based on The Sweeney television series. His novel The Long Day's Dying was made into a 1968 film directed by Peter Collinson. White wrote mysteries, as well as war and adventure novels.", "C. Gardner Sullivan\n White Gold (1927) (producer) ; 179) Tempest (Taylor, 1928) (writer) ; 180) The Woman Disputed (H. King and Taylor, 1928) (screenplay) ; 181) Sadie Thompson (Walsh, 1928) (titles, editor) ; 182) Alibi (West, 1929) (screenplay) ; 183) The Locked Door (Fitzmaurice, 1929) (screen adaptation) ; 184) All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) (supervising story chief) ; 185) What Men Want (1930) (supervising story editor) ; 186) Hell's Heroes (1930) (chief story supervisor) ; 187) The Cuban Love Song (Van Dyke, 1931) (screenplay) ; 188) Huddle (Wood, 1932) (dialogue continuity) ; 189) Strange Interlude (Strange Interval) (Leonard, 1932) (dialogue ", "White Lightning (1973 film)\n White Lightning is a 1973 American action film directed by Joseph Sargent and starring Burt Reynolds as the main character Robert \"Gator\" McKlusky, Jennifer Billingsley, Ned Beatty, Bo Hopkins, R.G. Armstrong, and Diane Ladd (erroneously billed in the opening and closing credits as “Diane Lad”). It was written by William W. Norton.", "Brian McDonald (screenwriter)\n Brian McDonald has written numerous screenplays. Those produced include the mockumentary short film White Face in 2001, and a thriller feature called Inheritance in 2004.", "Stiles White\n White began his career as a production assistant for Stan Winston Studios, working on projects ranging from Interview with the Vampire to Galaxy Quest. In 2004, he co-created the short-lived animated television series Da Boom Crew. White made his screenwriting debut co-writing the 2005 horror film Boogeyman with his future spouse, Juliet Snowden. In 2014, White made his directing debut with the supernatural horror film Ouija, based on the Hasbro's board game of same name whose script he once again co-wrote with Snowden. The film was released on October 24, 2014 by Universal Pictures, grossing more than $102 million with a budget of just $5 million." ]
Who was the screenwriter for The Bride’s Journey?
[ "Sergio Rubini" ]
screenwriter
The Bride's Journey
2,837,484
62
[ { "id": "2274938", "title": "Alan Jay Lerner", "text": "Royal Wedding, 1951 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; An American in Paris (1951) (writer) ; Brigadoon, 1954 (film) (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Gigi, 1958 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 1960 (lyricist) ; My Fair Lady, 1964 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Camelot, 1967 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Paint Your Wagon, 1969 (producer/screenwriter/lyricist) ; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, 1970 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; The Little Prince, 1974 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Tribute, 1980 (\"It's All for the Best,\" lyricist) ; Secret Places, 1984 (title song lyricist) Source: TCM ", "score": "1.5017788" }, { "id": "15256538", "title": "John Farrow", "text": " Farrow started writing while working as a sailor and became interested in screenwriting after a chance voyage in the South Seas with the film-maker Robert J. Flaherty. Re-entering the United States, allegedly by jumping ship at San Francisco, he found his way to Hollywood where from 1927, his nautical expertise brought him work as a script consultant and technical adviser. He had already earned minor recognition as a poet and writer of short stories. He soon established himself as a notable screenwriter. He worked for DeMille Productions, doing titles for White Gold (1927) and The Wreck of the Hesperus (1927). He adapted Richard Connell's 1923 short story \"A Friend of Napoleon\" but it does not appear to have been made. He also wrote the original story for The Blue Danube (1928) and the script for The Bride of the Colorado (1929). At Warner Bros he wrote A Sailor's Sweetheart (1927) for director Lloyd Bacon.", "score": "1.5002687" }, { "id": "8937379", "title": "Dana Fox", "text": " Gough and Millar's agent, established screenwriter Jessica Bendinger sought after an unpublished writer who would work inexpensively on a screenplay. Fox had not yet written a sample screenplay, but Bendinger was so impressed with her ideas for the story that Fox was hired to write the script. The produced film was The Wedding Date, which ultimately was panned by critics but a financial success. After The Wedding Dates release, she was attached to three separate writing projects. Her next produced screenplay was What Happens in Vegas, which was bought by 20th Century Fox in a high six-figure deal for the script's first draft, and which stars Cameron Diaz and Ashton ", "score": "1.4767599" }, { "id": "9220620", "title": "Runaway Bride (film)", "text": " Runaway Bride is a 1999 American screwball romantic comedy film directed by Garry Marshall and starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere. The screenplay, written by Sara Parriott and Josann McGibbon, is about a reporter (Gere) that is assigned to write a story about a woman (Roberts) who has left a string of fiancés at the altar. It is the second film to co-star Gere and Roberts, following Pretty Woman (1990). It received generally negative reviews from critics but was a commercial success, grossing $309 million worldwide.", "score": "1.4713342" }, { "id": "13900836", "title": "Alexis Zegerman", "text": " Zegerman wrote the screenplay for The Honeymoon Suite (2010).", "score": "1.465949" }, { "id": "972303", "title": "Bridal Path (novel)", "text": " The novel was adapted for film by the British Lion Film Corporation in 1959. It starred Bill Travers, George Cole and Gordon Jackson, it was produced and directed by Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat. Geoffrey Willans co-wrote the screenplay, but died before the film was released. The film was shot on location around Oban, Easdale and Appin. It premiered in Edinburgh.", "score": "1.4605005" }, { "id": "9700841", "title": "N. Richard Nash", "text": " 1956 Hollywood film starring Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn, and a 1982 full-length TV production. The play was made into a Broadway musical, 110 in the Shade. Here Come the Brides (1968-1970, 52 episodes) was a Screen Gems television series developed by Nash; Nash wrote the series pilot of the same name. In the 1950s, Nash moved from New York to Hollywood to write the screenplay for The Rainmaker. However, it was the 1972 Broadway failure of Echoes (1972) and the novelization of a screenplay that led Nash to transition from writing screenplays to writing novels. After working on Echoes, he developed a screenplay entitled Macho which he could not sell. In overcoming this, Nash noted: \"It occurred to ", "score": "1.4572933" }, { "id": "27451678", "title": "Traveller Wedding", "text": " Traveller Wedding is a 2009 novel by Irish filmmaker Graham Jones. The story is narrated by a nomadic woman called Christine who is furious at the release of a violent videogame about a traveller wedding and determined to tell the story of her people more authentically.", "score": "1.4569538" }, { "id": "4607212", "title": "Jo Swerling", "text": " Swerling was brought to Hollywood by Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn to work on the screenplay for Frank Capra's Ladies of Leisure (1930), the first of several collaborations with the director. His dozens of screenplays in the 1930s and 1940s include Platinum Blonde, Behind the Mask, Once to Every Woman, The Pride of the Yankees (for which he received an Academy Award nomination), Lifeboat, Leave Her to Heaven, and It's a Wonderful Life. He also provided some uncredited writing for Gone with the Wind.", "score": "1.4564164" }, { "id": "30711702", "title": "Géza von Cziffra", "text": "Gulliver's Travels (screenplay and direction, 1924) ; The Copper (screenplay and assistance with direction, 1930), with Hans Albers ; Three Days Confined to Barracks (screenplay, 1930) ; Everything for the Woman (1934) ; A Night in Venice (1934) ; Villa for Sale (screenplay, 1935) ; Ball at the Savoy (screenplay, 1935) ; Where the Lark Sings (screenplay, 1936) ; St. Peter's Umbrella (1936) ; The Vagabonds (screenplay, 1937) ; The Green Emperor (1939) ; The Life and Loves of Tschaikovsky (screenplay, 1939), with Zarah Leander and Marika Rökk ; Melody of a Great City (screenplay, 1943) ; Love Premiere (screenplay, 1943) ; Women Are No Angels (screenplay, 1943) ; The White Dream (1943) ; The Wedding Hotel (screenplay, 1944) ; Liebe nach Noten (1945), ", "score": "1.4531214" }, { "id": "30309057", "title": "Josann McGibbon", "text": " The team's first major success as a screenwriter was the early Brad Pitt film, The Favor. Their biggest hits since then include Three Men and a Little Lady and Runaway Bride. In 2007, McGibbon and Parriott co-wrote and produced the hit Debra Messing miniseries, The Starter Wife. The Starter Wife received 10 Emmy nominations in 2007, including for best screenwriting, and won one Emmy Award. It was also nominated for Golden Globe and Writers Guild awards, and was then produced as a series, also on USA Network. McGibbon and Parriott wrote and co-produced the Disney Channel movie, Descendants which was directed by Kenny Ortega and premiered in July, 2015. In February, 2016, it won the Writers ", "score": "1.4527992" }, { "id": "7948014", "title": "Barry Strugatz", "text": " Strugatz got his start as a production assistant and location scout, working under the auspices of directors Miloš Forman (Hair) and Woody Allen (The Purple Rose of Cairo). He wrote the screenplay to 1988’s Married to the Mob, directed by a pre-Silence of the Lambs Jonathan Demme, but 1989’s She Devil endured a critical and commercial roasting. He spent the next decade writing for the likes of Bette Midler and Joe Pesci. He finally turned to directing in 2000 with a short film, The Transformation.", "score": "1.4492371" }, { "id": "26216966", "title": "John Wijngaards", "text": "Grand Prix, as scriptwriter for Journey to the Centre of Love, Tenth International Catholic Film Festival, Warsaw 1995. ; The Bronze Award, for the same film at the Film Fest Houston 1997. ; The Chris Award, at the Columbus Film Festival 1997. ; The Marga Klompé Award, 2005. ; Lifetime Achievement Award, Christians for Biblical Equality 2021. ", "score": "1.4490316" }, { "id": "29359407", "title": "Bride Wars", "text": " Raphael and Wilson completed the shooting script of Bride Wars, from an original screenplay by Greg DePaul, before the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike began. Karen McCullah Lutz and Kirsten Smith also contributed to the screenplay. Some principal photography took place at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts. Most filming occurred in Boston, New York City, and in Salem, Massachusetts.", "score": "1.445717" }, { "id": "16244917", "title": "Tiana Alexandra", "text": " paid screenwriter\". Silliphant had written Lee into numerous TV shows, including Longstreet, and an original two hour TV pilot called The Way of the Intercepting Fist. He believed in Bruce so much that he wrote Lee into his script of Raymond Chandler's Marlowe. Silliphant had also written most of the episodes for the acclaimed television series Route 66, and won an Oscar for Best Screenplay on the feature film In the Heat of the Night. Alexandra and Stirling Silliphant were married in a ceremony at Chasen's Restaurant in West Hollywood on July 4, 1974. As reported by CBS News, the celebrity event included Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, William Holden and Henry Mancini.", "score": "1.4444191" }, { "id": "10677255", "title": "December Bride", "text": " DaLonne Cooper was the script supervisor.", "score": "1.4429951" }, { "id": "5232047", "title": "Hagar Wilde", "text": " Wilde was a prolific young short story writer and debut novelist when she was hired by billionaire Howard Hughes in 1931, to write dialogue for The Age for Love, starring Billie Dove. Her association with director Howard Hawks included co-writing (with Dudley Nichols) the screenplay for Bringing Up Baby (for which she had also written the original story, published in the magazine Collier's Weekly), and the screenplay for I Was a Male War Bride (1949). She also co-wrote the screenplay for The Unseen (1945), with Raymond Chandler, based on the novel Midnight House by Ethel Lina White. Wilde wrote two shows produced on Broadway. Her first stage success was a \"taut little horror drama\" titled Guest in the House (1942); she co-wrote the play with Dale Eunson, and it was adapted into a film in 1944. She also wrote Made in Heaven (1946–1947). In the 1950s she worked extensively in adapting scripts for television.", "score": "1.437787" }, { "id": "4063913", "title": "The Time Traveler's Wife (film)", "text": " because now the characters have an existence apart from me.\" In September 2003, the studio hired screenwriter Jeremy Leven to write an adapted screenplay of the novel. Directors Steven Spielberg and David Fincher briefly expressed interest in the project, though no negotiations took place. In March 2005, director Gus Van Sant entered negotiations with the studio to helm the project. The negotiations did not hold, and in November 2006, director Robert Schwentke was instead hired to take over the project. In January 2007, New Line hired screenwriter Bruce Joel Rubin to rewrite Leven's script. Eric Bana and Rachel McAdams were cast in April 2007. Filming began in Toronto on September 10, 2007. It was ", "score": "1.4375389" }, { "id": "8230142", "title": "Kathryn Scola", "text": " adaptation of the Dashiell Hammett novel, with writer Kubec Glasmon. In 1937, Scola and Darrell Ware collaborated to write the script for the film Second Honeymoon, directed by Walter Lang. In 1943, at the outset of the Second World War, Scola and Julien Josephson wrote the script for Happy Land, a 20th Century Fox production that was meant to prepare audiences for the losses of the war. During 1946, Scola wrote a screenplay for the Max Ophüls 1949 American film noir Caught, which would eventually be rejected by the censorship board due to what was deemed questionable material. Scola’s script was revised by various writers and eventually abandoned, leading to the final screenplay by playwright and screenwriter Arthur Laurents. Scola and Julien Josephson also worked together on the original screenplay for “In Times Like These” in 1956, a teleplay included in the anthology series The 20th Century Fox Hour.", "score": "1.4370899" }, { "id": "32807534", "title": "Sarah Kernochan", "text": " (about evangelist Marjoe Gortner), which won an Academy Award for Documentary Feature. Kernochan's first screen credit as a screenwriter came with the 1986 film 9½ Weeks. She followed that film with the script for Dancers (1987), starring Mikhail Baryshnikov and directed by Herbert Ross, which chronicled the backstage drama of a ballet company (played by American Ballet Theatre dancers) and their director during the staging of the ballet Giselle. By the time she was brought in to work on the 1993 film Sommersby, she had become known for a particular style of writing in Hollywood. She commented in an interview with Salon.com: Since then, she has been primarily a screenwriter for such films as Dancers (1987); ", "score": "1.4349086" } ]
[ "Alan Jay Lerner\nRoyal Wedding, 1951 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; An American in Paris (1951) (writer) ; Brigadoon, 1954 (film) (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Gigi, 1958 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 1960 (lyricist) ; My Fair Lady, 1964 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Camelot, 1967 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Paint Your Wagon, 1969 (producer/screenwriter/lyricist) ; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, 1970 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; The Little Prince, 1974 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Tribute, 1980 (\"It's All for the Best,\" lyricist) ; Secret Places, 1984 (title song lyricist) Source: TCM ", "John Farrow\n Farrow started writing while working as a sailor and became interested in screenwriting after a chance voyage in the South Seas with the film-maker Robert J. Flaherty. Re-entering the United States, allegedly by jumping ship at San Francisco, he found his way to Hollywood where from 1927, his nautical expertise brought him work as a script consultant and technical adviser. He had already earned minor recognition as a poet and writer of short stories. He soon established himself as a notable screenwriter. He worked for DeMille Productions, doing titles for White Gold (1927) and The Wreck of the Hesperus (1927). He adapted Richard Connell's 1923 short story \"A Friend of Napoleon\" but it does not appear to have been made. He also wrote the original story for The Blue Danube (1928) and the script for The Bride of the Colorado (1929). At Warner Bros he wrote A Sailor's Sweetheart (1927) for director Lloyd Bacon.", "Dana Fox\n Gough and Millar's agent, established screenwriter Jessica Bendinger sought after an unpublished writer who would work inexpensively on a screenplay. Fox had not yet written a sample screenplay, but Bendinger was so impressed with her ideas for the story that Fox was hired to write the script. The produced film was The Wedding Date, which ultimately was panned by critics but a financial success. After The Wedding Dates release, she was attached to three separate writing projects. Her next produced screenplay was What Happens in Vegas, which was bought by 20th Century Fox in a high six-figure deal for the script's first draft, and which stars Cameron Diaz and Ashton ", "Runaway Bride (film)\n Runaway Bride is a 1999 American screwball romantic comedy film directed by Garry Marshall and starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere. The screenplay, written by Sara Parriott and Josann McGibbon, is about a reporter (Gere) that is assigned to write a story about a woman (Roberts) who has left a string of fiancés at the altar. It is the second film to co-star Gere and Roberts, following Pretty Woman (1990). It received generally negative reviews from critics but was a commercial success, grossing $309 million worldwide.", "Alexis Zegerman\n Zegerman wrote the screenplay for The Honeymoon Suite (2010).", "Bridal Path (novel)\n The novel was adapted for film by the British Lion Film Corporation in 1959. It starred Bill Travers, George Cole and Gordon Jackson, it was produced and directed by Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat. Geoffrey Willans co-wrote the screenplay, but died before the film was released. The film was shot on location around Oban, Easdale and Appin. It premiered in Edinburgh.", "N. Richard Nash\n 1956 Hollywood film starring Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn, and a 1982 full-length TV production. The play was made into a Broadway musical, 110 in the Shade. Here Come the Brides (1968-1970, 52 episodes) was a Screen Gems television series developed by Nash; Nash wrote the series pilot of the same name. In the 1950s, Nash moved from New York to Hollywood to write the screenplay for The Rainmaker. However, it was the 1972 Broadway failure of Echoes (1972) and the novelization of a screenplay that led Nash to transition from writing screenplays to writing novels. After working on Echoes, he developed a screenplay entitled Macho which he could not sell. In overcoming this, Nash noted: \"It occurred to ", "Traveller Wedding\n Traveller Wedding is a 2009 novel by Irish filmmaker Graham Jones. The story is narrated by a nomadic woman called Christine who is furious at the release of a violent videogame about a traveller wedding and determined to tell the story of her people more authentically.", "Jo Swerling\n Swerling was brought to Hollywood by Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn to work on the screenplay for Frank Capra's Ladies of Leisure (1930), the first of several collaborations with the director. His dozens of screenplays in the 1930s and 1940s include Platinum Blonde, Behind the Mask, Once to Every Woman, The Pride of the Yankees (for which he received an Academy Award nomination), Lifeboat, Leave Her to Heaven, and It's a Wonderful Life. He also provided some uncredited writing for Gone with the Wind.", "Géza von Cziffra\nGulliver's Travels (screenplay and direction, 1924) ; The Copper (screenplay and assistance with direction, 1930), with Hans Albers ; Three Days Confined to Barracks (screenplay, 1930) ; Everything for the Woman (1934) ; A Night in Venice (1934) ; Villa for Sale (screenplay, 1935) ; Ball at the Savoy (screenplay, 1935) ; Where the Lark Sings (screenplay, 1936) ; St. Peter's Umbrella (1936) ; The Vagabonds (screenplay, 1937) ; The Green Emperor (1939) ; The Life and Loves of Tschaikovsky (screenplay, 1939), with Zarah Leander and Marika Rökk ; Melody of a Great City (screenplay, 1943) ; Love Premiere (screenplay, 1943) ; Women Are No Angels (screenplay, 1943) ; The White Dream (1943) ; The Wedding Hotel (screenplay, 1944) ; Liebe nach Noten (1945), ", "Josann McGibbon\n The team's first major success as a screenwriter was the early Brad Pitt film, The Favor. Their biggest hits since then include Three Men and a Little Lady and Runaway Bride. In 2007, McGibbon and Parriott co-wrote and produced the hit Debra Messing miniseries, The Starter Wife. The Starter Wife received 10 Emmy nominations in 2007, including for best screenwriting, and won one Emmy Award. It was also nominated for Golden Globe and Writers Guild awards, and was then produced as a series, also on USA Network. McGibbon and Parriott wrote and co-produced the Disney Channel movie, Descendants which was directed by Kenny Ortega and premiered in July, 2015. In February, 2016, it won the Writers ", "Barry Strugatz\n Strugatz got his start as a production assistant and location scout, working under the auspices of directors Miloš Forman (Hair) and Woody Allen (The Purple Rose of Cairo). He wrote the screenplay to 1988’s Married to the Mob, directed by a pre-Silence of the Lambs Jonathan Demme, but 1989’s She Devil endured a critical and commercial roasting. He spent the next decade writing for the likes of Bette Midler and Joe Pesci. He finally turned to directing in 2000 with a short film, The Transformation.", "John Wijngaards\nGrand Prix, as scriptwriter for Journey to the Centre of Love, Tenth International Catholic Film Festival, Warsaw 1995. ; The Bronze Award, for the same film at the Film Fest Houston 1997. ; The Chris Award, at the Columbus Film Festival 1997. ; The Marga Klompé Award, 2005. ; Lifetime Achievement Award, Christians for Biblical Equality 2021. ", "Bride Wars\n Raphael and Wilson completed the shooting script of Bride Wars, from an original screenplay by Greg DePaul, before the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike began. Karen McCullah Lutz and Kirsten Smith also contributed to the screenplay. Some principal photography took place at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts. Most filming occurred in Boston, New York City, and in Salem, Massachusetts.", "Tiana Alexandra\n paid screenwriter\". Silliphant had written Lee into numerous TV shows, including Longstreet, and an original two hour TV pilot called The Way of the Intercepting Fist. He believed in Bruce so much that he wrote Lee into his script of Raymond Chandler's Marlowe. Silliphant had also written most of the episodes for the acclaimed television series Route 66, and won an Oscar for Best Screenplay on the feature film In the Heat of the Night. Alexandra and Stirling Silliphant were married in a ceremony at Chasen's Restaurant in West Hollywood on July 4, 1974. As reported by CBS News, the celebrity event included Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, William Holden and Henry Mancini.", "December Bride\n DaLonne Cooper was the script supervisor.", "Hagar Wilde\n Wilde was a prolific young short story writer and debut novelist when she was hired by billionaire Howard Hughes in 1931, to write dialogue for The Age for Love, starring Billie Dove. Her association with director Howard Hawks included co-writing (with Dudley Nichols) the screenplay for Bringing Up Baby (for which she had also written the original story, published in the magazine Collier's Weekly), and the screenplay for I Was a Male War Bride (1949). She also co-wrote the screenplay for The Unseen (1945), with Raymond Chandler, based on the novel Midnight House by Ethel Lina White. Wilde wrote two shows produced on Broadway. Her first stage success was a \"taut little horror drama\" titled Guest in the House (1942); she co-wrote the play with Dale Eunson, and it was adapted into a film in 1944. She also wrote Made in Heaven (1946–1947). In the 1950s she worked extensively in adapting scripts for television.", "The Time Traveler's Wife (film)\n because now the characters have an existence apart from me.\" In September 2003, the studio hired screenwriter Jeremy Leven to write an adapted screenplay of the novel. Directors Steven Spielberg and David Fincher briefly expressed interest in the project, though no negotiations took place. In March 2005, director Gus Van Sant entered negotiations with the studio to helm the project. The negotiations did not hold, and in November 2006, director Robert Schwentke was instead hired to take over the project. In January 2007, New Line hired screenwriter Bruce Joel Rubin to rewrite Leven's script. Eric Bana and Rachel McAdams were cast in April 2007. Filming began in Toronto on September 10, 2007. It was ", "Kathryn Scola\n adaptation of the Dashiell Hammett novel, with writer Kubec Glasmon. In 1937, Scola and Darrell Ware collaborated to write the script for the film Second Honeymoon, directed by Walter Lang. In 1943, at the outset of the Second World War, Scola and Julien Josephson wrote the script for Happy Land, a 20th Century Fox production that was meant to prepare audiences for the losses of the war. During 1946, Scola wrote a screenplay for the Max Ophüls 1949 American film noir Caught, which would eventually be rejected by the censorship board due to what was deemed questionable material. Scola’s script was revised by various writers and eventually abandoned, leading to the final screenplay by playwright and screenwriter Arthur Laurents. Scola and Julien Josephson also worked together on the original screenplay for “In Times Like These” in 1956, a teleplay included in the anthology series The 20th Century Fox Hour.", "Sarah Kernochan\n (about evangelist Marjoe Gortner), which won an Academy Award for Documentary Feature. Kernochan's first screen credit as a screenwriter came with the 1986 film 9½ Weeks. She followed that film with the script for Dancers (1987), starring Mikhail Baryshnikov and directed by Herbert Ross, which chronicled the backstage drama of a ballet company (played by American Ballet Theatre dancers) and their director during the staging of the ballet Giselle. By the time she was brought in to work on the 1993 film Sommersby, she had become known for a particular style of writing in Hollywood. She commented in an interview with Salon.com: Since then, she has been primarily a screenwriter for such films as Dancers (1987); " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Pilot?
[ "Kevin Falls" ]
screenwriter
Pilot (Franklin & Bash)
5,453,489
5
[ { "id": "27684084", "title": "Jeff Martin (writer)", "text": "\"Pilot\" ", "score": "1.6747477" }, { "id": "26447225", "title": "Pilot (Revenge)", "text": " \"Pilot\" was written by series creator Mike Kelley and directed by Salt director Phillip Noyce it was filmed in North Carolina between March–April 2011.", "score": "1.6121113" }, { "id": "14920510", "title": "Pilot (The Americans)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.", "score": "1.5877508" }, { "id": "2971117", "title": "Pilot (Lost)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ", "score": "1.5862477" }, { "id": "13589525", "title": "Pilot (Manifest)", "text": " On August 23, 2017, it was announced that NBC had given Manifest a put pilot commitment, to be written by Jeff Rake and produced by Rake, Robert Zemeckis, Jack Rapke, and Jackie Levine. On January 23, 2018, it was reported that NBC had given the production a formal pilot order. The pilot was directed by David Frankel, who also executive produced. Manifest was ordered to series in May 2018.", "score": "1.5693038" }, { "id": "14175609", "title": "Pilot (Preacher)", "text": " \"Pilot\" was written by the series' creators Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg and Sam Catlin. Some elements in the episode are based on the first seven issues in the Preacher series, Gone to Texas, of which the script was first read and reviewed by Preacher co-creator Garth Ennis, as with the other episodes of the series. It also adapts, or at least provides allusions to Jesse's father John Custer from Until the End of the World, in the form of various black and white flashback sequences. Goldberg described the process of translating the main characters’ emotional stories from the comic to television as the biggest challenge. \"We had to make sure that you understood who each ", "score": "1.5691059" }, { "id": "14554449", "title": "Pilot (Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the television series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. The episode was first aired in the United States on the NBC network on September 18, 2006. Written by series creator Aaron Sorkin, and directed by executive producer Thomas Schlamme, the episode introduces the chaotic behind-the-scenes depiction of a fictional Saturday Night Live type show also called Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip.", "score": "1.5678561" }, { "id": "26447212", "title": "Pilot (Revenge)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.", "score": "1.559042" }, { "id": "27706150", "title": "Pilot (Homeland)", "text": " The episode was co-written by executive producers Alex Gansa, Gideon Raff, and Howard Gordon, while executive producer Michael Cuesta directed.", "score": "1.5585873" }, { "id": "1827185", "title": "Pilot (Dirty Sexy Money)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the ABC television series, Dirty Sexy Money. The episode was written by Craig Wright and was directed by Peter Horton. It originally aired on Wednesday, September 26, 2007.", "score": "1.5584645" }, { "id": "31589573", "title": "Pilot (The Shield)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the FX crime drama television series \"The Shield\". It was written by series creator Shawn Ryan, directed by Clark Johnson, and originally aired on March 12, 2002. The episode received Emmy Award nominations for both its writing and directing.", "score": "1.5550297" }, { "id": "11339621", "title": "Pilot (Awake)", "text": " Within a few weeks, Killen sent a rough draft of the script to his agent Marc Korman. Korman was so impressed by the script that, though it was after midnight, he went into the room where his sick wife was sleeping, and got into bed with her. Korman phoned Salke, and stated that the script was \"remarkable\", and praised Killen claiming that \"for a guy who has never written a procedural show in his life\", he is \"making two cases work\". Initially, Salke and Korman looked to sell acquisition rights to the Fox Broadcasting Company. Although it successfully made its way ", "score": "1.5502557" }, { "id": "27932156", "title": "Pilot (Person of Interest)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.", "score": "1.549762" }, { "id": "29325635", "title": "Pilot (About a Boy)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the pilot and first episode of the American television comedy series About a Boy, which premiered on February 22, 2014 on NBC in the United States. The series is based on the 1998 novel of the same name by British writer Nick Hornby and the 2002 film starring Hugh Grant. The episode is written by series developer Jason Katims and is directed by Jon Favreau. In the episode, a young boy named Marcus (Benjamin Stockham) and his single mother Fiona (Minnie Driver) move in next door to Will (David Walton), an unemployed bachelor living in San Francisco. Will woos a woman by pretending Marcus is his son.", "score": "1.5465884" }, { "id": "32838478", "title": "Pilot (Nikita)", "text": " The episode was written by developer and executive producer Craig Silverstein, while being directed by CSI: Crime Scene Investigation veteran Danny Cannon.", "score": "1.5454023" }, { "id": "11645394", "title": "Pilot (V)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ", "score": "1.5446973" }, { "id": "12129054", "title": "Pilot (Legends of Tomorrow)", "text": " \"Pilot, Part 1\" was revealed to be premiering in January 2016 in May 2015. The title of the episode, along with its writing credits of Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, Andrew Kreisberg, and Phil Klemmer, and the directing credit for Glen Winter was revealed on Twitter by Guggenheim. The credits and title for \"Pilot, Part 2\" was announced in September 2015.", "score": "1.5412674" }, { "id": "26346018", "title": "Pilot (The Deuce)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television drama series The Deuce. It premiered on September 10, 2017, on premium cable network HBO; the pilot was released in advance on HBO streaming service HBO Go on August 25. The episode was written by creators and showrunners George Pelecanos and David Simon, and was directed by Michelle MacLaren.", "score": "1.5410523" }, { "id": "5427365", "title": "Pilot (Gotham)", "text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the television series Gotham. It premiered on FOX on September 22, 2014 and was written by series developer Bruno Heller and directed by Danny Cannon. The episode, and the series as a whole, are based on characters appearing in and published by DC Comics in the Batman franchise, primarily those of James Gordon and Bruce Wayne. FOX gave the pilot a straight-to-series order with an order of 16 episodes. The pilot was watched by 8.21 million viewers, a strong number and received generally positive reviews for its acting and plot, but received criticism for its pace and subplots.", "score": "1.5409176" }, { "id": "2971127", "title": "Pilot (Lost)", "text": " write a script, but Braun wound up rejecting Lieber's draft and subsequent rewrites. In January 2004 Braun contacted J. J. Abrams, who developed the TV series Alias for ABC, to write a new pilot script, which would retain the title Lost. Although initially hesitant, Abrams warmed up to the idea on the condition that the series would have a supernatural angle to it and he was assigned a writing partner. ABC executive Heather Kadin sent him Damon Lindelof, who had long intended to meet Abrams as he wished to write for Alias. Together, Abrams and Lindelof developed the characters and plot of Lost, along with creating a series \"bible\" which would store the ", "score": "1.5395453" } ]
[ "Jeff Martin (writer)\n\"Pilot\" ", "Pilot (Revenge)\n \"Pilot\" was written by series creator Mike Kelley and directed by Salt director Phillip Noyce it was filmed in North Carolina between March–April 2011.", "Pilot (The Americans)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.", "Pilot (Lost)\n \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ", "Pilot (Manifest)\n On August 23, 2017, it was announced that NBC had given Manifest a put pilot commitment, to be written by Jeff Rake and produced by Rake, Robert Zemeckis, Jack Rapke, and Jackie Levine. On January 23, 2018, it was reported that NBC had given the production a formal pilot order. The pilot was directed by David Frankel, who also executive produced. Manifest was ordered to series in May 2018.", "Pilot (Preacher)\n \"Pilot\" was written by the series' creators Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg and Sam Catlin. Some elements in the episode are based on the first seven issues in the Preacher series, Gone to Texas, of which the script was first read and reviewed by Preacher co-creator Garth Ennis, as with the other episodes of the series. It also adapts, or at least provides allusions to Jesse's father John Custer from Until the End of the World, in the form of various black and white flashback sequences. Goldberg described the process of translating the main characters’ emotional stories from the comic to television as the biggest challenge. \"We had to make sure that you understood who each ", "Pilot (Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the television series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. The episode was first aired in the United States on the NBC network on September 18, 2006. Written by series creator Aaron Sorkin, and directed by executive producer Thomas Schlamme, the episode introduces the chaotic behind-the-scenes depiction of a fictional Saturday Night Live type show also called Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip.", "Pilot (Revenge)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.", "Pilot (Homeland)\n The episode was co-written by executive producers Alex Gansa, Gideon Raff, and Howard Gordon, while executive producer Michael Cuesta directed.", "Pilot (Dirty Sexy Money)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the ABC television series, Dirty Sexy Money. The episode was written by Craig Wright and was directed by Peter Horton. It originally aired on Wednesday, September 26, 2007.", "Pilot (The Shield)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the FX crime drama television series \"The Shield\". It was written by series creator Shawn Ryan, directed by Clark Johnson, and originally aired on March 12, 2002. The episode received Emmy Award nominations for both its writing and directing.", "Pilot (Awake)\n Within a few weeks, Killen sent a rough draft of the script to his agent Marc Korman. Korman was so impressed by the script that, though it was after midnight, he went into the room where his sick wife was sleeping, and got into bed with her. Korman phoned Salke, and stated that the script was \"remarkable\", and praised Killen claiming that \"for a guy who has never written a procedural show in his life\", he is \"making two cases work\". Initially, Salke and Korman looked to sell acquisition rights to the Fox Broadcasting Company. Although it successfully made its way ", "Pilot (Person of Interest)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.", "Pilot (About a Boy)\n \"Pilot\" is the pilot and first episode of the American television comedy series About a Boy, which premiered on February 22, 2014 on NBC in the United States. The series is based on the 1998 novel of the same name by British writer Nick Hornby and the 2002 film starring Hugh Grant. The episode is written by series developer Jason Katims and is directed by Jon Favreau. In the episode, a young boy named Marcus (Benjamin Stockham) and his single mother Fiona (Minnie Driver) move in next door to Will (David Walton), an unemployed bachelor living in San Francisco. Will woos a woman by pretending Marcus is his son.", "Pilot (Nikita)\n The episode was written by developer and executive producer Craig Silverstein, while being directed by CSI: Crime Scene Investigation veteran Danny Cannon.", "Pilot (V)\n \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ", "Pilot (Legends of Tomorrow)\n \"Pilot, Part 1\" was revealed to be premiering in January 2016 in May 2015. The title of the episode, along with its writing credits of Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, Andrew Kreisberg, and Phil Klemmer, and the directing credit for Glen Winter was revealed on Twitter by Guggenheim. The credits and title for \"Pilot, Part 2\" was announced in September 2015.", "Pilot (The Deuce)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television drama series The Deuce. It premiered on September 10, 2017, on premium cable network HBO; the pilot was released in advance on HBO streaming service HBO Go on August 25. The episode was written by creators and showrunners George Pelecanos and David Simon, and was directed by Michelle MacLaren.", "Pilot (Gotham)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the television series Gotham. It premiered on FOX on September 22, 2014 and was written by series developer Bruno Heller and directed by Danny Cannon. The episode, and the series as a whole, are based on characters appearing in and published by DC Comics in the Batman franchise, primarily those of James Gordon and Bruce Wayne. FOX gave the pilot a straight-to-series order with an order of 16 episodes. The pilot was watched by 8.21 million viewers, a strong number and received generally positive reviews for its acting and plot, but received criticism for its pace and subplots.", "Pilot (Lost)\n write a script, but Braun wound up rejecting Lieber's draft and subsequent rewrites. In January 2004 Braun contacted J. J. Abrams, who developed the TV series Alias for ABC, to write a new pilot script, which would retain the title Lost. Although initially hesitant, Abrams warmed up to the idea on the condition that the series would have a supernatural angle to it and he was assigned a writing partner. ABC executive Heather Kadin sent him Damon Lindelof, who had long intended to meet Abrams as he wished to write for Alias. Together, Abrams and Lindelof developed the characters and plot of Lost, along with creating a series \"bible\" which would store the " ]
Who was the screenwriter for These Children?
[ "Mario Mattoli" ]
screenwriter
These Children
2,912,084
94
[ { "id": "12867980", "title": "Are These Our Children", "text": " Are These Our Children? is a 1931 American pre-Code drama film directed by Wesley Ruggles and written by Howard Estabrook. The film stars Eric Linden, Ben Alexander, Beryl Mercer, Mary Kornman, Arline Judge, and Rochelle Hudson. The film was released on November 14, 1931 by RKO Pictures", "score": "1.6476216" }, { "id": "27622313", "title": "Roger King (novelist)", "text": " King was executive producer of the feature documentary Still, The Children Are Here, made in collaboration with Mira Nair and Dinaz Stafford. The film is set in the remote village of Sadholpara in Northeastern India. He has also written a screenplay adaptation of A Girl From Zanzibar, which is in development. His screenplay of Written on a Stranger's Map won the BBC/Writer's Guild award for best first screenplay.", "score": "1.604974" }, { "id": "25866844", "title": "Mormarevi Brothers", "text": " Mormarevi Brothers declared that they never had intentions to write about children. As writers, they always searched for the funny parts of everyday life. They found it in the child's point of view on the world, but their writing was spiced with a lot of humour that could also be appreciated by adults, and even with some satire. In 1971, their second filmed screenplay, named Porcupines Are Born Without Spines, was released. This was the first film in a series that came to be known as \"Childhood\". Inspired by children and their laughter, they produced a series of memorable films with similar themes. They were: With Children at the Seaside (1972), Exams at Any Odd Time (1974), Problem with Many Unknown Quantities (1977) and The Porcupines' War (1979). The first three films in this series used a formula of two separate ", "score": "1.574183" }, { "id": "26377582", "title": "Physician writer", "text": " ö (The Island of the Children) filmed in 1980 by Kay Pollak ; Alice Jones, American poet, practiced internal medicine, psychiatry, now psychoanalysis. Co-editor of Apogee Press. ; Carl Jung (1875–1961), Austrian psychoanalyst and author. ; James Kahn (born 1947) American writer, best known for his novelization of Return of the Jedi, Poltergeist and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. He has also written for well-known television series such as Melrose Place, Star Trek: The Next Generation, St. Elsewhere and E/R ; Christopher Kasparek (born 1945), Scottish-born writer of Polish descent who has edited and translated works by Ignacy Krasicki, Bolesław Prus, ", "score": "1.5462883" }, { "id": "6321475", "title": "These Three", "text": " These Three is a 1936 American drama film directed by William Wyler and starring Miriam Hopkins, Merle Oberon, Joel McCrea, and Bonita Granville. The screenplay by Lillian Hellman is based on her 1934 play The Children's Hour. A 1961 remake of the film, also directed by Wyler, was released as The Children's Hour in the US and The Loudest Whisper in the UK.", "score": "1.5267305" }, { "id": "29625669", "title": "Abby Mann", "text": " the introduction to the printed script, Mann credited a conversation with Abraham Pomerantz, U.S. Chief Deputy Counsel, for giving him the initial interest in Nuremberg. Mann and Kramer also collaborated on the film A Child Is Waiting (1963). While working for television, he created the series Kojak, starring Telly Savalas. Mann was executive producer, but was also credited as a writer on many episodes. His other writing credits include the screenplays for the television films The Marcus-Nelson Murders, The Atlanta Child Murders, Teamster Boss: The Jackie Presser Story, and Indictment: The McMartin Trial, as well as the film War and Love. He also directed the 1978 NBC TV miniseries King. In 1974, he signed a deal with Columbia Pictures Television to develop long-form television projects.", "score": "1.519659" }, { "id": "6391042", "title": "David Arata", "text": " David Arata is an American screenwriter and producer. He received national acclaim for his adaptive screenplay Children of Men in 2007, garnering an Academy Award nomination and multiple other industry awards. Arata's other screenwriting credits include Spy Game, Brokedown Palace, and most recently, The Angel.", "score": "1.5156392" }, { "id": "7682789", "title": "Children of the Lamp", "text": " In 2007 DreamWorks acquired the rights for a film adaptation to be produced by Nina Jacobson. Later DreamWorks dropped the project and Paramount signed the film to distribute with Disney. Writers Michael Handelman, Lee Hall, and Dave Guion were all, at one point, involved in developing a script. In April 2013, Paramount was in talks with director/writer Robert Rugan to direct the film. However, for unknown reasons, the film was never produced after the release of the final book.", "score": "1.5147307" }, { "id": "2309011", "title": "Glyn Jones (South African writer)", "text": " He wrote the screenplay for the Oscar Nominated Columbia Film, A King's Story on the life of the Duke of Windsor Edward VIII. He was chief writer and script editor for 20th Century Fox’s most successful children’s series, \"Here Come the Double Deckers\". He also wrote films for the Children's Film Foundation, two of which were award winners. Jones contributed a half dozen scripts for the Children's Film Foundation series The Magnificent Six and 1/2 (1968–69), plus nine scripts for Here Come the Double Deckers (1970–71), on which he was also script editor, a TV series derived from the CFF films. Jones wrote an episode of The Gold Robbers (1969) around the same time. In the UK he had written book ", "score": "1.5131269" }, { "id": "1664192", "title": "Gene Fowler", "text": " dozen screenplays, mostly written in the 1930s, including What Price Hollywood? (1932), The Call of the Wild (1935) and Billy the Kid (1941). He collaborated with Bess Meredyth on a stage play, The Mighty Barnum, which was later filmed, and also with Ben Hecht on the play The Great Magoo. During his years in Hollywood, Fowler became close to such celebrities as John Barrymore and W. C. Fields. Fields, whose animus toward children is legendary, claimed that Fowler's sons were the only children he could stand. He wrote a biography of Barrymore as well as Mack Sennett, Jimmy Durante and New York City mayor Jimmy Walker. In ", "score": "1.511927" }, { "id": "33159078", "title": "Stuart Blumberg", "text": " Blumberg was nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay in 2010 for co-writing The Kids Are All Right. Blumberg made his directorial debut with the Hollywood film Thanks for Sharing starring Mark Ruffalo, Tim Robbins, Gwyneth Paltrow, Josh Gad, Joely Richardson, and Alecia Moore. The film is about sex addiction and how a group of New Yorkers deal with recovery.", "score": "1.5105317" }, { "id": "30157442", "title": "The Children (1980 film)", "text": " The Children (a.k.a. The Children of Ravensback) is a 1980 low-budget horror film, written and produced by Carlton J. Albright. The movie is about five children in a small town who, thanks to a yellow toxic cloud, are transformed into bloodless zombies with black fingernails who microwave every living thing they put their hands on. The surviving adults of the town must attempt to put a stop to them. The film is distributed by Troma Entertainment.", "score": "1.5079252" }, { "id": "25998693", "title": "Andrew Marshall (screenwriter)", "text": " Andrew Paul Marshall (born 27 August 1954) is a British comedy screenwriter, most noted for the domestic sitcom 2point4 children. He was also the inspiration for Marvin the Paranoid Android in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Although he had also previously adapted stories for Agatha Christie's Poirot, in 2002 he made a further move into writing \"straight\" drama, with the fantasy horror series Strange. He has also written several screenplays.", "score": "1.5045366" }, { "id": "16216058", "title": "Children of Tomorrow", "text": " Children of Tomorrow is a 1970 science fiction novel by Canadian-American author A. E. van Vogt.", "score": "1.5016963" }, { "id": "3004685", "title": "Richard Kotuk", "text": " The 51st State. He also worked as a producer for CBS Reports for five years. His documentary films won numerous awards and honors. Children of Darkness (1983), which explored the lack of proper mental health care for seriously emotionally disturbed children in America, received four Emmys and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Feature Length Documentary. Kotuk and Ara Chekmayan, the film's co-producer and co-writer, faced some challenges in trying to gain permission to shoot at certain locations. The New York State Office of Mental Health denied them access to film at South Beach Psychiatric Center on Staten Island. To get around that, Kotuk and Chekmayan hid the identities of individuals who were willing to speak with them and they also shot with a hidden camera.", "score": "1.4985651" }, { "id": "26441378", "title": "The Child (1977 film)", "text": " The Child began as a project by Robert Voskanian and Robert Dadashian, two Armenian American film students at Columbia College Hollywood. Inspired to make a horror film after seeing Night of the Living Dead, the two acquired a screenplay by Ralph Lucas and began developing the project.", "score": "1.4963081" }, { "id": "6604963", "title": "Children of Men", "text": " Children of Men is a 2006 science fiction action-thriller film co-written and directed by Alfonso Cuarón. The screenplay, based on P. D. James' 1992 novel The Children of Men, was credited to five writers, with Clive Owen making uncredited contributions. The film takes place in 2027, when two decades of human infertility have left society on the brink of collapse. Asylum seekers seek sanctuary in the United Kingdom, where they are subjected to detention and refoulement by the government. Owen plays civil servant Theo Faron, who must help refugee Kee (Clare-Hope Ashitey) escape the chaos. Children of Men also stars Julianne Moore, Michael Caine, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Pam Ferris, and Charlie Hunnam. The film was released on 22 September 2006 in the UK and on 25 December ", "score": "1.491904" }, { "id": "4667564", "title": "James P. Comer", "text": " James P. Comer (born James Pierpont Comer, September 25, 1934 in East Chicago, Indiana) is currently the Maurice Falk Professor of Child Psychiatry at the Yale Child Study Center and has been since 1976. He is also an associate dean at the Yale School of Medicine. As one of the world's leading child psychiatrists, he is best known for his efforts to improve the scholastic performance of children from lower-income and minority backgrounds which led to the founding of the Comer School Development Program in 1968. His program has been used in more than 600 schools in eighty-two school districts. He is the author of ten books, including the autobiographical Maggie’s American Dream: The Life and Times of a Black Family, 1988; Leave No Child Behind: Preparing Today's Youth for Tomorrow's World, 2004; and his most recent book, What I Learned in ", "score": "1.4914972" }, { "id": "30000081", "title": "A War of Children", "text": " A War of Children is a 1972 television film directed by George Schaefer, written by James Costigan, and starring Vivien Merchant, Jenny Agutter, and John Ronane.", "score": "1.4912653" }, { "id": "26947252", "title": "Philip Child", "text": " Philip Albert Child (January 19, 1898 &ndash; February 6, 1978) was a Canadian novelist, poet, and academic. Born in Hamilton, Ontario, the son of William Addison Child and Elizabeth Helen (Harvey) Child graduated from Ridley College, St. Catharines in 1915 and then studied at Trinity College where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree after serving during World War I. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Christ's College, Cambridge in 1921 and received a Master of Arts and Ph.D. from Harvard University. He was a journalist and taught for a time at the University of British Columbia while writing several novels. In 1942, he became a professor at Trinity College eventually becoming Chancellor's Professor of English. He won the Ryerson Fiction Award twice, in 1945 for Day of Wrath and in 1949 for Mr. Ames Against Time. He also won the 1949 Governor General's Award for Mr. Ames Against Time.", "score": "1.4911205" } ]
[ "Are These Our Children\n Are These Our Children? is a 1931 American pre-Code drama film directed by Wesley Ruggles and written by Howard Estabrook. The film stars Eric Linden, Ben Alexander, Beryl Mercer, Mary Kornman, Arline Judge, and Rochelle Hudson. The film was released on November 14, 1931 by RKO Pictures", "Roger King (novelist)\n King was executive producer of the feature documentary Still, The Children Are Here, made in collaboration with Mira Nair and Dinaz Stafford. The film is set in the remote village of Sadholpara in Northeastern India. He has also written a screenplay adaptation of A Girl From Zanzibar, which is in development. His screenplay of Written on a Stranger's Map won the BBC/Writer's Guild award for best first screenplay.", "Mormarevi Brothers\n Mormarevi Brothers declared that they never had intentions to write about children. As writers, they always searched for the funny parts of everyday life. They found it in the child's point of view on the world, but their writing was spiced with a lot of humour that could also be appreciated by adults, and even with some satire. In 1971, their second filmed screenplay, named Porcupines Are Born Without Spines, was released. This was the first film in a series that came to be known as \"Childhood\". Inspired by children and their laughter, they produced a series of memorable films with similar themes. They were: With Children at the Seaside (1972), Exams at Any Odd Time (1974), Problem with Many Unknown Quantities (1977) and The Porcupines' War (1979). The first three films in this series used a formula of two separate ", "Physician writer\n ö (The Island of the Children) filmed in 1980 by Kay Pollak ; Alice Jones, American poet, practiced internal medicine, psychiatry, now psychoanalysis. Co-editor of Apogee Press. ; Carl Jung (1875–1961), Austrian psychoanalyst and author. ; James Kahn (born 1947) American writer, best known for his novelization of Return of the Jedi, Poltergeist and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. He has also written for well-known television series such as Melrose Place, Star Trek: The Next Generation, St. Elsewhere and E/R ; Christopher Kasparek (born 1945), Scottish-born writer of Polish descent who has edited and translated works by Ignacy Krasicki, Bolesław Prus, ", "These Three\n These Three is a 1936 American drama film directed by William Wyler and starring Miriam Hopkins, Merle Oberon, Joel McCrea, and Bonita Granville. The screenplay by Lillian Hellman is based on her 1934 play The Children's Hour. A 1961 remake of the film, also directed by Wyler, was released as The Children's Hour in the US and The Loudest Whisper in the UK.", "Abby Mann\n the introduction to the printed script, Mann credited a conversation with Abraham Pomerantz, U.S. Chief Deputy Counsel, for giving him the initial interest in Nuremberg. Mann and Kramer also collaborated on the film A Child Is Waiting (1963). While working for television, he created the series Kojak, starring Telly Savalas. Mann was executive producer, but was also credited as a writer on many episodes. His other writing credits include the screenplays for the television films The Marcus-Nelson Murders, The Atlanta Child Murders, Teamster Boss: The Jackie Presser Story, and Indictment: The McMartin Trial, as well as the film War and Love. He also directed the 1978 NBC TV miniseries King. In 1974, he signed a deal with Columbia Pictures Television to develop long-form television projects.", "David Arata\n David Arata is an American screenwriter and producer. He received national acclaim for his adaptive screenplay Children of Men in 2007, garnering an Academy Award nomination and multiple other industry awards. Arata's other screenwriting credits include Spy Game, Brokedown Palace, and most recently, The Angel.", "Children of the Lamp\n In 2007 DreamWorks acquired the rights for a film adaptation to be produced by Nina Jacobson. Later DreamWorks dropped the project and Paramount signed the film to distribute with Disney. Writers Michael Handelman, Lee Hall, and Dave Guion were all, at one point, involved in developing a script. In April 2013, Paramount was in talks with director/writer Robert Rugan to direct the film. However, for unknown reasons, the film was never produced after the release of the final book.", "Glyn Jones (South African writer)\n He wrote the screenplay for the Oscar Nominated Columbia Film, A King's Story on the life of the Duke of Windsor Edward VIII. He was chief writer and script editor for 20th Century Fox’s most successful children’s series, \"Here Come the Double Deckers\". He also wrote films for the Children's Film Foundation, two of which were award winners. Jones contributed a half dozen scripts for the Children's Film Foundation series The Magnificent Six and 1/2 (1968–69), plus nine scripts for Here Come the Double Deckers (1970–71), on which he was also script editor, a TV series derived from the CFF films. Jones wrote an episode of The Gold Robbers (1969) around the same time. In the UK he had written book ", "Gene Fowler\n dozen screenplays, mostly written in the 1930s, including What Price Hollywood? (1932), The Call of the Wild (1935) and Billy the Kid (1941). He collaborated with Bess Meredyth on a stage play, The Mighty Barnum, which was later filmed, and also with Ben Hecht on the play The Great Magoo. During his years in Hollywood, Fowler became close to such celebrities as John Barrymore and W. C. Fields. Fields, whose animus toward children is legendary, claimed that Fowler's sons were the only children he could stand. He wrote a biography of Barrymore as well as Mack Sennett, Jimmy Durante and New York City mayor Jimmy Walker. In ", "Stuart Blumberg\n Blumberg was nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay in 2010 for co-writing The Kids Are All Right. Blumberg made his directorial debut with the Hollywood film Thanks for Sharing starring Mark Ruffalo, Tim Robbins, Gwyneth Paltrow, Josh Gad, Joely Richardson, and Alecia Moore. The film is about sex addiction and how a group of New Yorkers deal with recovery.", "The Children (1980 film)\n The Children (a.k.a. The Children of Ravensback) is a 1980 low-budget horror film, written and produced by Carlton J. Albright. The movie is about five children in a small town who, thanks to a yellow toxic cloud, are transformed into bloodless zombies with black fingernails who microwave every living thing they put their hands on. The surviving adults of the town must attempt to put a stop to them. The film is distributed by Troma Entertainment.", "Andrew Marshall (screenwriter)\n Andrew Paul Marshall (born 27 August 1954) is a British comedy screenwriter, most noted for the domestic sitcom 2point4 children. He was also the inspiration for Marvin the Paranoid Android in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Although he had also previously adapted stories for Agatha Christie's Poirot, in 2002 he made a further move into writing \"straight\" drama, with the fantasy horror series Strange. He has also written several screenplays.", "Children of Tomorrow\n Children of Tomorrow is a 1970 science fiction novel by Canadian-American author A. E. van Vogt.", "Richard Kotuk\n The 51st State. He also worked as a producer for CBS Reports for five years. His documentary films won numerous awards and honors. Children of Darkness (1983), which explored the lack of proper mental health care for seriously emotionally disturbed children in America, received four Emmys and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Feature Length Documentary. Kotuk and Ara Chekmayan, the film's co-producer and co-writer, faced some challenges in trying to gain permission to shoot at certain locations. The New York State Office of Mental Health denied them access to film at South Beach Psychiatric Center on Staten Island. To get around that, Kotuk and Chekmayan hid the identities of individuals who were willing to speak with them and they also shot with a hidden camera.", "The Child (1977 film)\n The Child began as a project by Robert Voskanian and Robert Dadashian, two Armenian American film students at Columbia College Hollywood. Inspired to make a horror film after seeing Night of the Living Dead, the two acquired a screenplay by Ralph Lucas and began developing the project.", "Children of Men\n Children of Men is a 2006 science fiction action-thriller film co-written and directed by Alfonso Cuarón. The screenplay, based on P. D. James' 1992 novel The Children of Men, was credited to five writers, with Clive Owen making uncredited contributions. The film takes place in 2027, when two decades of human infertility have left society on the brink of collapse. Asylum seekers seek sanctuary in the United Kingdom, where they are subjected to detention and refoulement by the government. Owen plays civil servant Theo Faron, who must help refugee Kee (Clare-Hope Ashitey) escape the chaos. Children of Men also stars Julianne Moore, Michael Caine, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Pam Ferris, and Charlie Hunnam. The film was released on 22 September 2006 in the UK and on 25 December ", "James P. Comer\n James P. Comer (born James Pierpont Comer, September 25, 1934 in East Chicago, Indiana) is currently the Maurice Falk Professor of Child Psychiatry at the Yale Child Study Center and has been since 1976. He is also an associate dean at the Yale School of Medicine. As one of the world's leading child psychiatrists, he is best known for his efforts to improve the scholastic performance of children from lower-income and minority backgrounds which led to the founding of the Comer School Development Program in 1968. His program has been used in more than 600 schools in eighty-two school districts. He is the author of ten books, including the autobiographical Maggie’s American Dream: The Life and Times of a Black Family, 1988; Leave No Child Behind: Preparing Today's Youth for Tomorrow's World, 2004; and his most recent book, What I Learned in ", "A War of Children\n A War of Children is a 1972 television film directed by George Schaefer, written by James Costigan, and starring Vivien Merchant, Jenny Agutter, and John Ronane.", "Philip Child\n Philip Albert Child (January 19, 1898 &ndash; February 6, 1978) was a Canadian novelist, poet, and academic. Born in Hamilton, Ontario, the son of William Addison Child and Elizabeth Helen (Harvey) Child graduated from Ridley College, St. Catharines in 1915 and then studied at Trinity College where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree after serving during World War I. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Christ's College, Cambridge in 1921 and received a Master of Arts and Ph.D. from Harvard University. He was a journalist and taught for a time at the University of British Columbia while writing several novels. In 1942, he became a professor at Trinity College eventually becoming Chancellor's Professor of English. He won the Ryerson Fiction Award twice, in 1945 for Day of Wrath and in 1949 for Mr. Ames Against Time. He also won the 1949 Governor General's Award for Mr. Ames Against Time." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Prototype?
[ "Bill Lawrence", "William Van Duzer Lawrence IV", "Gary David Goldberg" ]
screenwriter
Prototype (Spin City)
5,495,438
4
[ { "id": "10735804", "title": "Prototype (1983 film)", "text": " campus as well as learns about self-determination, including reading the fate of the creature in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein novel. Needing more money, Forrester calls Pressman. The next afternoon, they return to the apartment but the surroundings are suspicious. Forrester orders Michael to hide in the garage. Inside the apartment, he finds Pressman. Aware that Pressman could not have withdrawn the money after business hours, Forrester accuses him of leading the government to him in exchange for a fully-funded research grant that he had long sought. Pressman denies it, claiming concern for Forrester as his only motivation. Forrester proposes a meeting at a ", "score": "1.622947" }, { "id": "10735805", "title": "Prototype (1983 film)", "text": " shop if Pressman will lead the agents away as a gesture of trust. Forrester finds Michael in the garage and is resigned to having to surrender him to the government. Michael decides he wants to be in control of his fate and proposes self-immolation using flammable liquids stored in the garage. Forrester is aghast at the idea but finally agrees that it’s the only way to keep Michael out of the government’s hands. They say good bye and Forrester goes to the coffee shop where he numbly joins Pressman, Jarrett and Keating as fire engines respond to the blaze at the garage.", "score": "1.5991197" }, { "id": "10735801", "title": "Prototype (1983 film)", "text": " Just before Christmas, a security guard discovers a top secret project has disappeared from a laboratory. It is an advanced humanoid robot with learning and analytical abilities, developed by a team led by irascible Nobel laureate Dr. Carl Forrester. He has taken the robot – named Michael – out for field testing at a department store then to his own home for dinner to see if the robot can fool his wife, Dorothy. Lab security escort Forrester and Michael back to the lab, to Dorothy’s puzzlement. Forrester’s associate, Gene Pressman, a scientist with ultra-liberal leanings, is ecstatic about the success of the unscheduled ", "score": "1.59771" }, { "id": "10735800", "title": "Prototype (1983 film)", "text": " Prototype is a 1983 television film, starring Christopher Plummer.", "score": "1.5918876" }, { "id": "10735806", "title": "Prototype (1983 film)", "text": "Christopher Plummer as Dr. Carl Forrester ; David Morse as Michael ; Frances Sternhagen as Dorothy Forrester ; James Sutorius as Dr. Gene Pressman ; Stephen Elliott as Dr. Arthur Jarrett ; Doran Clark as Chris ; Alley Mills as Dr. Rebecca Bishop ; Arthur Hill as Gen. Keating ; Ed Call as Security guard ; Jonathan Estrin as Dr. Cooper ; Richard Kuss as Harris ; Pat McNamara as Landlord ; Vahan Moosekian as Dr. Kirk ; Molly Hansen as Elizabeth Hammond Ph.D. (uncredited) ", "score": "1.5888615" }, { "id": "8829886", "title": "Prototype 2", "text": " Prototype 2 (stylized as [PROTOTYPE2]) is a 2012 open world action-adventure video game. Developed by Canadian studio Radical Entertainment and published by Activision, it is the sequel to 2009's Prototype. The game was announced at the 2010 Spike VGA Awards. Versions for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One were released on July 14, 2015 alongside the first game as Prototype Biohazard Bundle. Separate versions of the games became available in August 2015. The game features a new protagonist, James Heller, as he goes on a quest to destroy the Blacklight virus. The story is one of revenge, as Heller wants to kill Alex Mercer, protagonist of the original Prototype, after his family was killed in the outbreak of the Blacklight virus. While the game was a top seller for a period of time, its sales would eventually result in the downsizing of its developer.", "score": "1.5887929" }, { "id": "29322205", "title": "Prototype (video game)", "text": " Prototype (stylized as [PROTOTYPE]) is an open-world action-adventure video game developed by Radical Entertainment and published by Activision. The game was released in North America on June 9, 2009 (PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360), in southwestern parts of North America (Microsoft Windows) as well as Oceania on June 10, and in Europe on June 12. Versions for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One were released on July 14, 2015 alongside the sequel as Prototype Biohazard Bundle. Separate versions of the games became available in August 2015. Set in Manhattan, the game follows a powerful amnesiac shapeshifter named Alex Mercer who must stop an outbreak of Blacklight, ", "score": "1.5827866" }, { "id": "12228357", "title": "Prototype (1992 film)", "text": " Set in a post-apocalyptic Los Angeles of 2057, Hawkins Coselow, a crippled soldier, along with his ex-lover, Chandra Kerkorian, share vivid psychosexual dreams. Dr. Alexis Zalazny is working on a cybernetic program that will help Coselow walk again. The program sort of works, but everything goes deadly wrong when Coselow becomes a killing machine that can interface with any computer. He ends up killing several people belonging to a resistance movement. The rebels are led by Omegas, cybernetically altered humans, battled government forces in the crime-ridden streets. In time, the Omegas reprogrammed themselves and carried out their own deadly agenda. In the end, the Omegas were destroyed, except one - implanted in a child, Chandra Kerkorian. Now grown, she is ready to lead the rebellion again.", "score": "1.5636241" }, { "id": "12228356", "title": "Prototype (1992 film)", "text": " Prototype, also known as Prototype X29A, is a 1992 post-apocalyptic science fiction film.", "score": "1.5609801" }, { "id": "15902957", "title": "Prototype (company)", "text": " Prototype Ltd. (株式会社プロトタイプ) is a Japanese video game publisher established on March 27, 2006 by Toshio Tabeta, a former producer of Interchannel. While still with Interchannel, Tabeta's team was responsible for mainly developing and publishing versions of visual novels originally published by VisualArt's for consumer platforms like the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable. After Prototype split off from Interchannel, the company still continued to work with VisualArt's. Prototype is also involved in producing mobile phone ports through VisualArt's Motto which Prototype manages. Prototype has also produced a set of drama CDs based on Key's visual novel Clannad.", "score": "1.5605465" }, { "id": "10735807", "title": "Prototype (1983 film)", "text": " Filmed as a made for TV movie airing on the CBS network.", "score": "1.5362241" }, { "id": "10735803", "title": "Prototype (1983 film)", "text": " Keating from the Pentagon assures him that isn’t their intent, but Forrester is unconvinced. At night, Forrester sneaks Michael out in his car after Pressman distracts the guard at the front desk. Forrester and Michael switch to a car Pressman rented and go on the run. When Forrester calls Dorothy from a gas station, she insists he hang up as Keating and other agents are there and trying to trace the call. Forrester takes Michael to hide at the college campus where he used to teach as a young professor. He rents an off-campus apartment and a garage. Michael interacts with other people ", "score": "1.5191078" }, { "id": "29322217", "title": "Prototype (video game)", "text": " The game follows Dr. Alexander J. \"Alex\" Mercer (voiced by Barry Pepper) who wakes up in a morgue in the basement of Gentek, a genetic engineering company based in Manhattan, sending a pair of scientists that were just about to perform an autopsy running. Alex escapes, and witnesses the scientists being gunned down by military operatives. Alex is discovered and attacked. He survives bullets being fired into his chest, and leaps over a wall to safety. He soon discovers he now possesses powerful shapeshifting abilities, superhuman strength, speed, agility, durability, senses, endurance, weaponry and the ability to \"consume\" people to gain their memories, skills and appearance. With no memory ", "score": "1.5167927" }, { "id": "29322206", "title": "Prototype (video game)", "text": " plague that mutates individuals into hideous violent monsters. During his quest, Alex tries to uncover his past while also coming into conflict with both the US military and a black operations force called Blackwatch. Parallel to the game's storyline is the ability to play the game as a sandbox-style video game giving the player freedom to roam Manhattan. The game was a critical and commercial success, with critics praising the game for its originality and engaging gameplay. Many reviewers compared and contrasted it with Infamous, another open-world action-adventure game released one month prior to Prototype. A sequel, Prototype 2, was released in April 2012.", "score": "1.5148802" }, { "id": "10735808", "title": "Prototype (1983 film)", "text": " The New York Times praised the movie, citing the acting, script and directing as strong points, finding the move \"uncommonly riveting \" Creature Feature gave the movie 3.5 out of 5 stars, saying the movie was intelligent, well-acted and praised that both sides of the issue.", "score": "1.5097334" }, { "id": "29981260", "title": "Prototype (band)", "text": " In January 1994, Psychosis guitarists Vince Levalois and Kragen Lum shifted their focus to forming their own band, recruiting bassist Stephen Gambina and drummer Damion Ramirez, and named the band Prototype. The new band then began recording their debut release, a demo titled Seed, and released it later that year. The demo went on to receive praise and was referred to as the benchmark for modern aggressive/melodic progressive metal. The demo contained three songs: \"Seed\", \"Shine\", and \"Dead of Jericho\"; all three tracks later appeared on the band's first two studio albums. In 1996, Gambina and Ramirez left the band, and were replaced by bassist Mike ", "score": "1.499999" }, { "id": "8829899", "title": "Prototype 2", "text": " It was announced by Radical Entertainment that like the original Prototype, Prototype 2 would have a comic counterpart. The three part series takes place before the second video game, acting as a bridge between the two games. Published by Dark Horse Comics, the first comic was called the Anchor. After eradicating the virus in Africa, Mexico and Russia, Alex travels around the world, wondering about if the virus has made him a human, humanity's killer or its savior. Alex slowly begins to decide that he is the earth's savior and will usher it into a new age of prosperity after he wipes out humanity. However, this changes when he ", "score": "1.4992998" }, { "id": "28254041", "title": "Phil Lord and Christopher Miller", "text": " working on the script, they were fired for story issues and replaced with new writers, who after a year were also fired. Lord and Miller were then re-hired in 2006. The two completely redid the script, this time with the creative input of their crew. The new draft had the protagonist as a failed inventor who wanted to prove himself to his town. The two were almost fired again after Amy Pascal, the head of Sony Pictures at the time, criticized the film for a lack of story. Although the film succeeded on the comedic front in the animatic stage, Pascal ", "score": "1.4988372" }, { "id": "29322226", "title": "Prototype (video game)", "text": " A six-issue comic book series made by DC Comics Wildstorm was a spin-off as a prequel to the game and released alongside. It reveals more about Hope Idaho, Elizabeth Greene, and the viral outbreak.", "score": "1.495479" }, { "id": "9401195", "title": "Daniel Keyes", "text": " own time.\" One story idea Keyes wrote but did not submit to Lee was called \"Brainstorm\", the paragraph-long synopsis that would evolve into Flowers for Algernon. It begins: \"The first guy in the test to raise the I.Q. from a low normal 90 to genius level ... He goes through the experience and then is thrown back to what was.\" Keyes recalled, \"something told me it should be more than a comic book script.\" From 1955 to 1956, Keyes wrote for EC Comics, including its titles Shock Illustrated and Confessions Illustrated, under both his own name and the pseudonyms Kris Daniels and A.D. Locke.", "score": "1.4861265" } ]
[ "Prototype (1983 film)\n campus as well as learns about self-determination, including reading the fate of the creature in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein novel. Needing more money, Forrester calls Pressman. The next afternoon, they return to the apartment but the surroundings are suspicious. Forrester orders Michael to hide in the garage. Inside the apartment, he finds Pressman. Aware that Pressman could not have withdrawn the money after business hours, Forrester accuses him of leading the government to him in exchange for a fully-funded research grant that he had long sought. Pressman denies it, claiming concern for Forrester as his only motivation. Forrester proposes a meeting at a ", "Prototype (1983 film)\n shop if Pressman will lead the agents away as a gesture of trust. Forrester finds Michael in the garage and is resigned to having to surrender him to the government. Michael decides he wants to be in control of his fate and proposes self-immolation using flammable liquids stored in the garage. Forrester is aghast at the idea but finally agrees that it’s the only way to keep Michael out of the government’s hands. They say good bye and Forrester goes to the coffee shop where he numbly joins Pressman, Jarrett and Keating as fire engines respond to the blaze at the garage.", "Prototype (1983 film)\n Just before Christmas, a security guard discovers a top secret project has disappeared from a laboratory. It is an advanced humanoid robot with learning and analytical abilities, developed by a team led by irascible Nobel laureate Dr. Carl Forrester. He has taken the robot – named Michael – out for field testing at a department store then to his own home for dinner to see if the robot can fool his wife, Dorothy. Lab security escort Forrester and Michael back to the lab, to Dorothy’s puzzlement. Forrester’s associate, Gene Pressman, a scientist with ultra-liberal leanings, is ecstatic about the success of the unscheduled ", "Prototype (1983 film)\n Prototype is a 1983 television film, starring Christopher Plummer.", "Prototype (1983 film)\nChristopher Plummer as Dr. Carl Forrester ; David Morse as Michael ; Frances Sternhagen as Dorothy Forrester ; James Sutorius as Dr. Gene Pressman ; Stephen Elliott as Dr. Arthur Jarrett ; Doran Clark as Chris ; Alley Mills as Dr. Rebecca Bishop ; Arthur Hill as Gen. Keating ; Ed Call as Security guard ; Jonathan Estrin as Dr. Cooper ; Richard Kuss as Harris ; Pat McNamara as Landlord ; Vahan Moosekian as Dr. Kirk ; Molly Hansen as Elizabeth Hammond Ph.D. (uncredited) ", "Prototype 2\n Prototype 2 (stylized as [PROTOTYPE2]) is a 2012 open world action-adventure video game. Developed by Canadian studio Radical Entertainment and published by Activision, it is the sequel to 2009's Prototype. The game was announced at the 2010 Spike VGA Awards. Versions for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One were released on July 14, 2015 alongside the first game as Prototype Biohazard Bundle. Separate versions of the games became available in August 2015. The game features a new protagonist, James Heller, as he goes on a quest to destroy the Blacklight virus. The story is one of revenge, as Heller wants to kill Alex Mercer, protagonist of the original Prototype, after his family was killed in the outbreak of the Blacklight virus. While the game was a top seller for a period of time, its sales would eventually result in the downsizing of its developer.", "Prototype (video game)\n Prototype (stylized as [PROTOTYPE]) is an open-world action-adventure video game developed by Radical Entertainment and published by Activision. The game was released in North America on June 9, 2009 (PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360), in southwestern parts of North America (Microsoft Windows) as well as Oceania on June 10, and in Europe on June 12. Versions for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One were released on July 14, 2015 alongside the sequel as Prototype Biohazard Bundle. Separate versions of the games became available in August 2015. Set in Manhattan, the game follows a powerful amnesiac shapeshifter named Alex Mercer who must stop an outbreak of Blacklight, ", "Prototype (1992 film)\n Set in a post-apocalyptic Los Angeles of 2057, Hawkins Coselow, a crippled soldier, along with his ex-lover, Chandra Kerkorian, share vivid psychosexual dreams. Dr. Alexis Zalazny is working on a cybernetic program that will help Coselow walk again. The program sort of works, but everything goes deadly wrong when Coselow becomes a killing machine that can interface with any computer. He ends up killing several people belonging to a resistance movement. The rebels are led by Omegas, cybernetically altered humans, battled government forces in the crime-ridden streets. In time, the Omegas reprogrammed themselves and carried out their own deadly agenda. In the end, the Omegas were destroyed, except one - implanted in a child, Chandra Kerkorian. Now grown, she is ready to lead the rebellion again.", "Prototype (1992 film)\n Prototype, also known as Prototype X29A, is a 1992 post-apocalyptic science fiction film.", "Prototype (company)\n Prototype Ltd. (株式会社プロトタイプ) is a Japanese video game publisher established on March 27, 2006 by Toshio Tabeta, a former producer of Interchannel. While still with Interchannel, Tabeta's team was responsible for mainly developing and publishing versions of visual novels originally published by VisualArt's for consumer platforms like the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable. After Prototype split off from Interchannel, the company still continued to work with VisualArt's. Prototype is also involved in producing mobile phone ports through VisualArt's Motto which Prototype manages. Prototype has also produced a set of drama CDs based on Key's visual novel Clannad.", "Prototype (1983 film)\n Filmed as a made for TV movie airing on the CBS network.", "Prototype (1983 film)\n Keating from the Pentagon assures him that isn’t their intent, but Forrester is unconvinced. At night, Forrester sneaks Michael out in his car after Pressman distracts the guard at the front desk. Forrester and Michael switch to a car Pressman rented and go on the run. When Forrester calls Dorothy from a gas station, she insists he hang up as Keating and other agents are there and trying to trace the call. Forrester takes Michael to hide at the college campus where he used to teach as a young professor. He rents an off-campus apartment and a garage. Michael interacts with other people ", "Prototype (video game)\n The game follows Dr. Alexander J. \"Alex\" Mercer (voiced by Barry Pepper) who wakes up in a morgue in the basement of Gentek, a genetic engineering company based in Manhattan, sending a pair of scientists that were just about to perform an autopsy running. Alex escapes, and witnesses the scientists being gunned down by military operatives. Alex is discovered and attacked. He survives bullets being fired into his chest, and leaps over a wall to safety. He soon discovers he now possesses powerful shapeshifting abilities, superhuman strength, speed, agility, durability, senses, endurance, weaponry and the ability to \"consume\" people to gain their memories, skills and appearance. With no memory ", "Prototype (video game)\n plague that mutates individuals into hideous violent monsters. During his quest, Alex tries to uncover his past while also coming into conflict with both the US military and a black operations force called Blackwatch. Parallel to the game's storyline is the ability to play the game as a sandbox-style video game giving the player freedom to roam Manhattan. The game was a critical and commercial success, with critics praising the game for its originality and engaging gameplay. Many reviewers compared and contrasted it with Infamous, another open-world action-adventure game released one month prior to Prototype. A sequel, Prototype 2, was released in April 2012.", "Prototype (1983 film)\n The New York Times praised the movie, citing the acting, script and directing as strong points, finding the move \"uncommonly riveting \" Creature Feature gave the movie 3.5 out of 5 stars, saying the movie was intelligent, well-acted and praised that both sides of the issue.", "Prototype (band)\n In January 1994, Psychosis guitarists Vince Levalois and Kragen Lum shifted their focus to forming their own band, recruiting bassist Stephen Gambina and drummer Damion Ramirez, and named the band Prototype. The new band then began recording their debut release, a demo titled Seed, and released it later that year. The demo went on to receive praise and was referred to as the benchmark for modern aggressive/melodic progressive metal. The demo contained three songs: \"Seed\", \"Shine\", and \"Dead of Jericho\"; all three tracks later appeared on the band's first two studio albums. In 1996, Gambina and Ramirez left the band, and were replaced by bassist Mike ", "Prototype 2\n It was announced by Radical Entertainment that like the original Prototype, Prototype 2 would have a comic counterpart. The three part series takes place before the second video game, acting as a bridge between the two games. Published by Dark Horse Comics, the first comic was called the Anchor. After eradicating the virus in Africa, Mexico and Russia, Alex travels around the world, wondering about if the virus has made him a human, humanity's killer or its savior. Alex slowly begins to decide that he is the earth's savior and will usher it into a new age of prosperity after he wipes out humanity. However, this changes when he ", "Phil Lord and Christopher Miller\n working on the script, they were fired for story issues and replaced with new writers, who after a year were also fired. Lord and Miller were then re-hired in 2006. The two completely redid the script, this time with the creative input of their crew. The new draft had the protagonist as a failed inventor who wanted to prove himself to his town. The two were almost fired again after Amy Pascal, the head of Sony Pictures at the time, criticized the film for a lack of story. Although the film succeeded on the comedic front in the animatic stage, Pascal ", "Prototype (video game)\n A six-issue comic book series made by DC Comics Wildstorm was a spin-off as a prequel to the game and released alongside. It reveals more about Hope Idaho, Elizabeth Greene, and the viral outbreak.", "Daniel Keyes\n own time.\" One story idea Keyes wrote but did not submit to Lee was called \"Brainstorm\", the paragraph-long synopsis that would evolve into Flowers for Algernon. It begins: \"The first guy in the test to raise the I.Q. from a low normal 90 to genius level ... He goes through the experience and then is thrown back to what was.\" Keyes recalled, \"something told me it should be more than a comic book script.\" From 1955 to 1956, Keyes wrote for EC Comics, including its titles Shock Illustrated and Confessions Illustrated, under both his own name and the pseudonyms Kris Daniels and A.D. Locke." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Ma Hogan's New Boarder?
[ "Raymond Longford", "John Walter Longford" ]
screenwriter
Ma Hogan's New Boarder
669,330
70
[ { "id": "7375409", "title": "Hogan Sheffer", "text": " From 1986 to 1994, he worked as a freelancer and did script analysis for various production companies. He also worked for Mary Stuart Masterson at her production company. From 1997 to 2000, he was employed by DreamWorks as the Director of Screenplay Development under producers Mark Johnson and Elizabeth Cantillon. He was in charge of developing screenplays for films like My Dog Skip, Galaxy Quest, Home Fries, and What Lies Beneath.", "score": "1.5399845" }, { "id": "7375407", "title": "Hogan Sheffer", "text": " Hogan Sheffer (June 12, 1958 – September 28, 2019) was an American screenwriter.", "score": "1.5270479" }, { "id": "25939051", "title": "William Hogan (author)", "text": " William Hogan (born 1937) is an American novelist and film producer.", "score": "1.4577763" }, { "id": "2855582", "title": "The Mavis Bramston Show", "text": " also later wrote for Number 96 and co-wrote the script of the hit Paul Hogan film Crocodile Dundee. At this stage Raye was intending to work only as the show's producer, and she still needed to find a female lead; Chater suggested June Salter (who agreed to a guest appearance in the pilot) and they also approached Judi Farr and several other actresses, but all were tied up with other work and could not commit to the lead role. Chater finally suggested that Raye should do the pilot herself, for fear that Seven would lose interest in the show and cancel, and although she was not keen to perform and co-produce, Raye agreed to do it.", "score": "1.4502788" }, { "id": "25354407", "title": "Robert J. Hogan (author)", "text": " war. One of the three was Bull Nevin; and another was named “Nippy” Westover — prototypes of the soon-to-be-created “Bull” Martin and “Nippy” Weston. Airplane salesmen were expendable after the 1929 collapse, and Hogan soon found himself placed upon his mettle. To fill a leisure moment, he read one of the new aviation pulp magazines. Afterwards, he is reported to have said, “Hell, I can write better than that!” and a short while later he sold his first story to WINGS for $65.00. Moving from Florida to Manhattan, to be near the pulp markets, he found a jungle of competition. Nearly 300 writers lived around New York and an ", "score": "1.445987" }, { "id": "28356881", "title": "Dear Brigitte", "text": " a job if Jimmie would sign. It all got around that, one depending on another. There was no material in there that justified a picture.\" Although Nunnally Johnson wrote early drafts of the film, Hal Kanter was brought in to work on it and he gets sole screen credit. Kanter says it was Henry Koster's idea to introduce a captain, played by Ed Wynn, to act as a Greek chorus. Johnson said Koster got this idea from the film Tom Jones. Johnson did not like the device because he felt it did not suit the picture and told Koster to ", "score": "1.4452051" }, { "id": "25939053", "title": "William Hogan (author)", "text": " Hogan is best known for his coming-of-age novel The Quartzsite Trip (Atheneum Books, 1980), a cult classic of which Kirkus Reviews said, \"[T]here's an innocence of time and culture laid out here that is sweet and true: the trip is irresistible, as good as American Graffiti, and maybe--for its sculpted, more than nostalgic shape--even better.\" His second novel, entitled The Year of the Mongoose (Atheneum, 1981) was not nearly as well-received, with one critic dubbing it \"a tired, toothless, virtually plotless satire on the network TV biz\". Hogan was also a partner in Ten-Four Productions, a movie company based in California in the 1970s and 1980s. The company's work includes Rainbow, a made-for-television biopic about actress Judy Garland, and one season of the television series Harper Valley PTA.", "score": "1.4442046" }, { "id": "4321396", "title": "Miss Susie Slagle's", "text": " In August 1943 the project was reactivated when Paramount head of production Buddy DeSylva have it to producer John Houseman, who had just made The Unseen for the studio. In January 1944 the project was officially put back on Paramount's schedule with a new screenplay done (Hugo Butler was borrowed from MGM to do this ) and Betty Field listed as star. The novel was set in Baltimore at Johns Hopkins Hospital but references to that specific city and hospital were removed from the script.", "score": "1.4287906" }, { "id": "31912259", "title": "Krysty Wilson-Cairns", "text": " Wilson-Cairns sold her first film script to FilmNation Entertainment in 2014. It was for the science fiction thriller project Aether, which provided her breakthrough after it made the top ten of the Black List. The script was read by screenwriter John Logan who hired her to work as a staff writer on his television show Penny Dreadful in 2015. She also contributed to its comic book series. After this, her first writing commission was for a potential film adaptation, to be directed by Tobias Lindholm, of Charles Graeber's non-fiction book The Good Nurse: A True Story of Medicine, Madness, and Murder. Filmmaker Sam Mendes was impressed by her treatment, and ", "score": "1.4196599" }, { "id": "25944858", "title": "Bartlett Cormack", "text": " Moving to Beverly Hills in 1928, he worked with Howard Hughes on the silent film version of The Racket, one of the first films nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture (then called \"Best Picture, Production\") in 1929. He shared screenwriting credit with Rex Beach for the 1930 film version of The Spoilers. Beach based his 1906 novel on the true story of corrupt government officials stealing gold mines from prospectors, which Beach had witnessed while he was prospecting in Nome, Alaska. The novel was adapted to the screen on five occasions; 1914, 1923, 1930, 1942, and 1955. Although Ben Hecht was the author of the Broadway play The Front Page, and was himself a screenwriter, Howard ", "score": "1.4187014" }, { "id": "7375418", "title": "Hogan Sheffer", "text": "Associate Head Writer: October 25, 2005 - August 9, 2006 ; Head Writer: August 2000 - May 24, 2005 Head Writer: October 5, 2006 - January 24, 2008 Co-Head Writer: July 15, 2008 - February 1, 2013 As the World Turns Days of Our Lives The Young and the Restless", "score": "1.417037" }, { "id": "12385693", "title": "John Irving", "text": " previous novels, it was dismissed by critics but became a national bestseller on the strength of Irving's reputation for fashioning literate, engrossing page-turners. Irving returned in 1998 with A Widow for One Year, which was named a New York Times Notable Book. In 1999, after nearly 10 years in development, Irving's screenplay for The Cider House Rules was made into a film directed by Lasse Hallström, starring Michael Caine, Tobey Maguire, Charlize Theron, and Delroy Lindo. Irving also made a cameo appearance as the disapproving stationmaster. The film was nominated for several Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and earned Irving ", "score": "1.4152458" }, { "id": "5481825", "title": "Strange Boarders", "text": " Strange Boarders is a 1938 British comedy thriller film, directed by Herbert Mason, produced by Edward Black for Gainsborough Pictures, and starring Tom Walls, Renée Saint-Cyr, Googie Withers and Ronald Adam. The film is an adaptation of the 1934 espionage novel The Strange Boarders of Palace Crescent by E. Phillips Oppenheim, and was well received by critics. The Los Angeles Times described it as \"a long series of laughs as well as thrills\".", "score": "1.4141262" }, { "id": "6993710", "title": "Milton Raison", "text": " Milton Raison was an American screenwriter for both film and television. He was also known as George Milton, George Wallace Sayre, and George Sayre. His first credit was Air Hostess in 1933, which he co-wrote with Keene Thompson. Over the next 20 years he would write the screenplay, story, or both on over 70 films. With the advent of television, he also worked on several TV shows during the 1950s. His credits during the 1930s include Strictly Dynamite (1934), The Shadow (1937), Torture Ship (1939), and The Man They Could Not Hang (1939). His 1940s credits include Tumbledown Ranch in Arizona (1941), Sheriff of Sage Valley (1942), Anna ", "score": "1.4133699" }, { "id": "25983859", "title": "The Verdict", "text": " Film rights to the novel were bought by the team of Richard Zanuck and David Brown. A number of actors, including Roy Scheider, William Holden, Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant and Dustin Hoffman, expressed interest in the project because of the strength of the lead role. Arthur Hiller was originally attached to direct while David Mamet hired to write a screenplay. Though Mamet had already made a name for himself in the theater, he was still new to screenwriting. The producers were uncertain whether Mamet would take the job given the standards he set with his own previous work, but according ", "score": "1.4121516" }, { "id": "5232047", "title": "Hagar Wilde", "text": " Wilde was a prolific young short story writer and debut novelist when she was hired by billionaire Howard Hughes in 1931, to write dialogue for The Age for Love, starring Billie Dove. Her association with director Howard Hawks included co-writing (with Dudley Nichols) the screenplay for Bringing Up Baby (for which she had also written the original story, published in the magazine Collier's Weekly), and the screenplay for I Was a Male War Bride (1949). She also co-wrote the screenplay for The Unseen (1945), with Raymond Chandler, based on the novel Midnight House by Ethel Lina White. Wilde wrote two shows produced on Broadway. Her first stage success was a \"taut little horror drama\" titled Guest in the House (1942); she co-wrote the play with Dale Eunson, and it was adapted into a film in 1944. She also wrote Made in Heaven (1946–1947). In the 1950s she worked extensively in adapting scripts for television.", "score": "1.4120637" }, { "id": "1961524", "title": "Charles Evered", "text": " published by Broadway Play Publishing, Samuel French and Smith and Kraus among others. Additional plays include: Traces, Wilderness of Mirrors, Bridewell, Ted's Head, Clouds Hill, Looking Again, (“Best Ten Minute Plays 2012”, Smith and Kraus) and Ten. He has written screenplays and teleplays for studios such as Universal Pictures, NBC, Steven Spielberg's DreamWorks Pictures and Paramount Pictures. His produced film and television credits include an episode of Monk entitled “Mr. Monk and the Leper” for USA Network, starring Tony Shalhoub. Mr. Evered wrote and directed the feature film Adopt a Sailor, starring Peter Coyote and Bebe Neuwirth. Adopt a Sailor was an official selection at ", "score": "1.4116197" }, { "id": "27455804", "title": "Milt Josefsberg", "text": " writers. The WGA picket line would be thinner without him!'\" Also a producer and script reader, Josefsberg, who was called by Mel Shavelson, one-time creative partner and three-time Writers Gould of America (WGA) president \"the maven of comedy\", did such for the television show, The Joey Bishop Show from 1961 to 1965, the film Butterfly (1979), as well as the TV series, You Can't Take It with You which ran from 1987 to 1988. In later years, he also penned the books The Jack Benny Show (1977), reminiscing about his years as a writer on Benny's radio and TV shows, and Comedy Writing for Television and Hollywood.", "score": "1.4103196" }, { "id": "3043883", "title": "Laurence Marks (American writer)", "text": " Laurence Marks (August 23, 1915 &ndash; January 1, 1993) was an American writer for radio and television shows including Hogan's Heroes and M*A*S*H. He received an award from the Writers Guild of America. According to M*A*S*H creator Larry Gelbart, he and Marks teamed up in 1946 to write for Jack Paar on radio, then moved to writing for Bob Hope at $1,250 a week each.", "score": "1.4096265" }, { "id": "4607212", "title": "Jo Swerling", "text": " Swerling was brought to Hollywood by Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn to work on the screenplay for Frank Capra's Ladies of Leisure (1930), the first of several collaborations with the director. His dozens of screenplays in the 1930s and 1940s include Platinum Blonde, Behind the Mask, Once to Every Woman, The Pride of the Yankees (for which he received an Academy Award nomination), Lifeboat, Leave Her to Heaven, and It's a Wonderful Life. He also provided some uncredited writing for Gone with the Wind.", "score": "1.4083788" } ]
[ "Hogan Sheffer\n From 1986 to 1994, he worked as a freelancer and did script analysis for various production companies. He also worked for Mary Stuart Masterson at her production company. From 1997 to 2000, he was employed by DreamWorks as the Director of Screenplay Development under producers Mark Johnson and Elizabeth Cantillon. He was in charge of developing screenplays for films like My Dog Skip, Galaxy Quest, Home Fries, and What Lies Beneath.", "Hogan Sheffer\n Hogan Sheffer (June 12, 1958 – September 28, 2019) was an American screenwriter.", "William Hogan (author)\n William Hogan (born 1937) is an American novelist and film producer.", "The Mavis Bramston Show\n also later wrote for Number 96 and co-wrote the script of the hit Paul Hogan film Crocodile Dundee. At this stage Raye was intending to work only as the show's producer, and she still needed to find a female lead; Chater suggested June Salter (who agreed to a guest appearance in the pilot) and they also approached Judi Farr and several other actresses, but all were tied up with other work and could not commit to the lead role. Chater finally suggested that Raye should do the pilot herself, for fear that Seven would lose interest in the show and cancel, and although she was not keen to perform and co-produce, Raye agreed to do it.", "Robert J. Hogan (author)\n war. One of the three was Bull Nevin; and another was named “Nippy” Westover — prototypes of the soon-to-be-created “Bull” Martin and “Nippy” Weston. Airplane salesmen were expendable after the 1929 collapse, and Hogan soon found himself placed upon his mettle. To fill a leisure moment, he read one of the new aviation pulp magazines. Afterwards, he is reported to have said, “Hell, I can write better than that!” and a short while later he sold his first story to WINGS for $65.00. Moving from Florida to Manhattan, to be near the pulp markets, he found a jungle of competition. Nearly 300 writers lived around New York and an ", "Dear Brigitte\n a job if Jimmie would sign. It all got around that, one depending on another. There was no material in there that justified a picture.\" Although Nunnally Johnson wrote early drafts of the film, Hal Kanter was brought in to work on it and he gets sole screen credit. Kanter says it was Henry Koster's idea to introduce a captain, played by Ed Wynn, to act as a Greek chorus. Johnson said Koster got this idea from the film Tom Jones. Johnson did not like the device because he felt it did not suit the picture and told Koster to ", "William Hogan (author)\n Hogan is best known for his coming-of-age novel The Quartzsite Trip (Atheneum Books, 1980), a cult classic of which Kirkus Reviews said, \"[T]here's an innocence of time and culture laid out here that is sweet and true: the trip is irresistible, as good as American Graffiti, and maybe--for its sculpted, more than nostalgic shape--even better.\" His second novel, entitled The Year of the Mongoose (Atheneum, 1981) was not nearly as well-received, with one critic dubbing it \"a tired, toothless, virtually plotless satire on the network TV biz\". Hogan was also a partner in Ten-Four Productions, a movie company based in California in the 1970s and 1980s. The company's work includes Rainbow, a made-for-television biopic about actress Judy Garland, and one season of the television series Harper Valley PTA.", "Miss Susie Slagle's\n In August 1943 the project was reactivated when Paramount head of production Buddy DeSylva have it to producer John Houseman, who had just made The Unseen for the studio. In January 1944 the project was officially put back on Paramount's schedule with a new screenplay done (Hugo Butler was borrowed from MGM to do this ) and Betty Field listed as star. The novel was set in Baltimore at Johns Hopkins Hospital but references to that specific city and hospital were removed from the script.", "Krysty Wilson-Cairns\n Wilson-Cairns sold her first film script to FilmNation Entertainment in 2014. It was for the science fiction thriller project Aether, which provided her breakthrough after it made the top ten of the Black List. The script was read by screenwriter John Logan who hired her to work as a staff writer on his television show Penny Dreadful in 2015. She also contributed to its comic book series. After this, her first writing commission was for a potential film adaptation, to be directed by Tobias Lindholm, of Charles Graeber's non-fiction book The Good Nurse: A True Story of Medicine, Madness, and Murder. Filmmaker Sam Mendes was impressed by her treatment, and ", "Bartlett Cormack\n Moving to Beverly Hills in 1928, he worked with Howard Hughes on the silent film version of The Racket, one of the first films nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture (then called \"Best Picture, Production\") in 1929. He shared screenwriting credit with Rex Beach for the 1930 film version of The Spoilers. Beach based his 1906 novel on the true story of corrupt government officials stealing gold mines from prospectors, which Beach had witnessed while he was prospecting in Nome, Alaska. The novel was adapted to the screen on five occasions; 1914, 1923, 1930, 1942, and 1955. Although Ben Hecht was the author of the Broadway play The Front Page, and was himself a screenwriter, Howard ", "Hogan Sheffer\nAssociate Head Writer: October 25, 2005 - August 9, 2006 ; Head Writer: August 2000 - May 24, 2005 Head Writer: October 5, 2006 - January 24, 2008 Co-Head Writer: July 15, 2008 - February 1, 2013 As the World Turns Days of Our Lives The Young and the Restless", "John Irving\n previous novels, it was dismissed by critics but became a national bestseller on the strength of Irving's reputation for fashioning literate, engrossing page-turners. Irving returned in 1998 with A Widow for One Year, which was named a New York Times Notable Book. In 1999, after nearly 10 years in development, Irving's screenplay for The Cider House Rules was made into a film directed by Lasse Hallström, starring Michael Caine, Tobey Maguire, Charlize Theron, and Delroy Lindo. Irving also made a cameo appearance as the disapproving stationmaster. The film was nominated for several Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and earned Irving ", "Strange Boarders\n Strange Boarders is a 1938 British comedy thriller film, directed by Herbert Mason, produced by Edward Black for Gainsborough Pictures, and starring Tom Walls, Renée Saint-Cyr, Googie Withers and Ronald Adam. The film is an adaptation of the 1934 espionage novel The Strange Boarders of Palace Crescent by E. Phillips Oppenheim, and was well received by critics. The Los Angeles Times described it as \"a long series of laughs as well as thrills\".", "Milton Raison\n Milton Raison was an American screenwriter for both film and television. He was also known as George Milton, George Wallace Sayre, and George Sayre. His first credit was Air Hostess in 1933, which he co-wrote with Keene Thompson. Over the next 20 years he would write the screenplay, story, or both on over 70 films. With the advent of television, he also worked on several TV shows during the 1950s. His credits during the 1930s include Strictly Dynamite (1934), The Shadow (1937), Torture Ship (1939), and The Man They Could Not Hang (1939). His 1940s credits include Tumbledown Ranch in Arizona (1941), Sheriff of Sage Valley (1942), Anna ", "The Verdict\n Film rights to the novel were bought by the team of Richard Zanuck and David Brown. A number of actors, including Roy Scheider, William Holden, Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant and Dustin Hoffman, expressed interest in the project because of the strength of the lead role. Arthur Hiller was originally attached to direct while David Mamet hired to write a screenplay. Though Mamet had already made a name for himself in the theater, he was still new to screenwriting. The producers were uncertain whether Mamet would take the job given the standards he set with his own previous work, but according ", "Hagar Wilde\n Wilde was a prolific young short story writer and debut novelist when she was hired by billionaire Howard Hughes in 1931, to write dialogue for The Age for Love, starring Billie Dove. Her association with director Howard Hawks included co-writing (with Dudley Nichols) the screenplay for Bringing Up Baby (for which she had also written the original story, published in the magazine Collier's Weekly), and the screenplay for I Was a Male War Bride (1949). She also co-wrote the screenplay for The Unseen (1945), with Raymond Chandler, based on the novel Midnight House by Ethel Lina White. Wilde wrote two shows produced on Broadway. Her first stage success was a \"taut little horror drama\" titled Guest in the House (1942); she co-wrote the play with Dale Eunson, and it was adapted into a film in 1944. She also wrote Made in Heaven (1946–1947). In the 1950s she worked extensively in adapting scripts for television.", "Charles Evered\n published by Broadway Play Publishing, Samuel French and Smith and Kraus among others. Additional plays include: Traces, Wilderness of Mirrors, Bridewell, Ted's Head, Clouds Hill, Looking Again, (“Best Ten Minute Plays 2012”, Smith and Kraus) and Ten. He has written screenplays and teleplays for studios such as Universal Pictures, NBC, Steven Spielberg's DreamWorks Pictures and Paramount Pictures. His produced film and television credits include an episode of Monk entitled “Mr. Monk and the Leper” for USA Network, starring Tony Shalhoub. Mr. Evered wrote and directed the feature film Adopt a Sailor, starring Peter Coyote and Bebe Neuwirth. Adopt a Sailor was an official selection at ", "Milt Josefsberg\n writers. The WGA picket line would be thinner without him!'\" Also a producer and script reader, Josefsberg, who was called by Mel Shavelson, one-time creative partner and three-time Writers Gould of America (WGA) president \"the maven of comedy\", did such for the television show, The Joey Bishop Show from 1961 to 1965, the film Butterfly (1979), as well as the TV series, You Can't Take It with You which ran from 1987 to 1988. In later years, he also penned the books The Jack Benny Show (1977), reminiscing about his years as a writer on Benny's radio and TV shows, and Comedy Writing for Television and Hollywood.", "Laurence Marks (American writer)\n Laurence Marks (August 23, 1915 &ndash; January 1, 1993) was an American writer for radio and television shows including Hogan's Heroes and M*A*S*H. He received an award from the Writers Guild of America. According to M*A*S*H creator Larry Gelbart, he and Marks teamed up in 1946 to write for Jack Paar on radio, then moved to writing for Bob Hope at $1,250 a week each.", "Jo Swerling\n Swerling was brought to Hollywood by Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn to work on the screenplay for Frank Capra's Ladies of Leisure (1930), the first of several collaborations with the director. His dozens of screenplays in the 1930s and 1940s include Platinum Blonde, Behind the Mask, Once to Every Woman, The Pride of the Yankees (for which he received an Academy Award nomination), Lifeboat, Leave Her to Heaven, and It's a Wonderful Life. He also provided some uncredited writing for Gone with the Wind." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Le Fils d'Amr est mort?
[ "Jean-Jacques Andrien" ]
screenwriter
The Son of Amir Is Dead
2,452,039
85
[ { "id": "4921290", "title": "Yannick Haenel", "text": " He published several novels, including Introduction à la mort française and Évoluer parmi les avalanches, as well as an essay about the tapestries of The Lady and the Unicorn: À mon seul désir. He also directed two volumes of interviews with Philippe Sollers: Ligne de risque and Poker. In 2007, he published Cercle (Éditions Gallimard), a novel which earned him the prix Décembre and the prix Roger Nimier. In 2007, a controversy arose with Alina Reyes who accused him of plagiarism. In 2008-2009, Haenel was a resident at the French Academy in Rome, the Villa Médicis. In 2009, he was awarded the Prix Interallié and the Prix du ", "score": "1.576416" }, { "id": "14875074", "title": "On aura tout vu", "text": " François Perrin (Pierre Richard), a photographer desirous to get into filming, wrote with his friend Henri, a script titled Le miroir de l'âme. Having not found any producer, François transmits the script to a producer of pornographic films, Bob Morlock (Jean-Pierre Marielle), who retitles the project into La vaginale. The only thing is that this setting becomes a source of conflict between François and his partner Christine (Miou-Miou).", "score": "1.549773" }, { "id": "11620822", "title": "Serge-Simon Held", "text": " Serge-Simon Held (credited as S.S. Held) was a French science fiction author known for the 1931 environmentalist novel La Mort du Fer (published in English as The Death of Iron). Very little is known about Held. He may have been from Alsace or of Alsacian descent, with many people from the region fleeing to Paris in 1870 due to the Alsacian cession to Germany following the Franco-Prussian war. The professor of English Frederick Waage was unable to find a record of Held, but noted that Held is frequently used as an ornamental surname among Jews. La Mort du Fer was published by Fayard, and printed by of Abbeville, in 1931. The novel was serialized in ", "score": "1.5252528" }, { "id": "7303926", "title": "Howard Vernon", "text": " / Le Lac des Morts Vivants / Lake of the Living Dead (1981, director: Jean Rollin) .... The Mayor ; Docteur Jekyll et les femmes (1981) .... Dr. Lanyon ; L'appât du gain (1981) ; Revenge in the House of Usher / Neurosis (1982, director: Jesús Franco) .... René Dimanche ; Revenge in the House of Usher (1983) .... Eric Usher ; Sangre en mis zapatos/ Blood on my Shoes (1983) .... Profesor Albert Von Klaus ; Mad Mutilator (1983) .... Vampire ; Le fou du roi (1984) .... Abbé guibourd ; The Sinister Dr. Orloff (1984, director: Jesús Franco) .... Dr. Orloff ", "score": "1.5000424" }, { "id": "13971523", "title": "Vertigo (film)", "text": " The screenplay of Vertigo is an adaptation of the French novel D'entre les morts (From Among the Dead) by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac. Hitchcock had attempted to buy the rights to the previous novel by the same authors, Celle qui n'était plus (She Who Was No More), but he failed, and it was made instead by Henri-Georges Clouzot as Les Diaboliques. Although François Truffaut once suggested that D'entre les morts was specifically written for Hitchcock by Boileau and Narcejac, Narcejac subsequently denied that this was their intention. However, Hitchcock's interest in their work meant that Paramount Pictures commissioned a synopsis of D'entre les morts in 1954, before it had even been translated into English. In the book, Judy's involvement in Madeleine's death was not revealed until the denouement. At the script stage, Hitchcock suggested revealing the secret two-thirds of the way through ", "score": "1.4953759" }, { "id": "3338538", "title": "Sept morts sur ordonnance", "text": " Sept morts sur ordonnance (Seven Deaths by Prescription or Bestial Quartet) is a 1975 French drama film directed by Jacques Rouffio and starring Michel Piccoli, Gérard Depardieu, Jane Birkin, Marina Vlady, Charles Vanel and Valérie Mairesse. The film was awarded the César Award for Best Editing, and was nominated for Best Film, Best Actor and Best Writing.", "score": "1.4947222" }, { "id": "27224673", "title": "A Man and a Woman", "text": " A young widow, Anne Gauthier (Anouk Aimée), is raising her daughter Françoise (Souad Amidou) alone following the death of her husband (Pierre Barouh) who worked as a stuntman and who died in a movie set accident that she witnessed. Still working as a film script supervisor, Anne divides her time between her home in Paris and Deauville in northern France where her daughter attends boarding school. A young widower, Jean-Louis (Jean-Louis Trintignant), is raising his son Antoine (Antoine Sire) alone following the death of his wife Valerie (Valerie Lagrange) who committed suicide after Jean-Louis was in a near fatal crash during the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Still working as a race car driver, Jean-Louis divides his time between ", "score": "1.4945115" }, { "id": "6009020", "title": "Bernard Comment", "text": " Along with Alain Tanner, he co-wrote the screenplays for the films Fourbi (1996), Requiem (1998), Jonas et Lila, Til Tomorrow (1999), Paul s'en va (2004). He also created with Bertrand Theubet, Le pied dans la fourmilière (1998) based on one of his novels. He was a member of the international jury at the Locarno International Film Festival (1996) and Fribourg International Film Festival (1998). In 1999, he was appointed as director of fiction at France Culture.", "score": "1.4929929" }, { "id": "13394873", "title": "Alexis Lecaye", "text": " Alexis Lecaye (born August 22, 1951 in Alexandria, Egypt) is a French author and script writer. He also publishes under the pen name Alexandre Terrel and is probably best known for the creation of the long running TV crime series Julie Lescaut. Lecaye grew up in Lebanon and France. After studying history at university he started working as a script writer for French movies and, later, for the French TV as well. In 1992 he created the TV series Julie Lescaut, which was based on his crime novel by the same name. Since 1980 he has published a string of novels in different genres such as crime fiction, science fiction and children's literature. Some of his books have been translated into other languages, particularly English and German. For his novel Le Témoin est à la noce he received the Prix du Roman d’Aventures in 1984.", "score": "1.4912202" }, { "id": "4491136", "title": "Jean-Marie Gourio", "text": "2005 : La vie est à nous !, directed by Gérard Krawczyk (adapted from L'eau des fleurs Some of his book had been adapted into film. In 2014, he write the screenplay of Brèves de comptoir with Jean-Michel Ribes.", "score": "1.4905057" }, { "id": "30885343", "title": "Henri Verneuil", "text": " ; Le Grand chef (1959) ; La Vache et le Prisonnier (1959) (+ screenwriter), with Fernandel ; (1960) ; La Française et l'amour (1960) ; Le Président (The President) (1961) (+ screenwriter), with Jean Gabin ; Les Lions sont lâchés (1961) ; Un singe en hiver (1962), with Jean Gabin and Jean-Paul Belmondo ; Mélodie en sous-sol (1963) (Any Number Can Win) (1964 Edgar Award, Best Foreign Film), with Alain Delon and Jean Gabin ; Cent mille dollars au soleil (1964) (+ screenwriter), with Jean-Paul Belmondo and Lino Ventura ; Week-end à Zuydcoote (1964), with Jean-Paul Belmondo ; La Vingt-cinquième heure (The 25th Hour) (1967) (+ screenwriter), with Anthony Quinn ; La Bataille de San Sebastian (A wall for ", "score": "1.4899917" }, { "id": "7998120", "title": "Le Fils de-la-femme-mâle", "text": " Le fils de la femme male is a novel by Ivorian author Maurice Bandaman. It won the Grand prix littéraire d'Afrique noire in 1993.", "score": "1.4887302" }, { "id": "16231441", "title": "Paul Féval, fils", "text": " d'Artagnan has proposed to her sister, Françoise. The wedding occurs at the Saintes Maries de la Mer. Barbary Coast pirates raid the town and capture d'Artagnan and the two women. Cyrano rushes to the rescue; unfortunately, he is fatally wounded and dies at the end of the novel before he could marry a willing Roxane. Paul Féval fils also wrote two science fiction novels. During 1922 and 1923, he collaborated with writer H.J. Magog on a great, rambling serial entitled Les Mystères de Demain [The Mysteries Of Tomorrow] (1922–23), an obvious homage to Eugène Sue’s Les Mystères de Paris. In it, the good scientist Oronius fights the evil schemes ", "score": "1.4856141" }, { "id": "1561488", "title": "Prix du Quai des Orfèvres", "text": " c'est trop! ; 1974: Michèle Ressi, for La Mort du bois de Saint-Ixe ; 1975: Bernard Matignon, for Une mort qui fait du bruit ; 1976: Serge Montigny, for Une fleur pour mourir ; 1977: Jacquemard-Sénécal, for Le Crime de la maison Grün ; 1978: Pierre Magnan, for Le Sang des Atrides ; 1979: Julien Vartet, for Le Déjeuner interrompu ; 1980: Denis Lacombe, for Dans le creux de la main ; 1981: Michel Dansel, for De la part de Barbara ; 1982: Hélène Pasquier, for Coup double ; 1983: Maurice Périsset, for Périls en la demeure ; 1984: Jean Lamborelle, for On écrase bien les vipères ; ", "score": "1.4834731" }, { "id": "11667393", "title": "Nabyl Lahlou", "text": " He studied theater in Paris at Académie du Théâtre de la Rue Blanche and L'Ecole Charles Dullin, and later taught at Kordj-el-Kifane (Algeria). He wrote plays in both French and Arabic; among his French plays are Ophélie n'est pas morte (Ophelia is Not Dead) (1969) and Schrischamtury (1975), and among his Arabic Les Milliandaires (The Millionaires) (1968), Les tortues (The Turtles) (1970), and Asseyez-vous sur les cadavres (Sit on Corpses) (1974). His first medium length film was Les mortes (The Dead) (1975), while his first feature-length film was Al Kanfoudi (1978).", "score": "1.4809757" }, { "id": "9437618", "title": "Muriel (film)", "text": " Alain Resnais and Jean Cayrol first discussed the project of Muriel in 1959. They developed the script while Resnais was working on L'Année dernière à Marienbad as well as on two other (uncompleted) projects relating to the then contentious topic of the war in Algeria. Cayrol, though primarily a poet and novelist, was himself interested in film-making and editing, and he produced a screenplay for Muriel in which nearly all of the complex editing sequences were outlined.", "score": "1.4761527" }, { "id": "6303363", "title": "Éric Ollivier", "text": "Cinema; screenwriter or dialoguiste ; 1961: Les Godelureaux, film by Claude Chabrol, with Bernadette Lafont, Jean-Claude Brialy and Jean Tissier ; 1963: Dragées au poivre, film by Jacques Baratier, with Guy Bedos, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Francis Blanche and Sophie Daumier ; 1965: L'Or du duc, film by Jacques Baratier, with Claude Rich, Monique Tarbès and Jacques Dufilho ; 1971: Églantine, film by Jean-Claude Brialy, with Valentine Tessier, Claude Dauphin and Odile Versois Television ; 1966: Un beau dimanche, Television film by François Villiers, with Jean-Pierre Aumont ", "score": "1.4747066" }, { "id": "16330326", "title": "Auguste Le Breton", "text": " Auguste Le Breton (born Auguste Monfort 18 February 1913 – 31 May 1999) was a French novelist who wrote primarily about the criminal underworld. His novels were adapted into several notable films of the 1950s, such as Rififi, Razzia sur la chnouf, Le rouge est mis and Le clan des siciliens. He wrote the dialogue for the noir film Bob le flambeur.", "score": "1.469921" }, { "id": "7171337", "title": "Marie-Georges Pascal", "text": "1975: Rêves pornos / Le Dictionnaire de l'érotisme, directed by Max Pécas (edited from Je Suis Frigide...Pourquoi?) ... Carla ; 1999: Eurotika !, documentary television series directed by Andy Stark and Pete Tombs : Episodes: Vampires and Virgins: The Films of Jean Rollin (edited from Les Raisins de la Mort), Is there a Doctor in the House: Medicine gone bad (edited from Je Suis Frigide...Pourquoi?), I am a Nymphomaniac: Erotic Films of Max Pécas (edited from Je Suis Frigide...Pourquoi?) ; 2007: La Nuit des horloges, directed by Jean Rollin (edited from Les Raisins de la Mort) .. Élisabeth ; 2007: Secret Cinema (Das geheime Kino), short directed by Michael Wolf (edited from Les Raisins de la mort) ; 2008: Spark of Life, short directed by Mike Bazanele (edited from Les Raisins de la mort) ; 2008: Grindhouse Universe, (trailer of Les Petites Filles modèles) ; 2011: Jean Rollin, le rêveur égaré, documentary directed by Damien Dupont and Yvan Pierre-Kaiser (edited from Les Raisins de la mort) ; 2015: Jean Rollin, être et à voir, documentary directed by Jean-Loup Martin (edited from Les Raisins de la mort) ", "score": "1.4678679" }, { "id": "25896962", "title": "La morte accarezza a mezzanotte", "text": " La morte accarezza a mezzanotte is a 1972 giallo film directed by Luciano Ercoli. The film was written by Ernesto Gastaldi, Guido Leoni, Mahnahén Velasco and Mannuel Velasco. It starred Susan Scott, Simón Andreu, Peter Martell, Claudie Lange and Carlo Gentili.", "score": "1.4672269" } ]
[ "Yannick Haenel\n He published several novels, including Introduction à la mort française and Évoluer parmi les avalanches, as well as an essay about the tapestries of The Lady and the Unicorn: À mon seul désir. He also directed two volumes of interviews with Philippe Sollers: Ligne de risque and Poker. In 2007, he published Cercle (Éditions Gallimard), a novel which earned him the prix Décembre and the prix Roger Nimier. In 2007, a controversy arose with Alina Reyes who accused him of plagiarism. In 2008-2009, Haenel was a resident at the French Academy in Rome, the Villa Médicis. In 2009, he was awarded the Prix Interallié and the Prix du ", "On aura tout vu\n François Perrin (Pierre Richard), a photographer desirous to get into filming, wrote with his friend Henri, a script titled Le miroir de l'âme. Having not found any producer, François transmits the script to a producer of pornographic films, Bob Morlock (Jean-Pierre Marielle), who retitles the project into La vaginale. The only thing is that this setting becomes a source of conflict between François and his partner Christine (Miou-Miou).", "Serge-Simon Held\n Serge-Simon Held (credited as S.S. Held) was a French science fiction author known for the 1931 environmentalist novel La Mort du Fer (published in English as The Death of Iron). Very little is known about Held. He may have been from Alsace or of Alsacian descent, with many people from the region fleeing to Paris in 1870 due to the Alsacian cession to Germany following the Franco-Prussian war. The professor of English Frederick Waage was unable to find a record of Held, but noted that Held is frequently used as an ornamental surname among Jews. La Mort du Fer was published by Fayard, and printed by of Abbeville, in 1931. The novel was serialized in ", "Howard Vernon\n / Le Lac des Morts Vivants / Lake of the Living Dead (1981, director: Jean Rollin) .... The Mayor ; Docteur Jekyll et les femmes (1981) .... Dr. Lanyon ; L'appât du gain (1981) ; Revenge in the House of Usher / Neurosis (1982, director: Jesús Franco) .... René Dimanche ; Revenge in the House of Usher (1983) .... Eric Usher ; Sangre en mis zapatos/ Blood on my Shoes (1983) .... Profesor Albert Von Klaus ; Mad Mutilator (1983) .... Vampire ; Le fou du roi (1984) .... Abbé guibourd ; The Sinister Dr. Orloff (1984, director: Jesús Franco) .... Dr. Orloff ", "Vertigo (film)\n The screenplay of Vertigo is an adaptation of the French novel D'entre les morts (From Among the Dead) by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac. Hitchcock had attempted to buy the rights to the previous novel by the same authors, Celle qui n'était plus (She Who Was No More), but he failed, and it was made instead by Henri-Georges Clouzot as Les Diaboliques. Although François Truffaut once suggested that D'entre les morts was specifically written for Hitchcock by Boileau and Narcejac, Narcejac subsequently denied that this was their intention. However, Hitchcock's interest in their work meant that Paramount Pictures commissioned a synopsis of D'entre les morts in 1954, before it had even been translated into English. In the book, Judy's involvement in Madeleine's death was not revealed until the denouement. At the script stage, Hitchcock suggested revealing the secret two-thirds of the way through ", "Sept morts sur ordonnance\n Sept morts sur ordonnance (Seven Deaths by Prescription or Bestial Quartet) is a 1975 French drama film directed by Jacques Rouffio and starring Michel Piccoli, Gérard Depardieu, Jane Birkin, Marina Vlady, Charles Vanel and Valérie Mairesse. The film was awarded the César Award for Best Editing, and was nominated for Best Film, Best Actor and Best Writing.", "A Man and a Woman\n A young widow, Anne Gauthier (Anouk Aimée), is raising her daughter Françoise (Souad Amidou) alone following the death of her husband (Pierre Barouh) who worked as a stuntman and who died in a movie set accident that she witnessed. Still working as a film script supervisor, Anne divides her time between her home in Paris and Deauville in northern France where her daughter attends boarding school. A young widower, Jean-Louis (Jean-Louis Trintignant), is raising his son Antoine (Antoine Sire) alone following the death of his wife Valerie (Valerie Lagrange) who committed suicide after Jean-Louis was in a near fatal crash during the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Still working as a race car driver, Jean-Louis divides his time between ", "Bernard Comment\n Along with Alain Tanner, he co-wrote the screenplays for the films Fourbi (1996), Requiem (1998), Jonas et Lila, Til Tomorrow (1999), Paul s'en va (2004). He also created with Bertrand Theubet, Le pied dans la fourmilière (1998) based on one of his novels. He was a member of the international jury at the Locarno International Film Festival (1996) and Fribourg International Film Festival (1998). In 1999, he was appointed as director of fiction at France Culture.", "Alexis Lecaye\n Alexis Lecaye (born August 22, 1951 in Alexandria, Egypt) is a French author and script writer. He also publishes under the pen name Alexandre Terrel and is probably best known for the creation of the long running TV crime series Julie Lescaut. Lecaye grew up in Lebanon and France. After studying history at university he started working as a script writer for French movies and, later, for the French TV as well. In 1992 he created the TV series Julie Lescaut, which was based on his crime novel by the same name. Since 1980 he has published a string of novels in different genres such as crime fiction, science fiction and children's literature. Some of his books have been translated into other languages, particularly English and German. For his novel Le Témoin est à la noce he received the Prix du Roman d’Aventures in 1984.", "Jean-Marie Gourio\n2005 : La vie est à nous !, directed by Gérard Krawczyk (adapted from L'eau des fleurs Some of his book had been adapted into film. In 2014, he write the screenplay of Brèves de comptoir with Jean-Michel Ribes.", "Henri Verneuil\n ; Le Grand chef (1959) ; La Vache et le Prisonnier (1959) (+ screenwriter), with Fernandel ; (1960) ; La Française et l'amour (1960) ; Le Président (The President) (1961) (+ screenwriter), with Jean Gabin ; Les Lions sont lâchés (1961) ; Un singe en hiver (1962), with Jean Gabin and Jean-Paul Belmondo ; Mélodie en sous-sol (1963) (Any Number Can Win) (1964 Edgar Award, Best Foreign Film), with Alain Delon and Jean Gabin ; Cent mille dollars au soleil (1964) (+ screenwriter), with Jean-Paul Belmondo and Lino Ventura ; Week-end à Zuydcoote (1964), with Jean-Paul Belmondo ; La Vingt-cinquième heure (The 25th Hour) (1967) (+ screenwriter), with Anthony Quinn ; La Bataille de San Sebastian (A wall for ", "Le Fils de-la-femme-mâle\n Le fils de la femme male is a novel by Ivorian author Maurice Bandaman. It won the Grand prix littéraire d'Afrique noire in 1993.", "Paul Féval, fils\n d'Artagnan has proposed to her sister, Françoise. The wedding occurs at the Saintes Maries de la Mer. Barbary Coast pirates raid the town and capture d'Artagnan and the two women. Cyrano rushes to the rescue; unfortunately, he is fatally wounded and dies at the end of the novel before he could marry a willing Roxane. Paul Féval fils also wrote two science fiction novels. During 1922 and 1923, he collaborated with writer H.J. Magog on a great, rambling serial entitled Les Mystères de Demain [The Mysteries Of Tomorrow] (1922–23), an obvious homage to Eugène Sue’s Les Mystères de Paris. In it, the good scientist Oronius fights the evil schemes ", "Prix du Quai des Orfèvres\n c'est trop! ; 1974: Michèle Ressi, for La Mort du bois de Saint-Ixe ; 1975: Bernard Matignon, for Une mort qui fait du bruit ; 1976: Serge Montigny, for Une fleur pour mourir ; 1977: Jacquemard-Sénécal, for Le Crime de la maison Grün ; 1978: Pierre Magnan, for Le Sang des Atrides ; 1979: Julien Vartet, for Le Déjeuner interrompu ; 1980: Denis Lacombe, for Dans le creux de la main ; 1981: Michel Dansel, for De la part de Barbara ; 1982: Hélène Pasquier, for Coup double ; 1983: Maurice Périsset, for Périls en la demeure ; 1984: Jean Lamborelle, for On écrase bien les vipères ; ", "Nabyl Lahlou\n He studied theater in Paris at Académie du Théâtre de la Rue Blanche and L'Ecole Charles Dullin, and later taught at Kordj-el-Kifane (Algeria). He wrote plays in both French and Arabic; among his French plays are Ophélie n'est pas morte (Ophelia is Not Dead) (1969) and Schrischamtury (1975), and among his Arabic Les Milliandaires (The Millionaires) (1968), Les tortues (The Turtles) (1970), and Asseyez-vous sur les cadavres (Sit on Corpses) (1974). His first medium length film was Les mortes (The Dead) (1975), while his first feature-length film was Al Kanfoudi (1978).", "Muriel (film)\n Alain Resnais and Jean Cayrol first discussed the project of Muriel in 1959. They developed the script while Resnais was working on L'Année dernière à Marienbad as well as on two other (uncompleted) projects relating to the then contentious topic of the war in Algeria. Cayrol, though primarily a poet and novelist, was himself interested in film-making and editing, and he produced a screenplay for Muriel in which nearly all of the complex editing sequences were outlined.", "Éric Ollivier\nCinema; screenwriter or dialoguiste ; 1961: Les Godelureaux, film by Claude Chabrol, with Bernadette Lafont, Jean-Claude Brialy and Jean Tissier ; 1963: Dragées au poivre, film by Jacques Baratier, with Guy Bedos, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Francis Blanche and Sophie Daumier ; 1965: L'Or du duc, film by Jacques Baratier, with Claude Rich, Monique Tarbès and Jacques Dufilho ; 1971: Églantine, film by Jean-Claude Brialy, with Valentine Tessier, Claude Dauphin and Odile Versois Television ; 1966: Un beau dimanche, Television film by François Villiers, with Jean-Pierre Aumont ", "Auguste Le Breton\n Auguste Le Breton (born Auguste Monfort 18 February 1913 – 31 May 1999) was a French novelist who wrote primarily about the criminal underworld. His novels were adapted into several notable films of the 1950s, such as Rififi, Razzia sur la chnouf, Le rouge est mis and Le clan des siciliens. He wrote the dialogue for the noir film Bob le flambeur.", "Marie-Georges Pascal\n1975: Rêves pornos / Le Dictionnaire de l'érotisme, directed by Max Pécas (edited from Je Suis Frigide...Pourquoi?) ... Carla ; 1999: Eurotika !, documentary television series directed by Andy Stark and Pete Tombs : Episodes: Vampires and Virgins: The Films of Jean Rollin (edited from Les Raisins de la Mort), Is there a Doctor in the House: Medicine gone bad (edited from Je Suis Frigide...Pourquoi?), I am a Nymphomaniac: Erotic Films of Max Pécas (edited from Je Suis Frigide...Pourquoi?) ; 2007: La Nuit des horloges, directed by Jean Rollin (edited from Les Raisins de la Mort) .. Élisabeth ; 2007: Secret Cinema (Das geheime Kino), short directed by Michael Wolf (edited from Les Raisins de la mort) ; 2008: Spark of Life, short directed by Mike Bazanele (edited from Les Raisins de la mort) ; 2008: Grindhouse Universe, (trailer of Les Petites Filles modèles) ; 2011: Jean Rollin, le rêveur égaré, documentary directed by Damien Dupont and Yvan Pierre-Kaiser (edited from Les Raisins de la mort) ; 2015: Jean Rollin, être et à voir, documentary directed by Jean-Loup Martin (edited from Les Raisins de la mort) ", "La morte accarezza a mezzanotte\n La morte accarezza a mezzanotte is a 1972 giallo film directed by Luciano Ercoli. The film was written by Ernesto Gastaldi, Guido Leoni, Mahnahén Velasco and Mannuel Velasco. It starred Susan Scott, Simón Andreu, Peter Martell, Claudie Lange and Carlo Gentili." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Tine?
[ "Knud Leif Thomsen" ]
screenwriter
Tine (film)
2,912,893
99
[ { "id": "13068055", "title": "Tine (film)", "text": " Tine is a 1964 Danish drama film directed by Knud Leif Thomsen. It was entered into the 4th Moscow International Film Festival.", "score": "1.4894004" }, { "id": "16096444", "title": "Richard Maibaum", "text": " Lazenby. He did an early draft of Diamonds Are Forever (1971), then the producers wanted an American writer and hired Tom Mankiewicz to rework it. Mankiewicz was the sole screenwriter on Live and Let Die (1973), Roger Moore's first Bond movie. Instead, Maibaum wrote and produced a TV movie, Jarrett (1973), starring Glenn Ford. Maibaum was brought back to the Bond movies to work on Mankiewicz's draft of The Man with the Golden Gun (1974). He was one of the many writers who worked on The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), sharing credit with Christopher Wood. Maibaum was not used on Moonraker (1979), the producers preferring Wood. Instead, Maibaum worked on a Bond spoof, S.H.E: Security Hazards Expert (1980).", "score": "1.4765348" }, { "id": "8469179", "title": "Peter Bart", "text": " wrote the script himself as well, Bart said he could not remember. Variety policy prohibits staffers from selling scripts, as doing so could generate a conflict of interest given that publication's focus and influence on the Hollywood movie industry, though Bart said he has no problem with staff selling the movie rights to books they have written. He served as executive producer and screenwriter of the documentary film, Boffo! Tinseltown's Bombs and Blockbusters (2006) shown on the HBO television channel. Through the years Bart has published eight books, including five non-fiction and three fiction. He serves on the Board of Advisors for Penske Media Company.", "score": "1.457607" }, { "id": "28313690", "title": "Stuart J. Byrne", "text": " Stuart James Byrne (October 26, 1913 - September 23, 2011) was an American screenwriter and writer of science fiction and fantasy. He published under his own name and the pseudonyms Rothayne Amare, John Bloodstone, Howard Dare, and Marx Kaye (a house pseudonym).", "score": "1.4505267" }, { "id": "4257537", "title": "Melissa Mathison", "text": " Mathison wrote the screenplay for E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) in collaboration with Steven Spielberg. It was nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. The script was based on a story, written by John Sayles, that Spielberg provided to Mathison during the filming of Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). Spielberg attributes the line \"E.T. phone home\" to Mathison. She collaborated again with Spielberg for The BFG (2016), her final film, which was dedicated in her memory. She also had film credits for The Escape Artist (1982) and The Indian in the Cupboard (1995).", "score": "1.4461732" }, { "id": "9434925", "title": "Myra Breckinridge (film)", "text": " Film rights were sold for a reported $750,000 including a percentage of the profits and a fee covering Gore Vidal writing the screenplay. Vidal wrote a draft, but the job was ultimately assigned to David Giler, who wrote a draft in three weeks. Vidal told Giler how much he liked the draft. Michael Sarne had just made Joanna. 20th Century Fox's head of production, Dick Zanuck, said \"he came to me when we had two lousy scripts and said he knew how to do it. He had some good ideas.\" Zanuck introduced Sarne to the film's producer, Robert Fyer, who was so impressed that the studio hired Sarne to write a script. The final draft of the script would be the tenth. The original director was Bud Yorkin. Producer Jim Cresson said \"we thought he ", "score": "1.4380171" }, { "id": "31886492", "title": "Yip Tin-shing", "text": " Yip Tin-shing (born 1965) is a Hong Kong screenwriter.", "score": "1.4295176" }, { "id": "15936901", "title": "James Agee", "text": " script was written by the film's director Charles Laughton. Reports that Agee's screenplay for Hunter was not used have been proved false by the 2004 discovery of his first draft, which although 293 pages in length, is many scenes the film which Laughton directed. However, Laughton seemed to have edited great parts of the script because Agee's original script was too long. While not yet published, the first draft has been read by scholars, most notably Professor Jeffrey Couchman of Columbia University. He credited Agee in the essay, \"Credit Where Credit Is Due.\" Also false were reports that Agee was fired from the film. Laughton renewed Agee's contract ", "score": "1.4272306" }, { "id": "31043166", "title": "Demolition Man (film)", "text": " A novelization, written by Robert Tine (using the pseudonym Richard Osborne), was published in November 1993.", "score": "1.4242938" }, { "id": "9659326", "title": "Diane Thomas", "text": " In 1978, while working on Romancing the Stone, Thomas was a waitress at Coral Beach Cantina on the Pacific Coast Highway. It took less than a week for her agent, Norman Kurland, to sell the script. Kurland had sent it to several major studios. Actor/producer Michael Douglas and Columbia Pictures bought the script, though the film would later be made by 20th Century Fox. According to other accounts, the sale of the screenplay was a Cinderella story in itself: Thomas pitched the story directly to Douglas when the actor happened to come into her cafe as a customer. This account, however, is disputed. \"It just had a spontaneity about the writing,\" Douglas said of the screenplay that would launch Thomas's career. \"She was not cautious. The script had a wonderful spirit about it. ... There was a total lack of fear to the writing. It worked.\" The screenplay for Romancing the Stone sold for $250,000. After Romancing the Stone, Thomas wrote another screenplay titled either Blonde Hurricane or Blond Hurricane, an adaptation of P. Howard's book of the same name.", "score": "1.421336" }, { "id": "15936900", "title": "James Agee", "text": " In 1947 and 1948, Agee wrote an untitled screenplay for Charlie Chaplin, in which the Tramp survives a nuclear holocaust; posthumously titled The Tramp's New World, the text was published in 2005. The commentary Agee wrote for the 1948 documentary The Quiet One was his first contribution to a film that was completed and released. Agee's career as a movie scriptwriter was curtailed by his alcoholism. Nevertheless, he is one of the credited screenwriters on two of the most respected films of the 1950s: The African Queen (1951) and The Night of the Hunter (1955). His contribution to Hunter is shrouded in controversy. Some critics have claimed the ", "score": "1.4145315" }, { "id": "8469755", "title": "The Morals of Hilda", "text": " Henry Christeen Warnack (alternative H. C. Warnack) (c. 1877-1927) was 39 years old when he wrote the story for this film. He had spent most of his career as a reporter for various newspapers before moving to Los Angeles around 1907. He rose to become editor of the dramatic department of the Los Angeles Times. He also became a writer. He wrote articles, books, movie stories, and scenarios. Anthony Coldeway (1887-1963) was a prolific American screenwriter, storyteller, and director. He was only 29 years old when he wrote the scenario for this film. Anthony created his first scenario for Pathé in Aug 1911. The film was a western 2-reeler named \"The Flaming Arrows.\" By the time of this release, he had written scenarios for over 40 films. Although the bulk of his scripts were for short films, he had created scripts for 3 feature-length comedies before this release. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 1928 1st Academy Awards for the film Glorious Betsy. He would remain active in the industry until 1954.", "score": "1.4144663" }, { "id": "6356472", "title": "Robert Klane", "text": " Robert Klane (born 1941) is an American screenwriter, novelist and filmmaker, best known for early iconoclastic novels and for his screenplays for dark comedies such as Where's Poppa? (1970) and Weekend at Bernie's (1989).", "score": "1.4102938" }, { "id": "6356473", "title": "Robert Klane", "text": " A 1963 graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Klane first rose to prominence with his debut novel, the acerbic comedy The Horse is Dead (1968). His second novel, Where's Poppa? (1970), was adapted by Klane into a feature film directed by Carl Reiner and starring George Segal. For his screenplay, Klane received a Writers Guild of America Award nomination. His third novel was also adapted into a feature film, Fire Sale (1977), starring Alan Arkin. Klane went on to write screenplays for various films such as The Man with One Red Shoe (1985), National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985), and Weekend at Bernie's. He also directed several films including Thank God It's Friday (1978) and Weekend at Bernie's II (1993). Additionally, he wrote for several television shows including M*A*S*H and Tracey Takes On....", "score": "1.4093232" }, { "id": "3793768", "title": "Kelly Fremon Craig", "text": " Fremon Craig started out writing sketch comedy and spoken word poetry in college, then landed an internship in the film division of Immortal Entertainment, where she read her first film script and began to pursue screenwriting. She developed several screenplays during the 2000s, including a modern high school retelling of Cyrano de Bergerac and a comedic remake of the 2004 French drama Intimate Strangers for Paramount Pictures. One of her scripts, Ticket to Ride, caught the attention of Ghostbusters director Ivan Reitman. He bought the script under his The Montecito Picture Company as a directing vehicle for Reitman. According to Reitman, the script was rewritten at least 15 times. The film was released, under the new title Post Grad. The film was instead directed by Shrek director Vicky Jenson and was released in 2009 to critical and commercial disappointment.", "score": "1.4084429" }, { "id": "8179361", "title": "Will Tremper", "text": " Will Tremper (19 September 1928 &ndash; 14 December 1998) was a German journalist and filmmaker (writer, director, producer). He wrote twelve screenplays between 1956 and 1988. The young and then unknown actor Horst Buchholz starred in his first three films. With only a handful of films to his credit, he established himself quickly as the German answer to the directors of the Nouvelle Vague in France.", "score": "1.408428" }, { "id": "4476947", "title": "Stanley Mann", "text": "The Butler's Night Off (1951 - co-screenplay) ; Death of a Salesman (1957) (television) ; Another Time, Another Place (1958) ; The Mouse That Roared (1959 - co-screenplay) ; His and Hers (1961 - co-screenplay) ; The Mark (1961 - co-screenplay) ; Woman of Straw (1964 - co-screenplay) ; Up from the Beach (1965 - co-screenplay) ; The Collector (1965 - co-screenplay) ; A High Wind in Jamaica (1965 - co-screenplay) ; Rapture (1965) ; The Naked Runner (1967) ; The Strange Affair (1968 - co-screenplay) ; Fräulein Doktor (1969 - writer) ; Theatre of Blood (1973-idea) ; Russian Roulette (1975 - co-screenplay) ; Sky Riders (1976 - co-screenplay) ; Breaking Point (1976 - co-screenplay) ; Damien: Omen II (1978 - co-screenplay) ; Circle of Iron (1978 - co-screenplay) ; Meteor (1979 - co-screenplay) ; Eye of the Needle (1981) ; Draw! (1984) ; Firestarter (1984) ; Conan the Destroyer (1984) ; Tai-Pan (1986 - co-screenplay) ; Hanna's War (1988 - co-screenplay) ", "score": "1.4074774" }, { "id": "829112", "title": "Grant Nieporte", "text": " Grant Edward Nieporte is a screenwriter best known for the film Seven Pounds. Nieporte got the idea for the script after having a chat with a man whom he called \"one of the saddest people I've ever met in my life\". In the behind the scenes vignette found on the Seven Pounds DVD, Nieporte seems to suggest that the man was responsible for the death of seven in a \"national tragedy.\" In 2019, Nieporte wrote Breakthrough starring Chrissy Metz, Topher Grace, Marcel Ruiz, Josh Lucas, and Mike Colter for 20th Century Fox and Franklin Entertainment, which grossed over 50 million dollars and won the Dove Award for Best Inspirational Movie of the Year. Nieporte was a technical advisor for the TV show Home Improvement from 1997 to 1999. He was a writer's assistant on Jack & Jill in 1999–2000. He wrote episodes of the TV series 8 Simple Rules.", "score": "1.407041" }, { "id": "6204076", "title": "Karl Tunberg", "text": " than five years before the start of principal photography, Christopher Fry and Gore Vidal contributed to the screenplay during filming. Maxwell Anderson and S.N. Behrman are also mentioned as contributing writers in the film's commemorative booklet. The film's final onscreen writing credits created controversy when, in October 1959, the Writers Guild of America (WGA) awarded Tunberg sole screenplay credit, despite the objections of the film's director, William Wyler, who, in the film's commemorative booklet and elsewhere, claimed that Christopher Fry was more responsible than any other writer for the final screenplay. In response to Wyler's public outcries against their ruling, the WGA took out trade paper ads on November 20, ", "score": "1.405079" }, { "id": "29102848", "title": "Sabriel", "text": " According to Publishing News, Garth Nix was preparing to pitch a Sabriel film to studios in mid-2008 via Steve Fisher at APA. Nix co-wrote the screenplay with Dan Futterman, actor and Oscar-nominated screenwriter of Capote, and Dede Gardner and Jeremy Kleiner at Plan B Entertainment were to produce. The director would be Anand Tucker. Planning for the pitch was delayed by the writer's strike, and resumed in February. While the current status of any film is unknown, Nix is now represented by Matthew Snyder at CAA.", "score": "1.4028723" } ]
[ "Tine (film)\n Tine is a 1964 Danish drama film directed by Knud Leif Thomsen. It was entered into the 4th Moscow International Film Festival.", "Richard Maibaum\n Lazenby. He did an early draft of Diamonds Are Forever (1971), then the producers wanted an American writer and hired Tom Mankiewicz to rework it. Mankiewicz was the sole screenwriter on Live and Let Die (1973), Roger Moore's first Bond movie. Instead, Maibaum wrote and produced a TV movie, Jarrett (1973), starring Glenn Ford. Maibaum was brought back to the Bond movies to work on Mankiewicz's draft of The Man with the Golden Gun (1974). He was one of the many writers who worked on The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), sharing credit with Christopher Wood. Maibaum was not used on Moonraker (1979), the producers preferring Wood. Instead, Maibaum worked on a Bond spoof, S.H.E: Security Hazards Expert (1980).", "Peter Bart\n wrote the script himself as well, Bart said he could not remember. Variety policy prohibits staffers from selling scripts, as doing so could generate a conflict of interest given that publication's focus and influence on the Hollywood movie industry, though Bart said he has no problem with staff selling the movie rights to books they have written. He served as executive producer and screenwriter of the documentary film, Boffo! Tinseltown's Bombs and Blockbusters (2006) shown on the HBO television channel. Through the years Bart has published eight books, including five non-fiction and three fiction. He serves on the Board of Advisors for Penske Media Company.", "Stuart J. Byrne\n Stuart James Byrne (October 26, 1913 - September 23, 2011) was an American screenwriter and writer of science fiction and fantasy. He published under his own name and the pseudonyms Rothayne Amare, John Bloodstone, Howard Dare, and Marx Kaye (a house pseudonym).", "Melissa Mathison\n Mathison wrote the screenplay for E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) in collaboration with Steven Spielberg. It was nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. The script was based on a story, written by John Sayles, that Spielberg provided to Mathison during the filming of Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). Spielberg attributes the line \"E.T. phone home\" to Mathison. She collaborated again with Spielberg for The BFG (2016), her final film, which was dedicated in her memory. She also had film credits for The Escape Artist (1982) and The Indian in the Cupboard (1995).", "Myra Breckinridge (film)\n Film rights were sold for a reported $750,000 including a percentage of the profits and a fee covering Gore Vidal writing the screenplay. Vidal wrote a draft, but the job was ultimately assigned to David Giler, who wrote a draft in three weeks. Vidal told Giler how much he liked the draft. Michael Sarne had just made Joanna. 20th Century Fox's head of production, Dick Zanuck, said \"he came to me when we had two lousy scripts and said he knew how to do it. He had some good ideas.\" Zanuck introduced Sarne to the film's producer, Robert Fyer, who was so impressed that the studio hired Sarne to write a script. The final draft of the script would be the tenth. The original director was Bud Yorkin. Producer Jim Cresson said \"we thought he ", "Yip Tin-shing\n Yip Tin-shing (born 1965) is a Hong Kong screenwriter.", "James Agee\n script was written by the film's director Charles Laughton. Reports that Agee's screenplay for Hunter was not used have been proved false by the 2004 discovery of his first draft, which although 293 pages in length, is many scenes the film which Laughton directed. However, Laughton seemed to have edited great parts of the script because Agee's original script was too long. While not yet published, the first draft has been read by scholars, most notably Professor Jeffrey Couchman of Columbia University. He credited Agee in the essay, \"Credit Where Credit Is Due.\" Also false were reports that Agee was fired from the film. Laughton renewed Agee's contract ", "Demolition Man (film)\n A novelization, written by Robert Tine (using the pseudonym Richard Osborne), was published in November 1993.", "Diane Thomas\n In 1978, while working on Romancing the Stone, Thomas was a waitress at Coral Beach Cantina on the Pacific Coast Highway. It took less than a week for her agent, Norman Kurland, to sell the script. Kurland had sent it to several major studios. Actor/producer Michael Douglas and Columbia Pictures bought the script, though the film would later be made by 20th Century Fox. According to other accounts, the sale of the screenplay was a Cinderella story in itself: Thomas pitched the story directly to Douglas when the actor happened to come into her cafe as a customer. This account, however, is disputed. \"It just had a spontaneity about the writing,\" Douglas said of the screenplay that would launch Thomas's career. \"She was not cautious. The script had a wonderful spirit about it. ... There was a total lack of fear to the writing. It worked.\" The screenplay for Romancing the Stone sold for $250,000. After Romancing the Stone, Thomas wrote another screenplay titled either Blonde Hurricane or Blond Hurricane, an adaptation of P. Howard's book of the same name.", "James Agee\n In 1947 and 1948, Agee wrote an untitled screenplay for Charlie Chaplin, in which the Tramp survives a nuclear holocaust; posthumously titled The Tramp's New World, the text was published in 2005. The commentary Agee wrote for the 1948 documentary The Quiet One was his first contribution to a film that was completed and released. Agee's career as a movie scriptwriter was curtailed by his alcoholism. Nevertheless, he is one of the credited screenwriters on two of the most respected films of the 1950s: The African Queen (1951) and The Night of the Hunter (1955). His contribution to Hunter is shrouded in controversy. Some critics have claimed the ", "The Morals of Hilda\n Henry Christeen Warnack (alternative H. C. Warnack) (c. 1877-1927) was 39 years old when he wrote the story for this film. He had spent most of his career as a reporter for various newspapers before moving to Los Angeles around 1907. He rose to become editor of the dramatic department of the Los Angeles Times. He also became a writer. He wrote articles, books, movie stories, and scenarios. Anthony Coldeway (1887-1963) was a prolific American screenwriter, storyteller, and director. He was only 29 years old when he wrote the scenario for this film. Anthony created his first scenario for Pathé in Aug 1911. The film was a western 2-reeler named \"The Flaming Arrows.\" By the time of this release, he had written scenarios for over 40 films. Although the bulk of his scripts were for short films, he had created scripts for 3 feature-length comedies before this release. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 1928 1st Academy Awards for the film Glorious Betsy. He would remain active in the industry until 1954.", "Robert Klane\n Robert Klane (born 1941) is an American screenwriter, novelist and filmmaker, best known for early iconoclastic novels and for his screenplays for dark comedies such as Where's Poppa? (1970) and Weekend at Bernie's (1989).", "Robert Klane\n A 1963 graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Klane first rose to prominence with his debut novel, the acerbic comedy The Horse is Dead (1968). His second novel, Where's Poppa? (1970), was adapted by Klane into a feature film directed by Carl Reiner and starring George Segal. For his screenplay, Klane received a Writers Guild of America Award nomination. His third novel was also adapted into a feature film, Fire Sale (1977), starring Alan Arkin. Klane went on to write screenplays for various films such as The Man with One Red Shoe (1985), National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985), and Weekend at Bernie's. He also directed several films including Thank God It's Friday (1978) and Weekend at Bernie's II (1993). Additionally, he wrote for several television shows including M*A*S*H and Tracey Takes On....", "Kelly Fremon Craig\n Fremon Craig started out writing sketch comedy and spoken word poetry in college, then landed an internship in the film division of Immortal Entertainment, where she read her first film script and began to pursue screenwriting. She developed several screenplays during the 2000s, including a modern high school retelling of Cyrano de Bergerac and a comedic remake of the 2004 French drama Intimate Strangers for Paramount Pictures. One of her scripts, Ticket to Ride, caught the attention of Ghostbusters director Ivan Reitman. He bought the script under his The Montecito Picture Company as a directing vehicle for Reitman. According to Reitman, the script was rewritten at least 15 times. The film was released, under the new title Post Grad. The film was instead directed by Shrek director Vicky Jenson and was released in 2009 to critical and commercial disappointment.", "Will Tremper\n Will Tremper (19 September 1928 &ndash; 14 December 1998) was a German journalist and filmmaker (writer, director, producer). He wrote twelve screenplays between 1956 and 1988. The young and then unknown actor Horst Buchholz starred in his first three films. With only a handful of films to his credit, he established himself quickly as the German answer to the directors of the Nouvelle Vague in France.", "Stanley Mann\nThe Butler's Night Off (1951 - co-screenplay) ; Death of a Salesman (1957) (television) ; Another Time, Another Place (1958) ; The Mouse That Roared (1959 - co-screenplay) ; His and Hers (1961 - co-screenplay) ; The Mark (1961 - co-screenplay) ; Woman of Straw (1964 - co-screenplay) ; Up from the Beach (1965 - co-screenplay) ; The Collector (1965 - co-screenplay) ; A High Wind in Jamaica (1965 - co-screenplay) ; Rapture (1965) ; The Naked Runner (1967) ; The Strange Affair (1968 - co-screenplay) ; Fräulein Doktor (1969 - writer) ; Theatre of Blood (1973-idea) ; Russian Roulette (1975 - co-screenplay) ; Sky Riders (1976 - co-screenplay) ; Breaking Point (1976 - co-screenplay) ; Damien: Omen II (1978 - co-screenplay) ; Circle of Iron (1978 - co-screenplay) ; Meteor (1979 - co-screenplay) ; Eye of the Needle (1981) ; Draw! (1984) ; Firestarter (1984) ; Conan the Destroyer (1984) ; Tai-Pan (1986 - co-screenplay) ; Hanna's War (1988 - co-screenplay) ", "Grant Nieporte\n Grant Edward Nieporte is a screenwriter best known for the film Seven Pounds. Nieporte got the idea for the script after having a chat with a man whom he called \"one of the saddest people I've ever met in my life\". In the behind the scenes vignette found on the Seven Pounds DVD, Nieporte seems to suggest that the man was responsible for the death of seven in a \"national tragedy.\" In 2019, Nieporte wrote Breakthrough starring Chrissy Metz, Topher Grace, Marcel Ruiz, Josh Lucas, and Mike Colter for 20th Century Fox and Franklin Entertainment, which grossed over 50 million dollars and won the Dove Award for Best Inspirational Movie of the Year. Nieporte was a technical advisor for the TV show Home Improvement from 1997 to 1999. He was a writer's assistant on Jack & Jill in 1999–2000. He wrote episodes of the TV series 8 Simple Rules.", "Karl Tunberg\n than five years before the start of principal photography, Christopher Fry and Gore Vidal contributed to the screenplay during filming. Maxwell Anderson and S.N. Behrman are also mentioned as contributing writers in the film's commemorative booklet. The film's final onscreen writing credits created controversy when, in October 1959, the Writers Guild of America (WGA) awarded Tunberg sole screenplay credit, despite the objections of the film's director, William Wyler, who, in the film's commemorative booklet and elsewhere, claimed that Christopher Fry was more responsible than any other writer for the final screenplay. In response to Wyler's public outcries against their ruling, the WGA took out trade paper ads on November 20, ", "Sabriel\n According to Publishing News, Garth Nix was preparing to pitch a Sabriel film to studios in mid-2008 via Steve Fisher at APA. Nix co-wrote the screenplay with Dan Futterman, actor and Oscar-nominated screenwriter of Capote, and Dede Gardner and Jeremy Kleiner at Plan B Entertainment were to produce. The director would be Anand Tucker. Planning for the pitch was delayed by the writer's strike, and resumed in February. While the current status of any film is unknown, Nix is now represented by Matthew Snyder at CAA." ]
Who was the screenwriter for The Worst Years of Our Lives?
[ "David Trueba" ]
screenwriter
The Worst Years of Our Lives
5,965,946
89
[ { "id": "10264464", "title": "The Worst Years of Our Lives", "text": " Los peores años de nuestra vida (English: The Worst Years of Our Life) is a 1994 Spanish comedy film directed by Emilio Martínez Lázaro and written by David Trueba. The film was nominated for four Goya Awards, winning one.", "score": "1.6941123" }, { "id": "6342369", "title": "Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay", "text": " the Life\" written by Lenny Schulman, story by Clay ; Nothing but Trouble, screenplay by Dan Aykroyd, story by Peter Aykroyd ; Return to the Blue Lagoon, screenplay by Leslie Stevens, based on the novel \"The Garden of God\" by Henry De Vere Stacpoole ; 1992 Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot, written by Blake Snyder, William Osborne & William Davies ; The Bodyguard, written by Lawrence Kasdan ; Christopher Columbus: The Discovery, screenplay by John Briley and Cary Bates and Mario Puzo ; Final Analysis, screenplay by Wesley Strick, story by Robert H. Berger, M.D. (consultant), and Wesley Strick ; ", "score": "1.5466199" }, { "id": "15388261", "title": "Days of Our Lives", "text": " splits show-running duties with Albert Alarr (who previously served as a member of the show's directing staff) as co-executive producer. The first long-term head writer, William J. Bell, started writing for Days of Our Lives in 1966 and continued with the show until 1975, two years after he had created his own successful soap, The Young and the Restless, for rival network CBS. He continued with the show as a storyline consultant until 1978. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, many changes to the head writer position occurred. In the early 1980s, Margaret DePriest helped stabilize the show with her serial killer storyline. Later head ", "score": "1.4913349" }, { "id": "25194147", "title": "Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life (film)", "text": " On August 4, 2015, it was announced that Steve Carr would direct the film adaptation of James Patterson's 2011 novel Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life, with a script written by Chris Bowman and Hubbel Palmer. Although Carr originally planned his next project to be an R-rated comedy, he accepted the offer to direct the film due to his connection with the character of Rafe, as he would doodle out his angst during his early teen years; this became a habit throughout his film career, as he would doodle what shots would look like to cinematographers he worked with. Patterson gave Carr a lot of freedom from the source material, and the director chose to make the film adaptation more of a family movie than the young-kid-orientated book. ", "score": "1.4873421" }, { "id": "6842991", "title": "Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life", "text": " A film adaptation was released by CBS Films in October 2016. Griffin Gluck played Rafe Khatchadorian.", "score": "1.4843655" }, { "id": "10162457", "title": "The Worst Years of Your Life: Stories for the Geeked-Out, Angst-Ridden, Lust-Addled, and Deeply Misunderstood Adolescent in All of Us", "text": " The Worst Years of Your Life: Stories for the Geeked-Out, Angst-Ridden, Lust-Addled, and Deeply Misunderstood Adolescent in All of Us is a short story collection edited by Mark Jude Poirier. The collection was published in 2007 by Simon & Schuster and includes short fiction by George Saunders, Jennifer Egan, A. M. Homes, and Nathan Englander.", "score": "1.4829926" }, { "id": "8913536", "title": "Kim Fuller", "text": "Lenny Live and Unleashed (co-writer with Lenny Henry, 1989) ; Spice World (1997, nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay) ; High Heels and Low Lifes (2001) ; From Justin to Kelly (2003, nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay) ; Seeing Double (2003) ; Mashup Movie (2009) ", "score": "1.4810655" }, { "id": "25194161", "title": "Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life (film)", "text": " On October 3, 2016, Patterson announced that he is developing a sequel to the film.", "score": "1.4675581" }, { "id": "10161313", "title": "Mark Poirier", "text": " He wrote the novels Modern Ranch Living and Goats as well as the short story collections Unsung Heroes of American Industry and Naked Pueblo. He served as the editor of the book The Worst Years of Your Life: Stories for the Geeked-Out, Angst-Ridden, Lust-Addled, and Deeply Misunderstood Adolescent in All of Us, including short pieces by George Saunders, Jennifer Egan, A. M. Homes and Nathan Englander. In 2015, Scribner published Intro to Alien Invasion, a satirical graphic novel he co-wrote with Owen King. At one time, Poirier was named \"the young American writer to watch\" by the Times Literary Supplement. He has been the recipient of a Maytag Fellowship and a James Michener Fellowship. He is currently working as a screenwriter and is the author of Smart ", "score": "1.462188" }, { "id": "25389481", "title": "Bernard Gordon (writer)", "text": " Bernard Gordon (October 29, 1918 &ndash; May 11, 2007) was an American writer and producer. For much of his 27-year career he was prevented from taking screen credit by the Hollywood Blacklist. Among his best-known works are screenplays for Flesh and Fury (1952), Earth vs. the Flying Saucers (1956), and 55 Days at Peking (1963).", "score": "1.4491817" }, { "id": "10264466", "title": "The Worst Years of Our Lives", "text": "Goya Awards ; Best Actor in a Leading Role (Gabino Diego) ; Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Agustín González) ; Best Screenplay &ndash; Original (David Trueba) ", "score": "1.4422398" }, { "id": "5784207", "title": "Harris Goldberg", "text": " Goldberg crossed over to television writing during this period, selling pilots to HBO, CBS, NBC, ABC, TNT and USA. It was during this time that Goldberg began suffering from depersonalization disorder, an anxiety and stress reaction he calls the most hideous and frightening time of his life. He would go on to say that he did not know if he would make it from one day to the next. After recovering, Goldberg wrote the screenplay Numb about the experience. Actor Matthew Perry attached himself to the project, and soon afterward Goldberg landed his feature film directorial debut with a cast that included Mary Steenburgen, Kevin ", "score": "1.4379363" }, { "id": "9425923", "title": "Script doctor", "text": " order to get a rewrite job, you have to submit your notes for your ideas on how to fix the script. So they can get all the notes from all the different writers, keep the notes and not hire you. That's free work and that's what I always call life-wasting events.\" ; Ben Hecht: Twentieth Century (1934), A Star Is Born (1937), Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), Gone with the Wind (1939), Stagecoach (1939), Foreign Correspondent (1940), Cornered (1945), Gilda (1946), Rope and Cry of the City (1948), Strangers on a Train (1951), Angel Face (1952), and Cleopatra (1963). According to a November 1999 article ", "score": "1.4253302" }, { "id": "12386400", "title": "James Thurber", "text": " The last twenty years of Thurber's life were filled with material and professional success in spite of his blindness. He published at least fourteen more books, including The Thurber Carnival (1945), Thurber Country (1953), and the extremely popular account of the life of New Yorker editor Harold Ross, The Years with Ross (1959). A number of his short stories were made into movies, including The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947). Many of his short stories are humorous fictional memoirs from his life, but he also wrote darker material, such as \"The Whip-Poor-Will\", a story of madness and murder. His best-known short ", "score": "1.4231335" }, { "id": "25194148", "title": "Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life (film)", "text": " was also able to choose cast members for Middle School, which was unlike his past projects and he appreciated that as he was able to choose some \"great improvisational comics.\" Other details were announced on August 4, such as Griffin Gluck playing Rafe Khatchadorian, Leopoldo Gout and Bill Robinson producing the film, CBS Films producing it as well as handling international sales, and Lionsgate handling domestic distribution for CBS. Jacob Hopkins came in planning to play characters besides Miller The Killer. During audition shoots, Hopkins pushed Gluck's character around out of playfulness instead of bad faith, but Carr interpreted him as \"upbeat and really physical\" enough for a bully character. He improvised gags into the film, such as a running gag where he makes fun of Rafe's last name Khatchadorian. ", "score": "1.4211037" }, { "id": "8027122", "title": "David Ambrose", "text": "Year of the Gun (1991) – screenplay ; La Révolution française (1989) – screenplay ; Taffin (1988) – screenplay ; D.A.R.Y.L. (1985) – screenplay ; Blackout (1985) – screenplay ; Amityville 3-D (1983) – screenplay (as William Wales) ; The Final Countdown (1980) – story, screenplay ; The Survivor (1980) – screenplay ; A Dangerous Summer (1980) – screenplay ; A Man Called Intrepid (1979) – screenplay ; The Fifth Musketeer (1974) – screenplay ", "score": "1.4208856" }, { "id": "4813360", "title": "Screenwriting", "text": "Crashing Hollywood (1931)&mdash;A screenwriter collaborates on a gangster movie with a real-life gangster. When the film is released, the mob doesn't like how accurate the movie is. ; Sunset Boulevard (1950)&mdash;Actor William Holden portrays a hack screenwriter forced to collaborate on a screenplay with a desperate, fading silent film star, played by Gloria Swanson. ; In a Lonely Place (1950)&mdash;Humphrey Bogart is a washed up screenwriter who gets framed for murder. ; Paris, When it Sizzles (1964)&mdash;William Holden plays a drunk screenwriter who has wasted months partying and has just two days to finish his script. He hires Audrey Hepburn to help. ; Barton Fink (1991)&mdash;John Turturro plays ", "score": "1.4197526" }, { "id": "26730466", "title": "Michael Ventura", "text": " Michael Ventura commenced his career as a journalist at the Austin Sun, a counter-culture bi-weekly newspaper that published in the 1970s. Ventura is best known for his long-running column, \"Letters at 3 A.M.\", which first appeared in LA Weekly in the early 1980s and continued in the Austin Chronicle until 2015. He has published three novels: Night Time Losing Time (1989), The Zoo Where You're Fed to God (1994), and The Death of Frank Sinatra (1996). An excerpt from his novel about Miriam of Magdala was published in the third issue of the CalArts literary journal Black Clock in 2005. He is the author of two essay collections, Shadow-Dancing in the U.S.A. (1985) and Letters at 3 A.M.: Reports on Endarkenment (1994). With psychologist James Hillman, Ventura co-authored the 1992 bestseller We've Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy – And the World's Getting Worse. He appears as a fictional character in Steve Erickson's 1996 novel, Amnesiascope. He wrote the screenplay for Echo Park (1986), among other films, including Roadie (1980). He curated the Sundance Festival's 1989 retrospective on John Cassavetes.", "score": "1.4172825" }, { "id": "14363707", "title": "The Rewrite", "text": " Keith Michaels is a divorced and depressed screenwriter whose only successful work was Paradise Misplaced, which won the Best Screenplay Award fifteen years ago. Unemployed and low on funds after a long period of unsuccessful pitching, he reluctantly takes up a job teaching screenwriting at Binghamton University in Upstate New York. On arrival, Keith angers fellow professor Mary Weldon with derogatory comments about Jane Austen and other misogynistic behavior; he also strikes up an unethical relationship with a young undergraduate student, Karen Gabney, which ends quickly. Keith also does not believe in the concept of teaching and is scornful of his job, as exemplified by his selecting mostly women students for his class based solely on ", "score": "1.4139487" }, { "id": "25360056", "title": "Charles Bennett (screenwriter)", "text": " \"world's worst director\": Number, Please (1931); Deadlock (1931), which was a big hit; Midnight (1931), the latter based on his play; and Two Way Street (1932). Bennett wrote and directed the play Sensation (1931), a melodrama, but it was not a success, although it was adapted into a film. He followed it with another play Big Business (1932), which Bennett also directed and appeared in alongside his then-wife Maggie. But by now he had given up acting to focus on writing. Bennett wrote a short film, Partners Please (1932), and did an early film for John Paddy Carstairs, Paris Plane (1933). Bennett wrote Mannequin (1933); ", "score": "1.412708" } ]
[ "The Worst Years of Our Lives\n Los peores años de nuestra vida (English: The Worst Years of Our Life) is a 1994 Spanish comedy film directed by Emilio Martínez Lázaro and written by David Trueba. The film was nominated for four Goya Awards, winning one.", "Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay\n the Life\" written by Lenny Schulman, story by Clay ; Nothing but Trouble, screenplay by Dan Aykroyd, story by Peter Aykroyd ; Return to the Blue Lagoon, screenplay by Leslie Stevens, based on the novel \"The Garden of God\" by Henry De Vere Stacpoole ; 1992 Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot, written by Blake Snyder, William Osborne & William Davies ; The Bodyguard, written by Lawrence Kasdan ; Christopher Columbus: The Discovery, screenplay by John Briley and Cary Bates and Mario Puzo ; Final Analysis, screenplay by Wesley Strick, story by Robert H. Berger, M.D. (consultant), and Wesley Strick ; ", "Days of Our Lives\n splits show-running duties with Albert Alarr (who previously served as a member of the show's directing staff) as co-executive producer. The first long-term head writer, William J. Bell, started writing for Days of Our Lives in 1966 and continued with the show until 1975, two years after he had created his own successful soap, The Young and the Restless, for rival network CBS. He continued with the show as a storyline consultant until 1978. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, many changes to the head writer position occurred. In the early 1980s, Margaret DePriest helped stabilize the show with her serial killer storyline. Later head ", "Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life (film)\n On August 4, 2015, it was announced that Steve Carr would direct the film adaptation of James Patterson's 2011 novel Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life, with a script written by Chris Bowman and Hubbel Palmer. Although Carr originally planned his next project to be an R-rated comedy, he accepted the offer to direct the film due to his connection with the character of Rafe, as he would doodle out his angst during his early teen years; this became a habit throughout his film career, as he would doodle what shots would look like to cinematographers he worked with. Patterson gave Carr a lot of freedom from the source material, and the director chose to make the film adaptation more of a family movie than the young-kid-orientated book. ", "Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life\n A film adaptation was released by CBS Films in October 2016. Griffin Gluck played Rafe Khatchadorian.", "The Worst Years of Your Life: Stories for the Geeked-Out, Angst-Ridden, Lust-Addled, and Deeply Misunderstood Adolescent in All of Us\n The Worst Years of Your Life: Stories for the Geeked-Out, Angst-Ridden, Lust-Addled, and Deeply Misunderstood Adolescent in All of Us is a short story collection edited by Mark Jude Poirier. The collection was published in 2007 by Simon & Schuster and includes short fiction by George Saunders, Jennifer Egan, A. M. Homes, and Nathan Englander.", "Kim Fuller\nLenny Live and Unleashed (co-writer with Lenny Henry, 1989) ; Spice World (1997, nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay) ; High Heels and Low Lifes (2001) ; From Justin to Kelly (2003, nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay) ; Seeing Double (2003) ; Mashup Movie (2009) ", "Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life (film)\n On October 3, 2016, Patterson announced that he is developing a sequel to the film.", "Mark Poirier\n He wrote the novels Modern Ranch Living and Goats as well as the short story collections Unsung Heroes of American Industry and Naked Pueblo. He served as the editor of the book The Worst Years of Your Life: Stories for the Geeked-Out, Angst-Ridden, Lust-Addled, and Deeply Misunderstood Adolescent in All of Us, including short pieces by George Saunders, Jennifer Egan, A. M. Homes and Nathan Englander. In 2015, Scribner published Intro to Alien Invasion, a satirical graphic novel he co-wrote with Owen King. At one time, Poirier was named \"the young American writer to watch\" by the Times Literary Supplement. He has been the recipient of a Maytag Fellowship and a James Michener Fellowship. He is currently working as a screenwriter and is the author of Smart ", "Bernard Gordon (writer)\n Bernard Gordon (October 29, 1918 &ndash; May 11, 2007) was an American writer and producer. For much of his 27-year career he was prevented from taking screen credit by the Hollywood Blacklist. Among his best-known works are screenplays for Flesh and Fury (1952), Earth vs. the Flying Saucers (1956), and 55 Days at Peking (1963).", "The Worst Years of Our Lives\nGoya Awards ; Best Actor in a Leading Role (Gabino Diego) ; Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Agustín González) ; Best Screenplay &ndash; Original (David Trueba) ", "Harris Goldberg\n Goldberg crossed over to television writing during this period, selling pilots to HBO, CBS, NBC, ABC, TNT and USA. It was during this time that Goldberg began suffering from depersonalization disorder, an anxiety and stress reaction he calls the most hideous and frightening time of his life. He would go on to say that he did not know if he would make it from one day to the next. After recovering, Goldberg wrote the screenplay Numb about the experience. Actor Matthew Perry attached himself to the project, and soon afterward Goldberg landed his feature film directorial debut with a cast that included Mary Steenburgen, Kevin ", "Script doctor\n order to get a rewrite job, you have to submit your notes for your ideas on how to fix the script. So they can get all the notes from all the different writers, keep the notes and not hire you. That's free work and that's what I always call life-wasting events.\" ; Ben Hecht: Twentieth Century (1934), A Star Is Born (1937), Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), Gone with the Wind (1939), Stagecoach (1939), Foreign Correspondent (1940), Cornered (1945), Gilda (1946), Rope and Cry of the City (1948), Strangers on a Train (1951), Angel Face (1952), and Cleopatra (1963). According to a November 1999 article ", "James Thurber\n The last twenty years of Thurber's life were filled with material and professional success in spite of his blindness. He published at least fourteen more books, including The Thurber Carnival (1945), Thurber Country (1953), and the extremely popular account of the life of New Yorker editor Harold Ross, The Years with Ross (1959). A number of his short stories were made into movies, including The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947). Many of his short stories are humorous fictional memoirs from his life, but he also wrote darker material, such as \"The Whip-Poor-Will\", a story of madness and murder. His best-known short ", "Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life (film)\n was also able to choose cast members for Middle School, which was unlike his past projects and he appreciated that as he was able to choose some \"great improvisational comics.\" Other details were announced on August 4, such as Griffin Gluck playing Rafe Khatchadorian, Leopoldo Gout and Bill Robinson producing the film, CBS Films producing it as well as handling international sales, and Lionsgate handling domestic distribution for CBS. Jacob Hopkins came in planning to play characters besides Miller The Killer. During audition shoots, Hopkins pushed Gluck's character around out of playfulness instead of bad faith, but Carr interpreted him as \"upbeat and really physical\" enough for a bully character. He improvised gags into the film, such as a running gag where he makes fun of Rafe's last name Khatchadorian. ", "David Ambrose\nYear of the Gun (1991) – screenplay ; La Révolution française (1989) – screenplay ; Taffin (1988) – screenplay ; D.A.R.Y.L. (1985) – screenplay ; Blackout (1985) – screenplay ; Amityville 3-D (1983) – screenplay (as William Wales) ; The Final Countdown (1980) – story, screenplay ; The Survivor (1980) – screenplay ; A Dangerous Summer (1980) – screenplay ; A Man Called Intrepid (1979) – screenplay ; The Fifth Musketeer (1974) – screenplay ", "Screenwriting\nCrashing Hollywood (1931)&mdash;A screenwriter collaborates on a gangster movie with a real-life gangster. When the film is released, the mob doesn't like how accurate the movie is. ; Sunset Boulevard (1950)&mdash;Actor William Holden portrays a hack screenwriter forced to collaborate on a screenplay with a desperate, fading silent film star, played by Gloria Swanson. ; In a Lonely Place (1950)&mdash;Humphrey Bogart is a washed up screenwriter who gets framed for murder. ; Paris, When it Sizzles (1964)&mdash;William Holden plays a drunk screenwriter who has wasted months partying and has just two days to finish his script. He hires Audrey Hepburn to help. ; Barton Fink (1991)&mdash;John Turturro plays ", "Michael Ventura\n Michael Ventura commenced his career as a journalist at the Austin Sun, a counter-culture bi-weekly newspaper that published in the 1970s. Ventura is best known for his long-running column, \"Letters at 3 A.M.\", which first appeared in LA Weekly in the early 1980s and continued in the Austin Chronicle until 2015. He has published three novels: Night Time Losing Time (1989), The Zoo Where You're Fed to God (1994), and The Death of Frank Sinatra (1996). An excerpt from his novel about Miriam of Magdala was published in the third issue of the CalArts literary journal Black Clock in 2005. He is the author of two essay collections, Shadow-Dancing in the U.S.A. (1985) and Letters at 3 A.M.: Reports on Endarkenment (1994). With psychologist James Hillman, Ventura co-authored the 1992 bestseller We've Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy – And the World's Getting Worse. He appears as a fictional character in Steve Erickson's 1996 novel, Amnesiascope. He wrote the screenplay for Echo Park (1986), among other films, including Roadie (1980). He curated the Sundance Festival's 1989 retrospective on John Cassavetes.", "The Rewrite\n Keith Michaels is a divorced and depressed screenwriter whose only successful work was Paradise Misplaced, which won the Best Screenplay Award fifteen years ago. Unemployed and low on funds after a long period of unsuccessful pitching, he reluctantly takes up a job teaching screenwriting at Binghamton University in Upstate New York. On arrival, Keith angers fellow professor Mary Weldon with derogatory comments about Jane Austen and other misogynistic behavior; he also strikes up an unethical relationship with a young undergraduate student, Karen Gabney, which ends quickly. Keith also does not believe in the concept of teaching and is scornful of his job, as exemplified by his selecting mostly women students for his class based solely on ", "Charles Bennett (screenwriter)\n \"world's worst director\": Number, Please (1931); Deadlock (1931), which was a big hit; Midnight (1931), the latter based on his play; and Two Way Street (1932). Bennett wrote and directed the play Sensation (1931), a melodrama, but it was not a success, although it was adapted into a film. He followed it with another play Big Business (1932), which Bennett also directed and appeared in alongside his then-wife Maggie. But by now he had given up acting to focus on writing. Bennett wrote a short film, Partners Please (1932), and did an early film for John Paddy Carstairs, Paris Plane (1933). Bennett wrote Mannequin (1933); " ]
Who was the screenwriter for The City?
[ "Clyde Fitch", "William Clyde Fitch" ]
screenwriter
The City (1916 film)
1,332,312
71
[ { "id": "30219920", "title": "Malvin Wald", "text": " Malvin Daniel Wald (August 8, 1917 – March 6, 2008) was an American screenwriter most famous for writing the 1948 police drama The Naked City, for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Story. He wrote over 150 scripts for motion pictures and TV shows including Peter Gunn, Daktari, and Perry Mason. He also served with the Army Air Forces and taught screenwriting at the University of Southern California. He died at Sherman Oaks Hospital in Los Angeles from age-related causes at age 90.", "score": "1.5620102" }, { "id": "10867497", "title": "Jay McInerney", "text": "McInerney wrote the screenplay for the 1988 film adaptation of Bright Lights, Big City. Directed by James Bridges, it stars Michael J. Fox, Kiefer Sutherland, and Phoebe Cates. ", "score": "1.5475192" }, { "id": "7375766", "title": "Dark City (1998 film)", "text": " Proyas co-wrote the screenplay with Lem Dobbs and David S. Goyer. Goyer had written The Crow: City of Angels, the sequel to Proyas's 1994 film The Crow; Proyas invited Goyer to co-write the screenplay for Dark City after reading Goyer's screenplay for Blade, which had yet to be released. Writers Guild of America initially protested at crediting more than two screenwriters for a film, but it eventually relented and credited all three writers. Proyas originally conceived a story about a 1940s detective who is obsessed with facts and cannot solve a case where the facts do not make sense. \"He slowly starts to go insane through the story\", says Proyas. \"He can't put the facts together because they don't add up to anything rational.\" In the process of creating the fictional world for the character of the detective, Proyas created other characters, shifting the focus of the film from the detective (Bumstead) to the person pursued by the detective (Murdoch). Proyas envisioned a robust narrative where the audience could examine the film from the perspective of multiple characters and focus on the plot.", "score": "1.5397239" }, { "id": "9831536", "title": "Thomas Lee Wright", "text": " first screenwriting assignment was writing a draft of The Godfather Part III. This led to authoring projects for Peter Guber, Dino De Laurentiis, Mike Medavoy, and Daniel Melnick, among others. Wright wrote the original screenplay for the Warner Brothers film New Jack City. which the New York Times called \"an urban classic\" on the 25th anniversary of its premiere. He was nominated for Best Documentary Short Subject at the 90th Academy Awards for Edith+Eddie. Wright is well-known for his films about social justice issues, including: Three of his films deal with war veterans: As an author, Wright co-wrote two books about filmmaking:", "score": "1.5391217" }, { "id": "6297200", "title": "Jo Eisinger", "text": " Jo Eisinger (1909–1991) was a film and television writer whose career spanned more than 40 years from the early 1940s well into the 1980s. He is widely recognized as the writer of two of the most psychologically complex film noirs, Gilda (1946) and Night and the City (1950). His credits also include The Sleeping City (1950) and Crime of Passion (1957), a coda to the films of the noir style, for which he wrote the story as well as the screenplay. Starring Barbara Stanwyck, it's a strikingly modern commentary about how women were driven mad by the limitations imposed upon them in the postwar period. Jo Eisinger ", "score": "1.5257938" }, { "id": "14937776", "title": "Kenneth Lipper", "text": " Lipper triumphed in the publishing world with the success of his novel Wall Street, adapted from Oliver Stone's award-winning film of the same name, in which Lipper himself served as technical advisor and had a brief cameo. His experience in government was the inspiration for another film, 1996's City Hall, starring Al Pacino, for which he served as producer and wrote the screenplay and novel. Lipper appeared on Charlie Rose, discussing his novel and movie \"City Hall,\" in 1996. Lipper was also producer of The Winter Guest, starring Emma Thompson, and the Holocaust documentary The Last Days, for which he won an Academy Award.", "score": "1.4936626" }, { "id": "13808726", "title": "Joseph Stinson", "text": " Joseph Stinson (also known as Joseph C. Stinson) is an American screenwriter best known for such films as City Heat, Stick and Sudden Impact.", "score": "1.4800134" }, { "id": "7225562", "title": "Naked City (TV series)", "text": " iteration of the series, writer Silliphant was forced to reduce his involvement considerably, as he was simultaneously working as the main scriptwriter for Route 66 which began in October 1960. Silliphant wrote the first three episodes of Naked City's second season, then did not write any further episodes until he wrote three episodes for season four. Those employed as writers of Naked City episodes during seasons 2, 3 and 4 included veteran TV writer Howard Rodman (who also served as story editor), blacklisted screenwriter Arnold Manoff (writing with the pseudonym \"Joel Carpenter\"), and Shimon Wincelberg, amongst others. Noted science-fiction TV writers Charles Beaumont and Gene Roddenberry also each contributed one episode.", "score": "1.4743215" }, { "id": "32282813", "title": "Steve Shagan", "text": " the book his typewriter broke and author Harold Robbins loaned him his. Shagan went on to write the novel City of Angels and its film adaptation, Hustle, both released in 1975. He then wrote the screenplay for and co-produced Voyage of the Damned, for which he received another Academy Award nomination, this time for Best Adapted Screenplay. This was followed by Nightwing, which he adapted from the novel of same name by Martin Cruz Smith. He then adapted his 1979 novel The Formula into a 1980 film of the same name, which he also co-produced and which reunited him with Save the Tiger director John G. Avildsen. Of ", "score": "1.4694166" }, { "id": "8362556", "title": "Barry Michael Cooper", "text": " Barry Michael Cooper is a New York City-born American writer, producer and director, best known for his screenplays for the films New Jack City (1991), Sugar Hill (1994), and Above the Rim (1994), sometimes called his \"Harlem Trilogy\".", "score": "1.4647229" }, { "id": "12566707", "title": "Alex Tse", "text": " After three years of small jobs, Tse sold to television-based Showtime a script called 87 Fleer, about four middle-class kids from the Richmond District. The company was impressed with his script and encouraged him to write a pilot about gangs. By June 2002, Tse submitted a first-story outline titled The Game for a potential television series. By the following September, the outline was developed into a full script that eventually became the Showtime television movie Sucker Free City (2004), directed by Spike Lee. For the film, Tse won a literary award from PEN Center USA for best teleplay, and he was nominated for best screenplay (original or adapted) for the 2006 ", "score": "1.458878" }, { "id": "31697858", "title": "Miklós László", "text": " In the early 1940s he also wrote a screenplay Katherine which was picked up by MGM and became the motion picture The Big City (1948) starring Margaret O'Brien, Robert Preston, Danny Thomas and George Murphy. The screenplay examined the diversity and underlying unity of human cultures in the microcosm of a New York City adoption. Only one other of Miklos Laszlo's plays was ever widely produced in the Americas. Entitled St. Lazar's Pharmacy it is the story of a man learning the lessons of the true value of “home” as compared to the many lures of a false and deceiving world of empty promises. The play starred famed actress Miriam Hopkins and toured all ", "score": "1.4586139" }, { "id": "6788835", "title": "Leonard Gardner", "text": " Leonard Gardner (born 3 November 1933) is an American novelist, short story writer, and screenwriter. His writing has appeared in The Paris Review, Esquire, The Southwest Review, and other publications, and he has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. Gardner was born in Stockton, and went to San Francisco State University. He currently in Larkspur, California. Gardner's 1969 novel Fat City is an American classic whose stature has increased over the years. His screen adaptation of Fat City was made into an acclaimed 1972 film of the same title, directed by John Huston. The book and movie are set in and around Stockton and concern the struggles of third-rate pro boxers who only dimly comprehend that none of them will ever make the big time. Devoid of the usual \"sweet science\" cliches, the book roils with dark pessimism as ", "score": "1.4525126" }, { "id": "31501072", "title": "Herbert Baker (screenwriter)", "text": " In 1945, Baker wrote for the Danny Kaye radio show. Henry Morgan hired Baker to write for his radio show in 1947. Baker began his career in screenwriting in 1948 with Morgan's film debut So This Is New York, co-written with Carl Foreman and based upon Ring Lardner's 1920 novel The Big Town. Baker was a Yale classmate of director Richard Fleischer and recommended him to Stanley Kramer for So This Is New York. He wrote Dream Wife (1953) with Sidney Sheldon for Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr, as well as several films for Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis such as Jumping Jacks (1951), Scared Stiff (1953), and Artists and Models (1955). The latter film was directed and co-written by Frank Tashlin, ", "score": "1.4524354" }, { "id": "444326", "title": "Steven Zaillian", "text": " Steven Ernest Bernard Zaillian (born January 30, 1953) is an American screenwriter, director, film editor, and producer. He won an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award and a BAFTA Award for his screenplay Schindler's List (1993) and has also earned Oscar nominations for films Awakenings, Gangs of New York, Moneyball and The Irishman. He was presented with the Distinguished Screenwriter Award at the 2009 Austin Film Festival and the Laurel Award for Screenwriting Achievement from the Writers Guild of America in 2011. Zaillian is the founder of Film Rites, a film production company. In 2016, he created, wrote and directed the HBO limited series The Night Of. Zaillian is regarded as one of the most influential and greatest screenwriters in cinema history.", "score": "1.4519103" }, { "id": "5958177", "title": "The City (1977 film)", "text": " The City is a 1977 American made-for-television crime drama film starring Robert Forster, Ward Costello, Don Johnson, Jimmy Dean and Mark Hamill. The film was produced as a pilot for a proposed television series that never came to be. It was originally broadcast January 12, 1977 on NBC.", "score": "1.4518251" }, { "id": "10521780", "title": "Robert Towne", "text": " Robert Towne (born Robert Bertram Schwartz; November 23, 1934) is an American screenwriter, producer, director and actor. He was part of the New Hollywood wave of filmmaking. He is best known for his Academy Award-winning original screenplay for Roman Polanski's Chinatown (1974), which is widely considered one of the greatest screenplays ever written. He later said it was inspired by a chapter in Carey McWilliams's Southern California Country: An Island on the Land (1946) and a West magazine article on Raymond Chandler's Los Angeles. Towne also wrote the sequel, The Two Jakes (1990); the Hal Ashby comedy-dramas The Last Detail (1973) and Shampoo (1975); and the first two Mission: Impossible films. Towne directed the sports dramas Personal Best (1982) and Without Limits (1998), the crime thriller Tequila Sunrise (1988), and the romantic crime drama Ask the Dust (2006).", "score": "1.4493701" }, { "id": "16465325", "title": "John Rechy", "text": " Rechy's first published work, the largely autobiographical novel City of Night, debuted in October 1963. Despite the predominantly negative reviews the book received at the time of its publication, City of Night became an international bestseller. In addition to the dozen novels he has written to date, Rechy has contributed numerous essays and literary reviews to various publications including The Nation, The New York Review of Books, Los Angeles Times, L.A. Weekly, The Village Voice, The New York Times, Evergreen Review and Saturday Review. Many of these writings were anthologized in his 2004 publication Beneath the Skin. He has written three plays, ", "score": "1.4493678" }, { "id": "4047905", "title": "Fargo Rock City", "text": " A screenplay written by Craig Finn and Tom Ruprecht was finished in 2009. \"We’d get together every day at noon and write till six. We had one computer in the room and one notebook, and we’d alternate scenes. I’d write a scene on the computer, then he’d look at it and make any changes; meanwhile he’d be writing a scene in the notebook that he’d type up, and I’d look at it, make any changes. We could probably do four scenes a day.\"", "score": "1.4447451" }, { "id": "5510541", "title": "Zoo City", "text": " In November 2011, South African film producer Helena Spring won the film rights to Zoo City. Beukes was slated to write the film's script, while Spring planned to offer the project to a shortlist of directors. Beukes's literary agent said that \"Helena outbid all the others in a spirited auction for film rights to this extraordinary book: she had an extremely proactive, writer-friendly approach to working with Lauren and offered an imaginative and creative proposal that was irresistible.\" In November 2013, Donovan Marsh was announced as the prospective film's director. At this time Marsh was developing a script with input from Beukes, and the film was scheduled to go into production in the second half of 2014.", "score": "1.4446568" } ]
[ "Malvin Wald\n Malvin Daniel Wald (August 8, 1917 – March 6, 2008) was an American screenwriter most famous for writing the 1948 police drama The Naked City, for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Story. He wrote over 150 scripts for motion pictures and TV shows including Peter Gunn, Daktari, and Perry Mason. He also served with the Army Air Forces and taught screenwriting at the University of Southern California. He died at Sherman Oaks Hospital in Los Angeles from age-related causes at age 90.", "Jay McInerney\nMcInerney wrote the screenplay for the 1988 film adaptation of Bright Lights, Big City. Directed by James Bridges, it stars Michael J. Fox, Kiefer Sutherland, and Phoebe Cates. ", "Dark City (1998 film)\n Proyas co-wrote the screenplay with Lem Dobbs and David S. Goyer. Goyer had written The Crow: City of Angels, the sequel to Proyas's 1994 film The Crow; Proyas invited Goyer to co-write the screenplay for Dark City after reading Goyer's screenplay for Blade, which had yet to be released. Writers Guild of America initially protested at crediting more than two screenwriters for a film, but it eventually relented and credited all three writers. Proyas originally conceived a story about a 1940s detective who is obsessed with facts and cannot solve a case where the facts do not make sense. \"He slowly starts to go insane through the story\", says Proyas. \"He can't put the facts together because they don't add up to anything rational.\" In the process of creating the fictional world for the character of the detective, Proyas created other characters, shifting the focus of the film from the detective (Bumstead) to the person pursued by the detective (Murdoch). Proyas envisioned a robust narrative where the audience could examine the film from the perspective of multiple characters and focus on the plot.", "Thomas Lee Wright\n first screenwriting assignment was writing a draft of The Godfather Part III. This led to authoring projects for Peter Guber, Dino De Laurentiis, Mike Medavoy, and Daniel Melnick, among others. Wright wrote the original screenplay for the Warner Brothers film New Jack City. which the New York Times called \"an urban classic\" on the 25th anniversary of its premiere. He was nominated for Best Documentary Short Subject at the 90th Academy Awards for Edith+Eddie. Wright is well-known for his films about social justice issues, including: Three of his films deal with war veterans: As an author, Wright co-wrote two books about filmmaking:", "Jo Eisinger\n Jo Eisinger (1909–1991) was a film and television writer whose career spanned more than 40 years from the early 1940s well into the 1980s. He is widely recognized as the writer of two of the most psychologically complex film noirs, Gilda (1946) and Night and the City (1950). His credits also include The Sleeping City (1950) and Crime of Passion (1957), a coda to the films of the noir style, for which he wrote the story as well as the screenplay. Starring Barbara Stanwyck, it's a strikingly modern commentary about how women were driven mad by the limitations imposed upon them in the postwar period. Jo Eisinger ", "Kenneth Lipper\n Lipper triumphed in the publishing world with the success of his novel Wall Street, adapted from Oliver Stone's award-winning film of the same name, in which Lipper himself served as technical advisor and had a brief cameo. His experience in government was the inspiration for another film, 1996's City Hall, starring Al Pacino, for which he served as producer and wrote the screenplay and novel. Lipper appeared on Charlie Rose, discussing his novel and movie \"City Hall,\" in 1996. Lipper was also producer of The Winter Guest, starring Emma Thompson, and the Holocaust documentary The Last Days, for which he won an Academy Award.", "Joseph Stinson\n Joseph Stinson (also known as Joseph C. Stinson) is an American screenwriter best known for such films as City Heat, Stick and Sudden Impact.", "Naked City (TV series)\n iteration of the series, writer Silliphant was forced to reduce his involvement considerably, as he was simultaneously working as the main scriptwriter for Route 66 which began in October 1960. Silliphant wrote the first three episodes of Naked City's second season, then did not write any further episodes until he wrote three episodes for season four. Those employed as writers of Naked City episodes during seasons 2, 3 and 4 included veteran TV writer Howard Rodman (who also served as story editor), blacklisted screenwriter Arnold Manoff (writing with the pseudonym \"Joel Carpenter\"), and Shimon Wincelberg, amongst others. Noted science-fiction TV writers Charles Beaumont and Gene Roddenberry also each contributed one episode.", "Steve Shagan\n the book his typewriter broke and author Harold Robbins loaned him his. Shagan went on to write the novel City of Angels and its film adaptation, Hustle, both released in 1975. He then wrote the screenplay for and co-produced Voyage of the Damned, for which he received another Academy Award nomination, this time for Best Adapted Screenplay. This was followed by Nightwing, which he adapted from the novel of same name by Martin Cruz Smith. He then adapted his 1979 novel The Formula into a 1980 film of the same name, which he also co-produced and which reunited him with Save the Tiger director John G. Avildsen. Of ", "Barry Michael Cooper\n Barry Michael Cooper is a New York City-born American writer, producer and director, best known for his screenplays for the films New Jack City (1991), Sugar Hill (1994), and Above the Rim (1994), sometimes called his \"Harlem Trilogy\".", "Alex Tse\n After three years of small jobs, Tse sold to television-based Showtime a script called 87 Fleer, about four middle-class kids from the Richmond District. The company was impressed with his script and encouraged him to write a pilot about gangs. By June 2002, Tse submitted a first-story outline titled The Game for a potential television series. By the following September, the outline was developed into a full script that eventually became the Showtime television movie Sucker Free City (2004), directed by Spike Lee. For the film, Tse won a literary award from PEN Center USA for best teleplay, and he was nominated for best screenplay (original or adapted) for the 2006 ", "Miklós László\n In the early 1940s he also wrote a screenplay Katherine which was picked up by MGM and became the motion picture The Big City (1948) starring Margaret O'Brien, Robert Preston, Danny Thomas and George Murphy. The screenplay examined the diversity and underlying unity of human cultures in the microcosm of a New York City adoption. Only one other of Miklos Laszlo's plays was ever widely produced in the Americas. Entitled St. Lazar's Pharmacy it is the story of a man learning the lessons of the true value of “home” as compared to the many lures of a false and deceiving world of empty promises. The play starred famed actress Miriam Hopkins and toured all ", "Leonard Gardner\n Leonard Gardner (born 3 November 1933) is an American novelist, short story writer, and screenwriter. His writing has appeared in The Paris Review, Esquire, The Southwest Review, and other publications, and he has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. Gardner was born in Stockton, and went to San Francisco State University. He currently in Larkspur, California. Gardner's 1969 novel Fat City is an American classic whose stature has increased over the years. His screen adaptation of Fat City was made into an acclaimed 1972 film of the same title, directed by John Huston. The book and movie are set in and around Stockton and concern the struggles of third-rate pro boxers who only dimly comprehend that none of them will ever make the big time. Devoid of the usual \"sweet science\" cliches, the book roils with dark pessimism as ", "Herbert Baker (screenwriter)\n In 1945, Baker wrote for the Danny Kaye radio show. Henry Morgan hired Baker to write for his radio show in 1947. Baker began his career in screenwriting in 1948 with Morgan's film debut So This Is New York, co-written with Carl Foreman and based upon Ring Lardner's 1920 novel The Big Town. Baker was a Yale classmate of director Richard Fleischer and recommended him to Stanley Kramer for So This Is New York. He wrote Dream Wife (1953) with Sidney Sheldon for Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr, as well as several films for Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis such as Jumping Jacks (1951), Scared Stiff (1953), and Artists and Models (1955). The latter film was directed and co-written by Frank Tashlin, ", "Steven Zaillian\n Steven Ernest Bernard Zaillian (born January 30, 1953) is an American screenwriter, director, film editor, and producer. He won an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award and a BAFTA Award for his screenplay Schindler's List (1993) and has also earned Oscar nominations for films Awakenings, Gangs of New York, Moneyball and The Irishman. He was presented with the Distinguished Screenwriter Award at the 2009 Austin Film Festival and the Laurel Award for Screenwriting Achievement from the Writers Guild of America in 2011. Zaillian is the founder of Film Rites, a film production company. In 2016, he created, wrote and directed the HBO limited series The Night Of. Zaillian is regarded as one of the most influential and greatest screenwriters in cinema history.", "The City (1977 film)\n The City is a 1977 American made-for-television crime drama film starring Robert Forster, Ward Costello, Don Johnson, Jimmy Dean and Mark Hamill. The film was produced as a pilot for a proposed television series that never came to be. It was originally broadcast January 12, 1977 on NBC.", "Robert Towne\n Robert Towne (born Robert Bertram Schwartz; November 23, 1934) is an American screenwriter, producer, director and actor. He was part of the New Hollywood wave of filmmaking. He is best known for his Academy Award-winning original screenplay for Roman Polanski's Chinatown (1974), which is widely considered one of the greatest screenplays ever written. He later said it was inspired by a chapter in Carey McWilliams's Southern California Country: An Island on the Land (1946) and a West magazine article on Raymond Chandler's Los Angeles. Towne also wrote the sequel, The Two Jakes (1990); the Hal Ashby comedy-dramas The Last Detail (1973) and Shampoo (1975); and the first two Mission: Impossible films. Towne directed the sports dramas Personal Best (1982) and Without Limits (1998), the crime thriller Tequila Sunrise (1988), and the romantic crime drama Ask the Dust (2006).", "John Rechy\n Rechy's first published work, the largely autobiographical novel City of Night, debuted in October 1963. Despite the predominantly negative reviews the book received at the time of its publication, City of Night became an international bestseller. In addition to the dozen novels he has written to date, Rechy has contributed numerous essays and literary reviews to various publications including The Nation, The New York Review of Books, Los Angeles Times, L.A. Weekly, The Village Voice, The New York Times, Evergreen Review and Saturday Review. Many of these writings were anthologized in his 2004 publication Beneath the Skin. He has written three plays, ", "Fargo Rock City\n A screenplay written by Craig Finn and Tom Ruprecht was finished in 2009. \"We’d get together every day at noon and write till six. We had one computer in the room and one notebook, and we’d alternate scenes. I’d write a scene on the computer, then he’d look at it and make any changes; meanwhile he’d be writing a scene in the notebook that he’d type up, and I’d look at it, make any changes. We could probably do four scenes a day.\"", "Zoo City\n In November 2011, South African film producer Helena Spring won the film rights to Zoo City. Beukes was slated to write the film's script, while Spring planned to offer the project to a shortlist of directors. Beukes's literary agent said that \"Helena outbid all the others in a spirited auction for film rights to this extraordinary book: she had an extremely proactive, writer-friendly approach to working with Lauren and offered an imaginative and creative proposal that was irresistible.\" In November 2013, Donovan Marsh was announced as the prospective film's director. At this time Marsh was developing a script with input from Beukes, and the film was scheduled to go into production in the second half of 2014." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Jackson: My Life... Your Fault?
[ "Duncan Roy" ]
screenwriter
Jackson: My Life... Your Fault
4,605,563
93
[ { "id": "15456836", "title": "Jackson: My Life... Your Fault", "text": " Jackson: My Life... Your Fault is a 1995 gay-themed film directed by Duncan Roy starring Benjamin Soames and Alan Gilchrist.", "score": "1.7757785" }, { "id": "15456837", "title": "Jackson: My Life... Your Fault", "text": " Jackson (Benjamin Soames) has lived sheltered with his mother since his father's death when he was a little boy. He remembers the event from childhood, and is still troubled by it. His mother (Georgina Hale), is over-protective, and plays upon Jackson's emotions to keep him tied to her. On meeting an attractive policeman, he needs to decide whether to grow up or not.", "score": "1.6219666" }, { "id": "29978249", "title": "Joseph Jackson (screenwriter)", "text": " film representative and most successful writers for Hollywood talking films. entered films in 1918 as publicity representative He was elected president of the Wampas, organization of the publicity and advertising men, in 1923. He later joined the ranks of scenario writers and for the last five years had been turning out screen plays for Warner Brothers First National Pictures. He wrote the script and dialogue for :The Singing Fool\", \"The Terror\", \"My Man\", \"Tenderloin\", \"Those Who Dance\", Fifty Million Frenchmen\", \"Smart Money\" and scores of others. He also was author of many vaudeville play-lets. He was married to Ethel Shannon former actress and had a 4-year-old son. He married April 10, 1927, at the Wilshire Boulevard Congregational Church, Los Angeles", "score": "1.5366757" }, { "id": "29749452", "title": "Horace Jackson", "text": " Philip Barry's 1928 play of the same name, would be honored with an Academy Award nomination at the 4th Academy Awards in 1932, however, he lost to the big winner of those awards, Cimarron (written by Howard Estabrook). He was also reported as one of a plethora of writers who worked on the screenplay for the 1942 film The Night Before the Divorce, although he received no screenplay credit. In 1947, he sued Republic Pictures for plagiarism regarding the film Calendar Girl (1947). According to a 1949 New York Times article, Jackson and his writing partner, Irene Homer, were successful in their suit, receiving a \"substantial sum\". On January 26, 1952 Jackson would die in a car accident.", "score": "1.5048771" }, { "id": "9488160", "title": "Frederick J. Jackson", "text": " Frederick J. Jackson (September 21, 1886 &ndash; May 22, 1953) was an American author, playwright and screenwriter. He wrote for over 50 films between 1912 and 1946. Over a forty-year span, a dozen of his plays were produced on Broadway. Several of his plays were turned into films, including The Bishop Misbehaves. He was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and died in Hollywood, California.", "score": "1.4954668" }, { "id": "29978248", "title": "Joseph Jackson (screenwriter)", "text": " Joseph Jackson (June 8, 1894 – May 26, 1932) was an American screenwriter, who was nominated for the now dead category of Best Story at the 4th Academy Awards. He was nominated alongside Lucien Hubbard. They were nominated for Smart Money. He had over 50 screenplay credits from 1927 to 1932.", "score": "1.4722428" }, { "id": "30168954", "title": "Tony Kushner", "text": " screenplay Munich was produced and directed by Steven Spielberg in 2005. In January 2006, a documentary feature about Kushner entitled Wrestling with Angels debuted at the Sundance Film Festival. The film was directed by Freida Lee Mock. In April 2011 it was announced that he was working with Spielberg again, writing the screenplay for an adaptation of historian Doris Kearns Goodwin's book Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. The screenplay for Lincoln would go on to receive multiple awards, in addition to nominations for Best Adapted Screenplay at the Golden Globes and The Oscars. In a 2015 interview actress/producer Viola Davis revealed she had hired Kushner to write an as yet untitled biopic about the life of Barbara Jordan that she planned to star in. In 2016, Kushner ", "score": "1.439162" }, { "id": "5344692", "title": "Tracey Jackson", "text": " She has published two books and has written several feature-length screenplays, including the romantic comedy films The Other End of the Line (2008) and Confessions of a Shopaholic (2009). Jackson also created the 1990 Fox TV series Babes. She blogs on her personal website and for websites including The Huffington Post and wowOwow, and is married to Glenn Horowitz, a bookseller in New York.", "score": "1.4350829" }, { "id": "29407145", "title": "Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski", "text": " Their first success was the popular but critically derided comedy Problem Child (1990). Alexander and Karaszewski claim that their original screenplay was a sophisticated black comedy, but that the studio watered it down into an unrecognizable state. In 1994, Alexander and Karaszewski persuaded Tim Burton to direct a biopic about Edward D. Wood, Jr., titled Ed Wood. They wrote the screenplay in six weeks. Ed Wood led to a succession of offbeat biopics, including The People vs. Larry Flynt; Man on the Moon, about the short life of comedian Andy Kaufman; and Auto Focus, chronicling the downfall and subsequent murder of Hogan's Heroes star Bob Crane, which they produced. A script they penned about the life of Robert Ripley of Ripley's Believe It or Not! was at one ", "score": "1.4315126" }, { "id": "29627720", "title": "Lisa F. Jackson", "text": " campaign spots for Senators Frank Church, Fritz Hollings and Ted Kennedy. She has directed and/or edited dozens of films for PBS, including Voices and Visions: Emily Dickinson, Jackson Pollock: Portrait, Through Madness (a 1993 NYC Emmy winner), The Creative Spirit, Storytellers, The Sixth Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, Bill Moyers' Journal, The Mind, and segments for Sesame Street and Live from Lincoln Center. Jackson's credits as a producer/director include Meeting with a Killer: One Family’s Journey (2001, Court TV; 2001 Emmy Award nominee), Life Afterlife (1999, HBO), The Secret Life of Barbie (1998, ABC; 1999 Emmy Award winner), Why Am I Gay? (1993) and Addicted (1997) for HBO's America Undercover series, Smart Sex (1994) and No Money, ", "score": "1.4221652" }, { "id": "15456519", "title": "Duncan Roy", "text": "The Picture of Dorian Gray (2006) ; Method (2004) ; AKA (2002) ; Clancy's Kitchen (1996) ; Jackson: My Life... Your Fault (1995) ", "score": "1.418445" }, { "id": "15423314", "title": "Scott Neustadter", "text": " Scott Eric Neustadter (born 1977) is an American screenwriter and producer. He often works with his writing partner, Michael H. Weber. The two writers wrote the original screenplays for 500 Days of Summer and The Pink Panther 2. 500 Days of Summer is based on two real relationships Neustadter had. They also wrote the screenplays for The Spectacular Now, based on the novel by Tim Tharp, The Fault in Our Stars, based on the best-selling novel by John Green, and Paper Towns, based on another novel by Green. For writing The Disaster Artist (2017), the pair was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. They also created the television series Friends with Benefits, which lasted one season.", "score": "1.4165004" }, { "id": "33052035", "title": "Michael H. Weber", "text": " Michael H. Weber (born January 13, 1978) is an American screenwriter and producer from Great Neck, New York. He and his writing partner Scott Neustadter have written the original screenplays for the films 500 Days of Summer (2009) and The Pink Panther 2 (2009). They also wrote the screenplays for The Spectacular Now (2013), based on the novel by Tim Tharp, The Fault in Our Stars (2014), based on the best-selling novel by John Green and Paper Towns (2015), based on another novel by Green. For writing The Disaster Artist (2017), the pair was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. They also created the sitcom Friends with Benefits, which lasted one season.", "score": "1.4157891" }, { "id": "1488209", "title": "Jeremy Jackson (author)", "text": " Jeremy Jackson is an American author. He has written two novels, Life at These Speeds (2002), about a high school boy who finds his life through long-distance running and track, and In Summer (2004), with a similar premise, about a high school graduate caught between his adolescence and adulthood. The manuscript of Life at These Speeds won a James A. Michener/Copernicus Society of America Fellowship in 2000 and was later a selection for Barnes & Noble's Discover Great New Writers. The novel became a feature film, 1 Mile to You, starring Billy Crudup and Graham Rogers (2017). Jackson has also written three cookbooks, The Cornbread Book (2003), ", "score": "1.4156404" }, { "id": "14119823", "title": "Spartacus (film)", "text": " Howard Fast was originally hired to adapt his own novel as a screenplay, but he had difficulty working in the format. He was replaced by Dalton Trumbo, who had been blacklisted as one of the Hollywood 10, and intended to use the pseudonym \"Sam Jackson\". Kirk Douglas insisted that Trumbo be given screen credit for his work, which helped to break the blacklist. Trumbo had been jailed for contempt of Congress in 1950, after which he had survived by writing screenplays under assumed names. Douglas's intervention on his behalf was praised as an act of courage. In his autobiography, Douglas states that this decision was motivated by a meeting that Edward Lewis, Stanley Kubrick, and he had regarding whose names to put against the screenplay in the film credits, given Trumbo's shaky position with Hollywood executives. One idea was to credit ", "score": "1.4105815" }, { "id": "8144924", "title": "Mr. Reliable", "text": " Terry Hayes was attached to produce the film. He showed a script to Nadia Tass, who liked the story and the characters but wanted it rewritten. Hayes made the changes and Tass came on board to direct. Also released as My Entire Life.", "score": "1.4093742" }, { "id": "8070596", "title": "My Life in Ruins", "text": " The script is originally by Mike Reiss, based on his travel experiences, but it was later re-written by Vardalos (My Big Fat Greek Wedding) after she became involved. The film was co-produced by Gary Goetzman and Tom Hanks, and is directed by Donald Petrie. Vardalos has stated that the film was a lifelong dream of hers for she had always wanted to do a film in her family's ancestral homeland.", "score": "1.4092911" }, { "id": "32348409", "title": "Middle-earth in film", "text": " two hours, and offered suggestions in order to achieve this, namely amalgamating Gondor and Rohan. They contacted Hossein Amini to rewrite and threatened to get John Madden or Quentin Tarantino to direct. Jackson believes this was an empty threat to get him to concede to the one-film version. He refused, but his agent Ken Kamins convinced Harvey Weinstein that getting another filmmaker to work on the project will result in further delays and costs, at which point Harvey conceded to give Jackson the opportunity to find another studio to take over. Robert Zemeckis, Universal and DreamWorks declined. Fox were interested, but unwilling to enter a project involving Saul Zaentz, and Sony and ", "score": "1.4086211" }, { "id": "28415890", "title": "Richard Price (writer)", "text": " He wrote the screenplay for the film Child 44, which was released in April 2015. Price did uncredited work on the film American Gangster (2007). Price wrote and conceptualized the 18-minute film surrounding Michael Jackson's \"Bad\" video. He also wrote for the HBO series The Wire. Price won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2008 ceremony for his work on the fifth season of The Wire. He created a police drama series NYC 22 in 2012, it was cancelled after one season. His eight-part HBO miniseries The Night Of premiered in July 2016. Also premiering on ", "score": "1.4080844" }, { "id": "6146057", "title": "Mitchell S. Jackson", "text": " and named an \"Honor Book\" by the BCALA. He has been the recipient of fellowships from TED, the Lannan Foundation, The Center For Fiction, and The Bread Loaf Writer's Conference. Jackson is the co-director, writer, and producer of The Residue Years: A Documentary (2013), a documentary film exploring the autobiographical elements of his novel of the same name. It was an Official Selection of the Portland Film Festival It premiered on the Web at the Literary Hub website. Jackson's short fiction, nonfiction, and poetry have been published in Vice, Gigantic Magazine, Flaunt Magazine, The Frozen Moment: Contemporary Writers on the Choices That Change Our Lives, and New York ", "score": "1.40568" } ]
[ "Jackson: My Life... Your Fault\n Jackson: My Life... Your Fault is a 1995 gay-themed film directed by Duncan Roy starring Benjamin Soames and Alan Gilchrist.", "Jackson: My Life... Your Fault\n Jackson (Benjamin Soames) has lived sheltered with his mother since his father's death when he was a little boy. He remembers the event from childhood, and is still troubled by it. His mother (Georgina Hale), is over-protective, and plays upon Jackson's emotions to keep him tied to her. On meeting an attractive policeman, he needs to decide whether to grow up or not.", "Joseph Jackson (screenwriter)\n film representative and most successful writers for Hollywood talking films. entered films in 1918 as publicity representative He was elected president of the Wampas, organization of the publicity and advertising men, in 1923. He later joined the ranks of scenario writers and for the last five years had been turning out screen plays for Warner Brothers First National Pictures. He wrote the script and dialogue for :The Singing Fool\", \"The Terror\", \"My Man\", \"Tenderloin\", \"Those Who Dance\", Fifty Million Frenchmen\", \"Smart Money\" and scores of others. He also was author of many vaudeville play-lets. He was married to Ethel Shannon former actress and had a 4-year-old son. He married April 10, 1927, at the Wilshire Boulevard Congregational Church, Los Angeles", "Horace Jackson\n Philip Barry's 1928 play of the same name, would be honored with an Academy Award nomination at the 4th Academy Awards in 1932, however, he lost to the big winner of those awards, Cimarron (written by Howard Estabrook). He was also reported as one of a plethora of writers who worked on the screenplay for the 1942 film The Night Before the Divorce, although he received no screenplay credit. In 1947, he sued Republic Pictures for plagiarism regarding the film Calendar Girl (1947). According to a 1949 New York Times article, Jackson and his writing partner, Irene Homer, were successful in their suit, receiving a \"substantial sum\". On January 26, 1952 Jackson would die in a car accident.", "Frederick J. Jackson\n Frederick J. Jackson (September 21, 1886 &ndash; May 22, 1953) was an American author, playwright and screenwriter. He wrote for over 50 films between 1912 and 1946. Over a forty-year span, a dozen of his plays were produced on Broadway. Several of his plays were turned into films, including The Bishop Misbehaves. He was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and died in Hollywood, California.", "Joseph Jackson (screenwriter)\n Joseph Jackson (June 8, 1894 – May 26, 1932) was an American screenwriter, who was nominated for the now dead category of Best Story at the 4th Academy Awards. He was nominated alongside Lucien Hubbard. They were nominated for Smart Money. He had over 50 screenplay credits from 1927 to 1932.", "Tony Kushner\n screenplay Munich was produced and directed by Steven Spielberg in 2005. In January 2006, a documentary feature about Kushner entitled Wrestling with Angels debuted at the Sundance Film Festival. The film was directed by Freida Lee Mock. In April 2011 it was announced that he was working with Spielberg again, writing the screenplay for an adaptation of historian Doris Kearns Goodwin's book Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. The screenplay for Lincoln would go on to receive multiple awards, in addition to nominations for Best Adapted Screenplay at the Golden Globes and The Oscars. In a 2015 interview actress/producer Viola Davis revealed she had hired Kushner to write an as yet untitled biopic about the life of Barbara Jordan that she planned to star in. In 2016, Kushner ", "Tracey Jackson\n She has published two books and has written several feature-length screenplays, including the romantic comedy films The Other End of the Line (2008) and Confessions of a Shopaholic (2009). Jackson also created the 1990 Fox TV series Babes. She blogs on her personal website and for websites including The Huffington Post and wowOwow, and is married to Glenn Horowitz, a bookseller in New York.", "Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski\n Their first success was the popular but critically derided comedy Problem Child (1990). Alexander and Karaszewski claim that their original screenplay was a sophisticated black comedy, but that the studio watered it down into an unrecognizable state. In 1994, Alexander and Karaszewski persuaded Tim Burton to direct a biopic about Edward D. Wood, Jr., titled Ed Wood. They wrote the screenplay in six weeks. Ed Wood led to a succession of offbeat biopics, including The People vs. Larry Flynt; Man on the Moon, about the short life of comedian Andy Kaufman; and Auto Focus, chronicling the downfall and subsequent murder of Hogan's Heroes star Bob Crane, which they produced. A script they penned about the life of Robert Ripley of Ripley's Believe It or Not! was at one ", "Lisa F. Jackson\n campaign spots for Senators Frank Church, Fritz Hollings and Ted Kennedy. She has directed and/or edited dozens of films for PBS, including Voices and Visions: Emily Dickinson, Jackson Pollock: Portrait, Through Madness (a 1993 NYC Emmy winner), The Creative Spirit, Storytellers, The Sixth Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, Bill Moyers' Journal, The Mind, and segments for Sesame Street and Live from Lincoln Center. Jackson's credits as a producer/director include Meeting with a Killer: One Family’s Journey (2001, Court TV; 2001 Emmy Award nominee), Life Afterlife (1999, HBO), The Secret Life of Barbie (1998, ABC; 1999 Emmy Award winner), Why Am I Gay? (1993) and Addicted (1997) for HBO's America Undercover series, Smart Sex (1994) and No Money, ", "Duncan Roy\nThe Picture of Dorian Gray (2006) ; Method (2004) ; AKA (2002) ; Clancy's Kitchen (1996) ; Jackson: My Life... Your Fault (1995) ", "Scott Neustadter\n Scott Eric Neustadter (born 1977) is an American screenwriter and producer. He often works with his writing partner, Michael H. Weber. The two writers wrote the original screenplays for 500 Days of Summer and The Pink Panther 2. 500 Days of Summer is based on two real relationships Neustadter had. They also wrote the screenplays for The Spectacular Now, based on the novel by Tim Tharp, The Fault in Our Stars, based on the best-selling novel by John Green, and Paper Towns, based on another novel by Green. For writing The Disaster Artist (2017), the pair was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. They also created the television series Friends with Benefits, which lasted one season.", "Michael H. Weber\n Michael H. Weber (born January 13, 1978) is an American screenwriter and producer from Great Neck, New York. He and his writing partner Scott Neustadter have written the original screenplays for the films 500 Days of Summer (2009) and The Pink Panther 2 (2009). They also wrote the screenplays for The Spectacular Now (2013), based on the novel by Tim Tharp, The Fault in Our Stars (2014), based on the best-selling novel by John Green and Paper Towns (2015), based on another novel by Green. For writing The Disaster Artist (2017), the pair was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. They also created the sitcom Friends with Benefits, which lasted one season.", "Jeremy Jackson (author)\n Jeremy Jackson is an American author. He has written two novels, Life at These Speeds (2002), about a high school boy who finds his life through long-distance running and track, and In Summer (2004), with a similar premise, about a high school graduate caught between his adolescence and adulthood. The manuscript of Life at These Speeds won a James A. Michener/Copernicus Society of America Fellowship in 2000 and was later a selection for Barnes & Noble's Discover Great New Writers. The novel became a feature film, 1 Mile to You, starring Billy Crudup and Graham Rogers (2017). Jackson has also written three cookbooks, The Cornbread Book (2003), ", "Spartacus (film)\n Howard Fast was originally hired to adapt his own novel as a screenplay, but he had difficulty working in the format. He was replaced by Dalton Trumbo, who had been blacklisted as one of the Hollywood 10, and intended to use the pseudonym \"Sam Jackson\". Kirk Douglas insisted that Trumbo be given screen credit for his work, which helped to break the blacklist. Trumbo had been jailed for contempt of Congress in 1950, after which he had survived by writing screenplays under assumed names. Douglas's intervention on his behalf was praised as an act of courage. In his autobiography, Douglas states that this decision was motivated by a meeting that Edward Lewis, Stanley Kubrick, and he had regarding whose names to put against the screenplay in the film credits, given Trumbo's shaky position with Hollywood executives. One idea was to credit ", "Mr. Reliable\n Terry Hayes was attached to produce the film. He showed a script to Nadia Tass, who liked the story and the characters but wanted it rewritten. Hayes made the changes and Tass came on board to direct. Also released as My Entire Life.", "My Life in Ruins\n The script is originally by Mike Reiss, based on his travel experiences, but it was later re-written by Vardalos (My Big Fat Greek Wedding) after she became involved. The film was co-produced by Gary Goetzman and Tom Hanks, and is directed by Donald Petrie. Vardalos has stated that the film was a lifelong dream of hers for she had always wanted to do a film in her family's ancestral homeland.", "Middle-earth in film\n two hours, and offered suggestions in order to achieve this, namely amalgamating Gondor and Rohan. They contacted Hossein Amini to rewrite and threatened to get John Madden or Quentin Tarantino to direct. Jackson believes this was an empty threat to get him to concede to the one-film version. He refused, but his agent Ken Kamins convinced Harvey Weinstein that getting another filmmaker to work on the project will result in further delays and costs, at which point Harvey conceded to give Jackson the opportunity to find another studio to take over. Robert Zemeckis, Universal and DreamWorks declined. Fox were interested, but unwilling to enter a project involving Saul Zaentz, and Sony and ", "Richard Price (writer)\n He wrote the screenplay for the film Child 44, which was released in April 2015. Price did uncredited work on the film American Gangster (2007). Price wrote and conceptualized the 18-minute film surrounding Michael Jackson's \"Bad\" video. He also wrote for the HBO series The Wire. Price won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2008 ceremony for his work on the fifth season of The Wire. He created a police drama series NYC 22 in 2012, it was cancelled after one season. His eight-part HBO miniseries The Night Of premiered in July 2016. Also premiering on ", "Mitchell S. Jackson\n and named an \"Honor Book\" by the BCALA. He has been the recipient of fellowships from TED, the Lannan Foundation, The Center For Fiction, and The Bread Loaf Writer's Conference. Jackson is the co-director, writer, and producer of The Residue Years: A Documentary (2013), a documentary film exploring the autobiographical elements of his novel of the same name. It was an Official Selection of the Portland Film Festival It premiered on the Web at the Literary Hub website. Jackson's short fiction, nonfiction, and poetry have been published in Vice, Gigantic Magazine, Flaunt Magazine, The Frozen Moment: Contemporary Writers on the Choices That Change Our Lives, and New York " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Three Loves in Rio?
[ "Carlos Hugo Christensen" ]
screenwriter
Three Loves in Rio
5,988,419
60
[ { "id": "16215628", "title": "Three Loves in Rio", "text": " Three Loves in Rio (Meus Amores no Rio, Mis amores en Río) is a 1959 Brazilian-Argentine drama film directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen. It was entered into the 9th Berlin International Film Festival.", "score": "1.7865539" }, { "id": "306889", "title": "Rio, I Love You", "text": " The participating directors were Brazilians Carlos Saldanha (Ice Age and Rio), José Padilha (Elite Squad), Andrucha Waddington (The House of Sand) and Fernando Meirelles (City of God), the Lebanese director Nadine Labaki (Caramel), the Mexican screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga (Babel), the Australian director Stephan Elliott (The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert), the Italian director Paolo Sorrentino (The Great Beauty), the American actor and director John Turturro, and the South Korean director Im Sang-soo (A Good Lawyer's Wife, The Housemaid). The opening and closing sequences, plus the transitions were directed by Brazilian Vicente Amorim, while musician Gilberto Gil composed the theme song. Those responsible for producing the film, among them Rio Filme, disclosed that the cost of production was R$20 million.", "score": "1.6519153" }, { "id": "9695232", "title": "Rene Belmonte", "text": " Renê Belmonte (born January 27, 1971 in São Paulo) is a Brazilian TV and movie screenwriter. Belmonte studied advertising at ESPM in São Paulo then studied moviewriting in London at City Lit. After moving to Rio de Janeiro in 2001 he worked at Total Entertainment for three years, evaluating and developing projects in-house. Since 1999 he has been giving screenwriting courses and workshops for different schools and entities. In television he was segment producer and headwriter for the reality show Temptation Island Brazil (for SBT) and staff writer of the comedy show Sob Nova Direção (TV Globo). In 2006 he was the creator and headwriter of the sitcom Avassaladoras for Fox Television and Record. For the big screen he wrote Sexo, amor e traição (2004), directed by Jorge Fernando, and Se eu fosse você (2006), directed by Daniel Filho, two of the biggest hits in the recent Brazilian filmography. His latest works include the German film Showdebola, directed by Alexander Pickl, and Sexo com Amor, directed by Wolf Maya, with a 2008 summer release date. He also wrote the script of Entre Sábanas, a Colombian film by Gustavo Nieto Roa currently filming in Bogotá.", "score": "1.6125224" }, { "id": "306888", "title": "Rio, I Love You", "text": " Rio, I Love You (Rio, Eu Te Amo) is a 2014 Brazilian anthology film starring an ensemble cast of actors of various nationalities. It's the third film in the Cities of Love franchise (following 2006's Paris, je t'aime and the 2008 film New York, I Love You), created and produced by Emmanuel Benbihy.", "score": "1.6056757" }, { "id": "13427817", "title": "Michael James Love", "text": " Tina Modotti for Mick Jagger's Jagged Films and Warner Brothers. In 2010 Love wrote the screenplay for the Spanish language film La Leyenda De Las Arcas released in 2011. Most recently, Michael wrote the original screenplay for the English language historical epic Cristiada directed by Dean Wright and produced by NewLand Films about the Cristero War in Mexico (1926–1929), starring Andy García, Peter O'Toole, Bruce Greenwood, Eva Longoria, and Rubén Blades. \"Cristiada\" aka \"For Greater Glory\" was released internationally by Relativity Media and Arc Entertainment and was nominated for five Alma Awards. As a writer, producer, director, Michael Love made three feature films ", "score": "1.5882581" }, { "id": "16215629", "title": "Three Loves in Rio", "text": "Susana Freyre ; Jardel Filho ; Domingo Alzugaray ; Fábio Cardoso ; Agildo Ribeiro ; Diana Morel ; Dina Lisboa ; Humberto Catalano ; Afonso Stuart ; Blanca Tapia ; Vicente Rubino ; Carlos Infante ; Marga de los Llanos ; Orlando Guy ; Antonio Ventura ; Antonio Camargo ", "score": "1.5642626" }, { "id": "6096680", "title": "Three to Tango", "text": " In March 1998 it was announced Matthew Perry and Neve Campbell were in talks with Outlaw Productions and Warner Bros. to headline Three to Tango written by Rodney Patrick Vaccaro, with rewrite by Aileen Brosh. The film was slated to be the directorial debut of Damon Santostefano following dropping out of directing Tristar's Idle Hands.", "score": "1.5560074" }, { "id": "31246332", "title": "Primum Entertainment Group", "text": " At the Cannes Film Festival in May 2009, Primum Entertainment Group acquired the license to produce Rio, Eu Te Amo the next film in the series of Cities of Love motion pictures following Paris, je t'aime and New York, I Love You. This film is currently in development.", "score": "1.5435886" }, { "id": "26697341", "title": "Manoel de Oliveira", "text": " life relationship between Fanny Owen, Amor de Perdição author Camilo Castelo Branco and Branco's best friend Jose Augusto. Oliveira's wife was a distant relative of Owen and had access to private letter's written by all three protagonists in the film. The film was screened to great acclaim at the Director's Fortnight at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival and furthered Oliveira's global recognition. In addition to Francisca, Oliveira adapted six other novels or stories from author Agustina Bessa-Luís, as well as collaborated on the screenplay for the documentary Visita ou Memórias e Confissões. This was also the first film which Oliveira ", "score": "1.5414988" }, { "id": "30959656", "title": "The Third Bank of the River", "text": " The Third Bank of the River (A Terceira Margem do Rio) is a 1994 Brazilian drama film directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos. It is based on the short stories \"A Menina de Lá\", \"Os Irmãos Dagobé\", \"Fatalidade\", \"Seqüência\", and \"A Terceira Margem do Rio\" by João Guimarães Rosa compiled into the book Primeiras Estórias. It was entered into the 44th Berlin International Film Festival.", "score": "1.5325842" }, { "id": "31091024", "title": "Richard Alfieri", "text": " Prize at the New York Film and Television Festival and a Writers Guild Award nomination for his teleplay for the film A Friendship in Vienna. He also received both a Writers Guild Award and an Emmy Award nomination for his work on Norman Lear’s ABC special I Love Liberty. He wrote the feature film Echoes and the novel Ricardo - Diary of a Matinee Idol, which he adapted into the screenplay Moonlight Blonde. He also wrote the film adaptation of Robert James Waller's novel Puerto Vallarta Squeeze. His play \"The Sisters\", suggested by Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters, premiered at the Pasadena Playhouse. Alfieri adapted the ", "score": "1.5323579" }, { "id": "26363460", "title": "Khaled Mouzanar", "text": "2014: Rio, I Love You (Co-Writer of the segment \"O Milagre\") ; 2018: Capernaum (film) (Co-Writer) ; 2020: Mayroun and the Unicorn (short film for Netflix Homemade serie) (Co-Director) ", "score": "1.5311549" }, { "id": "2606449", "title": "Three Men of the River", "text": " Three Men of the River (Tres hombres del río) is a 1943 Argentine crime drama film directed by Mario Soffici and starring Elisa Galvé and José Olarra. The film is based on an old Argentine legend about an Aztec girl who is raped and murdered by vandals and dumped in a river. A flower blossoms at the place in which she was killed and misfortune falls upon the culprits. Three Men of the River was one of the most critically acclaimed films of 1943 in Argentina, winning five Silver Condor awards at the 1944 Argentine Film Critics Association Awards, with cinematographers Leo Fleider and Francis Boeniger winning the Silver Condor Awards for Best Camera Operator and Best Cinematography respectively, and Leticia Scuri winning the Silver Condor Award for Best Supporting Actress. The film also won Best Original Screenplay and Best Music. At the Argentine Academy of Cinematography Arts and Sciences awards it also won Best Director for Soffici, Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress for Scuri, and Best Cinematography and Best Camera Operator for Boeniger and Fleider.", "score": "1.5289471" }, { "id": "13388781", "title": "Fernanda Montenegro", "text": " known as Rio's Love Song), which garnered its director Carlos \"Cacá\" Diegues a Best Director Award in the Havana Film Festival. She then moved, in 1997, to a small appearance in O Que é Isso, Companheiro? (internationally known as Four Days in September), which starred American actor Alan Arkin and chronicled the kidnapping of American consul Charles Burke Elbrick by rebellious political activists who opposed the military dictatorship in Brazil, based on the memoirs of Brazilian politician Fernando Gabeira. The movie had significant international repercussion, welcoming nominations to the Golden Bear in the Berlin International Film Festival and to the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.", "score": "1.5271201" }, { "id": "30730621", "title": "Aluizio Abranches", "text": " Aluizio Abranches is a Brazilian film director. Graduated in cinema at London Film School and in economics at Universidade Cândido Mendes, Aluizio became known for taking to the cinema screens challenging projects, both in their strategies of creation as well in their themes, with a prestigious crew and great cast. His mostly recurrent themes are family and love, as a counterpoint to a world full of violence, fear and intolerance. A Glass of Rage is based on the novel of the Brazilian writer Raduan Nassar. The Three Marias is a shakespearean tragedy in the countryside of Pernambuco. From Beginning to End addresses unconditional love between two brothers and it is the third film that Aluizio Works with Julia Lemmertz, who stars the movie with Fábio Assunção, Rafael Cardoso and João Gabriel Vasconcellos. In Happily Married, Aluizio rejoins the partnership with Alexandre Borges, who stars in the comedy with Camila Morgado.", "score": "1.5171511" }, { "id": "5233974", "title": "Letters from Three Lovers", "text": " Letters from Three Lovers is a 1973 made-for-television drama film directed by John Erman. An ABC Movie of the Week and a sequel to The Letters (1973), the film is co-produced by Aaron Spelling, written by Ann Marcus and stars Martin Sheen, Belinda Montgomery, Robert Sterling, June Allyson, Ken Berry and Juliet Mills, among others.", "score": "1.5126308" }, { "id": "13427816", "title": "Michael James Love", "text": " Michael James Love (aka Michael Love) is a screenwriter, producer, and director Love grew up in Mexico City of American parents and attended Cal Arts at Valencia California. In 1987 Love wrote the screenplay for the Academy Award-nominated Gaby: A True Story directed by Luis Mandoki about Gabriela Brimmer, the Mexican poet with cerebral palsy, starring Liv Ullmann, Robert Loggia, and Norma Aleandro. In 1993 Love wrote the original screenplays for the ABC movie of the week Shattering the Silence and in 1996 the Spanish-language feature film Extranos Caminos. Love has written many other screenplays, including Mavericks for Playtone, Icon and Universal Studios, ", "score": "1.5106423" }, { "id": "12755905", "title": "That Man from Rio", "text": " The film was nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the Academy Awards.", "score": "1.5083773" }, { "id": "13424329", "title": "Brazil (1985 film)", "text": " Gilliam developed the story and wrote the first draft of the screenplay with Charles Alverson, who was paid for his work but was ultimately uncredited in the final film. For nearly 20 years, Gilliam denied that Alverson had made any material contribution to the script. When the first draft was published and original in-progress documents emerged from Alverson's files, however, Gilliam begrudgingly changed his story. This was too late for either credit on the film or a listing on the failed Oscar nomination for Alverson; he has said that he would not have minded the Oscar nomination, even though he didn't think much of the script or the finished film. Gilliam, McKeown, and Stoppard ", "score": "1.5059524" }, { "id": "1943345", "title": "Laura Malin", "text": " Laura started writing for film and television projects out of the country, in Angola, where she wrote the TV series called Novos Quilombos; Paris, where she developed a drama series for mobiles; and in the US. Laura worked as a screenwriter on the set of The River Murders, a feature film she adapted for a Brazilian character on location (Spokane, WA). In 2009, Laura was Artistic Director at the first edition of the Hollywood Brazilian Film Festival’s first edition in Los Angeles. The following year, Laura wrote and produced the short film Viver! that premiered at the Cannes Short Film Corner.", "score": "1.5022948" } ]
[ "Three Loves in Rio\n Three Loves in Rio (Meus Amores no Rio, Mis amores en Río) is a 1959 Brazilian-Argentine drama film directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen. It was entered into the 9th Berlin International Film Festival.", "Rio, I Love You\n The participating directors were Brazilians Carlos Saldanha (Ice Age and Rio), José Padilha (Elite Squad), Andrucha Waddington (The House of Sand) and Fernando Meirelles (City of God), the Lebanese director Nadine Labaki (Caramel), the Mexican screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga (Babel), the Australian director Stephan Elliott (The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert), the Italian director Paolo Sorrentino (The Great Beauty), the American actor and director John Turturro, and the South Korean director Im Sang-soo (A Good Lawyer's Wife, The Housemaid). The opening and closing sequences, plus the transitions were directed by Brazilian Vicente Amorim, while musician Gilberto Gil composed the theme song. Those responsible for producing the film, among them Rio Filme, disclosed that the cost of production was R$20 million.", "Rene Belmonte\n Renê Belmonte (born January 27, 1971 in São Paulo) is a Brazilian TV and movie screenwriter. Belmonte studied advertising at ESPM in São Paulo then studied moviewriting in London at City Lit. After moving to Rio de Janeiro in 2001 he worked at Total Entertainment for three years, evaluating and developing projects in-house. Since 1999 he has been giving screenwriting courses and workshops for different schools and entities. In television he was segment producer and headwriter for the reality show Temptation Island Brazil (for SBT) and staff writer of the comedy show Sob Nova Direção (TV Globo). In 2006 he was the creator and headwriter of the sitcom Avassaladoras for Fox Television and Record. For the big screen he wrote Sexo, amor e traição (2004), directed by Jorge Fernando, and Se eu fosse você (2006), directed by Daniel Filho, two of the biggest hits in the recent Brazilian filmography. His latest works include the German film Showdebola, directed by Alexander Pickl, and Sexo com Amor, directed by Wolf Maya, with a 2008 summer release date. He also wrote the script of Entre Sábanas, a Colombian film by Gustavo Nieto Roa currently filming in Bogotá.", "Rio, I Love You\n Rio, I Love You (Rio, Eu Te Amo) is a 2014 Brazilian anthology film starring an ensemble cast of actors of various nationalities. It's the third film in the Cities of Love franchise (following 2006's Paris, je t'aime and the 2008 film New York, I Love You), created and produced by Emmanuel Benbihy.", "Michael James Love\n Tina Modotti for Mick Jagger's Jagged Films and Warner Brothers. In 2010 Love wrote the screenplay for the Spanish language film La Leyenda De Las Arcas released in 2011. Most recently, Michael wrote the original screenplay for the English language historical epic Cristiada directed by Dean Wright and produced by NewLand Films about the Cristero War in Mexico (1926–1929), starring Andy García, Peter O'Toole, Bruce Greenwood, Eva Longoria, and Rubén Blades. \"Cristiada\" aka \"For Greater Glory\" was released internationally by Relativity Media and Arc Entertainment and was nominated for five Alma Awards. As a writer, producer, director, Michael Love made three feature films ", "Three Loves in Rio\nSusana Freyre ; Jardel Filho ; Domingo Alzugaray ; Fábio Cardoso ; Agildo Ribeiro ; Diana Morel ; Dina Lisboa ; Humberto Catalano ; Afonso Stuart ; Blanca Tapia ; Vicente Rubino ; Carlos Infante ; Marga de los Llanos ; Orlando Guy ; Antonio Ventura ; Antonio Camargo ", "Three to Tango\n In March 1998 it was announced Matthew Perry and Neve Campbell were in talks with Outlaw Productions and Warner Bros. to headline Three to Tango written by Rodney Patrick Vaccaro, with rewrite by Aileen Brosh. The film was slated to be the directorial debut of Damon Santostefano following dropping out of directing Tristar's Idle Hands.", "Primum Entertainment Group\n At the Cannes Film Festival in May 2009, Primum Entertainment Group acquired the license to produce Rio, Eu Te Amo the next film in the series of Cities of Love motion pictures following Paris, je t'aime and New York, I Love You. This film is currently in development.", "Manoel de Oliveira\n life relationship between Fanny Owen, Amor de Perdição author Camilo Castelo Branco and Branco's best friend Jose Augusto. Oliveira's wife was a distant relative of Owen and had access to private letter's written by all three protagonists in the film. The film was screened to great acclaim at the Director's Fortnight at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival and furthered Oliveira's global recognition. In addition to Francisca, Oliveira adapted six other novels or stories from author Agustina Bessa-Luís, as well as collaborated on the screenplay for the documentary Visita ou Memórias e Confissões. This was also the first film which Oliveira ", "The Third Bank of the River\n The Third Bank of the River (A Terceira Margem do Rio) is a 1994 Brazilian drama film directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos. It is based on the short stories \"A Menina de Lá\", \"Os Irmãos Dagobé\", \"Fatalidade\", \"Seqüência\", and \"A Terceira Margem do Rio\" by João Guimarães Rosa compiled into the book Primeiras Estórias. It was entered into the 44th Berlin International Film Festival.", "Richard Alfieri\n Prize at the New York Film and Television Festival and a Writers Guild Award nomination for his teleplay for the film A Friendship in Vienna. He also received both a Writers Guild Award and an Emmy Award nomination for his work on Norman Lear’s ABC special I Love Liberty. He wrote the feature film Echoes and the novel Ricardo - Diary of a Matinee Idol, which he adapted into the screenplay Moonlight Blonde. He also wrote the film adaptation of Robert James Waller's novel Puerto Vallarta Squeeze. His play \"The Sisters\", suggested by Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters, premiered at the Pasadena Playhouse. Alfieri adapted the ", "Khaled Mouzanar\n2014: Rio, I Love You (Co-Writer of the segment \"O Milagre\") ; 2018: Capernaum (film) (Co-Writer) ; 2020: Mayroun and the Unicorn (short film for Netflix Homemade serie) (Co-Director) ", "Three Men of the River\n Three Men of the River (Tres hombres del río) is a 1943 Argentine crime drama film directed by Mario Soffici and starring Elisa Galvé and José Olarra. The film is based on an old Argentine legend about an Aztec girl who is raped and murdered by vandals and dumped in a river. A flower blossoms at the place in which she was killed and misfortune falls upon the culprits. Three Men of the River was one of the most critically acclaimed films of 1943 in Argentina, winning five Silver Condor awards at the 1944 Argentine Film Critics Association Awards, with cinematographers Leo Fleider and Francis Boeniger winning the Silver Condor Awards for Best Camera Operator and Best Cinematography respectively, and Leticia Scuri winning the Silver Condor Award for Best Supporting Actress. The film also won Best Original Screenplay and Best Music. At the Argentine Academy of Cinematography Arts and Sciences awards it also won Best Director for Soffici, Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress for Scuri, and Best Cinematography and Best Camera Operator for Boeniger and Fleider.", "Fernanda Montenegro\n known as Rio's Love Song), which garnered its director Carlos \"Cacá\" Diegues a Best Director Award in the Havana Film Festival. She then moved, in 1997, to a small appearance in O Que é Isso, Companheiro? (internationally known as Four Days in September), which starred American actor Alan Arkin and chronicled the kidnapping of American consul Charles Burke Elbrick by rebellious political activists who opposed the military dictatorship in Brazil, based on the memoirs of Brazilian politician Fernando Gabeira. The movie had significant international repercussion, welcoming nominations to the Golden Bear in the Berlin International Film Festival and to the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.", "Aluizio Abranches\n Aluizio Abranches is a Brazilian film director. Graduated in cinema at London Film School and in economics at Universidade Cândido Mendes, Aluizio became known for taking to the cinema screens challenging projects, both in their strategies of creation as well in their themes, with a prestigious crew and great cast. His mostly recurrent themes are family and love, as a counterpoint to a world full of violence, fear and intolerance. A Glass of Rage is based on the novel of the Brazilian writer Raduan Nassar. The Three Marias is a shakespearean tragedy in the countryside of Pernambuco. From Beginning to End addresses unconditional love between two brothers and it is the third film that Aluizio Works with Julia Lemmertz, who stars the movie with Fábio Assunção, Rafael Cardoso and João Gabriel Vasconcellos. In Happily Married, Aluizio rejoins the partnership with Alexandre Borges, who stars in the comedy with Camila Morgado.", "Letters from Three Lovers\n Letters from Three Lovers is a 1973 made-for-television drama film directed by John Erman. An ABC Movie of the Week and a sequel to The Letters (1973), the film is co-produced by Aaron Spelling, written by Ann Marcus and stars Martin Sheen, Belinda Montgomery, Robert Sterling, June Allyson, Ken Berry and Juliet Mills, among others.", "Michael James Love\n Michael James Love (aka Michael Love) is a screenwriter, producer, and director Love grew up in Mexico City of American parents and attended Cal Arts at Valencia California. In 1987 Love wrote the screenplay for the Academy Award-nominated Gaby: A True Story directed by Luis Mandoki about Gabriela Brimmer, the Mexican poet with cerebral palsy, starring Liv Ullmann, Robert Loggia, and Norma Aleandro. In 1993 Love wrote the original screenplays for the ABC movie of the week Shattering the Silence and in 1996 the Spanish-language feature film Extranos Caminos. Love has written many other screenplays, including Mavericks for Playtone, Icon and Universal Studios, ", "That Man from Rio\n The film was nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the Academy Awards.", "Brazil (1985 film)\n Gilliam developed the story and wrote the first draft of the screenplay with Charles Alverson, who was paid for his work but was ultimately uncredited in the final film. For nearly 20 years, Gilliam denied that Alverson had made any material contribution to the script. When the first draft was published and original in-progress documents emerged from Alverson's files, however, Gilliam begrudgingly changed his story. This was too late for either credit on the film or a listing on the failed Oscar nomination for Alverson; he has said that he would not have minded the Oscar nomination, even though he didn't think much of the script or the finished film. Gilliam, McKeown, and Stoppard ", "Laura Malin\n Laura started writing for film and television projects out of the country, in Angola, where she wrote the TV series called Novos Quilombos; Paris, where she developed a drama series for mobiles; and in the US. Laura worked as a screenwriter on the set of The River Murders, a feature film she adapted for a Brazilian character on location (Spokane, WA). In 2009, Laura was Artistic Director at the first edition of the Hollywood Brazilian Film Festival’s first edition in Los Angeles. The following year, Laura wrote and produced the short film Viver! that premiered at the Cannes Short Film Corner." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Guilty?
[ "Howard Gordon", "Evan Katz" ]
screenwriter
Guilty (Awake)
4,294,775
69
[ { "id": "7095259", "title": "Linda Arvidson", "text": " Arvidson wrote screenplays, including the one for the five-reel Who's Guilty Now? She was an associate editor of Film Fun and a film critic for Leslie's Magazine, and she wrote the book When the Movies Were Young.", "score": "1.688261" }, { "id": "11706811", "title": "Guilty (Awake)", "text": " The episode was written by series executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon and consulting producer Evan Katz, and was directed by Jeffrey Reiner. It marked both Gordon and Katz's first writing credit in the series, and director Reiner's second directing credit, with the last episode he directed being \"The Little Guy\", the second episode aired on March 8, 2012. This is the first episode that was not written by series creator and executive producer Kyle Killen.", "score": "1.6059334" }, { "id": "30690905", "title": "The Guilty (2000 film)", "text": " The Guilty is a 2000 American crime film directed by Anthony Waller and starring Bill Pullman, Devon Sawa, Gabrielle Anwar, Angela Featherstone and Joanne Whalley. The film is a remake of the 1992 UK TV two-part telemovie of the same name and identical plot starring Michael Kitchen, Sean Gallagher, Caroline Catz and Carol Starks.", "score": "1.6019685" }, { "id": "8811339", "title": "The Guilty (1947 film)", "text": " The Guilty is a 1947 film noir directed by John Reinhardt, based on Cornell Woolrich's short story \"Two Men in a Furnished Room\". The film was produced by oil millionaire Jack Wrather, the husband of lead actress Bonita Granville.", "score": "1.575717" }, { "id": "28994992", "title": "Guilt (Revenge)", "text": " The episode was written by Nikki Toscano, while being directed by CSI: Crime Scene Investigation veteran Kenneth Fink.", "score": "1.5744259" }, { "id": "12556895", "title": "Guilty Conscience (film)", "text": " Guilty Conscience is a 1985 American television film, produced by Robert A. Papazian, written by Richard Levinson and William Link, directed by David Greene, starring Anthony Hopkins, Blythe Danner and Swoosie Kurtz. The film score was composed by Billy Goldenberg. It premiered on April 2, 1985 on CBS. The film is a drama, but also a mystery, with many plot twists and turns.", "score": "1.5699906" }, { "id": "31465599", "title": "The Guilty (Baldacci novel)", "text": " The Guilty is thriller novel written by David Baldacci. It is the fourth installment to feature Will Robie, a highly skilled U.S. Government assassin. The book was released on November 17, 2015 by Grand Central Publishing.", "score": "1.5636756" }, { "id": "31878464", "title": "The Guilty (2021 film)", "text": " The Guilty is a 2021 American crime thriller film directed and produced by Antoine Fuqua, from a screenplay by Nic Pizzolatto. A remake of the 2018 Danish film of the same name, the film stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Christina Vidal, with the voices of Ethan Hawke, Riley Keough, Eli Goree, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Paul Dano, and Peter Sarsgaard. The Guilty had its world premiere at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival on September 11, 2021. The film was released in a limited release on September 24, 2021, then digitally on Netflix on October 1. It received mostly positive reviews from critics, who praised Gyllenhaal's performance but still felt that the remake was inferior to the original film.", "score": "1.5515194" }, { "id": "30665023", "title": "The Guilty (2018 film)", "text": " The Guilty (Den skyldige) is a 2018 Danish crime thriller film co-written and directed by Gustav Möller, his debut film. It was screened in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition section at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. The film was distributed in the U.S. by Magnolia Pictures. It was selected as the Danish submission for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards, making the December shortlist.", "score": "1.5425892" }, { "id": "25536072", "title": "Guilty by Suspicion", "text": " Guilty by Suspicion is a 1991 American drama film about the Hollywood blacklist, McCarthyism, and the activities of the House Un-American Activities Committee. Written and directed by Irwin Winkler, it stars Robert De Niro, Annette Bening, and George Wendt. The character of David Merrill was inspired by the experiences of John Berry during the Hollywood blacklist era. The film was entered into the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.", "score": "1.5216393" }, { "id": "31878472", "title": "The Guilty (2021 film)", "text": " In December 2018, it was announced Jake Gyllenhaal had acquired rights to the 2018 Danish thriller film The Guilty, and would star in and produce a remake under his Nine Stories Productions banner, alongside Bold Films. In September 2020, it was announced Antoine Fuqua would direct and produce the film, from a screenplay by Nic Pizzolatto. Later that month, Netflix acquired worldwide rights to the film for $30 million. In November 2020, Ethan Hawke, Peter Sarsgaard, Riley Keough, Paul Dano, Byron Bowers, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, David Castaneda, Christina Vidal, Adrian Martinez, Bill Burr, Beau Knapp and Edi Patterson joined the cast of the film. Principal photography began in Los Angeles in November 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and lasted for 11 days. Three days before production was set to begin, a person in contact with director Antoine Fuqua tested positive for COVID-19. Fuqua tested negative subsequently, so the production was still on schedule. He directed the entire film from a van with screens that had access to the cameras, maintaining contact with the cast and the crew.", "score": "1.509596" }, { "id": "6601581", "title": "Presumed Guilty (film)", "text": " The film was produced chiefly by Roberto Hernández and Layda Negrete. Hernández and Negrete (LL.M. 1996, M.P.P. 1998) are candidates for PhDs in Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. They are married and have two daughters.", "score": "1.5076444" }, { "id": "11706804", "title": "Guilty (Awake)", "text": " \"Guilty\" is the third episode of the American police procedural drama television series Awake. The episode first aired on March 15, 2012 in the United States on NBC, and was simultaneously broadcast on Global in Canada. It was written by series executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon and consulting producer Evan Katz, and was directed by Jeffrey Reiner. \"Guilty\" was well received by television critics, who praised its storylines, noting the script to be interesting. The episode garnered 5.12 million viewers in the United States and a 1.6/4 rating in the 18–49 demographic, according to Nielsen ratings. It ranked second in its timeslot of the night, behind Private Practice on ABC. The show centers on Michael Britten ", "score": "1.5038229" }, { "id": "30665035", "title": "The Guilty (2018 film)", "text": " After The Guiltys debut, Möller received requests for remake rights from around the world, but declined personal involvement in any of them, preferring instead to work on new projects. In 2018, it was announced that Nine Stories and Jake Gyllenhaal had bought the American rights to The Guilty with Gyllenhaal set to star. In 2020, it was announced the film would be directed by Antoine Fuqua and be adapted by Nic Pizzolatto. The film was shot at a single Los Angeles location sometime in November. Peter Sarsgaard, Ethan Hawke, and Riley Keough were confirmed to join the cast. In September 2020, Netflix acquired worldwide distribution rights for the film for $30 million.", "score": "1.5033927" }, { "id": "12556896", "title": "Guilty Conscience (film)", "text": " Arthur Jamison (Anthony Hopkins), a wealthy criminal defence attorney, is facing a costly divorce from his wife, Louise (Blythe Danner). Arthur deals with the predicament by imagining numerous schemes in which he kills her. As a defense attorney, Arthur is familiar with both the courts and the minds of criminals, and he spends much of the film consulting an officious imaginary version of himself (a double played by Donegan Smith) for the perfect scheme to rid himself of Louise. Arthur runs each murder, or the subsequent trial, through in his mind, searching for problems, loopholes, and the elusive watertight alibi. Arthur's mistress, Jackie Willis (Swoosie Kurtz), meets up with Louise in secret. The two concoct a scheme to kill Arthur. They confront ", "score": "1.5026217" }, { "id": "6228853", "title": "Guilty (2011 film)", "text": " Guilty (Présumé coupable, ) is a 2011 French drama film directed by Vincent Garenq about the Outreau trial. Garenq was nominated for the 2012 Best Writing (Adaptation) César Award and Philippe Torreton was nominated as Best Actor.", "score": "1.5018814" }, { "id": "30463859", "title": "Richard Collins (screenwriter)", "text": " Richard J. Collins (July 20, 1914 – February 14, 2013) was an American producer, director and screenwriter prominent in Hollywood during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. He worked on several notable television programs including Bonanza, General Electric Theater, Matlock and Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre. He was married to actress Dorothy Comingore from 1939 until 1945. One of the characters in the film Guilty by Suspicion was based on his character although he and Dorothy Comingore were long divorced before the HUAC hearings.", "score": "1.4872954" }, { "id": "25983859", "title": "The Verdict", "text": " Film rights to the novel were bought by the team of Richard Zanuck and David Brown. A number of actors, including Roy Scheider, William Holden, Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant and Dustin Hoffman, expressed interest in the project because of the strength of the lead role. Arthur Hiller was originally attached to direct while David Mamet hired to write a screenplay. Though Mamet had already made a name for himself in the theater, he was still new to screenwriting. The producers were uncertain whether Mamet would take the job given the standards he set with his own previous work, but according ", "score": "1.4682133" }, { "id": "5797595", "title": "Guilty (2020 film)", "text": " Guilty is a 2020 Indian Hindi-language thriller drama film directed by Ruchi Narain and written by Ruchi Narain, Kanika Dhillon and Atika Chohan. Starring Kiara Advani and several others, the film follows the story of a songwriter whose boyfriend is accused of rape during the era of #MeToo. The film is the first production venture of Dharmatic, the digital arm of Karan Johar's Dharma Productions. It was released on 6 March 2020 on Netflix.", "score": "1.4655794" }, { "id": "16203085", "title": "Paul Chitlik", "text": " In 1984 he wrote his second play, “Casanova Goldberg,” which received a staged reading in Los Angeles, but before it could be produced, Chitlik did a career about-face and began to write for television, first as the executive story editor for a syndicated series, \"Guilty or Innocent,\" and later as a staff writer with writing partner, Jeremy Bertrand Finch, for the Showtime series,\"Brothers.\" Chitlik and Finch wrote for CBS' \"The Twilight Zone,\" \"Who's the Boss?,\" and NBC's \"Amen.\" Chitlik joined the Writers Guild of America, west, in 1986, and has been an active member since, serving on the Academic Liaison Committee, the Publications Board, and, most recently, on the Writers with Disabilities Committee. In 1999 he assisted the Guild’s public ", "score": "1.4654145" } ]
[ "Linda Arvidson\n Arvidson wrote screenplays, including the one for the five-reel Who's Guilty Now? She was an associate editor of Film Fun and a film critic for Leslie's Magazine, and she wrote the book When the Movies Were Young.", "Guilty (Awake)\n The episode was written by series executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon and consulting producer Evan Katz, and was directed by Jeffrey Reiner. It marked both Gordon and Katz's first writing credit in the series, and director Reiner's second directing credit, with the last episode he directed being \"The Little Guy\", the second episode aired on March 8, 2012. This is the first episode that was not written by series creator and executive producer Kyle Killen.", "The Guilty (2000 film)\n The Guilty is a 2000 American crime film directed by Anthony Waller and starring Bill Pullman, Devon Sawa, Gabrielle Anwar, Angela Featherstone and Joanne Whalley. The film is a remake of the 1992 UK TV two-part telemovie of the same name and identical plot starring Michael Kitchen, Sean Gallagher, Caroline Catz and Carol Starks.", "The Guilty (1947 film)\n The Guilty is a 1947 film noir directed by John Reinhardt, based on Cornell Woolrich's short story \"Two Men in a Furnished Room\". The film was produced by oil millionaire Jack Wrather, the husband of lead actress Bonita Granville.", "Guilt (Revenge)\n The episode was written by Nikki Toscano, while being directed by CSI: Crime Scene Investigation veteran Kenneth Fink.", "Guilty Conscience (film)\n Guilty Conscience is a 1985 American television film, produced by Robert A. Papazian, written by Richard Levinson and William Link, directed by David Greene, starring Anthony Hopkins, Blythe Danner and Swoosie Kurtz. The film score was composed by Billy Goldenberg. It premiered on April 2, 1985 on CBS. The film is a drama, but also a mystery, with many plot twists and turns.", "The Guilty (Baldacci novel)\n The Guilty is thriller novel written by David Baldacci. It is the fourth installment to feature Will Robie, a highly skilled U.S. Government assassin. The book was released on November 17, 2015 by Grand Central Publishing.", "The Guilty (2021 film)\n The Guilty is a 2021 American crime thriller film directed and produced by Antoine Fuqua, from a screenplay by Nic Pizzolatto. A remake of the 2018 Danish film of the same name, the film stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Christina Vidal, with the voices of Ethan Hawke, Riley Keough, Eli Goree, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Paul Dano, and Peter Sarsgaard. The Guilty had its world premiere at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival on September 11, 2021. The film was released in a limited release on September 24, 2021, then digitally on Netflix on October 1. It received mostly positive reviews from critics, who praised Gyllenhaal's performance but still felt that the remake was inferior to the original film.", "The Guilty (2018 film)\n The Guilty (Den skyldige) is a 2018 Danish crime thriller film co-written and directed by Gustav Möller, his debut film. It was screened in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition section at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. The film was distributed in the U.S. by Magnolia Pictures. It was selected as the Danish submission for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards, making the December shortlist.", "Guilty by Suspicion\n Guilty by Suspicion is a 1991 American drama film about the Hollywood blacklist, McCarthyism, and the activities of the House Un-American Activities Committee. Written and directed by Irwin Winkler, it stars Robert De Niro, Annette Bening, and George Wendt. The character of David Merrill was inspired by the experiences of John Berry during the Hollywood blacklist era. The film was entered into the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.", "The Guilty (2021 film)\n In December 2018, it was announced Jake Gyllenhaal had acquired rights to the 2018 Danish thriller film The Guilty, and would star in and produce a remake under his Nine Stories Productions banner, alongside Bold Films. In September 2020, it was announced Antoine Fuqua would direct and produce the film, from a screenplay by Nic Pizzolatto. Later that month, Netflix acquired worldwide rights to the film for $30 million. In November 2020, Ethan Hawke, Peter Sarsgaard, Riley Keough, Paul Dano, Byron Bowers, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, David Castaneda, Christina Vidal, Adrian Martinez, Bill Burr, Beau Knapp and Edi Patterson joined the cast of the film. Principal photography began in Los Angeles in November 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and lasted for 11 days. Three days before production was set to begin, a person in contact with director Antoine Fuqua tested positive for COVID-19. Fuqua tested negative subsequently, so the production was still on schedule. He directed the entire film from a van with screens that had access to the cameras, maintaining contact with the cast and the crew.", "Presumed Guilty (film)\n The film was produced chiefly by Roberto Hernández and Layda Negrete. Hernández and Negrete (LL.M. 1996, M.P.P. 1998) are candidates for PhDs in Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. They are married and have two daughters.", "Guilty (Awake)\n \"Guilty\" is the third episode of the American police procedural drama television series Awake. The episode first aired on March 15, 2012 in the United States on NBC, and was simultaneously broadcast on Global in Canada. It was written by series executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon and consulting producer Evan Katz, and was directed by Jeffrey Reiner. \"Guilty\" was well received by television critics, who praised its storylines, noting the script to be interesting. The episode garnered 5.12 million viewers in the United States and a 1.6/4 rating in the 18–49 demographic, according to Nielsen ratings. It ranked second in its timeslot of the night, behind Private Practice on ABC. The show centers on Michael Britten ", "The Guilty (2018 film)\n After The Guiltys debut, Möller received requests for remake rights from around the world, but declined personal involvement in any of them, preferring instead to work on new projects. In 2018, it was announced that Nine Stories and Jake Gyllenhaal had bought the American rights to The Guilty with Gyllenhaal set to star. In 2020, it was announced the film would be directed by Antoine Fuqua and be adapted by Nic Pizzolatto. The film was shot at a single Los Angeles location sometime in November. Peter Sarsgaard, Ethan Hawke, and Riley Keough were confirmed to join the cast. In September 2020, Netflix acquired worldwide distribution rights for the film for $30 million.", "Guilty Conscience (film)\n Arthur Jamison (Anthony Hopkins), a wealthy criminal defence attorney, is facing a costly divorce from his wife, Louise (Blythe Danner). Arthur deals with the predicament by imagining numerous schemes in which he kills her. As a defense attorney, Arthur is familiar with both the courts and the minds of criminals, and he spends much of the film consulting an officious imaginary version of himself (a double played by Donegan Smith) for the perfect scheme to rid himself of Louise. Arthur runs each murder, or the subsequent trial, through in his mind, searching for problems, loopholes, and the elusive watertight alibi. Arthur's mistress, Jackie Willis (Swoosie Kurtz), meets up with Louise in secret. The two concoct a scheme to kill Arthur. They confront ", "Guilty (2011 film)\n Guilty (Présumé coupable, ) is a 2011 French drama film directed by Vincent Garenq about the Outreau trial. Garenq was nominated for the 2012 Best Writing (Adaptation) César Award and Philippe Torreton was nominated as Best Actor.", "Richard Collins (screenwriter)\n Richard J. Collins (July 20, 1914 – February 14, 2013) was an American producer, director and screenwriter prominent in Hollywood during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. He worked on several notable television programs including Bonanza, General Electric Theater, Matlock and Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre. He was married to actress Dorothy Comingore from 1939 until 1945. One of the characters in the film Guilty by Suspicion was based on his character although he and Dorothy Comingore were long divorced before the HUAC hearings.", "The Verdict\n Film rights to the novel were bought by the team of Richard Zanuck and David Brown. A number of actors, including Roy Scheider, William Holden, Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant and Dustin Hoffman, expressed interest in the project because of the strength of the lead role. Arthur Hiller was originally attached to direct while David Mamet hired to write a screenplay. Though Mamet had already made a name for himself in the theater, he was still new to screenwriting. The producers were uncertain whether Mamet would take the job given the standards he set with his own previous work, but according ", "Guilty (2020 film)\n Guilty is a 2020 Indian Hindi-language thriller drama film directed by Ruchi Narain and written by Ruchi Narain, Kanika Dhillon and Atika Chohan. Starring Kiara Advani and several others, the film follows the story of a songwriter whose boyfriend is accused of rape during the era of #MeToo. The film is the first production venture of Dharmatic, the digital arm of Karan Johar's Dharma Productions. It was released on 6 March 2020 on Netflix.", "Paul Chitlik\n In 1984 he wrote his second play, “Casanova Goldberg,” which received a staged reading in Los Angeles, but before it could be produced, Chitlik did a career about-face and began to write for television, first as the executive story editor for a syndicated series, \"Guilty or Innocent,\" and later as a staff writer with writing partner, Jeremy Bertrand Finch, for the Showtime series,\"Brothers.\" Chitlik and Finch wrote for CBS' \"The Twilight Zone,\" \"Who's the Boss?,\" and NBC's \"Amen.\" Chitlik joined the Writers Guild of America, west, in 1986, and has been an active member since, serving on the Academic Liaison Committee, the Publications Board, and, most recently, on the Writers with Disabilities Committee. In 1999 he assisted the Guild’s public " ]
Who was the screenwriter for The Return?
[ "Antun Vrdoljak" ]
screenwriter
The Return (1979 film)
5,951,428
98
[ { "id": "11795058", "title": "The Return (The Office)", "text": " \"The Return\" was written by Michael Schur, Lee Eisenberg, and Gene Stupnitsky, while series creator and executive producer Greg Daniels directed and Dean Holland edited. The original title of this episode was \"Oscar's Return\", a reference to the reappearance of actor Oscar Nunez, who had temporarily left the series after the season premiere. Nunez spent the interim working on the Comedy Central series Halfway Home. It was the last episode Daniels filmed before the Thanksgiving holiday, the start of an eight-week break for the cast and crew. Then-president of NBC Entertainment Kevin Reilly played Dwight's first interviewer. Ed Helms noted in the audio commentary that his mother had trouble watching a string of episodes that included \"The Return\" because ", "score": "1.5486664" }, { "id": "3131436", "title": "The Returned (2013 film)", "text": " The Returned (Retornados) is a 2013 Spanish-Canadian thriller film directed by Manuel Carballo, written by Hatem Khraiche, and starring Emily Hampshire, Kris Holden-Ried, Shawn Doyle, and Claudia Bassols. When a rare and difficult to obtain medicine that requires daily doses to stave off the effects of a zombie infection runs low, a physician (Hampshire) and her infected husband (Holden-Ried) go on the run to avoid angry demonstrators.", "score": "1.5184399" }, { "id": "6069285", "title": "Return (2011 film)", "text": " Return is a 2011 independent film about an American reservist, wife and mother returning home from her tour of duty in the Middle East. The film was written and directed by Liza Johnson, and stars Linda Cardellini, Michael Shannon and John Slattery. It is Johnson's first feature-length film, and received good reviews at its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight. Linda Cardellini was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead for her performance in the film.", "score": "1.507908" }, { "id": "3718449", "title": "The Returned (American TV series)", "text": " The Returned is an American supernatural drama television series developed by Carlton Cuse as an adaptation of the 2012 French series Les Revenants, which was broadcast internationally as The Returned. The American adapted series follows residents in a small town whose lives are disrupted when people who have been dead for many years begin reappearing. Cuse wrote the pilot episode and executive produced the series alongside Raelle Tucker. The series premiered on March 9, 2015 and was cancelled by A&E after one season, on June 15, 2015.", "score": "1.5025313" }, { "id": "14007257", "title": "The Return (2006 film)", "text": " The Return is a 2006 American psychological horror film directed by Asif Kapadia and starring Sarah Michelle Gellar, Kate Beahan, Peter O'Brien, and Sam Shepard. It was released theatrically on November 10, 2006, and on DVD on February 27, 2007. The Blu-ray was released on October 6, 2009.", "score": "1.492312" }, { "id": "32601524", "title": "Knots Landing: Back to the Cul-de-Sac", "text": " at Karen and Gary's construction company so that she can find the agreement Sumner needs. Meanwhile, Greg is surprised when Anne Matheson-Sumner (Michelle Phillips) returns after four years in Paris. Mack and Karen are approached by Meg (Francesca Marie Smith), their 12-year-old adopted daughter, who asks for the truth about the identity of her biological father. Mack will never reveal the answer and chooses to lie to Meg again. Valene, who has written a best-selling book called \"Hostage\" about her year-long kidnapping four years earlier, has been contracted by a major film studio to adapt the book into a screenplay. The studio assign Clay McKinney (Michael Woods), a once promising writer whose career was plagued by his alcoholism, to be her writing ", "score": "1.4890311" }, { "id": "7450297", "title": "Return (1985 film)", "text": " Return was based on the 1972 novel Some Other Place. The Right Place. by Donald Harington. The film was shot in Los Angeles and Massachusetts, and was released in theaters January 24, 1986. It was released on VHS in 1988, with an \"R\" rating.", "score": "1.4826663" }, { "id": "25754269", "title": "Carlton Cuse", "text": " Cuse was showrunner, co-developer, writer, and executive producer of The Returned, based on the popular and International Emmy Award-winning French suspense series Les Revenants, adapted by Fabrice Gobert and inspired by the feature film, They Came Back, directed by Robin Campillo. Raelle Tucker also served as showrunner and executive producer. The 10-episode first season premiered on March 9, 2015. The series focused on a small town that is turned upside down when several local people, who have been long presumed dead, suddenly reappear. The Returned was co-produced by A+E Studios and FremantleMedia North America in association with Haut et Court TV SAS, the producer of the French series. The show was cancelled after one season in June 2015.", "score": "1.4785407" }, { "id": "2337115", "title": "The Returned (novel)", "text": " The Returned is the debut novel by American author Jason Mott, published in 2013. It is centered on the return of dead people to the living world and their impact on the daily lives of the people around them. The TV adaptation Resurrection was produced by ABC Studios and aired on March 9, 2014.", "score": "1.4652638" }, { "id": "6687644", "title": "Larry Cohen", "text": " espionage TV series Blue Light (1966) starring Robert Goulet and Coronet Blue (1967) starring Frank Converse, and the science-fiction TV series, The Invaders (1967–1968). In 1966, he wrote the screenplay to the Western film Return of the Seven (also known as Return of the Magnificent Seven), a sequel to the 1960 film The Magnificent Seven, which had the return of Yul Brynner as gunslinger Chris Adams. Four episodes he wrote for Blue Light were edited together to create the theatrical film I Deal in Danger, released in December 1966. He also created the Western TV series Branded (1965–1966) and was the co-creator with Walter Grauman of Blue Light.", "score": "1.46434" }, { "id": "25256988", "title": "The Returning", "text": " The Returning is a 1990 Australia-New Zealand horror film directed by John Day.", "score": "1.4482018" }, { "id": "2055371", "title": "Katherine Reback", "text": " Katherine Reback (1950/51 – May 24, 2010) was an American screenwriter, best known for the screenplay of the 1997 romantic comedy Fools Rush In and for penning the production draft of the 1983 film, Flashdance. Reback was a native of Stamford, Connecticut. She received her bachelor's degree from Columbia University. She launched her career in the mid-1970s, while working for Alan King in New York City. Reback also began writing for such television shows as The Line and One Day at a Time. In 1980, Reback relocated to California. In addition to screenwriting, Reback contributed to Bill Clinton's speech writing team during his 1992 presidential campaign. Reback worked as a writer for Fox Television Studios for the last fifteen years of her life, until her death in 2010. Katherine Reback died of cancer on May 24, 2010, in Los Angeles at the age of 59. She was survived by husband, Sonny King (the couple had been married for 15 years); three stepchildren; and a step-grandchild.", "score": "1.4447157" }, { "id": "27710806", "title": "Return (TV series)", "text": " The first script reading of the cast was held on November 15, 2017.", "score": "1.4431405" }, { "id": "2089701", "title": "James Kahn", "text": " James Kahn is an American medical specialist and writer, best known for his novelization of Return of the Jedi. Born in Chicago on December 30, 1947, Kahn received a degree in medical studies from the University of Chicago. His post-graduate training, specializing in Emergency Medicine, was completed at USC–LA County Hospital and UCLA. His original work includes three novels in the New World series: World Enough, and Time (1980), Time's Dark Laughter (1982), and Timefall (1987). As well as Return of the Jedi, he wrote the novelizations of the films Poltergeist and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. He has also written for well-known television series such as Melrose Place and Star Trek: The Next Generation. He was the producer of Melrose Place from 1996 to 1998.", "score": "1.4410505" }, { "id": "16248962", "title": "The Return (Shatner novel)", "text": " The Return is a novel by William Shatner that was co-written with Garfield Reeves-Stevens and Judith Reeves-Stevens. It is set in the Star Trek universe but, as part of the \"Shatnerverse,\" does not follow the timeline established by other Star Trek novels. The book's sequel is Avenger.", "score": "1.4408593" }, { "id": "27345882", "title": "Joseph Petracca", "text": " One of Petracca’s short prose pieces, \"Something For the Birds,\" - a proto-environmentalist comedy focusing on the plight of the California condor - was purchased by 20th Century Fox studios in the same year as the release of Come Back to Sorrento, and Petracca co-authored the screenplay with Alvin M. Josephy. The film version of \"Something for the Birds\" was directed by Robert Wise. Petracca was subsequently hired by Fox studios as a contract writer and for the next several years wrote and collaborated on numerous screenplays, including Seven Cities of Gold (1955) and The Proud Ones (1956). Subsequent to his tenure at Fox, Petracca ", "score": "1.4391532" }, { "id": "12136188", "title": "Oswald Cobblepot (Batman Returns)", "text": " screenplay for the film.\" Director Tim Burton hired Wesley Strick to do an uncredited rewrite. Strick recalled, \"When I was hired to write Batman Returns (Batman II at the time), the big problem of the script was the Penguin's lack of a 'master plan'.\" Warner Bros. presented Strick with warming, or freezing Gotham City, a plot point they would later use in Batman & Robin. Strick gained inspiration from a Moses parallel that had the Penguin killing the firstborn sons of Gotham. A similar notion was used when the Penguin's parents threw him into a river as a baby. While this Penguin retained many trademarks, such as a variety of ", "score": "1.4304621" }, { "id": "7450294", "title": "Return (1985 film)", "text": " Return, also known as Return: A Case of Passion, is a 1985 independent mystery film, written, directed and co-produced by Andrew Silver. It was Silver's debut theatrical work.", "score": "1.426689" }, { "id": "16181693", "title": "The Return (Applegate novel)", "text": " The Return is the 48th book in the Animorphs series, written by K. A. Applegate. It is known to have been ghostwritten by Kimberly Morris. Due to an editorial oversight, Lisa Harkrader was mistakenly credited with writing the book. It is the last book (fully) narrated by Rachel. It is the fourth of the last ten books to have an inverted title, in which the main title is in color and the background of the title is in black, showing a definite change.", "score": "1.426085" }, { "id": "26754794", "title": "John Fasano", "text": " Tombstone, Judge Dredd, and Color of Night. Fasano was among the many writers attached to Alien 3 during its long development. While Vincent Ward was still attached to the project, Fasano expanded the writer-director's story outline into a full screenplay that was ultimately unused. In 1997, he was nominated for a WGA Award for writing The Hunchback, a television adaptation of Victor Hugo's novel The Hunchback of Notre-Dame which stylistically hearkened back to the previous 1923 adaptation. He also wrote several episodes of the television series F/X, the made-for-TV film The Hunley, and was a one-off guest writer on Profiler. Fasano co-wrote Universal Soldier: The Return, a ", "score": "1.424453" } ]
[ "The Return (The Office)\n \"The Return\" was written by Michael Schur, Lee Eisenberg, and Gene Stupnitsky, while series creator and executive producer Greg Daniels directed and Dean Holland edited. The original title of this episode was \"Oscar's Return\", a reference to the reappearance of actor Oscar Nunez, who had temporarily left the series after the season premiere. Nunez spent the interim working on the Comedy Central series Halfway Home. It was the last episode Daniels filmed before the Thanksgiving holiday, the start of an eight-week break for the cast and crew. Then-president of NBC Entertainment Kevin Reilly played Dwight's first interviewer. Ed Helms noted in the audio commentary that his mother had trouble watching a string of episodes that included \"The Return\" because ", "The Returned (2013 film)\n The Returned (Retornados) is a 2013 Spanish-Canadian thriller film directed by Manuel Carballo, written by Hatem Khraiche, and starring Emily Hampshire, Kris Holden-Ried, Shawn Doyle, and Claudia Bassols. When a rare and difficult to obtain medicine that requires daily doses to stave off the effects of a zombie infection runs low, a physician (Hampshire) and her infected husband (Holden-Ried) go on the run to avoid angry demonstrators.", "Return (2011 film)\n Return is a 2011 independent film about an American reservist, wife and mother returning home from her tour of duty in the Middle East. The film was written and directed by Liza Johnson, and stars Linda Cardellini, Michael Shannon and John Slattery. It is Johnson's first feature-length film, and received good reviews at its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight. Linda Cardellini was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead for her performance in the film.", "The Returned (American TV series)\n The Returned is an American supernatural drama television series developed by Carlton Cuse as an adaptation of the 2012 French series Les Revenants, which was broadcast internationally as The Returned. The American adapted series follows residents in a small town whose lives are disrupted when people who have been dead for many years begin reappearing. Cuse wrote the pilot episode and executive produced the series alongside Raelle Tucker. The series premiered on March 9, 2015 and was cancelled by A&E after one season, on June 15, 2015.", "The Return (2006 film)\n The Return is a 2006 American psychological horror film directed by Asif Kapadia and starring Sarah Michelle Gellar, Kate Beahan, Peter O'Brien, and Sam Shepard. It was released theatrically on November 10, 2006, and on DVD on February 27, 2007. The Blu-ray was released on October 6, 2009.", "Knots Landing: Back to the Cul-de-Sac\n at Karen and Gary's construction company so that she can find the agreement Sumner needs. Meanwhile, Greg is surprised when Anne Matheson-Sumner (Michelle Phillips) returns after four years in Paris. Mack and Karen are approached by Meg (Francesca Marie Smith), their 12-year-old adopted daughter, who asks for the truth about the identity of her biological father. Mack will never reveal the answer and chooses to lie to Meg again. Valene, who has written a best-selling book called \"Hostage\" about her year-long kidnapping four years earlier, has been contracted by a major film studio to adapt the book into a screenplay. The studio assign Clay McKinney (Michael Woods), a once promising writer whose career was plagued by his alcoholism, to be her writing ", "Return (1985 film)\n Return was based on the 1972 novel Some Other Place. The Right Place. by Donald Harington. The film was shot in Los Angeles and Massachusetts, and was released in theaters January 24, 1986. It was released on VHS in 1988, with an \"R\" rating.", "Carlton Cuse\n Cuse was showrunner, co-developer, writer, and executive producer of The Returned, based on the popular and International Emmy Award-winning French suspense series Les Revenants, adapted by Fabrice Gobert and inspired by the feature film, They Came Back, directed by Robin Campillo. Raelle Tucker also served as showrunner and executive producer. The 10-episode first season premiered on March 9, 2015. The series focused on a small town that is turned upside down when several local people, who have been long presumed dead, suddenly reappear. The Returned was co-produced by A+E Studios and FremantleMedia North America in association with Haut et Court TV SAS, the producer of the French series. The show was cancelled after one season in June 2015.", "The Returned (novel)\n The Returned is the debut novel by American author Jason Mott, published in 2013. It is centered on the return of dead people to the living world and their impact on the daily lives of the people around them. The TV adaptation Resurrection was produced by ABC Studios and aired on March 9, 2014.", "Larry Cohen\n espionage TV series Blue Light (1966) starring Robert Goulet and Coronet Blue (1967) starring Frank Converse, and the science-fiction TV series, The Invaders (1967–1968). In 1966, he wrote the screenplay to the Western film Return of the Seven (also known as Return of the Magnificent Seven), a sequel to the 1960 film The Magnificent Seven, which had the return of Yul Brynner as gunslinger Chris Adams. Four episodes he wrote for Blue Light were edited together to create the theatrical film I Deal in Danger, released in December 1966. He also created the Western TV series Branded (1965–1966) and was the co-creator with Walter Grauman of Blue Light.", "The Returning\n The Returning is a 1990 Australia-New Zealand horror film directed by John Day.", "Katherine Reback\n Katherine Reback (1950/51 – May 24, 2010) was an American screenwriter, best known for the screenplay of the 1997 romantic comedy Fools Rush In and for penning the production draft of the 1983 film, Flashdance. Reback was a native of Stamford, Connecticut. She received her bachelor's degree from Columbia University. She launched her career in the mid-1970s, while working for Alan King in New York City. Reback also began writing for such television shows as The Line and One Day at a Time. In 1980, Reback relocated to California. In addition to screenwriting, Reback contributed to Bill Clinton's speech writing team during his 1992 presidential campaign. Reback worked as a writer for Fox Television Studios for the last fifteen years of her life, until her death in 2010. Katherine Reback died of cancer on May 24, 2010, in Los Angeles at the age of 59. She was survived by husband, Sonny King (the couple had been married for 15 years); three stepchildren; and a step-grandchild.", "Return (TV series)\n The first script reading of the cast was held on November 15, 2017.", "James Kahn\n James Kahn is an American medical specialist and writer, best known for his novelization of Return of the Jedi. Born in Chicago on December 30, 1947, Kahn received a degree in medical studies from the University of Chicago. His post-graduate training, specializing in Emergency Medicine, was completed at USC–LA County Hospital and UCLA. His original work includes three novels in the New World series: World Enough, and Time (1980), Time's Dark Laughter (1982), and Timefall (1987). As well as Return of the Jedi, he wrote the novelizations of the films Poltergeist and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. He has also written for well-known television series such as Melrose Place and Star Trek: The Next Generation. He was the producer of Melrose Place from 1996 to 1998.", "The Return (Shatner novel)\n The Return is a novel by William Shatner that was co-written with Garfield Reeves-Stevens and Judith Reeves-Stevens. It is set in the Star Trek universe but, as part of the \"Shatnerverse,\" does not follow the timeline established by other Star Trek novels. The book's sequel is Avenger.", "Joseph Petracca\n One of Petracca’s short prose pieces, \"Something For the Birds,\" - a proto-environmentalist comedy focusing on the plight of the California condor - was purchased by 20th Century Fox studios in the same year as the release of Come Back to Sorrento, and Petracca co-authored the screenplay with Alvin M. Josephy. The film version of \"Something for the Birds\" was directed by Robert Wise. Petracca was subsequently hired by Fox studios as a contract writer and for the next several years wrote and collaborated on numerous screenplays, including Seven Cities of Gold (1955) and The Proud Ones (1956). Subsequent to his tenure at Fox, Petracca ", "Oswald Cobblepot (Batman Returns)\n screenplay for the film.\" Director Tim Burton hired Wesley Strick to do an uncredited rewrite. Strick recalled, \"When I was hired to write Batman Returns (Batman II at the time), the big problem of the script was the Penguin's lack of a 'master plan'.\" Warner Bros. presented Strick with warming, or freezing Gotham City, a plot point they would later use in Batman & Robin. Strick gained inspiration from a Moses parallel that had the Penguin killing the firstborn sons of Gotham. A similar notion was used when the Penguin's parents threw him into a river as a baby. While this Penguin retained many trademarks, such as a variety of ", "Return (1985 film)\n Return, also known as Return: A Case of Passion, is a 1985 independent mystery film, written, directed and co-produced by Andrew Silver. It was Silver's debut theatrical work.", "The Return (Applegate novel)\n The Return is the 48th book in the Animorphs series, written by K. A. Applegate. It is known to have been ghostwritten by Kimberly Morris. Due to an editorial oversight, Lisa Harkrader was mistakenly credited with writing the book. It is the last book (fully) narrated by Rachel. It is the fourth of the last ten books to have an inverted title, in which the main title is in color and the background of the title is in black, showing a definite change.", "John Fasano\n Tombstone, Judge Dredd, and Color of Night. Fasano was among the many writers attached to Alien 3 during its long development. While Vincent Ward was still attached to the project, Fasano expanded the writer-director's story outline into a full screenplay that was ultimately unused. In 1997, he was nominated for a WGA Award for writing The Hunchback, a television adaptation of Victor Hugo's novel The Hunchback of Notre-Dame which stylistically hearkened back to the previous 1923 adaptation. He also wrote several episodes of the television series F/X, the made-for-TV film The Hunley, and was a one-off guest writer on Profiler. Fasano co-wrote Universal Soldier: The Return, a " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Oregon?
[ "Lisa Zwerling" ]
screenwriter
Oregon (Awake)
5,348,487
72
[ { "id": "11706852", "title": "Oregon (Awake)", "text": " The episode was written by consulting producer Lisa Zwerling, and directed by Aaron Lipstadt; it was Zwerling and Lipstadt's first writing credit, and was Lipstadt's first directing credit on the series. This is the second episode that was not written by series creator and executive producer Kyle Killen, with the last episode he wrote being \"Guilty\". Although it was the fifth broadcast episode, it was originally scheduled to be the fourth episode of the season, with the production code being \"1ATR03\" due to NBC's decision to change the broadcasting order.", "score": "1.590676" }, { "id": "7417025", "title": "My Own Private Idaho", "text": " rich kid, also fashioned after street hustlers Van Sant had met in Portland. Early drafts of the screenplay were set on Hollywood Boulevard, not Portland, with working titles such as Blue Funk and Minions of the Moon. Rechy's novel inspired Van Sant to change the setting to Portland. The script originally consisted of two separate scenarios: the first (Modern Days) recounted Mike's story; the second updated the Henry IV plays with Scott's story. Van Sant realized he could blend the two stories together in the manner of William S. Burroughs' \"cut up\" technique. In essence, this method involves various story fragments and ideas mixed and matched ", "score": "1.5301964" }, { "id": "30078971", "title": "Keith Scribner", "text": " Keith Scribner is an American novelist, short-story writer, screenwriter, essayist, and educator. His third novel, The Oregon Experiment, was published by Alfred A. Knopf (Random House) in June 2011. He is a professor of English at Oregon State University, where he teaches in the School of Writing, Literature, and Film. Scribner received his BA from Vassar College and was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, where he later taught as a Jones Lecturer. He has received fellowships from Oregon State University's Center for the Humanities. His first novel, The GoodLife, was included in the annual New York Times \"Notable Books\" list for the year 2000, and a Barnes & Noble \"Discover Great New Writers\" selection.", "score": "1.5273473" }, { "id": "15536850", "title": "Walt Curtis", "text": " Walt Curtis (born July 4, 1941) is a poet, novelist and painter from Portland, Oregon. His autobiographical work, Mala Noche (1977), became the basis for Gus Van Sant's 1985 film of the same name. He was the co-founder of the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission. He has hosted the poetry radio show \"Talking Earth\" at KBOO since 1971. He has written about and championed Oregon literary figures such as Joaquin Miller, Hazel Hall, Frances Fuller Victor, and many others. Portland Mayor Sam Adams declared July 1–7, 2010 \"Walt Curtis Week.\"", "score": "1.5100605" }, { "id": "12181648", "title": "Jonathan Raymond", "text": " Jonathan Raymond is an American writer living in Portland, Oregon. He is best known for writing the novels The Half-Life and Rain Dragon, and for writing the short stories or novels for the films Old Joy, Wendy and Lucy, and First Cow, all directed by Kelly Reichardt, with whom he co-wrote the screenplays. As a screenwriter, Raymond wrote the scripts for Meek's Cutoff and Night Moves, and was nominated for a Primetime Emmy for his teleplay writing on the HBO miniseries, Mildred Pierce.", "score": "1.5091889" }, { "id": "8288634", "title": "The Oregonian (film)", "text": " The Oregonian is a 2011 horror film directed by Calvin Reeder. The movie premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival and was given a limited release beginning on June 8, 2012, partially as a result of a successful Kickstarter campaign. The Oregonian received a DVD release in early 2013. The film stars Lindsay Pulsipher as a young woman who, after waking up from a car crash with no recollection of what happened, journeys through a surreal landscape and meets multiple bizarre characters.", "score": "1.5069208" }, { "id": "12921734", "title": "Calder Willingham", "text": " re-emerged in 1989 to do movie work again, his first assignment, adapting one of his own novels directly to the screen. Rambling Rose (1991) starred Robert Duvall, Diane Ladd and Laura Dern as Rose. Willingham also began a screenplay for Steven Spielberg in 1994 entitled Julie’s Valley about a pioneer family attacked by Native Americans on the Oregon Trail. However, after delivering the draft, he was diagnosed with lung cancer and died February 19, 1995, and the film never was made. Willingham's work is now generally out of print. In a biography written for the Literary Guild, author Herman Wouk ", "score": "1.505148" }, { "id": "32417445", "title": "Nard Jones", "text": " Nard Jones (1904–1972) was an American writer, best known for his novels set in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest.", "score": "1.4902631" }, { "id": "32252284", "title": "Charles Larson (producer)", "text": " Charles Larson (23 October 1922 &ndash; 21 September 2006) was a writer and producer of television programs. He was born in Portland, Oregon, USA. Beginning his Hollywood career as a messenger for MGM, Larson ultimately became a screenwriter for short films and later for television. His TV writing credits during the 1950s include Studio One, The Lone Ranger, and Climax!. During the 1960s, he wrote episodes for The Virginian and Rawhide. In 1964, he became an associate producer on Twelve O'Clock High for which he also wrote five episodes. He then became a producer for The F.B.I., for which he earned an Emmy Award nomination in 1969. He also wrote and directed several episodes of that series. Larson also produced and wrote for the TV shows The Interns and Cade's County. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, he wrote for Hawaii Five-O, Trapper John, M.D., and parts 5, 7, 9, and 11 of the epic mini-series Centennial. He was the executive producer of the short-lived 1974 ABC police drama Nakia, and he also wrote for the show. Larson died in Portland, Oregon on 21 September 2006.", "score": "1.4893069" }, { "id": "14000828", "title": "Joseph Rose (journalist)", "text": " media outlets, including PBS's Frontline. He has also written about the childhood and family of Portland-native Matt Groening, creator of The Simpsons. Rose's articles on a Gulf War war veteran secretly living in the wilderness of Portland's Forest Park with his young daughter were the inspiration for the 2018 film \"Leave No Trace.\" In 2008, Rose became The Oregonians chief transportation writer, with a daily blog and weekly Metro column called \"Hard Drive\". He is a graduate of Central Washington University in Ellensburg, Washington. In 2018, he began studying for his Master of Divinity at Yale University. When he was living in Oregon, Rose was also a leader of the \"alternative liturgy\" ", "score": "1.486201" }, { "id": "25206681", "title": "David Duncan (writer)", "text": " David Duncan (February 17, 1913 &ndash; December 27, 1999, Everett, Washington) was an American screenwriter and novelist.", "score": "1.4798367" }, { "id": "10323546", "title": "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)", "text": "Blood Cult ", "score": "1.4767852" }, { "id": "10323544", "title": "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)", "text": " Written as David Robbins Endworld is a Scifi series launched in 1986 under the name David Robbins. The novels take place in a post-apocalyptic United States.", "score": "1.4711812" }, { "id": "10323566", "title": "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)", "text": "57: Terror on Track Written as: Franklin W. Dixon", "score": "1.4698869" }, { "id": "13972807", "title": "Oregon City, Oregon", "text": " of the state of Oregon ; Alvin F. Waller (1808–1872), pioneer, missionary Political activists ; William Simon U'Ren (1859-1949), lawyer, known as the Father of the Oregon System of government. Writers ; Jeffrey St. Clair (1959–), journalist and author ; M. K. Hobson (1969–), science fiction writer ; Kenneth Scott Latourette (1884–1968), historian ; Edwin Markham (1852–1940), American Poet Laureate ; Performing artists ; Ron Saltmarsh (1962–) Music Composer ; Meredith Brooks (1958–), singer/songwriter ; Louis Conrad Rosenberg (1890–1983), artist and architect ; Susan Ruttan (1948–), actress ; Jack Taylor (actor) (1936–), actor Businesspeople ; Melville Eastham (1885–1964), businessman (founded General Radio Company), engineer, radio pioneer ; David Eccles (1849–1912), railroadman and businessman Athletes ; Brian Burres (1981–), major league baseball pitcher ; Jeff Charleston (1983–), professional ", "score": "1.4675281" }, { "id": "11354680", "title": "Mike Rich", "text": " College of Business, Rich began his media career as a news reporter for Portland radio station KINK. He transitioned in 2001 from full time at KINK to morning updates while pursuing a screenwriter career. In 1998, he was awarded a Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for his first film script Finding Forrester. This film was named after his high school English teacher, Mrs. Forster, from Enterprise High School in Enterprise, Oregon. He was awarded an honorary dFA by OSU on June 17, 2007, for his acclaim earned by his first two movies.", "score": "1.4674187" }, { "id": "29806484", "title": "Don Berry (author)", "text": " Don George Berry (January 23, 1932 – February 20, 2001) was an American author and artist best known for his trilogy of historical novels about early settlers in the Oregon Country. Described as one of \"Oregon's best fiction writers of the post-World War II generation\", and a \"Forgotten Beat\", Berry's second novel, Moontrap (1962), was nominated for the National Book Award in 1963.", "score": "1.4652065" }, { "id": "10323539", "title": "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)", "text": " David L. Robbins (born July 4, 1950) is an American author of English and Pennsylvania Dutch descent. He writes both fiction and non-fiction. He has written over three hundred books under his own name and many pen names, among them: David Thompson, Jake McMasters, Jon Sharpe, Don Pendleton, Franklin W. Dixon, Ralph Compton, Dean L. McElwain, J.D. Cameron and John Killdeer. He has written for the following series: The Trailsman, Mack Bolan, Endworld, Blade, Wilderness, White Apache, Davy Crockett, Omega Sub and The Hardy Boys Casefiles. Robbins is a member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, the Horror Writers Association, and Western Writers of America.", "score": "1.4618509" }, { "id": "10323562", "title": "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)", "text": "Woodland Warriors ; New Mexico Nightmare ; Menagerie Of Malice ; Island Devils ; Idaho Blood Spur ; Desert Duel (Feb. 07) ", "score": "1.4611036" }, { "id": "31228737", "title": "Frederic Balch", "text": " Frederic Homer Balch (1861—1891) was an American author from the Pacific Northwest, best known for The Bridge of the Gods: A Romance of Indian Oregon, the only work published during his brief life. Balch was the first Northwest writer to make Native Americans major characters and the first to celebrate the Northwest landscape, its primal forest, great rivers, and volcanic mountains. Balch died of tuberculosis at 29 years old. During his life he wrestled with constant poverty, a lack of formal education, and the paradoxical isolation of the frontier wilderness whose scenery he extolled. While probably still a teenager Balch had a clear authorial vision: \"To make Oregon as famous as Scott made Scotland; to make the Cascades as widely known as the Highlands;...to make the splendid scenery of the Willammette the background for romance full of passion and grandeur.\"", "score": "1.4581149" } ]
[ "Oregon (Awake)\n The episode was written by consulting producer Lisa Zwerling, and directed by Aaron Lipstadt; it was Zwerling and Lipstadt's first writing credit, and was Lipstadt's first directing credit on the series. This is the second episode that was not written by series creator and executive producer Kyle Killen, with the last episode he wrote being \"Guilty\". Although it was the fifth broadcast episode, it was originally scheduled to be the fourth episode of the season, with the production code being \"1ATR03\" due to NBC's decision to change the broadcasting order.", "My Own Private Idaho\n rich kid, also fashioned after street hustlers Van Sant had met in Portland. Early drafts of the screenplay were set on Hollywood Boulevard, not Portland, with working titles such as Blue Funk and Minions of the Moon. Rechy's novel inspired Van Sant to change the setting to Portland. The script originally consisted of two separate scenarios: the first (Modern Days) recounted Mike's story; the second updated the Henry IV plays with Scott's story. Van Sant realized he could blend the two stories together in the manner of William S. Burroughs' \"cut up\" technique. In essence, this method involves various story fragments and ideas mixed and matched ", "Keith Scribner\n Keith Scribner is an American novelist, short-story writer, screenwriter, essayist, and educator. His third novel, The Oregon Experiment, was published by Alfred A. Knopf (Random House) in June 2011. He is a professor of English at Oregon State University, where he teaches in the School of Writing, Literature, and Film. Scribner received his BA from Vassar College and was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, where he later taught as a Jones Lecturer. He has received fellowships from Oregon State University's Center for the Humanities. His first novel, The GoodLife, was included in the annual New York Times \"Notable Books\" list for the year 2000, and a Barnes & Noble \"Discover Great New Writers\" selection.", "Walt Curtis\n Walt Curtis (born July 4, 1941) is a poet, novelist and painter from Portland, Oregon. His autobiographical work, Mala Noche (1977), became the basis for Gus Van Sant's 1985 film of the same name. He was the co-founder of the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission. He has hosted the poetry radio show \"Talking Earth\" at KBOO since 1971. He has written about and championed Oregon literary figures such as Joaquin Miller, Hazel Hall, Frances Fuller Victor, and many others. Portland Mayor Sam Adams declared July 1–7, 2010 \"Walt Curtis Week.\"", "Jonathan Raymond\n Jonathan Raymond is an American writer living in Portland, Oregon. He is best known for writing the novels The Half-Life and Rain Dragon, and for writing the short stories or novels for the films Old Joy, Wendy and Lucy, and First Cow, all directed by Kelly Reichardt, with whom he co-wrote the screenplays. As a screenwriter, Raymond wrote the scripts for Meek's Cutoff and Night Moves, and was nominated for a Primetime Emmy for his teleplay writing on the HBO miniseries, Mildred Pierce.", "The Oregonian (film)\n The Oregonian is a 2011 horror film directed by Calvin Reeder. The movie premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival and was given a limited release beginning on June 8, 2012, partially as a result of a successful Kickstarter campaign. The Oregonian received a DVD release in early 2013. The film stars Lindsay Pulsipher as a young woman who, after waking up from a car crash with no recollection of what happened, journeys through a surreal landscape and meets multiple bizarre characters.", "Calder Willingham\n re-emerged in 1989 to do movie work again, his first assignment, adapting one of his own novels directly to the screen. Rambling Rose (1991) starred Robert Duvall, Diane Ladd and Laura Dern as Rose. Willingham also began a screenplay for Steven Spielberg in 1994 entitled Julie’s Valley about a pioneer family attacked by Native Americans on the Oregon Trail. However, after delivering the draft, he was diagnosed with lung cancer and died February 19, 1995, and the film never was made. Willingham's work is now generally out of print. In a biography written for the Literary Guild, author Herman Wouk ", "Nard Jones\n Nard Jones (1904–1972) was an American writer, best known for his novels set in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest.", "Charles Larson (producer)\n Charles Larson (23 October 1922 &ndash; 21 September 2006) was a writer and producer of television programs. He was born in Portland, Oregon, USA. Beginning his Hollywood career as a messenger for MGM, Larson ultimately became a screenwriter for short films and later for television. His TV writing credits during the 1950s include Studio One, The Lone Ranger, and Climax!. During the 1960s, he wrote episodes for The Virginian and Rawhide. In 1964, he became an associate producer on Twelve O'Clock High for which he also wrote five episodes. He then became a producer for The F.B.I., for which he earned an Emmy Award nomination in 1969. He also wrote and directed several episodes of that series. Larson also produced and wrote for the TV shows The Interns and Cade's County. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, he wrote for Hawaii Five-O, Trapper John, M.D., and parts 5, 7, 9, and 11 of the epic mini-series Centennial. He was the executive producer of the short-lived 1974 ABC police drama Nakia, and he also wrote for the show. Larson died in Portland, Oregon on 21 September 2006.", "Joseph Rose (journalist)\n media outlets, including PBS's Frontline. He has also written about the childhood and family of Portland-native Matt Groening, creator of The Simpsons. Rose's articles on a Gulf War war veteran secretly living in the wilderness of Portland's Forest Park with his young daughter were the inspiration for the 2018 film \"Leave No Trace.\" In 2008, Rose became The Oregonians chief transportation writer, with a daily blog and weekly Metro column called \"Hard Drive\". He is a graduate of Central Washington University in Ellensburg, Washington. In 2018, he began studying for his Master of Divinity at Yale University. When he was living in Oregon, Rose was also a leader of the \"alternative liturgy\" ", "David Duncan (writer)\n David Duncan (February 17, 1913 &ndash; December 27, 1999, Everett, Washington) was an American screenwriter and novelist.", "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)\nBlood Cult ", "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)\n Written as David Robbins Endworld is a Scifi series launched in 1986 under the name David Robbins. The novels take place in a post-apocalyptic United States.", "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)\n57: Terror on Track Written as: Franklin W. Dixon", "Oregon City, Oregon\n of the state of Oregon ; Alvin F. Waller (1808–1872), pioneer, missionary Political activists ; William Simon U'Ren (1859-1949), lawyer, known as the Father of the Oregon System of government. Writers ; Jeffrey St. Clair (1959–), journalist and author ; M. K. Hobson (1969–), science fiction writer ; Kenneth Scott Latourette (1884–1968), historian ; Edwin Markham (1852–1940), American Poet Laureate ; Performing artists ; Ron Saltmarsh (1962–) Music Composer ; Meredith Brooks (1958–), singer/songwriter ; Louis Conrad Rosenberg (1890–1983), artist and architect ; Susan Ruttan (1948–), actress ; Jack Taylor (actor) (1936–), actor Businesspeople ; Melville Eastham (1885–1964), businessman (founded General Radio Company), engineer, radio pioneer ; David Eccles (1849–1912), railroadman and businessman Athletes ; Brian Burres (1981–), major league baseball pitcher ; Jeff Charleston (1983–), professional ", "Mike Rich\n College of Business, Rich began his media career as a news reporter for Portland radio station KINK. He transitioned in 2001 from full time at KINK to morning updates while pursuing a screenwriter career. In 1998, he was awarded a Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for his first film script Finding Forrester. This film was named after his high school English teacher, Mrs. Forster, from Enterprise High School in Enterprise, Oregon. He was awarded an honorary dFA by OSU on June 17, 2007, for his acclaim earned by his first two movies.", "Don Berry (author)\n Don George Berry (January 23, 1932 – February 20, 2001) was an American author and artist best known for his trilogy of historical novels about early settlers in the Oregon Country. Described as one of \"Oregon's best fiction writers of the post-World War II generation\", and a \"Forgotten Beat\", Berry's second novel, Moontrap (1962), was nominated for the National Book Award in 1963.", "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)\n David L. Robbins (born July 4, 1950) is an American author of English and Pennsylvania Dutch descent. He writes both fiction and non-fiction. He has written over three hundred books under his own name and many pen names, among them: David Thompson, Jake McMasters, Jon Sharpe, Don Pendleton, Franklin W. Dixon, Ralph Compton, Dean L. McElwain, J.D. Cameron and John Killdeer. He has written for the following series: The Trailsman, Mack Bolan, Endworld, Blade, Wilderness, White Apache, Davy Crockett, Omega Sub and The Hardy Boys Casefiles. Robbins is a member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, the Horror Writers Association, and Western Writers of America.", "David L. Robbins (Oregon writer)\nWoodland Warriors ; New Mexico Nightmare ; Menagerie Of Malice ; Island Devils ; Idaho Blood Spur ; Desert Duel (Feb. 07) ", "Frederic Balch\n Frederic Homer Balch (1861—1891) was an American author from the Pacific Northwest, best known for The Bridge of the Gods: A Romance of Indian Oregon, the only work published during his brief life. Balch was the first Northwest writer to make Native Americans major characters and the first to celebrate the Northwest landscape, its primal forest, great rivers, and volcanic mountains. Balch died of tuberculosis at 29 years old. During his life he wrestled with constant poverty, a lack of formal education, and the paradoxical isolation of the frontier wilderness whose scenery he extolled. While probably still a teenager Balch had a clear authorial vision: \"To make Oregon as famous as Scott made Scotland; to make the Cascades as widely known as the Highlands;...to make the splendid scenery of the Willammette the background for romance full of passion and grandeur.\"" ]
Who was the screenwriter for Bingo?
[ "Jean-Claude Lord" ]
screenwriter
Bingo (1974 film)
2,208,014
94
[ { "id": "1852107", "title": "Bingo (Better Call Saul)", "text": " This was the second episode written by supervising producer Gennifer Hutchison for the series. It was directed by Larysa Kondracki.", "score": "1.8200436" }, { "id": "4670099", "title": "Bingo Hell", "text": " Bingo Hell is a 2021 American comedy horror film directed by Gigi Saul Guerrero from a screenplay that she co-wrote with Shane McKenzie and Perry Blackshear. The film is the fifth installment in the anthological Welcome to the Blumhouse film series. The film stars Adriana Barraza, L. Scott Caldwell, and Joshua Caleb Johnson. The film premiered at Fantastic Fest on September 24, 2021. The film was released in the United States on October 1, 2021 by Amazon Studios.", "score": "1.7058654" }, { "id": "9161210", "title": "William Brashler", "text": " William Brashler (born 1947) is an American author and journalist. He is best known for writing The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings, which was published in 1973. A film adaptation, directed by John Badham and starring Richard Pryor and Billy Dee Williams, was released in 1976. Bingo Long was chosen as one of the top 100 sports books of all time by Sports Illustrated, in 2002. The 20th anniversary edition of the book included a preface by sports historian Peter C. Bjarkman.", "score": "1.648969" }, { "id": "25001074", "title": "The Bingo Palace", "text": " The Bingo Palace is a novel written by Louise Erdrich published in 1994, with three chapters appearing in the Georgia Review, The New Yorker, and Granta. It is the fourth novel in Erdrich's Love Medicine series, and it follows Lipsha Morrissey as he is summoned home by his grandmother Lulu Lamartine. He returns home to the reservation for the first time in years and finds himself in rapture of a woman named Shawnee Ray. The novel discusses themes of family and identity from an Anishinaabe perspective.", "score": "1.6453397" }, { "id": "13746550", "title": "Bingo (1998 film)", "text": " Bingo is a 1998 computer-animated short film directed by Chris Landreth. The short is based on the stage play Disregard This Play by the theater troupe The Neo Futurists. It uses surrealistic imagery and dialogue to tell the story of an ordinary man who is surrounded by characters who insist that he is someone named \"Bingo the Clown\" even though he is not. Eventually, the man is worn down by their unwavering insistence and comes to believe that he is Bingo the Clown. At the time of Bingo's creation, Landreth was employed as an animator at AliasWavefront, and the film was used to demonstrate the capabilities of the company's new Maya animation software.", "score": "1.5784469" }, { "id": "27404872", "title": "Bingo: The King of the Mornings", "text": " Bingo: The King of the Mornings (Bingo: O Rei das Manhãs) is a 2017 Brazilian biographical drama film directed by Academy Awards nominee Daniel Rezende in his directorial debut. Written by Luiz Bolognesi, the screenplay is inspired in the life of Arlindo Barreto, one of many actors who played Bozo the Clown in Brazil. However, to avoid copyrights claim and preserve its creative freedom, the production does not use either the name of Bozo or Arlindo, adopting the fictional names of Bingo and Augusto, respectively. The film was released in Brazil on August 24, 2017. On September 15, it was selected as the Brazilian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.", "score": "1.56708" }, { "id": "13746557", "title": "Bingo (1998 film)", "text": " Bingo was created with a pre-release version of AliasWavefront's Maya computer graphics and animation software. The Maya software and the film were developed concurrently at Alias|Wavefront, and the company used the finished film as a demonstration of the software's capabilities. Some of the Maya features that were showcased in Bingo included blend shapes, custom shaders, rigid and soft body dynamics, particle systems, and interactive lighting setups.", "score": "1.5669911" }, { "id": "32040829", "title": "David Wood (actor)", "text": " Among his film roles are Johnny in Lindsay Anderson's If.... (1968) and Thompson in Aces High (1976). He appeared as the character Bingo Little in the original London cast of the Andrew Lloyd Webber and Alan Ayckbourn musical Jeeves in 1975. He wrote the screenplay for the 1974 adaptation of Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazons, released by Anglo EMI.", "score": "1.5545893" }, { "id": "25545358", "title": "Bingo's Run", "text": " Bingo's Run is a 2014 novel by James A. Levine. The story follows Bingo, a street child from the Kibera slum in Nairobi, Kenya, who is a 15-year-old drug runner and \"growth retard\". Levine is a professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic.", "score": "1.5514334" }, { "id": "15634391", "title": "George Wells (screenwriter)", "text": " With co-writer Harry Tugend, Wells was nominated for the 1950 Writers Guild of America Award in the category of Best Written American Musical for Take Me Out to the Ball Game. They lost to Betty Comden and Adolph Green, for On the Town. He won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for Designing Woman.", "score": "1.5429986" }, { "id": "26507295", "title": "Bingo (play)", "text": " Bingo: Scenes of Money and Death is a 1973 play by English playwright Edward Bond. It depicts an ageing William Shakespeare at his Warwickshire home in 1615 and 1616, suffering pangs of conscience in part because he signed a contract which protected his landholdings, on the condition that he would not interfere with an enclosure of common lands that would hurt the local peasant farmers. Although the play is fictional, this contract has a factual basis. Bingo is a political drama heavily influenced by Bertolt Brecht and Epic theatre. Some have praised Bond’s portrayal of Shakespeare while others have criticized it.", "score": "1.5357205" }, { "id": "9627220", "title": "Bingo Bongo", "text": " Bingo Bongo is a 1982 Italian family comedy film directed by Pasquale Festa Campanile and starring Adriano Celentano as an Italian Tarzan character escaping across Milan. The film also created an Italian neologism indicating wild animal-like language or behaviour.", "score": "1.5241714" }, { "id": "13612627", "title": "The Bingo Club", "text": " The Bingo Club is one of five specially commissioned one-hour plays which were screened in January 2004 on BBC One. Starring Paula Wilcox and John McArdle, The Bingo Tales relates the story of three women facing romantic hardship and growing old. During production in October 2003, Clive Mantle fell on his face while shooting a fencing scene and was rushed to Selly Oak Hospital with a ruptured ligament in his leg.", "score": "1.5074017" }, { "id": "26507311", "title": "Bingo (play)", "text": " Bingo has had a mixed reception from critics. After the November 1973 premiere at the Northcott Theatre, some wrote favorably about the play while others felt Bond had denigrated Shakespeare. In 1974, Ronald Bryden of The New York Times billed Bingo as \"a passionately cold, powerfully unforgiving play\" from the \"Royal Court's most important playwright\". The Austin Chronicle's Barry Pineo described Shakespeare as the play’s least engaging character but wrote, “While this diminishes the impact of Bond's play, it does not eclipse it. Rarely have I encountered a playwright with a more clear social conscience, and rarely one who could express it with ", "score": "1.4949508" }, { "id": "172546", "title": "Gene Weingarten", "text": " Weingarten has written three screenplays, one in collaboration with humorist Dave Barry and two in collaboration with David Simon, including B Major, about a piano marathon conducted in Scranton in 1970. None of the screenplays has yet been produced.", "score": "1.4946942" }, { "id": "30791888", "title": "Tee Franklin", "text": " Her first book was Bingo Love, was kickstarted in 2016, raised $57,000, and was published by Image Comics, selling out before it even hit the shelves. She specifically crowdfunded it to see if people were actually interested in these kinds of stories. Bingo Love is a love story about the adolescent same-sex romance of Hazel Johnson and Mari McCray that spans more than 60 years. Forced apart by their families and society, Hazel and Mari both married young men and had families. Now in their mid 60’s, they meet again at a bingo hall and realize they still love each other. The book has been nominated for a GLAAD Media Awards for ", "score": "1.4796876" }, { "id": "1852103", "title": "Bingo (Better Call Saul)", "text": " \"Bingo\" is the seventh episode of the first season of the AMC television series Better Call Saul, the spinoff series of Breaking Bad. The episode aired on March 16, 2015 on AMC in the United States. Outside of the United States, the episode premiered on streaming service Netflix in several countries.", "score": "1.4709141" }, { "id": "13746551", "title": "Bingo (1998 film)", "text": " The film opens with a live-action footage of the Neo-Futurists performing the excerpt of Disregard This Play before a live audience. A man in a strange hat greets a man sitting in a chair and addresses him as \"Bingo\". When the man in the chair denies being named Bingo, the man in the hat insists that he was, in fact, \"Bingo the Clown-o\". As the man in the chair tries to correct him, the man in the hat continues to address him more loudly from cutting off the protests. This was removed from a Vimeo upload by the film’s director. After the footage, it opens the scene in computer-generated imagery. A man, \"Dave,\" ", "score": "1.468431" }, { "id": "27500500", "title": "Peter Steinfeld", "text": " the screenplay. Steinfeld had been signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 2003 to adapt Ben Mezrich's true crime book Bringing Down the House, about the feats of the card counting MIT Blackjack Team, into the film 21, which was released in 2008. Before filming began in 2005, screenwriter Allan Loeb was brought in to rewrite Steinfeld's script as a former gambling addict. Steinfeld has completed an as-yet-unmade script, Ebony and Ivory, for Imagine Entertainment. Currently, he and his wife, screenwriter DeShawn Schneider, are working on high concept film The Big Shot for Plan B Entertainment and a remake of Paul Newman's 1977 film Slap Shot for Universal Pictures. He has also written and executive produced a number of television pilots, including \"Pulse\" and \"Inspector General\", which have not been picked up.", "score": "1.4666691" }, { "id": "26507306", "title": "Bingo (play)", "text": "Shakespeare – Bob Peck ; Old Man – Paul Jesson ; Son – David Howey ; William Combe – David Roper ; Ben Jonson – Rhys McConnochie ; Old Woman – Joanna Tope ; Judith – Sue Cox ; Young Woman – Yvonne Edgell Bingo was first presented at the Northcott Theatre, Devon on 14 November 1973. It was directed by Jane Howell and John Dove, with the following cast: The play opened at the Royal Court Theatre on 14 August 1974, again directed by Jane Howell and John Dove; this time with John Gielgud (Shakespeare), John Barrett (Old man), Gillian Martell (Judith) and Arthur Lowe (Ben Jonson). ", "score": "1.465205" } ]
[ "Bingo (Better Call Saul)\n This was the second episode written by supervising producer Gennifer Hutchison for the series. It was directed by Larysa Kondracki.", "Bingo Hell\n Bingo Hell is a 2021 American comedy horror film directed by Gigi Saul Guerrero from a screenplay that she co-wrote with Shane McKenzie and Perry Blackshear. The film is the fifth installment in the anthological Welcome to the Blumhouse film series. The film stars Adriana Barraza, L. Scott Caldwell, and Joshua Caleb Johnson. The film premiered at Fantastic Fest on September 24, 2021. The film was released in the United States on October 1, 2021 by Amazon Studios.", "William Brashler\n William Brashler (born 1947) is an American author and journalist. He is best known for writing The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings, which was published in 1973. A film adaptation, directed by John Badham and starring Richard Pryor and Billy Dee Williams, was released in 1976. Bingo Long was chosen as one of the top 100 sports books of all time by Sports Illustrated, in 2002. The 20th anniversary edition of the book included a preface by sports historian Peter C. Bjarkman.", "The Bingo Palace\n The Bingo Palace is a novel written by Louise Erdrich published in 1994, with three chapters appearing in the Georgia Review, The New Yorker, and Granta. It is the fourth novel in Erdrich's Love Medicine series, and it follows Lipsha Morrissey as he is summoned home by his grandmother Lulu Lamartine. He returns home to the reservation for the first time in years and finds himself in rapture of a woman named Shawnee Ray. The novel discusses themes of family and identity from an Anishinaabe perspective.", "Bingo (1998 film)\n Bingo is a 1998 computer-animated short film directed by Chris Landreth. The short is based on the stage play Disregard This Play by the theater troupe The Neo Futurists. It uses surrealistic imagery and dialogue to tell the story of an ordinary man who is surrounded by characters who insist that he is someone named \"Bingo the Clown\" even though he is not. Eventually, the man is worn down by their unwavering insistence and comes to believe that he is Bingo the Clown. At the time of Bingo's creation, Landreth was employed as an animator at AliasWavefront, and the film was used to demonstrate the capabilities of the company's new Maya animation software.", "Bingo: The King of the Mornings\n Bingo: The King of the Mornings (Bingo: O Rei das Manhãs) is a 2017 Brazilian biographical drama film directed by Academy Awards nominee Daniel Rezende in his directorial debut. Written by Luiz Bolognesi, the screenplay is inspired in the life of Arlindo Barreto, one of many actors who played Bozo the Clown in Brazil. However, to avoid copyrights claim and preserve its creative freedom, the production does not use either the name of Bozo or Arlindo, adopting the fictional names of Bingo and Augusto, respectively. The film was released in Brazil on August 24, 2017. On September 15, it was selected as the Brazilian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.", "Bingo (1998 film)\n Bingo was created with a pre-release version of AliasWavefront's Maya computer graphics and animation software. The Maya software and the film were developed concurrently at Alias|Wavefront, and the company used the finished film as a demonstration of the software's capabilities. Some of the Maya features that were showcased in Bingo included blend shapes, custom shaders, rigid and soft body dynamics, particle systems, and interactive lighting setups.", "David Wood (actor)\n Among his film roles are Johnny in Lindsay Anderson's If.... (1968) and Thompson in Aces High (1976). He appeared as the character Bingo Little in the original London cast of the Andrew Lloyd Webber and Alan Ayckbourn musical Jeeves in 1975. He wrote the screenplay for the 1974 adaptation of Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazons, released by Anglo EMI.", "Bingo's Run\n Bingo's Run is a 2014 novel by James A. Levine. The story follows Bingo, a street child from the Kibera slum in Nairobi, Kenya, who is a 15-year-old drug runner and \"growth retard\". Levine is a professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic.", "George Wells (screenwriter)\n With co-writer Harry Tugend, Wells was nominated for the 1950 Writers Guild of America Award in the category of Best Written American Musical for Take Me Out to the Ball Game. They lost to Betty Comden and Adolph Green, for On the Town. He won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for Designing Woman.", "Bingo (play)\n Bingo: Scenes of Money and Death is a 1973 play by English playwright Edward Bond. It depicts an ageing William Shakespeare at his Warwickshire home in 1615 and 1616, suffering pangs of conscience in part because he signed a contract which protected his landholdings, on the condition that he would not interfere with an enclosure of common lands that would hurt the local peasant farmers. Although the play is fictional, this contract has a factual basis. Bingo is a political drama heavily influenced by Bertolt Brecht and Epic theatre. Some have praised Bond’s portrayal of Shakespeare while others have criticized it.", "Bingo Bongo\n Bingo Bongo is a 1982 Italian family comedy film directed by Pasquale Festa Campanile and starring Adriano Celentano as an Italian Tarzan character escaping across Milan. The film also created an Italian neologism indicating wild animal-like language or behaviour.", "The Bingo Club\n The Bingo Club is one of five specially commissioned one-hour plays which were screened in January 2004 on BBC One. Starring Paula Wilcox and John McArdle, The Bingo Tales relates the story of three women facing romantic hardship and growing old. During production in October 2003, Clive Mantle fell on his face while shooting a fencing scene and was rushed to Selly Oak Hospital with a ruptured ligament in his leg.", "Bingo (play)\n Bingo has had a mixed reception from critics. After the November 1973 premiere at the Northcott Theatre, some wrote favorably about the play while others felt Bond had denigrated Shakespeare. In 1974, Ronald Bryden of The New York Times billed Bingo as \"a passionately cold, powerfully unforgiving play\" from the \"Royal Court's most important playwright\". The Austin Chronicle's Barry Pineo described Shakespeare as the play’s least engaging character but wrote, “While this diminishes the impact of Bond's play, it does not eclipse it. Rarely have I encountered a playwright with a more clear social conscience, and rarely one who could express it with ", "Gene Weingarten\n Weingarten has written three screenplays, one in collaboration with humorist Dave Barry and two in collaboration with David Simon, including B Major, about a piano marathon conducted in Scranton in 1970. None of the screenplays has yet been produced.", "Tee Franklin\n Her first book was Bingo Love, was kickstarted in 2016, raised $57,000, and was published by Image Comics, selling out before it even hit the shelves. She specifically crowdfunded it to see if people were actually interested in these kinds of stories. Bingo Love is a love story about the adolescent same-sex romance of Hazel Johnson and Mari McCray that spans more than 60 years. Forced apart by their families and society, Hazel and Mari both married young men and had families. Now in their mid 60’s, they meet again at a bingo hall and realize they still love each other. The book has been nominated for a GLAAD Media Awards for ", "Bingo (Better Call Saul)\n \"Bingo\" is the seventh episode of the first season of the AMC television series Better Call Saul, the spinoff series of Breaking Bad. The episode aired on March 16, 2015 on AMC in the United States. Outside of the United States, the episode premiered on streaming service Netflix in several countries.", "Bingo (1998 film)\n The film opens with a live-action footage of the Neo-Futurists performing the excerpt of Disregard This Play before a live audience. A man in a strange hat greets a man sitting in a chair and addresses him as \"Bingo\". When the man in the chair denies being named Bingo, the man in the hat insists that he was, in fact, \"Bingo the Clown-o\". As the man in the chair tries to correct him, the man in the hat continues to address him more loudly from cutting off the protests. This was removed from a Vimeo upload by the film’s director. After the footage, it opens the scene in computer-generated imagery. A man, \"Dave,\" ", "Peter Steinfeld\n the screenplay. Steinfeld had been signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 2003 to adapt Ben Mezrich's true crime book Bringing Down the House, about the feats of the card counting MIT Blackjack Team, into the film 21, which was released in 2008. Before filming began in 2005, screenwriter Allan Loeb was brought in to rewrite Steinfeld's script as a former gambling addict. Steinfeld has completed an as-yet-unmade script, Ebony and Ivory, for Imagine Entertainment. Currently, he and his wife, screenwriter DeShawn Schneider, are working on high concept film The Big Shot for Plan B Entertainment and a remake of Paul Newman's 1977 film Slap Shot for Universal Pictures. He has also written and executive produced a number of television pilots, including \"Pulse\" and \"Inspector General\", which have not been picked up.", "Bingo (play)\nShakespeare – Bob Peck ; Old Man – Paul Jesson ; Son – David Howey ; William Combe – David Roper ; Ben Jonson – Rhys McConnochie ; Old Woman – Joanna Tope ; Judith – Sue Cox ; Young Woman – Yvonne Edgell Bingo was first presented at the Northcott Theatre, Devon on 14 November 1973. It was directed by Jane Howell and John Dove, with the following cast: The play opened at the Royal Court Theatre on 14 August 1974, again directed by Jane Howell and John Dove; this time with John Gielgud (Shakespeare), John Barrett (Old man), Gillian Martell (Judith) and Arthur Lowe (Ben Jonson). " ]
Who was the screenwriter for Impossible?
[ "Tom Spezialy", "Marc Cherry" ]
screenwriter
Impossible (Desperate Housewives)
5,470,706
28
[ { "id": "27965714", "title": "Mission: Impossible (film)", "text": " Vampire, Cruise met De Palma during a dinner with Steven Spielberg and was impressed by his filmography, so when he went back home, saw all De Palma's films and convinced himself to have De Palma hired to direct Mission: Impossible. They went through two screenplay drafts that no one liked. De Palma brought in screenwriters Steve Zaillian, David Koepp, and finally Robert Towne. When the film was green-lit Koepp was initially fired with Robert Towne being the lead writer and Koepp being brought back on later. According to the director, the goal of the script was to \"constantly surprise the audience.\" Reportedly, Koepp was paid $1 million to rewrite an original script ", "score": "1.591804" }, { "id": "10521789", "title": "Robert Towne", "text": " Towne wrote the script for Days of Thunder (1990) and formed a close friendship with its star Tom Cruise. He was one of the writers on Cruise's The Firm (1993), then Beatty's Love Affair (1994). Cruise brought him on to Mission: Impossible (1996) and co-produced Towne's third film as director, Without Limits (1998). He also co-wrote Mission Impossible II (2000) for Cruise.", "score": "1.5812004" }, { "id": "9608792", "title": "The Impossible Years", "text": " The 1968 film version, which premiered December 5, was adapted by George Wells and directed by Michael Gordon. It starred David Niven, Lola Albright, Chad Everett, Ozzie Nelson, Cristina Ferrare, Gale Dixon and Darlene Carr. The eponymous theme song was written by The Tokens and performed by The Cowsills.", "score": "1.5203474" }, { "id": "603760", "title": "Sandra Wollner", "text": " Sandra Wollner (born 1983) is an Austrian film director and screenwriter. She made her feature directorial debut with The Impossible Picture (2016), and also directed and co-wrote The Trouble with Being Born (2020).", "score": "1.5160573" }, { "id": "31315025", "title": "The Saint of the Impossible", "text": " The Saint of the Impossible is a 2020 Swiss drama film written by Lani-Rain Feltham and Marc Raymond Wilkins, who is also the director in his directional debut. The film stars Magaly Solier, Marcelo Durand, Adriano Durand, Tara Thaller and Simon Käser.", "score": "1.5126888" }, { "id": "7375409", "title": "Hogan Sheffer", "text": " From 1986 to 1994, he worked as a freelancer and did script analysis for various production companies. He also worked for Mary Stuart Masterson at her production company. From 1997 to 2000, he was employed by DreamWorks as the Director of Screenplay Development under producers Mark Johnson and Elizabeth Cantillon. He was in charge of developing screenplays for films like My Dog Skip, Galaxy Quest, Home Fries, and What Lies Beneath.", "score": "1.4831977" }, { "id": "13338064", "title": "Nabil Farouk", "text": " Egyptian Central Intelligence agent called A.S. (alias: Adham Sabri). He was a doctor, but was not practising medicine, being devoted full-time to his writing. Other than his series, he wrote articles for two newspapers and three magazines, and started working on scripts for television series after finishing two films scripts, with a third one in progress. A new novel of (The Man of the Impossible) (Ragol Al Mostaheel) will be released titled ن-٣, which in arabic symbolizes the third best hero in the general intelligence, through which ن-٣ will reveal, with his unique skills and exceptional abilities, the answers to many questions related to the previous issues.", "score": "1.4769467" }, { "id": "31098000", "title": "Arthur Weiss", "text": " Arthur Weiss (13 June 1912 – 26 August 1980) was an American script writer for two decades on action/adventure TV shows like Mission: Impossible, Mannix, The Fugitive, Super Friends, The Time Tunnel and Sea Hunt. His most famous creation was the script for the movie Flipper in 1963, which became a TV series and was remade as a movie in 1996. He also worked alongside Irwin Allen as a writer and producer for \"disaster\" TV films including Flood! and Fire!. In 1969 Weiss published the novel O'Kelly's Eclipse about the undefeated British racehorse Eclipse. Weiss married actress Fay Baker on 3 August 1940. He divorced in 1965 and later married Patricia Jones.", "score": "1.4734786" }, { "id": "15875301", "title": "The Impossible Itself", "text": " The documentary features interviews with former S.F. Actor's Workshop members Herbert Blau, Alan Mandell, Eugene Roche, Robert Symonds, Robin Wagner, Joseph Miksak, Tony Miksak, and David Irving as well as former prison inmates Rick Cluchey, Ed Reed, Professor John Irwin and Prison Recreation Supervisor Clem Swagerty.", "score": "1.468674" }, { "id": "6639927", "title": "The Impossible Object (novel)", "text": " In 1973, a motion picture adaptation starring Alan Bates, and Dominique Sanda was released. The film was scripted by the novel's author, Nicholas Mosley.", "score": "1.4636731" }, { "id": "9608795", "title": "The Impossible Years", "text": " MGM bought the film rights to the play in 1965 for $350,000. George Wells completed the script by March 1966. MGM announced it for production in August 1966. The movie was greenlit by the team of Robert O'Brien and Robert M. Weitman. Filming took place in October 1967. At one stage, Peter Sellers was announced for the lead but by May, David Niven had been signed. Christina Ferrare, who played Niven's nubile daughter, had been under contract to 20th Century Fox for a year. The film featured the final movie performance of Ozzie Nelson.", "score": "1.4612014" }, { "id": "31574522", "title": "Done the Impossible", "text": "Orson Scott Card ; Keith R.A. DeCandido ; Tracy Hickman ; Margaret Weis ", "score": "1.4581175" }, { "id": "14191418", "title": "The Impossible (book)", "text": " In 2018, 20th Century Fox announced plans to produce a movie adaptation of The Impossible, titled Breakthrough, working with director Roxann Dawson, executive producer Samuel Rodriguez and producer DeVon Franklin, who has worked on other faith drama titles such as Miracles from Heaven and Heaven Is for Real. The film was released on April 17, 2019. In March of 2018, it was announced that actor Topher Grace would star as Pastor Jason Noble, and first responder Tommy Shine would be portrayed by Mike Colter. Actress Chrissy Metz of NBC's This Is Us starred as Joyce Smith. Other lead roles include Josh Lucas, Sam Trammell, and Marcel Ruiz.", "score": "1.4534454" }, { "id": "27421536", "title": "Stuart Hagmann", "text": " Stuart R. Hagmann (born in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin on September 2, 1942) is a television and film director primarily active from 1968 to 1977. His television work includes episodes of the series Mission: Impossible and Mannix. In film he is noted for directing The Strawberry Statement (1970), which was co-winner of the Cannes Film Festival's Jury Prize.", "score": "1.451967" }, { "id": "14047164", "title": "John Alton", "text": " In 1966, Alton shot the pilot for Mission: Impossible, which became a successful television series.", "score": "1.4487971" }, { "id": "28234032", "title": "Allan Weisbecker", "text": " Allan C. Weisbecker is a novelist, screenwriter, memoirist and surfer. He is the author of the \"cheerfully immoral novel\" Cosmic Banditos, the memoir In Search of Captain Zero and ''Can't You Get Along With Anyone? A Writer's Memoir and a Tale of a Lost Surfer's Paradise''. Allan has also written for several surfing magazines, including Surfer, Surfing and The Surfer's Journal, as well as scripting episodes of the television series Crime Story and Miami Vice. A movie version of Cosmic Banditos directed by John Cusack is currently in the works. In late 2006 his third book ''Can't You Get Along With Anyone? A Writer's Memoir ", "score": "1.4475602" }, { "id": "5158960", "title": "Minority Report (film)", "text": " money. They should be prepared to do the same.\" Production was delayed for several years. The original plan was to begin filming after Cruise's Mission: Impossible 2 was finished, but that film ran over schedule, which also allowed Spielberg time to bring in screenwriter Scott Frank to rework Cohen's screenplay. John August did an uncredited draft to polish the script, and Frank Darabont was also invited to rewrite, but was by then busy with The Majestic. The film closely follows Scott Frank's final script (completed May 16, 2001), and contains much of Cohen's third draft (May 24, 1997). Frank removed the character of Senator Malcolm from Cohen's screenplay, and inserted Burgess, who ", "score": "1.4463284" }, { "id": "30227029", "title": "Frank Darabont", "text": " can't really judge the script based on what you saw on the screen. It got rephrased and messed with every inch of the way.\" Guillermo del Toro has shown interest in adapting Darabont's draft of the Frankenstein script when he gets around to filming his own version of the story, calling the draft a \"near perfect\" adaptation of the original book. In 2004, he was hired by Tom Cruise to write Mission: Impossible III, but the script was later rewritten by J. J. Abrams, who directed the film. The same year, Darabont wrote the introduction for the Hellboy novel, Hellboy: Odder Jobs by Christopher Golden. In 2005, Cemetery Dance Publications published Darabont's novella ", "score": "1.4461176" }, { "id": "2717712", "title": "Mathew Klickstein", "text": " Klickstein was the writer of the 2009 American horror film Against the Dark, starring Steven Seagal and served as a casting producer on Food Network's Restaurant: Impossible from 2013 until the series ended in 2016. Born in California, Mathew was a prolific writer at a young age, penning his first novel at 13. A high-achieving student in high school, Mathew formed and ran various academic clubs while working on local congressional campaigns and for the ACLU. In 2012 he co-produced, co-directed and co-wrote Phamaly Theatre Company's disLabled, a multimedia performance involving actors with disabilities. Klickstein's non-fiction book titled ''SLIMED! An Oral History of Nickelodeon's Golden Age, which ", "score": "1.4446855" }, { "id": "4813361", "title": "Screenwriting", "text": " naïve New York playwright who comes to Hollywood with high hopes and great ambition. While there, he meets one of his writing idols, a celebrated novelist from the past who has become a drunken hack screenwriter (a character based on William Faulkner). ; Mistress (1992)&mdash;In this comedy written by Barry Primus and J. F. Lawton, Robert Wuhl is a screenwriter/director who's got integrity, vision, and a serious script &mdash; but no career. Martin Landau is a sleazy producer who introduces Wuhl to Robert De Niro, Danny Aiello and Eli Wallach - three guys willing to invest in the movie, but with one catch: each one wants his mistress ", "score": "1.4423581" } ]
[ "Mission: Impossible (film)\n Vampire, Cruise met De Palma during a dinner with Steven Spielberg and was impressed by his filmography, so when he went back home, saw all De Palma's films and convinced himself to have De Palma hired to direct Mission: Impossible. They went through two screenplay drafts that no one liked. De Palma brought in screenwriters Steve Zaillian, David Koepp, and finally Robert Towne. When the film was green-lit Koepp was initially fired with Robert Towne being the lead writer and Koepp being brought back on later. According to the director, the goal of the script was to \"constantly surprise the audience.\" Reportedly, Koepp was paid $1 million to rewrite an original script ", "Robert Towne\n Towne wrote the script for Days of Thunder (1990) and formed a close friendship with its star Tom Cruise. He was one of the writers on Cruise's The Firm (1993), then Beatty's Love Affair (1994). Cruise brought him on to Mission: Impossible (1996) and co-produced Towne's third film as director, Without Limits (1998). He also co-wrote Mission Impossible II (2000) for Cruise.", "The Impossible Years\n The 1968 film version, which premiered December 5, was adapted by George Wells and directed by Michael Gordon. It starred David Niven, Lola Albright, Chad Everett, Ozzie Nelson, Cristina Ferrare, Gale Dixon and Darlene Carr. The eponymous theme song was written by The Tokens and performed by The Cowsills.", "Sandra Wollner\n Sandra Wollner (born 1983) is an Austrian film director and screenwriter. She made her feature directorial debut with The Impossible Picture (2016), and also directed and co-wrote The Trouble with Being Born (2020).", "The Saint of the Impossible\n The Saint of the Impossible is a 2020 Swiss drama film written by Lani-Rain Feltham and Marc Raymond Wilkins, who is also the director in his directional debut. The film stars Magaly Solier, Marcelo Durand, Adriano Durand, Tara Thaller and Simon Käser.", "Hogan Sheffer\n From 1986 to 1994, he worked as a freelancer and did script analysis for various production companies. He also worked for Mary Stuart Masterson at her production company. From 1997 to 2000, he was employed by DreamWorks as the Director of Screenplay Development under producers Mark Johnson and Elizabeth Cantillon. He was in charge of developing screenplays for films like My Dog Skip, Galaxy Quest, Home Fries, and What Lies Beneath.", "Nabil Farouk\n Egyptian Central Intelligence agent called A.S. (alias: Adham Sabri). He was a doctor, but was not practising medicine, being devoted full-time to his writing. Other than his series, he wrote articles for two newspapers and three magazines, and started working on scripts for television series after finishing two films scripts, with a third one in progress. A new novel of (The Man of the Impossible) (Ragol Al Mostaheel) will be released titled ن-٣, which in arabic symbolizes the third best hero in the general intelligence, through which ن-٣ will reveal, with his unique skills and exceptional abilities, the answers to many questions related to the previous issues.", "Arthur Weiss\n Arthur Weiss (13 June 1912 – 26 August 1980) was an American script writer for two decades on action/adventure TV shows like Mission: Impossible, Mannix, The Fugitive, Super Friends, The Time Tunnel and Sea Hunt. His most famous creation was the script for the movie Flipper in 1963, which became a TV series and was remade as a movie in 1996. He also worked alongside Irwin Allen as a writer and producer for \"disaster\" TV films including Flood! and Fire!. In 1969 Weiss published the novel O'Kelly's Eclipse about the undefeated British racehorse Eclipse. Weiss married actress Fay Baker on 3 August 1940. He divorced in 1965 and later married Patricia Jones.", "The Impossible Itself\n The documentary features interviews with former S.F. Actor's Workshop members Herbert Blau, Alan Mandell, Eugene Roche, Robert Symonds, Robin Wagner, Joseph Miksak, Tony Miksak, and David Irving as well as former prison inmates Rick Cluchey, Ed Reed, Professor John Irwin and Prison Recreation Supervisor Clem Swagerty.", "The Impossible Object (novel)\n In 1973, a motion picture adaptation starring Alan Bates, and Dominique Sanda was released. The film was scripted by the novel's author, Nicholas Mosley.", "The Impossible Years\n MGM bought the film rights to the play in 1965 for $350,000. George Wells completed the script by March 1966. MGM announced it for production in August 1966. The movie was greenlit by the team of Robert O'Brien and Robert M. Weitman. Filming took place in October 1967. At one stage, Peter Sellers was announced for the lead but by May, David Niven had been signed. Christina Ferrare, who played Niven's nubile daughter, had been under contract to 20th Century Fox for a year. The film featured the final movie performance of Ozzie Nelson.", "Done the Impossible\nOrson Scott Card ; Keith R.A. DeCandido ; Tracy Hickman ; Margaret Weis ", "The Impossible (book)\n In 2018, 20th Century Fox announced plans to produce a movie adaptation of The Impossible, titled Breakthrough, working with director Roxann Dawson, executive producer Samuel Rodriguez and producer DeVon Franklin, who has worked on other faith drama titles such as Miracles from Heaven and Heaven Is for Real. The film was released on April 17, 2019. In March of 2018, it was announced that actor Topher Grace would star as Pastor Jason Noble, and first responder Tommy Shine would be portrayed by Mike Colter. Actress Chrissy Metz of NBC's This Is Us starred as Joyce Smith. Other lead roles include Josh Lucas, Sam Trammell, and Marcel Ruiz.", "Stuart Hagmann\n Stuart R. Hagmann (born in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin on September 2, 1942) is a television and film director primarily active from 1968 to 1977. His television work includes episodes of the series Mission: Impossible and Mannix. In film he is noted for directing The Strawberry Statement (1970), which was co-winner of the Cannes Film Festival's Jury Prize.", "John Alton\n In 1966, Alton shot the pilot for Mission: Impossible, which became a successful television series.", "Allan Weisbecker\n Allan C. Weisbecker is a novelist, screenwriter, memoirist and surfer. He is the author of the \"cheerfully immoral novel\" Cosmic Banditos, the memoir In Search of Captain Zero and ''Can't You Get Along With Anyone? A Writer's Memoir and a Tale of a Lost Surfer's Paradise''. Allan has also written for several surfing magazines, including Surfer, Surfing and The Surfer's Journal, as well as scripting episodes of the television series Crime Story and Miami Vice. A movie version of Cosmic Banditos directed by John Cusack is currently in the works. In late 2006 his third book ''Can't You Get Along With Anyone? A Writer's Memoir ", "Minority Report (film)\n money. They should be prepared to do the same.\" Production was delayed for several years. The original plan was to begin filming after Cruise's Mission: Impossible 2 was finished, but that film ran over schedule, which also allowed Spielberg time to bring in screenwriter Scott Frank to rework Cohen's screenplay. John August did an uncredited draft to polish the script, and Frank Darabont was also invited to rewrite, but was by then busy with The Majestic. The film closely follows Scott Frank's final script (completed May 16, 2001), and contains much of Cohen's third draft (May 24, 1997). Frank removed the character of Senator Malcolm from Cohen's screenplay, and inserted Burgess, who ", "Frank Darabont\n can't really judge the script based on what you saw on the screen. It got rephrased and messed with every inch of the way.\" Guillermo del Toro has shown interest in adapting Darabont's draft of the Frankenstein script when he gets around to filming his own version of the story, calling the draft a \"near perfect\" adaptation of the original book. In 2004, he was hired by Tom Cruise to write Mission: Impossible III, but the script was later rewritten by J. J. Abrams, who directed the film. The same year, Darabont wrote the introduction for the Hellboy novel, Hellboy: Odder Jobs by Christopher Golden. In 2005, Cemetery Dance Publications published Darabont's novella ", "Mathew Klickstein\n Klickstein was the writer of the 2009 American horror film Against the Dark, starring Steven Seagal and served as a casting producer on Food Network's Restaurant: Impossible from 2013 until the series ended in 2016. Born in California, Mathew was a prolific writer at a young age, penning his first novel at 13. A high-achieving student in high school, Mathew formed and ran various academic clubs while working on local congressional campaigns and for the ACLU. In 2012 he co-produced, co-directed and co-wrote Phamaly Theatre Company's disLabled, a multimedia performance involving actors with disabilities. Klickstein's non-fiction book titled ''SLIMED! An Oral History of Nickelodeon's Golden Age, which ", "Screenwriting\n naïve New York playwright who comes to Hollywood with high hopes and great ambition. While there, he meets one of his writing idols, a celebrated novelist from the past who has become a drunken hack screenwriter (a character based on William Faulkner). ; Mistress (1992)&mdash;In this comedy written by Barry Primus and J. F. Lawton, Robert Wuhl is a screenwriter/director who's got integrity, vision, and a serious script &mdash; but no career. Martin Landau is a sleazy producer who introduces Wuhl to Robert De Niro, Danny Aiello and Eli Wallach - three guys willing to invest in the movie, but with one catch: each one wants his mistress " ]
Who was the screenwriter for The Accused?
[ "Mario Soffici", "Marco Denevi", "Marco Denev" ]
screenwriter
The Accused (1960 film)
5,907,058
56
[ { "id": "427160", "title": "The Accused (1960 film)", "text": " The Accused (Los Acusados) is a 1960 Argentine crime drama directed and written by Antonio Cunill Jr.. The film was based on a screen play by Marco Denevi. The film starred Mario Soffici and Silvia Legrand.", "score": "1.6364481" }, { "id": "13692940", "title": "Accused (1936 film)", "text": " Accused is a 1936 British mystery film directed by Thornton Freeland and starring Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Dolores del Río and Florence Desmond. It was made at Isleworth Studios by the independent Criterion Films, which Fairbanks was a co-owner of. The film's sets were designed by Edward Carrick.", "score": "1.6215749" }, { "id": "7095259", "title": "Linda Arvidson", "text": " Arvidson wrote screenplays, including the one for the five-reel Who's Guilty Now? She was an associate editor of Film Fun and a film critic for Leslie's Magazine, and she wrote the book When the Movies Were Young.", "score": "1.6100729" }, { "id": "13582564", "title": "I Stand Accused", "text": " I Stand Accused is a 1938 American drama film directed by John H. Auer and written by Gordon Kahn and Alex Gottlieb. The film stars Robert Cummings, Helen Mack, Lyle Talbot, Thomas Beck, Gordon Jones and Robert Paige. The film was released by Republic Pictures.", "score": "1.588519" }, { "id": "31283321", "title": "Accused (1964 film)", "text": " Accused (Czech: Obžalovaný) is a 1964 film directed by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos. The film has won a Crystal Globe at 1964 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.", "score": "1.5783151" }, { "id": "5527850", "title": "The Narrowing Circle", "text": " The screenplay concerns a crime writer who finds himself accused of murder, and has to clear his name.", "score": "1.5744126" }, { "id": "2056642", "title": "Accused (2010 TV series)", "text": " be here. We see the crime and we see the punishment. Nothing else. No police procedure, thanks very much, no coppers striding along corridors with coats flapping. Just crime and punishment – the two things that matter most in any crime drama.\" McGovern was the lead writer for the series, with co-writers Alice Nutter, Danny Brocklehurst and Esther Wilson for episodes three, four and five respectively. The series was directed by David Blair (episodes 1, 2, 5 and 6) and Richard Laxton (episodes 3 and 4), and produced by RSJ Films, a company founded by Jimmy McGovern, Sita Williams and Roxy Spencer. RSJ Films is also known ", "score": "1.565541" }, { "id": "28096444", "title": "Accused (1958 TV series)", "text": " The show was produced by Selig J. Seligman, a former U.S. Army lawyer who served at the Nuremberg Trials. He later became an ABC Vice President as well as executive producer of Combat! and Garrison's Gorillas.", "score": "1.5654855" }, { "id": "28096443", "title": "Accused (1958 TV series)", "text": "Edgar Allan Jones, Jr. as the Judge ; William Gwinn as the Substitute Judge ; Jim Hodson as the Clerk ; Tim Farrell as the Bailiff ; Violet Gillmore as the Court Reporter (and Announcer) Similar to other courtroom dramas of the time, the defendants and witnesses were actors (including, for example, Pamela Mason and Robert Culp). However, the defense and prosecution attorneys were real-life lawyers. The court was presided over by Edgar Allan Jones, Jr. Jones had a law degree from the University of Virginia, was a member of the UCLA law faculty and a labor arbitrator. ", "score": "1.5636237" }, { "id": "8651339", "title": "Accused of Murder", "text": " Accused of Murder is a 1956 American Trucolor film noir crime film directed by Joseph Kane and starring David Brian and Vera Ralston, Sidney Blackmer.", "score": "1.5536051" }, { "id": "14450299", "title": "Accused (2014 film)", "text": " Accused (Lucia de B.) is a 2014 Dutch drama film directed by Paula van der Oest and written by Moniek Kramer. It was selected as the Dutch entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards, making the January Shortlist.", "score": "1.5446019" }, { "id": "2056640", "title": "Accused (2010 TV series)", "text": " Accused is a British television anthology series created by Jimmy McGovern. The drama series first aired on 15 November 2010 on BBC One and has run for two series. Each episode follows a different character as they await their verdict in court, and tells the story behind how they find themselves accused. The series has featured actors and actresses such as Christopher Eccleston, Benjamin Smith, Juliet Stevenson, Andy Serkis, Marc Warren, Naomie Harris, Sean Bean and Anne-Marie Duff as the accused in each episode. The series follows previous drama series by McGovern, including anthology series The Street and Moving On. After the cancellation of The Street in 2009 by Granada Television, McGovern formed RSJ Films to produce independent drama programmes and subsequently devised the Accused anthology series. Accused was written by McGovern, Danny Brocklehurst and Alice Nutter and was filmed in Manchester. In 2011 it won an International Emmy for best drama series.", "score": "1.5387542" }, { "id": "185197", "title": "Acquitted (1929 film)", "text": " In early September 1929, it was announced that Frank Strayer had been slated to direct the picture. In late August it was announced that Lloyd Hughes, Margaret Livingston, and Sam Hardy were attached to the project. With Lloyd Hughes and Margaret Livingston already cast in the lead roles, Charles Wilson and Otto Hoffman were added to the cast in early October. The film was released on November 15, 1929.", "score": "1.5383453" }, { "id": "27825235", "title": "The Woman Accused", "text": " The Woman Accused is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film directed by Paul Sloane and starring Nancy Carroll and Cary Grant as a young engaged couple on a sea cruise, with the woman being implicated in the death of her former lover. The supporting cast includes Jack La Rue in a sequence opposite Grant in which the latter violently whips him.", "score": "1.5383415" }, { "id": "13692942", "title": "Accused (1936 film)", "text": "Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. as Tony Seymour ; Dolores del Río as Gaby Seymour ; Florence Desmond as Yvette Delange ; Edward Rigby as Alphonse de la Riveire ; Basil Sydney as Eugene Roget ; Googie Withers as Ninette Duval ; J.H. Roberts as President of Court ; Cecil Humphreys as Prosecuting Counsel ; Esme Percy as Morel ; Moore Marriott as Dubec ; Cyril Raymond as Guy Henry ; Roland Culver as Henry Capelle ; Leo Genn as Man ", "score": "1.5359726" }, { "id": "2056644", "title": "Accused (2010 TV series)", "text": " On 24 February 2011, BBC Drama Controller Ben Stephenson announced that Accused has been renewed for a second series of four episodes, to be broadcast sometime in 2012. Despite the relatively low viewing figures from the first series, the second was commissioned in the hopes that it would have the potential to find a broader audience. Filming for the first two episodes of the second series began around November 2011. The new cast members confirmed to appear in these episodes included Anne-Marie Duff, Olivia Colman, Robert Sheehan, Joe Dempsie, Sheridan Smith, Paul Popplewell and comedian John Bishop. The first episode, starring Colman and Duff, would be written by McGovern and Carol Cullington, while writing credits on the second episode (starring Sheehan, Bishop and Smith) would again be shared by Daniel Brocklehurst and McGovern. In January 2012 it was confirmed that Anna Maxwell Martin would join Sheehan ", "score": "1.5316672" }, { "id": "2056649", "title": "Accused (2010 TV series)", "text": " In May 2021, it was announced that Fox had given a straight-to-order to an American adaptation of the series. The series will be co-produced between Sony Pictures Television and Fox Entertainment and scheduled for premiere in the 2022–23 television season with Howard Gordon, Alex Gansa and David Shore will be executive producing.", "score": "1.5248181" }, { "id": "8811339", "title": "The Guilty (1947 film)", "text": " The Guilty is a 1947 film noir directed by John Reinhardt, based on Cornell Woolrich's short story \"Two Men in a Furnished Room\". The film was produced by oil millionaire Jack Wrather, the husband of lead actress Bonita Granville.", "score": "1.520185" }, { "id": "427161", "title": "The Accused (1960 film)", "text": " Based on a real-life case in 1925, two great lawyers argue the case for and against a science teacher accused of the crime of teaching evolution.", "score": "1.5159563" }, { "id": "25479732", "title": "Trial (film)", "text": " Trial is a 1955 American film directed by Mark Robson and starring Glenn Ford, Dorothy McGuire, Arthur Kennedy and Juano Hernandez. Based on the novel written by Don Mankiewicz, it is about a Mexican boy accused of rape and murder; originally victimized by prejudiced accusers, he becomes a pawn of his communist defender, whose propaganda purposes would be best served by a verdict of guilty.", "score": "1.5128546" } ]
[ "The Accused (1960 film)\n The Accused (Los Acusados) is a 1960 Argentine crime drama directed and written by Antonio Cunill Jr.. The film was based on a screen play by Marco Denevi. The film starred Mario Soffici and Silvia Legrand.", "Accused (1936 film)\n Accused is a 1936 British mystery film directed by Thornton Freeland and starring Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Dolores del Río and Florence Desmond. It was made at Isleworth Studios by the independent Criterion Films, which Fairbanks was a co-owner of. The film's sets were designed by Edward Carrick.", "Linda Arvidson\n Arvidson wrote screenplays, including the one for the five-reel Who's Guilty Now? She was an associate editor of Film Fun and a film critic for Leslie's Magazine, and she wrote the book When the Movies Were Young.", "I Stand Accused\n I Stand Accused is a 1938 American drama film directed by John H. Auer and written by Gordon Kahn and Alex Gottlieb. The film stars Robert Cummings, Helen Mack, Lyle Talbot, Thomas Beck, Gordon Jones and Robert Paige. The film was released by Republic Pictures.", "Accused (1964 film)\n Accused (Czech: Obžalovaný) is a 1964 film directed by Ján Kadár and Elmar Klos. The film has won a Crystal Globe at 1964 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.", "The Narrowing Circle\n The screenplay concerns a crime writer who finds himself accused of murder, and has to clear his name.", "Accused (2010 TV series)\n be here. We see the crime and we see the punishment. Nothing else. No police procedure, thanks very much, no coppers striding along corridors with coats flapping. Just crime and punishment – the two things that matter most in any crime drama.\" McGovern was the lead writer for the series, with co-writers Alice Nutter, Danny Brocklehurst and Esther Wilson for episodes three, four and five respectively. The series was directed by David Blair (episodes 1, 2, 5 and 6) and Richard Laxton (episodes 3 and 4), and produced by RSJ Films, a company founded by Jimmy McGovern, Sita Williams and Roxy Spencer. RSJ Films is also known ", "Accused (1958 TV series)\n The show was produced by Selig J. Seligman, a former U.S. Army lawyer who served at the Nuremberg Trials. He later became an ABC Vice President as well as executive producer of Combat! and Garrison's Gorillas.", "Accused (1958 TV series)\nEdgar Allan Jones, Jr. as the Judge ; William Gwinn as the Substitute Judge ; Jim Hodson as the Clerk ; Tim Farrell as the Bailiff ; Violet Gillmore as the Court Reporter (and Announcer) Similar to other courtroom dramas of the time, the defendants and witnesses were actors (including, for example, Pamela Mason and Robert Culp). However, the defense and prosecution attorneys were real-life lawyers. The court was presided over by Edgar Allan Jones, Jr. Jones had a law degree from the University of Virginia, was a member of the UCLA law faculty and a labor arbitrator. ", "Accused of Murder\n Accused of Murder is a 1956 American Trucolor film noir crime film directed by Joseph Kane and starring David Brian and Vera Ralston, Sidney Blackmer.", "Accused (2014 film)\n Accused (Lucia de B.) is a 2014 Dutch drama film directed by Paula van der Oest and written by Moniek Kramer. It was selected as the Dutch entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards, making the January Shortlist.", "Accused (2010 TV series)\n Accused is a British television anthology series created by Jimmy McGovern. The drama series first aired on 15 November 2010 on BBC One and has run for two series. Each episode follows a different character as they await their verdict in court, and tells the story behind how they find themselves accused. The series has featured actors and actresses such as Christopher Eccleston, Benjamin Smith, Juliet Stevenson, Andy Serkis, Marc Warren, Naomie Harris, Sean Bean and Anne-Marie Duff as the accused in each episode. The series follows previous drama series by McGovern, including anthology series The Street and Moving On. After the cancellation of The Street in 2009 by Granada Television, McGovern formed RSJ Films to produce independent drama programmes and subsequently devised the Accused anthology series. Accused was written by McGovern, Danny Brocklehurst and Alice Nutter and was filmed in Manchester. In 2011 it won an International Emmy for best drama series.", "Acquitted (1929 film)\n In early September 1929, it was announced that Frank Strayer had been slated to direct the picture. In late August it was announced that Lloyd Hughes, Margaret Livingston, and Sam Hardy were attached to the project. With Lloyd Hughes and Margaret Livingston already cast in the lead roles, Charles Wilson and Otto Hoffman were added to the cast in early October. The film was released on November 15, 1929.", "The Woman Accused\n The Woman Accused is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film directed by Paul Sloane and starring Nancy Carroll and Cary Grant as a young engaged couple on a sea cruise, with the woman being implicated in the death of her former lover. The supporting cast includes Jack La Rue in a sequence opposite Grant in which the latter violently whips him.", "Accused (1936 film)\nDouglas Fairbanks, Jr. as Tony Seymour ; Dolores del Río as Gaby Seymour ; Florence Desmond as Yvette Delange ; Edward Rigby as Alphonse de la Riveire ; Basil Sydney as Eugene Roget ; Googie Withers as Ninette Duval ; J.H. Roberts as President of Court ; Cecil Humphreys as Prosecuting Counsel ; Esme Percy as Morel ; Moore Marriott as Dubec ; Cyril Raymond as Guy Henry ; Roland Culver as Henry Capelle ; Leo Genn as Man ", "Accused (2010 TV series)\n On 24 February 2011, BBC Drama Controller Ben Stephenson announced that Accused has been renewed for a second series of four episodes, to be broadcast sometime in 2012. Despite the relatively low viewing figures from the first series, the second was commissioned in the hopes that it would have the potential to find a broader audience. Filming for the first two episodes of the second series began around November 2011. The new cast members confirmed to appear in these episodes included Anne-Marie Duff, Olivia Colman, Robert Sheehan, Joe Dempsie, Sheridan Smith, Paul Popplewell and comedian John Bishop. The first episode, starring Colman and Duff, would be written by McGovern and Carol Cullington, while writing credits on the second episode (starring Sheehan, Bishop and Smith) would again be shared by Daniel Brocklehurst and McGovern. In January 2012 it was confirmed that Anna Maxwell Martin would join Sheehan ", "Accused (2010 TV series)\n In May 2021, it was announced that Fox had given a straight-to-order to an American adaptation of the series. The series will be co-produced between Sony Pictures Television and Fox Entertainment and scheduled for premiere in the 2022–23 television season with Howard Gordon, Alex Gansa and David Shore will be executive producing.", "The Guilty (1947 film)\n The Guilty is a 1947 film noir directed by John Reinhardt, based on Cornell Woolrich's short story \"Two Men in a Furnished Room\". The film was produced by oil millionaire Jack Wrather, the husband of lead actress Bonita Granville.", "The Accused (1960 film)\n Based on a real-life case in 1925, two great lawyers argue the case for and against a science teacher accused of the crime of teaching evolution.", "Trial (film)\n Trial is a 1955 American film directed by Mark Robson and starring Glenn Ford, Dorothy McGuire, Arthur Kennedy and Juano Hernandez. Based on the novel written by Don Mankiewicz, it is about a Mexican boy accused of rape and murder; originally victimized by prejudiced accusers, he becomes a pawn of his communist defender, whose propaganda purposes would be best served by a verdict of guilty." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Daybreak?
[ "Albert Capellani" ]
screenwriter
Daybreak (1918 film)
2,779,584
75
[ { "id": "6079722", "title": "Stephen Tolkin", "text": "Daybreak (also writer, 1993) ; Judgment Day: The Ellie Nesler Story (also writer, 1999) ; Carolina Moon (also writer, 2007) ; What If God Were the Sun? (2007) ; A Day Late and a Dollar Short (2014) ; Switched at Birth (2017) ; New York Prison Break: The Seduction of Joyce Mitchell (also writer, 2017) ", "score": "1.7246239" }, { "id": "32697835", "title": "Daybreak (1931 film)", "text": " Daybreak is a 1931 American pre-Code drama film directed by Jacques Feyder and written by Cyril Hume and Ruth Cummings. The film stars Ramon Novarro, Helen Chandler, Jean Hersholt, C. Aubrey Smith, William Bakewell and Karen Morley. The film was released on May 2, 1931, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.", "score": "1.6337936" }, { "id": "32180382", "title": "Daybreak (1954 film)", "text": " Daybreak (Morgengrauen) is a 1954 West German drama film directed by Viktor Tourjansky and starring Hans Stüwe, Elisabeth Müller and Alexander Kerst. The film's sets were designed by the art director Arne Flekstad. Filming took place at the Bavaria Studios. It was also shot on location in Munich and Hamburg.", "score": "1.5936579" }, { "id": "31657853", "title": "Operation Daybreak", "text": " The screen rights to the novel Seven Men at Daybreak by Alan Burgess were acquired by Warner Bros in mid-1973. Filming on the wartime-action movie based on the book, itself based on a factual story, was announced to be starting in November 1974 with screenplay by Ronald Harwood, and based on the factual events of the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich. The film was produced by Carter Dehaven and directed by Lewis Gilbert.", "score": "1.5520074" }, { "id": "32071924", "title": "Aron Eli Coleite", "text": " Aron Eli Coleite (sometimes credited Aron Coleite) is an American comic book writer, television writer and producer best known for his work on the Netflix series Daybreak, the NBC series Heroes and on the comic book series Ultimate X-Men.", "score": "1.5501592" }, { "id": "25386483", "title": "Daybreak (1948 film)", "text": "Eric Portman as Eddie Mendover/Tribe ; Ann Todd as Frances (\"Frankie\") ; Maxwell Reed as Olaf ; Bill Owen as Ron ; Edward Rigby as Bill Shackle ; Jane Hylton as Doris ; Eliot Makeham as Mr. Bigley ; Margaret Withers as Mrs. Bigley ; John Turnbull as Superintendent ; Maurice Denham as Inspector ; Milton Rosmer as Governor ", "score": "1.5499191" }, { "id": "15422073", "title": "Daybreak (1918 film)", "text": " Daybreak is a 1918 American silent drama film directed by Albert Capellani. The film is considered to be lost.", "score": "1.5454082" }, { "id": "15422075", "title": "Daybreak (1918 film)", "text": "Emily Stevens as Edith Frome ; Julian L'Estrange as Arthur Frome ; Herman Lieb as Herbert Rankin ; Augustus Phillips as Dr. David Brett ; Francis Joyner as Carl Peterson (credited as Frank Joyner) ; Evelyn Brent as Det. Alma Peterson ; Joseph Daly as Otway (credited as Joe Daly) ; Evelyn Axzell as Meta Thompson (credited as Mrs. Evelyn Axzell) ", "score": "1.5371463" }, { "id": "1728851", "title": "Daybreak Pacific", "text": " A film trilogy comprising: The Battle of Treasure Island, The Monster of Treasure Island and The Mystery of Treasure Island. Starring Beth Allen Nicko Vella and directed by Michael Hurst and Gavin Scott.", "score": "1.5346094" }, { "id": "15111064", "title": "Paul Zbyszewski", "text": " Zbyszewski began working in television as a writer on the game show Weakest Link. His screenplay for After the Sunset (which he co-wrote with Craig Rosenberg) was released theatrically in 2004. Zbyszewski went on to create the ABC science fiction series Day Break, where he worked as a co-executive producer and writer for the show's short run in the 2006-2007 television season. He wrote the pilot as well as the episodes \"What If They Run?\", \"What If She's Lying?\" (with Henry Alonso Myers), \"What If She's the Key?\" (with Jeffrey Bell) and the series finale \"What If It's Him?\" (with Bell). In 2013-14, and 2014-15 Zbyszewski was executive producer or co-executive producer on all episodes of the new ABC hit drama, Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Zbyszewski was a supervising producer ", "score": "1.533188" }, { "id": "6342385", "title": "Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay", "text": " ; Battleship - screenplay by Jon and Erich Hoeber, based on the boardgame by Hasbro ; A Thousand Words - written by Steve Koren ; The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2 - screenplay by Melissa Rosenberg and Stephenie Meyer, based on the novel by Meyer ; 2013 Movie 43 - written by countless screenwriters ; After Earth - screenplay by M. Night Shyamalan and Gary Whitta, story by Will Smith ; Grown Ups 2 - screenplay by Adam Sandler, Tim Herlihy and Fred Wolf ; The Lone Ranger - screenplay by Justin Haythe, Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, story by Ted ", "score": "1.5307369" }, { "id": "25386475", "title": "Daybreak (1948 film)", "text": " Daybreak is a 1948 drama by Riverside Studios – classified by some as 'British Noir' – directed by Compton Bennett and starring Eric Portman, Ann Todd and Maxwell Reed. It is based on a play by Monckton Hoffe. A sombre, bleak film, Daybreak was filmed in 1946, but ran into trouble with the BBFC, resulting in a delay of almost two years before its release. The version finally approved for release excised approximately six minutes of original footage, resulting in some jerky cuts where scenes have been removed and leaving noticeable plot lacunae which are considered to detract somewhat from an otherwise well-regarded film.", "score": "1.521038" }, { "id": "32180384", "title": "Daybreak (1954 film)", "text": "Hans Stüwe as Oberst Gaffron ; Elisabeth Müller as Inge Jensen ; Alexander Kerst as Jochen Freyberg ; Josef Sieber as Wilheilm Schramm ; Carsta Löck as Amalie Schramm ; Oliver Grimm as Pucky Schramm ; Walter Holten as Von Wakenitz ; Edward P. Merlotte as Colonel Thompson ; Renate Mannhardt as Anita Kyffland ; Gert Fröbe in a bit part ; Paula Braend ; Viktor Afritsch ; Malte Jaeger ; Kurt Großkurth ; Wolfried Lier ; Rudolf Reiff ; John Van Dreelen ", "score": "1.5187025" }, { "id": "25386487", "title": "Daybreak (1948 film)", "text": " The film was moderately successful at the British box office but failed to recoup its relatively high cost. The difficulties with the censor led J. Arthur Rank to refuse to finance a project of Box's, The Killer and the Slain.", "score": "1.5183754" }, { "id": "13994777", "title": "List of films based on actual events", "text": " Daybreak (1975) – Second World War film based on the true story of Operation Anthropoid, the assassination of SS General Reinhard Heydrich in Prague ; The Other Side of the Mountain (1975) – drama romance film based on a 1966 true story of ski racing champion Jill Kinmont ; Recommendation for Mercy (1975) – Canadian film fictionalizing the murder trial of Steven Truscott ; The Silence (1975) – made-for-TV movie about James Pelosi, a West Point cadet who was charged in 1971 with cheating on an exam. He remained at West Point but was subjected to \"The Silence\" – a policy ", "score": "1.5180198" }, { "id": "15111063", "title": "Paul Zbyszewski", "text": " Paul Zbyszewski is an American television writer and producer. He has worked in both capacities on the series Lost and Day Break, and he is the creator of Day Break. He also wrote the feature film After the Sunset.", "score": "1.5109296" }, { "id": "15422074", "title": "Daybreak (1918 film)", "text": " As described in a film magazine, Edith Frome (Stevens) finds it impossible to live with her husband Arthur (L'Estrange), who overindulges in liquor, and finally leaves him. After a separation of three years, she returns. Each evening she goes out and returns late, which arouses the suspicion of her husband. He has his secretary follow her and learns that she visits a child. Because of her friendliness with Dr. David Brett (Phillips), Arthur suspects the worst and institutes divorce proceedings. Edith tells him the truth concerning the child and Arthur, realizing his folly with his debauches, swears off liquor and they are reunited.", "score": "1.497771" }, { "id": "31353619", "title": "Richard Day (writer)", "text": " Richard Day is an American writer, producer, director and occasional actor. He has worked as a writer/producer for several television programs, including, Arrested Development, Spin City, Ellen, Roseanne, Mad About You and Aliens in America. In addition to his work in television, he has also written and directed his own independent films Girls Will Be Girls and Straight-Jacket based on his own off-Broadway play.", "score": "1.4951596" }, { "id": "15002491", "title": "Daybreak (2019 TV series)", "text": " Peyton started creating a series based on the graphic novel in 2012. He realised that the book had influences from Ferris Bueller. On July 26, 2018, Netflix announced an order for the production of a ten-episode first season. Aron Eli Coleite was set to serve as showrunner for the series. The series is created by Brad Peyton and Coleite who are credited as executive producers alongside Jeff Fierson. ASAP Entertainment will be involved in the production of the series. In September 2019, it was reported that the series was set to premiere on October 24, 2019. On December 16, 2019, Netflix canceled the series after one season.", "score": "1.4928854" }, { "id": "15002492", "title": "Daybreak (2019 TV series)", "text": " In October 2018, it was announced that Matthew Broderick would star in the series. In the same month, it was reported that Colin Ford, Alyvia Alyn Lind, Sophie Simnett, Austin Crute, Gregory Kasyan, Krysta Rodriguez, Cody Kearsley, and Jeante Godlock joined the cast.", "score": "1.492398" } ]
[ "Stephen Tolkin\nDaybreak (also writer, 1993) ; Judgment Day: The Ellie Nesler Story (also writer, 1999) ; Carolina Moon (also writer, 2007) ; What If God Were the Sun? (2007) ; A Day Late and a Dollar Short (2014) ; Switched at Birth (2017) ; New York Prison Break: The Seduction of Joyce Mitchell (also writer, 2017) ", "Daybreak (1931 film)\n Daybreak is a 1931 American pre-Code drama film directed by Jacques Feyder and written by Cyril Hume and Ruth Cummings. The film stars Ramon Novarro, Helen Chandler, Jean Hersholt, C. Aubrey Smith, William Bakewell and Karen Morley. The film was released on May 2, 1931, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.", "Daybreak (1954 film)\n Daybreak (Morgengrauen) is a 1954 West German drama film directed by Viktor Tourjansky and starring Hans Stüwe, Elisabeth Müller and Alexander Kerst. The film's sets were designed by the art director Arne Flekstad. Filming took place at the Bavaria Studios. It was also shot on location in Munich and Hamburg.", "Operation Daybreak\n The screen rights to the novel Seven Men at Daybreak by Alan Burgess were acquired by Warner Bros in mid-1973. Filming on the wartime-action movie based on the book, itself based on a factual story, was announced to be starting in November 1974 with screenplay by Ronald Harwood, and based on the factual events of the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich. The film was produced by Carter Dehaven and directed by Lewis Gilbert.", "Aron Eli Coleite\n Aron Eli Coleite (sometimes credited Aron Coleite) is an American comic book writer, television writer and producer best known for his work on the Netflix series Daybreak, the NBC series Heroes and on the comic book series Ultimate X-Men.", "Daybreak (1948 film)\nEric Portman as Eddie Mendover/Tribe ; Ann Todd as Frances (\"Frankie\") ; Maxwell Reed as Olaf ; Bill Owen as Ron ; Edward Rigby as Bill Shackle ; Jane Hylton as Doris ; Eliot Makeham as Mr. Bigley ; Margaret Withers as Mrs. Bigley ; John Turnbull as Superintendent ; Maurice Denham as Inspector ; Milton Rosmer as Governor ", "Daybreak (1918 film)\n Daybreak is a 1918 American silent drama film directed by Albert Capellani. The film is considered to be lost.", "Daybreak (1918 film)\nEmily Stevens as Edith Frome ; Julian L'Estrange as Arthur Frome ; Herman Lieb as Herbert Rankin ; Augustus Phillips as Dr. David Brett ; Francis Joyner as Carl Peterson (credited as Frank Joyner) ; Evelyn Brent as Det. Alma Peterson ; Joseph Daly as Otway (credited as Joe Daly) ; Evelyn Axzell as Meta Thompson (credited as Mrs. Evelyn Axzell) ", "Daybreak Pacific\n A film trilogy comprising: The Battle of Treasure Island, The Monster of Treasure Island and The Mystery of Treasure Island. Starring Beth Allen Nicko Vella and directed by Michael Hurst and Gavin Scott.", "Paul Zbyszewski\n Zbyszewski began working in television as a writer on the game show Weakest Link. His screenplay for After the Sunset (which he co-wrote with Craig Rosenberg) was released theatrically in 2004. Zbyszewski went on to create the ABC science fiction series Day Break, where he worked as a co-executive producer and writer for the show's short run in the 2006-2007 television season. He wrote the pilot as well as the episodes \"What If They Run?\", \"What If She's Lying?\" (with Henry Alonso Myers), \"What If She's the Key?\" (with Jeffrey Bell) and the series finale \"What If It's Him?\" (with Bell). In 2013-14, and 2014-15 Zbyszewski was executive producer or co-executive producer on all episodes of the new ABC hit drama, Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Zbyszewski was a supervising producer ", "Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay\n ; Battleship - screenplay by Jon and Erich Hoeber, based on the boardgame by Hasbro ; A Thousand Words - written by Steve Koren ; The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2 - screenplay by Melissa Rosenberg and Stephenie Meyer, based on the novel by Meyer ; 2013 Movie 43 - written by countless screenwriters ; After Earth - screenplay by M. Night Shyamalan and Gary Whitta, story by Will Smith ; Grown Ups 2 - screenplay by Adam Sandler, Tim Herlihy and Fred Wolf ; The Lone Ranger - screenplay by Justin Haythe, Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, story by Ted ", "Daybreak (1948 film)\n Daybreak is a 1948 drama by Riverside Studios – classified by some as 'British Noir' – directed by Compton Bennett and starring Eric Portman, Ann Todd and Maxwell Reed. It is based on a play by Monckton Hoffe. A sombre, bleak film, Daybreak was filmed in 1946, but ran into trouble with the BBFC, resulting in a delay of almost two years before its release. The version finally approved for release excised approximately six minutes of original footage, resulting in some jerky cuts where scenes have been removed and leaving noticeable plot lacunae which are considered to detract somewhat from an otherwise well-regarded film.", "Daybreak (1954 film)\nHans Stüwe as Oberst Gaffron ; Elisabeth Müller as Inge Jensen ; Alexander Kerst as Jochen Freyberg ; Josef Sieber as Wilheilm Schramm ; Carsta Löck as Amalie Schramm ; Oliver Grimm as Pucky Schramm ; Walter Holten as Von Wakenitz ; Edward P. Merlotte as Colonel Thompson ; Renate Mannhardt as Anita Kyffland ; Gert Fröbe in a bit part ; Paula Braend ; Viktor Afritsch ; Malte Jaeger ; Kurt Großkurth ; Wolfried Lier ; Rudolf Reiff ; John Van Dreelen ", "Daybreak (1948 film)\n The film was moderately successful at the British box office but failed to recoup its relatively high cost. The difficulties with the censor led J. Arthur Rank to refuse to finance a project of Box's, The Killer and the Slain.", "List of films based on actual events\n Daybreak (1975) – Second World War film based on the true story of Operation Anthropoid, the assassination of SS General Reinhard Heydrich in Prague ; The Other Side of the Mountain (1975) – drama romance film based on a 1966 true story of ski racing champion Jill Kinmont ; Recommendation for Mercy (1975) – Canadian film fictionalizing the murder trial of Steven Truscott ; The Silence (1975) – made-for-TV movie about James Pelosi, a West Point cadet who was charged in 1971 with cheating on an exam. He remained at West Point but was subjected to \"The Silence\" – a policy ", "Paul Zbyszewski\n Paul Zbyszewski is an American television writer and producer. He has worked in both capacities on the series Lost and Day Break, and he is the creator of Day Break. He also wrote the feature film After the Sunset.", "Daybreak (1918 film)\n As described in a film magazine, Edith Frome (Stevens) finds it impossible to live with her husband Arthur (L'Estrange), who overindulges in liquor, and finally leaves him. After a separation of three years, she returns. Each evening she goes out and returns late, which arouses the suspicion of her husband. He has his secretary follow her and learns that she visits a child. Because of her friendliness with Dr. David Brett (Phillips), Arthur suspects the worst and institutes divorce proceedings. Edith tells him the truth concerning the child and Arthur, realizing his folly with his debauches, swears off liquor and they are reunited.", "Richard Day (writer)\n Richard Day is an American writer, producer, director and occasional actor. He has worked as a writer/producer for several television programs, including, Arrested Development, Spin City, Ellen, Roseanne, Mad About You and Aliens in America. In addition to his work in television, he has also written and directed his own independent films Girls Will Be Girls and Straight-Jacket based on his own off-Broadway play.", "Daybreak (2019 TV series)\n Peyton started creating a series based on the graphic novel in 2012. He realised that the book had influences from Ferris Bueller. On July 26, 2018, Netflix announced an order for the production of a ten-episode first season. Aron Eli Coleite was set to serve as showrunner for the series. The series is created by Brad Peyton and Coleite who are credited as executive producers alongside Jeff Fierson. ASAP Entertainment will be involved in the production of the series. In September 2019, it was reported that the series was set to premiere on October 24, 2019. On December 16, 2019, Netflix canceled the series after one season.", "Daybreak (2019 TV series)\n In October 2018, it was announced that Matthew Broderick would star in the series. In the same month, it was reported that Colin Ford, Alyvia Alyn Lind, Sophie Simnett, Austin Crute, Gregory Kasyan, Krysta Rodriguez, Cody Kearsley, and Jeante Godlock joined the cast." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Féminin, masculin?
[ "Kiarash Anvari" ]
screenwriter
Féminin, masculin
4,177,164
48
[ { "id": "6554642", "title": "Jean-Luc Godard", "text": " capital. Masculin Féminin (1966), based on two Guy de Maupassant stories, La Femme de Paul and Le Signe, was a study of contemporary French youth and their involvement with cultural politics. An intertitle refers to the characters as \"The children of Marx and Coca-Cola.\" Although Godard's cinema is sometimes thought to depict a wholly masculine point of view, Phillip John Usher has demonstrated how the film, by the way it connects images and disparate events, seems to blur gender lines. Godard followed with Made in U.S.A (1966), whose source material was Richard Stark's The Jugger; and Two or Three Things I Know About Her (1967), ", "score": "1.656334" }, { "id": "2526645", "title": "Yves Afonso", "text": "Masculin Féminin (1966) - L'homme qui se suicide (uncredited) ; Made in U.S.A (1966) - David Goodis ; Week End (1967) - Gros Poucet (uncredited) ; Time to Live (1969) - René ; Une veuve en or (1970) - Un membre de la bande à Raphaël (uncredited) ; Dossier prostitution (1970) - Le placeur (uncredited) ; Cannabis (1970) - (uncredited) ; Vladimir et Rosa (1971) - Yves - un étudiant révolutionnnaire (uncredited) ; La maffia du plaisir (1971) - Un naturiste ; La cavale (1971) - Un gendarme (uncredited) ; Valparaiso, Valparaiso (1971) - Anatole ; L'insolent (1973) - Petit René ; Les volets clos (1973) ; Les gants blancs du diable (1973) - Cartoni, le tueur à gages ; Défense de ", "score": "1.5725762" }, { "id": "2720537", "title": "Cristina Perincioli", "text": " the first \"Women's Center\", and 1977 of the \"Rape Crisis Center”, all in (West-)Berlin. In 1975 she wrote with her partner Cäcilia Rentmeister the screenplay for the first feature film about a lesbian relationship produced for German television (\"Anna and Edith\", ZDF/Second German TV Channel). In 1977 Perincioli founded the Sphinx Filmproduktion GmbH, with Marianne Gassner as a production manager. The documentary fiction The Power of Men is the Patience of Women (ZDF/ Second German TV Channel, 1978) is also shown internationally. From an interview with Perincioli: Michael Althen described 2008 in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung functions and effects of the film as a \"... documentary fiction in which ", "score": "1.5439099" }, { "id": "16148276", "title": "Supervixens", "text": " 1973 and wrote the script. It was the first screenplay he wrote entirely by himself and he did the first draft in eight days. Meyer says he rewrote it nine times, with input of the actors. \"I think actors contribute to the comfort of words because it's one thing to sit in a little green room somewhere and write dialogue, but when you hear actors speaking it, it doesn't necessarily flow as well as it might,\" said Meyer. The two main female characters in the film were Superangel and Supervixen. \"Superangel, she's totally bad but beautiful,\" said Meyer. \"Supervixen, she's totally good. They're bookends. I like bookend ", "score": "1.5399477" }, { "id": "8670594", "title": "Jacquette Guillaume", "text": " Jacquette Guillaume (fl. 1665) was a French writer. Her best-known work was Les dames illustres, où par bonnes et fortes raisons il se prouve que le sexe féminin surpasse en toutes sortes de genres le sexe masculin, a work of 443 pages published by Thomas Jolly in Paris in 1665. Two copies of this book are believed to exist, in the Library of Congress and at Duke University. In this book she argues for the moral superiority of women over men. The book has been described as \"a long-neglected, obscured contribution to the history of early French feminism\", and was a source for Elizabeth Elstob's work which itself was a source for George Ballard's Memoirs of several ladies of Great Britain, who have been celebrated for their writings, or skill in the learned languages, arts and sciences (1752). She also wrote a fictional work, La femme genereuse, of which no copies are known to survive.", "score": "1.5164759" }, { "id": "26957030", "title": "The Dressmaker (2015 film)", "text": " Rosalie Ham sold the rights of the novel for film in mid 2000s. She said in an interview, \"I had ten offers on the table within weeks of the book coming out. I selected a producer who seemed passionate about the book and determined to make it happen\" and even wrote a screenplay for the film but somehow the project never took off. While missing out on the rights to begin with, producer Sue Maslin reconnected with the author whom she hadn't seen for 30 years since they were at boarding school together. After the initial project was shelved, Maslin optioned the rights of the novel in 2009 and brought Moorhouse on board to direct and write the screenplay for the film. Maslin said, \"She (Moorhouse) was ", "score": "1.5030069" }, { "id": "2766453", "title": "Mircea Mureșan", "text": "Toamna se numără bobocii, 1961 (screenwriter, with András Sütő) ; Partea ta de vină, 1963 ; Răscoala, 1965 ; K.O., 1968 (screenwriter, with Eugen Popiță) ; The Hatchet (film), 1969 (scenario after Mihail Sadoveanu's eponymous novel) ; Lunga noapte de șase ani, 1970 (documentary, has been destroyed) ; Asediul (film), 1970 (screenwriter, with Corneliu Leu) ; Bariera (film), 1972 ; Porțile albastre ale orașului, 1973 ; Toate pînzele sus, 1976 (for TV; screenwriter, with Alexandru Struțeanu) ; Împușcături sub clar de lună, 1977 ; Blestemul pământului, blestemul iubirii, 1979 ; Întoarcere la dragostea dintâi, 1981 (screenwriter) ; Lumini și umbre, 1981–1982 (for TV; with Andrei Blaier and Mihai Constantinescu) ; O lebădă, iarna, 1983 ; Horea (film), 1984 ; Cei mai frumoși 20 de ani, 1985 ; Maria și marea, 1988 ; Miss Litoral, 1991 ; A doua cădere a Constantinopolului, 1994 ; Sexy Harem Ada Kaleh, 2001 (screenwriter) ; Vrăjitoarea Azucena – Îngerul de abanos, 2004 (screenwriter) ", "score": "1.4845407" }, { "id": "6554675", "title": "Jean-Luc Godard", "text": " ; Usher, Phillip John (2009). \"De Sexe Incertain: Masculin, Féminin de Godard\". French Forum, vol. 34, no. 2, pp. 97–112. ; Godard Bibliography (via UC Berkeley) Diane Stevenson, \"Godard and Bazin\" in the Andre Bazin special issue, Jeffrey Crouse (ed.), Film International, Issue 30, Vol. 5, No. 6, 2007, pp. 32–40. ; Temple, Michael. Williams, James S. Witt, Michael (eds.) 2007. For Ever Godard. London: Black Dog Publishing. ; Temple, Michael and Williams, James S. (eds.) (2000). The Cinema alone: Essays on the Work of Jean-Luc Godard 1985–2000. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. ; Usher, Phillip John (2009). \"De Sexe Incertain: Masculin, Féminin de Godard\". French Forum, vol. 34, no. 2, pp. 97–112. ; Godard Bibliography (via UC Berkeley) Godard Bibliography (via UC Berkeley) Godard Bibliography (via UC Berkeley) ", "score": "1.4641961" }, { "id": "29713241", "title": "Inés Bortagaray", "text": "Mi amiga del parque (screenplay with Ana Katz) ; Mujer conejo (2010, screenplay with Verónica Chen) ; La vida útil (2010, screenplay with Federico Veiroj) ; Luna con dormilones (screenplay, Pablo Uribe film that participated in the 2012-2013 Montevideo Biennial and won the \"El Azahar\" grand prize at the tenth Salto Art Biennial) ; El tiempo pasa (2013, screenplay) ; Una novia errante (2006, feature film screenplay with Ana Katz) ; Otra historia del mundo (2017, screenplay, feature film based on the novel Alivio de luto by Mario Delgado Aparaín, with the author and Guillermo Casanova) ; El fin del mundo (television series, 13 episodes, with Adrián Biniez, original idea with Juan Pablo Rebella and Pablo Stoll) ; Eight short testimonials for TV Ciudad in Montevideo about menarche, first sexual relations, first childbirth, and menopause (2001, direction, research, and production) ; Tokyo Boogie (participated in writing the screenplay, Pablo Casacuberta and Yuki Goto) ", "score": "1.463228" }, { "id": "31446654", "title": "Malú Huacuja del Toro", "text": " multi-awarded director Julián Hernández, now on Netflix. She now lives in New York City. She writes both in English and Spanish. Her first play in English, Celebrities Shouldn't Have Children, was produced and directed in New York City by Venezuelan artist Leo Zelig, in 2004. Her short story Diabolical Compassion was selected finalist in the 2002 Arts & Letters Fiction Contest. Her screenplay \"Faustus in Hollywood\" was in the short-list nomination for best innovative screenplay at the Female Eye Film Festival 2019, and won finalist of the Hollywood Jumbo Screenplay Competition 2020 and Chicago Screenplay Awards 2020. She has been a frequent contributor to Alternet and CounterPunch publications in the US. She is the founder of the FEMINYSTA showcase (Filming Eve Multicultural Intersectional NY Screenings to All).", "score": "1.4626212" }, { "id": "2893404", "title": "Janine Marmot", "text": " Petit. She frequently co produces with European partners, and is currently producing Simon Pummell’s new feature Brand New-U with finance from British Film Institute, Netherlands Film Fund, Irish Film Board and Finite Films. Announced at International Film Festival Rotterdam in 2015 is an adaptation of Gibson's short story Dogfight by BAFTA award-winning writer and director Simon Pummell. Written by Gibson and Michael Swanwick and first published in Omni in July 1985, the film is being developed by British producer Janine Marmot at Hot Property Films. Her development slate also includes an original screenplay by Ned Beauman, one of the writer's on Granta magazine's once in a decade list: Best of Young British Novelists, and an adaptation of the Margaret Atwood novel The Edible Woman.", "score": "1.461052" }, { "id": "14832165", "title": "Suzanne Schiffman", "text": " à part (1964) (script supervisor) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; La peau douce (1964) (script girl) - François Truffaut ; Contempt (1963) (script girl) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; Le petit soldat (1963) (script girl) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; Vivre sa vie (1962) (script girl) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; Jules et Jim (1962) (script supervisor) - directed by François Truffaut ; Une femme est une femme (1961) (script girl) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; Lola (1961) (script girl) - directed by Jacques Demy ; Tirez sur le pianiste (1960) (script girl) - directed by François Truffaut ; Paris nous appartient (1960) (dialogue coach) - directed by Jacques Rivette ", "score": "1.4588164" }, { "id": "26657734", "title": "Sue Maslin", "text": " the Australian Film Institute Awards, Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards and IF Awards in 2003. Following Japanese Story, Maslin produced and executive produced a number of Australian documentaries including Irresistible (executive producer), Hunt Angels (producer) – winner of the 2006 AFI Award for Best Feature Documentary Film, Celebrity: Dominick Dunne (producer), Michael Kirby: Don't Forget the Justice Bit (producer), Breaking the News (executive producer) and Ringbalin: Breaking the Drought (executive producer). Maslin produced The Dressmaker alongside director Jocelyn Moorhouse which was released in 2015. Starring Kate Winslet, Judy Davis, Liam Hemsworth and Hugo Weaving, the film was released following the very successful book of the same title written by Rosalie Ham. The film was one of the most successful in Australian history grossing ", "score": "1.4509821" }, { "id": "10994472", "title": "Nick Maley", "text": " writer, creating the screenplay for the 1981 film Inseminoid. He created the script in four days along with his wife Gloria, also supplying the makeup for the characters in the film. Maley is originally from London but moved to Sint Maarten in 2007 with his wife Gloria, and opening the Planet Paradise movie exhibit. The exhibit features versions of various Star Wars characters and other memorabilia from his work in the film industry. He is also an artist and painter whose works have been featured across 18 different countries in museums and galleries. Maley was honored by Lucasfilm in 2016. The same year he also rebuilt a replica Yoda using the same principles as the original.", "score": "1.4463426" }, { "id": "28424518", "title": "Sadism and masochism in fiction", "text": " (1970), directed by Jess Franco ; The Laughing Woman, aka Femina Ridens, The Frightened Woman (1969), directed by Piero Schivazappa ; Eugenie de Sade (1970), another Jesus Franco adaptation of de Sade ; Daughters of Darkness, (Le Rouge aux Lèvres) (1971), directed by Harry Kümel and starring Delphine Seyrig and John Karlen ; The Nightcomers (1971), directed by Michael Winner and starring Marlon Brando and Stephanie Beacham ; Last Tango in Paris (1972), directed by Bernardo Bertolucci and starring Marlon Brando and Maria Schneider ; Justine de Sade (1972), directed by Claude Pierson ; The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (Die ", "score": "1.4422636" }, { "id": "5284987", "title": "Mahinder Watsa", "text": " 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, ", "score": "1.43713" }, { "id": "5405961", "title": "Your Ticket Is No Longer Valid", "text": " The film was based on a novel by Romain Gary which was optioned by producer Robert Lantos. His assistant Leila Basen wrote a draft of the script. She later recalled: \"If the book was totally sexist, the first draft screenplay written by an American writer was even more misogynist... There never was a script contract. Robert continued to pay me my executive assistant salary of $350 a week. I sat in my usual desk in a room with the other four secretaries. But instead of writing lunch orders, I was writing what was to become the biggest-budget Canadian film of that time... In lieu of money, I got an IBM Selectric II, a free trip to Paris, where some of the film was shot, and tons of experience screenwriter-wise. I ", "score": "1.4319692" }, { "id": "32388235", "title": "And God Created Woman (1956 film)", "text": " Approximately five years after the film's release, in 1961, Popular Library published a series of three screenplay novelizations based on mainstream foreign films known for pushing sexual boundaries in cinema, and this film was among them. The by line is that of \"new bestselling French author Simone Colette\", but no such author ever existed. Rather it's a pseudonym for American authorship, devised to tie the trio of novelizations together. Whether it served as a single author pseudonym or a \"house name\" for several writers is unknown. The copyright is assigned to the publisher and screenwriters Vadim & Lévy are nowhere mentioned.", "score": "1.4279758" }, { "id": "7933419", "title": "Men vs. Women", "text": " Men vs. Women (Maschi contro femmine) is a 2010 Italian comedy film directed by Fausto Brizzi. A sequel entitled Women vs. Men (Femmine contro maschi) was released in February 2011.", "score": "1.4258723" }, { "id": "8022321", "title": "Women vs. Men", "text": " Women vs. Men (Femmine contro maschi) is a 2011 Italian comedy film directed by Fausto Brizzi. The film is a sequel to 2010 Men vs. Women (Maschi contro femmine).", "score": "1.4248738" } ]
[ "Jean-Luc Godard\n capital. Masculin Féminin (1966), based on two Guy de Maupassant stories, La Femme de Paul and Le Signe, was a study of contemporary French youth and their involvement with cultural politics. An intertitle refers to the characters as \"The children of Marx and Coca-Cola.\" Although Godard's cinema is sometimes thought to depict a wholly masculine point of view, Phillip John Usher has demonstrated how the film, by the way it connects images and disparate events, seems to blur gender lines. Godard followed with Made in U.S.A (1966), whose source material was Richard Stark's The Jugger; and Two or Three Things I Know About Her (1967), ", "Yves Afonso\nMasculin Féminin (1966) - L'homme qui se suicide (uncredited) ; Made in U.S.A (1966) - David Goodis ; Week End (1967) - Gros Poucet (uncredited) ; Time to Live (1969) - René ; Une veuve en or (1970) - Un membre de la bande à Raphaël (uncredited) ; Dossier prostitution (1970) - Le placeur (uncredited) ; Cannabis (1970) - (uncredited) ; Vladimir et Rosa (1971) - Yves - un étudiant révolutionnnaire (uncredited) ; La maffia du plaisir (1971) - Un naturiste ; La cavale (1971) - Un gendarme (uncredited) ; Valparaiso, Valparaiso (1971) - Anatole ; L'insolent (1973) - Petit René ; Les volets clos (1973) ; Les gants blancs du diable (1973) - Cartoni, le tueur à gages ; Défense de ", "Cristina Perincioli\n the first \"Women's Center\", and 1977 of the \"Rape Crisis Center”, all in (West-)Berlin. In 1975 she wrote with her partner Cäcilia Rentmeister the screenplay for the first feature film about a lesbian relationship produced for German television (\"Anna and Edith\", ZDF/Second German TV Channel). In 1977 Perincioli founded the Sphinx Filmproduktion GmbH, with Marianne Gassner as a production manager. The documentary fiction The Power of Men is the Patience of Women (ZDF/ Second German TV Channel, 1978) is also shown internationally. From an interview with Perincioli: Michael Althen described 2008 in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung functions and effects of the film as a \"... documentary fiction in which ", "Supervixens\n 1973 and wrote the script. It was the first screenplay he wrote entirely by himself and he did the first draft in eight days. Meyer says he rewrote it nine times, with input of the actors. \"I think actors contribute to the comfort of words because it's one thing to sit in a little green room somewhere and write dialogue, but when you hear actors speaking it, it doesn't necessarily flow as well as it might,\" said Meyer. The two main female characters in the film were Superangel and Supervixen. \"Superangel, she's totally bad but beautiful,\" said Meyer. \"Supervixen, she's totally good. They're bookends. I like bookend ", "Jacquette Guillaume\n Jacquette Guillaume (fl. 1665) was a French writer. Her best-known work was Les dames illustres, où par bonnes et fortes raisons il se prouve que le sexe féminin surpasse en toutes sortes de genres le sexe masculin, a work of 443 pages published by Thomas Jolly in Paris in 1665. Two copies of this book are believed to exist, in the Library of Congress and at Duke University. In this book she argues for the moral superiority of women over men. The book has been described as \"a long-neglected, obscured contribution to the history of early French feminism\", and was a source for Elizabeth Elstob's work which itself was a source for George Ballard's Memoirs of several ladies of Great Britain, who have been celebrated for their writings, or skill in the learned languages, arts and sciences (1752). She also wrote a fictional work, La femme genereuse, of which no copies are known to survive.", "The Dressmaker (2015 film)\n Rosalie Ham sold the rights of the novel for film in mid 2000s. She said in an interview, \"I had ten offers on the table within weeks of the book coming out. I selected a producer who seemed passionate about the book and determined to make it happen\" and even wrote a screenplay for the film but somehow the project never took off. While missing out on the rights to begin with, producer Sue Maslin reconnected with the author whom she hadn't seen for 30 years since they were at boarding school together. After the initial project was shelved, Maslin optioned the rights of the novel in 2009 and brought Moorhouse on board to direct and write the screenplay for the film. Maslin said, \"She (Moorhouse) was ", "Mircea Mureșan\nToamna se numără bobocii, 1961 (screenwriter, with András Sütő) ; Partea ta de vină, 1963 ; Răscoala, 1965 ; K.O., 1968 (screenwriter, with Eugen Popiță) ; The Hatchet (film), 1969 (scenario after Mihail Sadoveanu's eponymous novel) ; Lunga noapte de șase ani, 1970 (documentary, has been destroyed) ; Asediul (film), 1970 (screenwriter, with Corneliu Leu) ; Bariera (film), 1972 ; Porțile albastre ale orașului, 1973 ; Toate pînzele sus, 1976 (for TV; screenwriter, with Alexandru Struțeanu) ; Împușcături sub clar de lună, 1977 ; Blestemul pământului, blestemul iubirii, 1979 ; Întoarcere la dragostea dintâi, 1981 (screenwriter) ; Lumini și umbre, 1981–1982 (for TV; with Andrei Blaier and Mihai Constantinescu) ; O lebădă, iarna, 1983 ; Horea (film), 1984 ; Cei mai frumoși 20 de ani, 1985 ; Maria și marea, 1988 ; Miss Litoral, 1991 ; A doua cădere a Constantinopolului, 1994 ; Sexy Harem Ada Kaleh, 2001 (screenwriter) ; Vrăjitoarea Azucena – Îngerul de abanos, 2004 (screenwriter) ", "Jean-Luc Godard\n ; Usher, Phillip John (2009). \"De Sexe Incertain: Masculin, Féminin de Godard\". French Forum, vol. 34, no. 2, pp. 97–112. ; Godard Bibliography (via UC Berkeley) Diane Stevenson, \"Godard and Bazin\" in the Andre Bazin special issue, Jeffrey Crouse (ed.), Film International, Issue 30, Vol. 5, No. 6, 2007, pp. 32–40. ; Temple, Michael. Williams, James S. Witt, Michael (eds.) 2007. For Ever Godard. London: Black Dog Publishing. ; Temple, Michael and Williams, James S. (eds.) (2000). The Cinema alone: Essays on the Work of Jean-Luc Godard 1985–2000. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. ; Usher, Phillip John (2009). \"De Sexe Incertain: Masculin, Féminin de Godard\". French Forum, vol. 34, no. 2, pp. 97–112. ; Godard Bibliography (via UC Berkeley) Godard Bibliography (via UC Berkeley) Godard Bibliography (via UC Berkeley) ", "Inés Bortagaray\nMi amiga del parque (screenplay with Ana Katz) ; Mujer conejo (2010, screenplay with Verónica Chen) ; La vida útil (2010, screenplay with Federico Veiroj) ; Luna con dormilones (screenplay, Pablo Uribe film that participated in the 2012-2013 Montevideo Biennial and won the \"El Azahar\" grand prize at the tenth Salto Art Biennial) ; El tiempo pasa (2013, screenplay) ; Una novia errante (2006, feature film screenplay with Ana Katz) ; Otra historia del mundo (2017, screenplay, feature film based on the novel Alivio de luto by Mario Delgado Aparaín, with the author and Guillermo Casanova) ; El fin del mundo (television series, 13 episodes, with Adrián Biniez, original idea with Juan Pablo Rebella and Pablo Stoll) ; Eight short testimonials for TV Ciudad in Montevideo about menarche, first sexual relations, first childbirth, and menopause (2001, direction, research, and production) ; Tokyo Boogie (participated in writing the screenplay, Pablo Casacuberta and Yuki Goto) ", "Malú Huacuja del Toro\n multi-awarded director Julián Hernández, now on Netflix. She now lives in New York City. She writes both in English and Spanish. Her first play in English, Celebrities Shouldn't Have Children, was produced and directed in New York City by Venezuelan artist Leo Zelig, in 2004. Her short story Diabolical Compassion was selected finalist in the 2002 Arts & Letters Fiction Contest. Her screenplay \"Faustus in Hollywood\" was in the short-list nomination for best innovative screenplay at the Female Eye Film Festival 2019, and won finalist of the Hollywood Jumbo Screenplay Competition 2020 and Chicago Screenplay Awards 2020. She has been a frequent contributor to Alternet and CounterPunch publications in the US. She is the founder of the FEMINYSTA showcase (Filming Eve Multicultural Intersectional NY Screenings to All).", "Janine Marmot\n Petit. She frequently co produces with European partners, and is currently producing Simon Pummell’s new feature Brand New-U with finance from British Film Institute, Netherlands Film Fund, Irish Film Board and Finite Films. Announced at International Film Festival Rotterdam in 2015 is an adaptation of Gibson's short story Dogfight by BAFTA award-winning writer and director Simon Pummell. Written by Gibson and Michael Swanwick and first published in Omni in July 1985, the film is being developed by British producer Janine Marmot at Hot Property Films. Her development slate also includes an original screenplay by Ned Beauman, one of the writer's on Granta magazine's once in a decade list: Best of Young British Novelists, and an adaptation of the Margaret Atwood novel The Edible Woman.", "Suzanne Schiffman\n à part (1964) (script supervisor) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; La peau douce (1964) (script girl) - François Truffaut ; Contempt (1963) (script girl) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; Le petit soldat (1963) (script girl) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; Vivre sa vie (1962) (script girl) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; Jules et Jim (1962) (script supervisor) - directed by François Truffaut ; Une femme est une femme (1961) (script girl) - directed by Jean-Luc Godard ; Lola (1961) (script girl) - directed by Jacques Demy ; Tirez sur le pianiste (1960) (script girl) - directed by François Truffaut ; Paris nous appartient (1960) (dialogue coach) - directed by Jacques Rivette ", "Sue Maslin\n the Australian Film Institute Awards, Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards and IF Awards in 2003. Following Japanese Story, Maslin produced and executive produced a number of Australian documentaries including Irresistible (executive producer), Hunt Angels (producer) – winner of the 2006 AFI Award for Best Feature Documentary Film, Celebrity: Dominick Dunne (producer), Michael Kirby: Don't Forget the Justice Bit (producer), Breaking the News (executive producer) and Ringbalin: Breaking the Drought (executive producer). Maslin produced The Dressmaker alongside director Jocelyn Moorhouse which was released in 2015. Starring Kate Winslet, Judy Davis, Liam Hemsworth and Hugo Weaving, the film was released following the very successful book of the same title written by Rosalie Ham. The film was one of the most successful in Australian history grossing ", "Nick Maley\n writer, creating the screenplay for the 1981 film Inseminoid. He created the script in four days along with his wife Gloria, also supplying the makeup for the characters in the film. Maley is originally from London but moved to Sint Maarten in 2007 with his wife Gloria, and opening the Planet Paradise movie exhibit. The exhibit features versions of various Star Wars characters and other memorabilia from his work in the film industry. He is also an artist and painter whose works have been featured across 18 different countries in museums and galleries. Maley was honored by Lucasfilm in 2016. The same year he also rebuilt a replica Yoda using the same principles as the original.", "Sadism and masochism in fiction\n (1970), directed by Jess Franco ; The Laughing Woman, aka Femina Ridens, The Frightened Woman (1969), directed by Piero Schivazappa ; Eugenie de Sade (1970), another Jesus Franco adaptation of de Sade ; Daughters of Darkness, (Le Rouge aux Lèvres) (1971), directed by Harry Kümel and starring Delphine Seyrig and John Karlen ; The Nightcomers (1971), directed by Michael Winner and starring Marlon Brando and Stephanie Beacham ; Last Tango in Paris (1972), directed by Bernardo Bertolucci and starring Marlon Brando and Maria Schneider ; Justine de Sade (1972), directed by Claude Pierson ; The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (Die ", "Mahinder Watsa\n 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, ", "Your Ticket Is No Longer Valid\n The film was based on a novel by Romain Gary which was optioned by producer Robert Lantos. His assistant Leila Basen wrote a draft of the script. She later recalled: \"If the book was totally sexist, the first draft screenplay written by an American writer was even more misogynist... There never was a script contract. Robert continued to pay me my executive assistant salary of $350 a week. I sat in my usual desk in a room with the other four secretaries. But instead of writing lunch orders, I was writing what was to become the biggest-budget Canadian film of that time... In lieu of money, I got an IBM Selectric II, a free trip to Paris, where some of the film was shot, and tons of experience screenwriter-wise. I ", "And God Created Woman (1956 film)\n Approximately five years after the film's release, in 1961, Popular Library published a series of three screenplay novelizations based on mainstream foreign films known for pushing sexual boundaries in cinema, and this film was among them. The by line is that of \"new bestselling French author Simone Colette\", but no such author ever existed. Rather it's a pseudonym for American authorship, devised to tie the trio of novelizations together. Whether it served as a single author pseudonym or a \"house name\" for several writers is unknown. The copyright is assigned to the publisher and screenwriters Vadim & Lévy are nowhere mentioned.", "Men vs. Women\n Men vs. Women (Maschi contro femmine) is a 2010 Italian comedy film directed by Fausto Brizzi. A sequel entitled Women vs. Men (Femmine contro maschi) was released in February 2011.", "Women vs. Men\n Women vs. Men (Femmine contro maschi) is a 2011 Italian comedy film directed by Fausto Brizzi. The film is a sequel to 2010 Men vs. Women (Maschi contro femmine)." ]
Who was the screenwriter for Tom Jones?
[ "Henry Fielding", "Henri Fielding", "Scriblerus Secundus", "Conny Keyber", "Alexander Drawcansir", "John Trottplaid", "Hercules Vinegar", "Henri Filding", "Lemuel Gulliver", "Petrus Gualterus", "Enrique Fielding", "Genri Filʹding" ]
screenwriter
Tom Jones (1917 film)
6,008,430
94
[ { "id": "7478840", "title": "Tom Jones (writer)", "text": " Tom Jones (born February 17, 1928) is an American lyricist and librettist, best known for The Fantasticks. He was born in Littlefield, Texas.", "score": "1.6771207" }, { "id": "1065077", "title": "Thom Jones", "text": " Reports have appeared stating Jones wrote screenplays for feature films, including a Vietnam screenplay for Cheyenne Enterprises. He was reported to have adapted Larry Brown's novel, The Rabbit Factory (2003), as a screenplay for Ithaka Films. {can't find source}", "score": "1.6139524" }, { "id": "25254815", "title": "Evan Jones (writer)", "text": " as a writer of documentary drama, television plays and feature films. His works include the television documentary series The Fight Against Slavery and several films directed by Joseph Losey, including Eva (a collaboration with Hugo Butler, 1962), King and Country (1964) and Modesty Blaise (1966). Other screenplays by Jones include Funeral in Berlin (1966), Escape to Victory (1981) and A Show of Force (1990). He is also notable as the author of Madhouse on Castle Street (1963), a now lost BBC television play, which featured the acting début of Bob Dylan. Jones's poem The Song of the Banana Man (1956) is taught in schools throughout the Caribbean and published in anthologies worldwide. He also wrote biographies, and textbooks and novels for children. His wife, Joanna Vogel, was an actress and his daughters Melissa and Sadie are both novelists.", "score": "1.6051991" }, { "id": "7478842", "title": "Tom Jones (writer)", "text": " More\", and \"I Can See It\". He also wrote the screenplay for the 1995 feature-film adaptation. Jones acted in a New York City revival of The Fantasticks, which he also directed. He played the part of the Old Actor, from when the musical opened in 1960, and from April 26, 2010, to June 6, 2010. He was credited as an actor in the show as Thomas Bruce. Jones is also the author of Making Musicals: An Informal Introduction to the World of Musical Theater, about which Elyse Sommer wrote on January 15, 1998 in CurtainUp: All of Jones's major musicals were written with Harvey Schmidt, whom he met at the University of Texas at Austin.", "score": "1.6022003" }, { "id": "25500567", "title": "Grover Jones", "text": " Grover Jones (November 15, 1893 &ndash; September 24, 1940) was an American screenwriter - often teamed with William Slavens McNutt - and film director. He wrote more than 100 films between 1920 and his death. He also was a film journal publisher and prolific short story writer. Jones was born in Rosedale, Indiana, grew up in West Terre Haute, Indiana, and died in Hollywood, California. He was the father of American polo pioneer Sue Sally Hale.", "score": "1.5995826" }, { "id": "12727563", "title": "Robert C. Jones", "text": " Robert Clifford Jones (March 30, 1936 – February 1, 2021) was an American film editor, screenwriter, and educator. He received an Academy Award for the screenplay of the film Coming Home (1978). As an editor, Jones had notable collaborations with the directors Arthur Hiller (seven films from 1967 to 1992) and Hal Ashby (four films from 1973 to 1982). Jones was nominated three times for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing: It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), and Bound for Glory (1976).", "score": "1.5991839" }, { "id": "28394087", "title": "Mervyn Jones (writer)", "text": " Mervyn Jones wrote 29 novels (five unpublished), including John and Mary (1966), the basis for the 1969 film, and Holding On (1973), which was adapted for television in 1977. Jones also wrote non-fiction, reportage and biography, including a fictional biography of Joseph Stalin in 1970 and a biography of his friend Michael Foot, the former Labour Party leader, in 1994. A former Communist, Jones wrote for the Daily Worker, and later the New Reasoner and Tribune; he was later assistant editor at the New Statesman.", "score": "1.5773216" }, { "id": "11234105", "title": "Vicky Jones", "text": " While working as a director, Jones met Phoebe Waller-Bridge and became friends while working on theatre productions. The two founded and became co-artistic directors of DryWrite Theatre Company. In 2013, Jones directed Waller-Bridge's stage production, Fleabag, which premiered at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Fleabag was later adapted as a television series for BBC and Amazon Prime Video. Jones wrote the episode Don't I Know You? for Killing Eve in 2018. Jones wrote the series Run for HBO in 2020 starring Merritt Weaver and Domhnall Gleeson.", "score": "1.57254" }, { "id": "12727565", "title": "Robert C. Jones", "text": " Upon his return from military service, Jones collaborated with Gene Fowler Jr. to edit A Child Is Waiting and It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (both released in 1963). He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for the latter film. He then increased his editing credentials by working on The Tiger Makes Out (1967) and Paint Your Wagon (1969). His work in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967) earned him his second Oscar nomination for Best Film Editing. Almost a decade elapsed before he received his third Academy Award editing nomination for the musical drama Bound for Glory (1976). Jones was also involved in writing film scripts. He initially declined to ", "score": "1.5318255" }, { "id": "2309011", "title": "Glyn Jones (South African writer)", "text": " He wrote the screenplay for the Oscar Nominated Columbia Film, A King's Story on the life of the Duke of Windsor Edward VIII. He was chief writer and script editor for 20th Century Fox’s most successful children’s series, \"Here Come the Double Deckers\". He also wrote films for the Children's Film Foundation, two of which were award winners. Jones contributed a half dozen scripts for the Children's Film Foundation series The Magnificent Six and 1/2 (1968–69), plus nine scripts for Here Come the Double Deckers (1970–71), on which he was also script editor, a TV series derived from the CFF films. Jones wrote an episode of The Gold Robbers (1969) around the same time. In the UK he had written book ", "score": "1.5251372" }, { "id": "12727566", "title": "Robert C. Jones", "text": " on Coming Home (1978) as editor when Hal Ashby asked him. However, he relented and joined as a screenwriter after Waldo Salt suffered a heart attack two months before the start of production. That film ultimately won the 1979 Academy Award for Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen, which he shared with Salt and Nancy Dowd. Jones was surprised by the win and stated that going on stage to receive the award marked the first time he met Salt and Dowd. He was then the co-screenwriter for Being There (1979), which his daughter said he rewrote. Although he was originally granted credit by the studio (United Artists–Lorimar Productions), the Writers Guild reversed that in ", "score": "1.5196818" }, { "id": "1790022", "title": "Matt Jones (writer)", "text": " Matthew David Jones (born 5 August 1968) is a British television screenwriter and television producer, who has worked on a variety of popular drama programmes for several television networks in the UK.", "score": "1.5146726" }, { "id": "27278823", "title": "Julia Jones (dramatist)", "text": " Julia Marian Jones (27 March 1923 – 9 October 2015) was a British television scriptwriter and former actress. Jones began her career as a television writer in 1965. Her works include the adaptation of Quiet as a Nun (1978) for the Armchair Thriller series, the BBC's Miss Marple series, the pilot episode of ITV's Wycliffe (1993), and serial dramatisations of the novels Anne of Green Gables (with Donald Churchill, 1972), Our Mutual Friend (1976) and Tom's Midnight Garden (1989).", "score": "1.5129745" }, { "id": "1417796", "title": "Terry Jones", "text": " Jones wrote the screenplay for Labyrinth (1986), although his draft went through several rewrites and several other writers before being filmed; consequently, much of the finished film was not actually written by Jones.", "score": "1.5066501" }, { "id": "7843608", "title": "Alan Jones (film critic)", "text": " Jones' punk-era reminiscences about close friend Sid Vicious formed the basis of director Alex Cox's screenplay Sid and Nancy and he has spoken about the friendship in several TV and radio documentaries. Jones worked for designer Vivienne Westwood in her shop Sex, was the Sex Pistols' DJ and appeared as a music executive in their film The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle, and today is regarded as something of an expert on all things Punk.", "score": "1.5037398" }, { "id": "4335651", "title": "R.S. Jones", "text": "ISBN: 978-0316103176 ISBN: 978-0316103176 ISBN: 978-0316103176 As an editor Jones was often acknowledged by the authors with whom he worked as an advocate and supporter. Richard Bausch expressed his gratitude to Jones \"for fighting\" in Good Evening Mr. and Mrs. America, and All the Ships at Sea, published in 1996. Russell Banks recognized Jones for his support in the creation of Cloudsplitter (novel) (1998) and The Angel on the Roof (2000), as did Armistead Maupin for The Night Listener (2000). John Colapinto cited Jones' painstaking explanation for editorial changes in the acknowledgments for As Nature Made Him (2000). Bel Canto, another of his editing projects, was dedicated to him by the author, Ann Patchett. In addition to his work as an editor, Jones published two novels and a number of short stories. His first novel Force of Gravity was described by Iris Murdoch as \"a beautiful, terrifying tale of a quiet descent into insanity.\" His second novel, Walking on Air \"examines all the psychological nuances of the dying and their caretakers.\" Jones' shorter work appeared in Q and in Best American Gay Fiction 1996. ", "score": "1.4944456" }, { "id": "16125745", "title": "L. Q. Jones", "text": " The Men From Shiloh (the final season rebranding of The Virginian) episode titled \"The Town Killer\". Other films include Men in War (1957), The Naked and the Dead (1958), Flaming Star (1960), Cimarron (1960), Hell Is for Heroes (1962), Hang 'Em High (1968), Stay Away, Joe (1968), The Brotherhood of Satan (1971), which he co-produced and wrote, Attack on Terror: The FBI vs. the Ku Klux Klan (1975), Lone Wolf McQuade (1983), Casino (1995), \"Tornado!\" (1996), The Edge (1997), The Mask of Zorro (1998), and A Prairie Home Companion (2006). Jones directed, produced, and wrote the screenplay for A Boy and His Dog.", "score": "1.4937735" }, { "id": "1790026", "title": "Matt Jones (writer)", "text": " of the writers working on the second season of the BBC revival of hugely popular science-fiction series Doctor Who, fulfilling a childhood ambition to work on the programme of which he had long been a fan. His episodes, a two-parter with the titles \"The Impossible Planet\" and \"The Satan Pit\", were broadcast on 3 and 10 June 2006. Jones also wrote the seventh episode of the second series of Doctor Who spin-off series Torchwood, called \"Dead Man Walking\". In 2012 Jones wrote the second episode of the BBC Four TV series Dirk Gently based on the novels by Douglas Adams. in 2017, he contributed episodes to Stan Lee's Lucky Man, and in 2020, to legal drama The Split.", "score": "1.4898378" }, { "id": "13363558", "title": "Kings of the Evening", "text": " Director/Producer Andrew P. Jones co-wrote the screenplay with his father, Robert Page Jones, who drew upon his youth during the Great Depression. Reginald T. Dorsey also served as a producer on the movie and played Benny.", "score": "1.4895191" }, { "id": "1642693", "title": "Amy Holden Jones", "text": " Jones established herself in the documentary scene by winning First Place at the AFI National Student Film Festival for her short documentary film A Weekend Home in 1975. Later on in her career, she would win the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay for Indecent Proposal in 1994. In 2019, Jones would win a Sentinel Award for The Resident Season 2, Episode 20 “If Not Now, When?” alongside co-writers Tianna Majumdar-Langham and Chris Bessounian.", "score": "1.4892952" } ]
[ "Tom Jones (writer)\n Tom Jones (born February 17, 1928) is an American lyricist and librettist, best known for The Fantasticks. He was born in Littlefield, Texas.", "Thom Jones\n Reports have appeared stating Jones wrote screenplays for feature films, including a Vietnam screenplay for Cheyenne Enterprises. He was reported to have adapted Larry Brown's novel, The Rabbit Factory (2003), as a screenplay for Ithaka Films. {can't find source}", "Evan Jones (writer)\n as a writer of documentary drama, television plays and feature films. His works include the television documentary series The Fight Against Slavery and several films directed by Joseph Losey, including Eva (a collaboration with Hugo Butler, 1962), King and Country (1964) and Modesty Blaise (1966). Other screenplays by Jones include Funeral in Berlin (1966), Escape to Victory (1981) and A Show of Force (1990). He is also notable as the author of Madhouse on Castle Street (1963), a now lost BBC television play, which featured the acting début of Bob Dylan. Jones's poem The Song of the Banana Man (1956) is taught in schools throughout the Caribbean and published in anthologies worldwide. He also wrote biographies, and textbooks and novels for children. His wife, Joanna Vogel, was an actress and his daughters Melissa and Sadie are both novelists.", "Tom Jones (writer)\n More\", and \"I Can See It\". He also wrote the screenplay for the 1995 feature-film adaptation. Jones acted in a New York City revival of The Fantasticks, which he also directed. He played the part of the Old Actor, from when the musical opened in 1960, and from April 26, 2010, to June 6, 2010. He was credited as an actor in the show as Thomas Bruce. Jones is also the author of Making Musicals: An Informal Introduction to the World of Musical Theater, about which Elyse Sommer wrote on January 15, 1998 in CurtainUp: All of Jones's major musicals were written with Harvey Schmidt, whom he met at the University of Texas at Austin.", "Grover Jones\n Grover Jones (November 15, 1893 &ndash; September 24, 1940) was an American screenwriter - often teamed with William Slavens McNutt - and film director. He wrote more than 100 films between 1920 and his death. He also was a film journal publisher and prolific short story writer. Jones was born in Rosedale, Indiana, grew up in West Terre Haute, Indiana, and died in Hollywood, California. He was the father of American polo pioneer Sue Sally Hale.", "Robert C. Jones\n Robert Clifford Jones (March 30, 1936 – February 1, 2021) was an American film editor, screenwriter, and educator. He received an Academy Award for the screenplay of the film Coming Home (1978). As an editor, Jones had notable collaborations with the directors Arthur Hiller (seven films from 1967 to 1992) and Hal Ashby (four films from 1973 to 1982). Jones was nominated three times for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing: It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), and Bound for Glory (1976).", "Mervyn Jones (writer)\n Mervyn Jones wrote 29 novels (five unpublished), including John and Mary (1966), the basis for the 1969 film, and Holding On (1973), which was adapted for television in 1977. Jones also wrote non-fiction, reportage and biography, including a fictional biography of Joseph Stalin in 1970 and a biography of his friend Michael Foot, the former Labour Party leader, in 1994. A former Communist, Jones wrote for the Daily Worker, and later the New Reasoner and Tribune; he was later assistant editor at the New Statesman.", "Vicky Jones\n While working as a director, Jones met Phoebe Waller-Bridge and became friends while working on theatre productions. The two founded and became co-artistic directors of DryWrite Theatre Company. In 2013, Jones directed Waller-Bridge's stage production, Fleabag, which premiered at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Fleabag was later adapted as a television series for BBC and Amazon Prime Video. Jones wrote the episode Don't I Know You? for Killing Eve in 2018. Jones wrote the series Run for HBO in 2020 starring Merritt Weaver and Domhnall Gleeson.", "Robert C. Jones\n Upon his return from military service, Jones collaborated with Gene Fowler Jr. to edit A Child Is Waiting and It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (both released in 1963). He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for the latter film. He then increased his editing credentials by working on The Tiger Makes Out (1967) and Paint Your Wagon (1969). His work in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967) earned him his second Oscar nomination for Best Film Editing. Almost a decade elapsed before he received his third Academy Award editing nomination for the musical drama Bound for Glory (1976). Jones was also involved in writing film scripts. He initially declined to ", "Glyn Jones (South African writer)\n He wrote the screenplay for the Oscar Nominated Columbia Film, A King's Story on the life of the Duke of Windsor Edward VIII. He was chief writer and script editor for 20th Century Fox’s most successful children’s series, \"Here Come the Double Deckers\". He also wrote films for the Children's Film Foundation, two of which were award winners. Jones contributed a half dozen scripts for the Children's Film Foundation series The Magnificent Six and 1/2 (1968–69), plus nine scripts for Here Come the Double Deckers (1970–71), on which he was also script editor, a TV series derived from the CFF films. Jones wrote an episode of The Gold Robbers (1969) around the same time. In the UK he had written book ", "Robert C. Jones\n on Coming Home (1978) as editor when Hal Ashby asked him. However, he relented and joined as a screenwriter after Waldo Salt suffered a heart attack two months before the start of production. That film ultimately won the 1979 Academy Award for Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen, which he shared with Salt and Nancy Dowd. Jones was surprised by the win and stated that going on stage to receive the award marked the first time he met Salt and Dowd. He was then the co-screenwriter for Being There (1979), which his daughter said he rewrote. Although he was originally granted credit by the studio (United Artists–Lorimar Productions), the Writers Guild reversed that in ", "Matt Jones (writer)\n Matthew David Jones (born 5 August 1968) is a British television screenwriter and television producer, who has worked on a variety of popular drama programmes for several television networks in the UK.", "Julia Jones (dramatist)\n Julia Marian Jones (27 March 1923 – 9 October 2015) was a British television scriptwriter and former actress. Jones began her career as a television writer in 1965. Her works include the adaptation of Quiet as a Nun (1978) for the Armchair Thriller series, the BBC's Miss Marple series, the pilot episode of ITV's Wycliffe (1993), and serial dramatisations of the novels Anne of Green Gables (with Donald Churchill, 1972), Our Mutual Friend (1976) and Tom's Midnight Garden (1989).", "Terry Jones\n Jones wrote the screenplay for Labyrinth (1986), although his draft went through several rewrites and several other writers before being filmed; consequently, much of the finished film was not actually written by Jones.", "Alan Jones (film critic)\n Jones' punk-era reminiscences about close friend Sid Vicious formed the basis of director Alex Cox's screenplay Sid and Nancy and he has spoken about the friendship in several TV and radio documentaries. Jones worked for designer Vivienne Westwood in her shop Sex, was the Sex Pistols' DJ and appeared as a music executive in their film The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle, and today is regarded as something of an expert on all things Punk.", "R.S. Jones\nISBN: 978-0316103176 ISBN: 978-0316103176 ISBN: 978-0316103176 As an editor Jones was often acknowledged by the authors with whom he worked as an advocate and supporter. Richard Bausch expressed his gratitude to Jones \"for fighting\" in Good Evening Mr. and Mrs. America, and All the Ships at Sea, published in 1996. Russell Banks recognized Jones for his support in the creation of Cloudsplitter (novel) (1998) and The Angel on the Roof (2000), as did Armistead Maupin for The Night Listener (2000). John Colapinto cited Jones' painstaking explanation for editorial changes in the acknowledgments for As Nature Made Him (2000). Bel Canto, another of his editing projects, was dedicated to him by the author, Ann Patchett. In addition to his work as an editor, Jones published two novels and a number of short stories. His first novel Force of Gravity was described by Iris Murdoch as \"a beautiful, terrifying tale of a quiet descent into insanity.\" His second novel, Walking on Air \"examines all the psychological nuances of the dying and their caretakers.\" Jones' shorter work appeared in Q and in Best American Gay Fiction 1996. ", "L. Q. Jones\n The Men From Shiloh (the final season rebranding of The Virginian) episode titled \"The Town Killer\". Other films include Men in War (1957), The Naked and the Dead (1958), Flaming Star (1960), Cimarron (1960), Hell Is for Heroes (1962), Hang 'Em High (1968), Stay Away, Joe (1968), The Brotherhood of Satan (1971), which he co-produced and wrote, Attack on Terror: The FBI vs. the Ku Klux Klan (1975), Lone Wolf McQuade (1983), Casino (1995), \"Tornado!\" (1996), The Edge (1997), The Mask of Zorro (1998), and A Prairie Home Companion (2006). Jones directed, produced, and wrote the screenplay for A Boy and His Dog.", "Matt Jones (writer)\n of the writers working on the second season of the BBC revival of hugely popular science-fiction series Doctor Who, fulfilling a childhood ambition to work on the programme of which he had long been a fan. His episodes, a two-parter with the titles \"The Impossible Planet\" and \"The Satan Pit\", were broadcast on 3 and 10 June 2006. Jones also wrote the seventh episode of the second series of Doctor Who spin-off series Torchwood, called \"Dead Man Walking\". In 2012 Jones wrote the second episode of the BBC Four TV series Dirk Gently based on the novels by Douglas Adams. in 2017, he contributed episodes to Stan Lee's Lucky Man, and in 2020, to legal drama The Split.", "Kings of the Evening\n Director/Producer Andrew P. Jones co-wrote the screenplay with his father, Robert Page Jones, who drew upon his youth during the Great Depression. Reginald T. Dorsey also served as a producer on the movie and played Benny.", "Amy Holden Jones\n Jones established herself in the documentary scene by winning First Place at the AFI National Student Film Festival for her short documentary film A Weekend Home in 1975. Later on in her career, she would win the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screenplay for Indecent Proposal in 1994. In 2019, Jones would win a Sentinel Award for The Resident Season 2, Episode 20 “If Not Now, When?” alongside co-writers Tianna Majumdar-Langham and Chris Bessounian." ]
Who was the composer of One?
[ "Michel van der Aa" ]
composer
One (opera)
5,342,026
58
[ { "id": "10158437", "title": "Tomás Oneto", "text": " .", "score": "1.6420305" }, { "id": "13177030", "title": "Onefour", "text": " Notes", "score": "1.5909624" }, { "id": "12041458", "title": "One (opera)", "text": " One is a chamber opera for soprano, video and soundtrack composed in 2002 by Michel van der Aa who also wrote the English-language libretto. It premiered on 12 January 2003 with Barbara Hannigan in the Frascati Theatre, Amsterdam. In 2004 Michel van der Aa received the Matthijs Vermeulen Award for this work.", "score": "1.5507737" }, { "id": "6704623", "title": "One (Edita Abdieski album)", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.5176853" }, { "id": "6611898", "title": "One (Ahmad Jamal album)", "text": " One is an album by American jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal featuring 1978 performances and released on 20th Century Fox in 1979.", "score": "1.508629" }, { "id": "5100553", "title": "Another One (Oscar Pettiford album)", "text": " Another One (also released as Oscar Pettiford Volume 2) is an album by bassist/cellist and composer Oscar Pettiford which was recorded in 1955 and first issued on the Bethlehem label.", "score": "1.4993383" }, { "id": "16020901", "title": "Pablo Flores", "text": "\"The One\" ", "score": "1.4936159" }, { "id": "5926666", "title": "Andy Akiho", "text": " NO one To kNOW one (Innova Recordings #801), 2011 – Performer and composer The War Below, 2018 - Composer", "score": "1.4915746" }, { "id": "30193350", "title": "One and One Is One (album)", "text": " One and One Is One is the debut studio album by English dance music group Joi, released on 23 February 1999 by Real World Records.", "score": "1.486273" }, { "id": "31401934", "title": "The Real One", "text": " Album Singles", "score": "1.4764483" }, { "id": "4123871", "title": "One One One", "text": " One One One is the sixth studio album by the Norwegian band Shining, released through Universal on April 8, 2013 and Indie Recordings on June 7, 2013.", "score": "1.4711381" }, { "id": "29803505", "title": "The One (band)", "text": " The One were a British band formed to back Peter Perrett on his first new material since the Only Ones originally split up in 1981.", "score": "1.4476004" }, { "id": "4996597", "title": "One (Bach novel)", "text": " One is a 1988 novel by Richard Bach about what could happen in an alternate world. The characters are based on Bach and his wife, Leslie Parrish.", "score": "1.4448572" }, { "id": "14973844", "title": "Gary Carpenter (composer)", "text": "The One Alone (1987), verse drama by Iris Murdoch ", "score": "1.440259" }, { "id": "31641965", "title": "Off World One", "text": " Off World One is an album by American composer Bill Laswell, issued under the moniker Possession. It was released on January 30, 1996, by Sub Meta.", "score": "1.4302424" }, { "id": "15499307", "title": "As One (opera)", "text": " The opera is scored for a string quartet and two singers, and consists of 15 discrete songs which depict important moments in Hannah's life throughout her coming-of-age story.", "score": "1.4293842" }, { "id": "25085718", "title": "Robert Scott Thompson", "text": "Art of the States: Robert Scott Thompson one work by the composer (Acouasm - composed in 2001) ", "score": "1.4186475" }, { "id": "3824514", "title": "One (A Chorus Line song)", "text": " One is a song from the musical A Chorus Line.", "score": "1.4142008" }, { "id": "5663343", "title": "Jill McManus", "text": "As One (Muse, 1975) With Richard Davis", "score": "1.4115206" }, { "id": "26952614", "title": "Temistocle Solera", "text": " Temistocle Solera (25 December 1815 &ndash; 21 April 1878) was an Italian opera composer and librettist.", "score": "1.4090742" } ]
[ "Tomás Oneto\n .", "Onefour\n Notes", "One (opera)\n One is a chamber opera for soprano, video and soundtrack composed in 2002 by Michel van der Aa who also wrote the English-language libretto. It premiered on 12 January 2003 with Barbara Hannigan in the Frascati Theatre, Amsterdam. In 2004 Michel van der Aa received the Matthijs Vermeulen Award for this work.", "One (Edita Abdieski album)\n Source:", "One (Ahmad Jamal album)\n One is an album by American jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal featuring 1978 performances and released on 20th Century Fox in 1979.", "Another One (Oscar Pettiford album)\n Another One (also released as Oscar Pettiford Volume 2) is an album by bassist/cellist and composer Oscar Pettiford which was recorded in 1955 and first issued on the Bethlehem label.", "Pablo Flores\n\"The One\" ", "Andy Akiho\n NO one To kNOW one (Innova Recordings #801), 2011 – Performer and composer The War Below, 2018 - Composer", "One and One Is One (album)\n One and One Is One is the debut studio album by English dance music group Joi, released on 23 February 1999 by Real World Records.", "The Real One\n Album Singles", "One One One\n One One One is the sixth studio album by the Norwegian band Shining, released through Universal on April 8, 2013 and Indie Recordings on June 7, 2013.", "The One (band)\n The One were a British band formed to back Peter Perrett on his first new material since the Only Ones originally split up in 1981.", "One (Bach novel)\n One is a 1988 novel by Richard Bach about what could happen in an alternate world. The characters are based on Bach and his wife, Leslie Parrish.", "Gary Carpenter (composer)\nThe One Alone (1987), verse drama by Iris Murdoch ", "Off World One\n Off World One is an album by American composer Bill Laswell, issued under the moniker Possession. It was released on January 30, 1996, by Sub Meta.", "As One (opera)\n The opera is scored for a string quartet and two singers, and consists of 15 discrete songs which depict important moments in Hannah's life throughout her coming-of-age story.", "Robert Scott Thompson\nArt of the States: Robert Scott Thompson one work by the composer (Acouasm - composed in 2001) ", "One (A Chorus Line song)\n One is a song from the musical A Chorus Line.", "Jill McManus\nAs One (Muse, 1975) With Richard Davis", "Temistocle Solera\n Temistocle Solera (25 December 1815 &ndash; 21 April 1878) was an Italian opera composer and librettist." ]
Who was the composer of Hello?
[ "Masaharu Fukuyama" ]
composer
Hello (Masaharu Fukuyama song)
4,365,923
67
[ { "id": "5139624", "title": "Hello World! (composition)", "text": " that a human, and not a very good human at that – well, not a compositional genius anyway – could write? Why not use it to find new realms of sound, new kinds of musical ideas?\" Conversely, the musicologist Peter Russell was asked to review \"Hello World!\" for the BBC, based on a video of the live premiere, but he was not given any information about the composer. In his critique, Russell writes \"on listening to this delightful piece of chamber music I could not bring myself to say that it would probably be more satisfying to read the score than listen to it. In fact after repeated hearings, I came to like it\".", "score": "1.6468972" }, { "id": "26913526", "title": "Hello and Welcome", "text": " \"Hello and Welcome\" (titled \"Hello + Welcome\") is a song created by the musical project Enigma, released on 10 March 2006 (see 2006 in music).", "score": "1.6410837" }, { "id": "5139620", "title": "Hello World! (composition)", "text": " The composition is dedicated to the memory of Raymond Scott, an electronic music pioneer and inventor of the Electronium.", "score": "1.6362767" }, { "id": "5139618", "title": "Hello World! (composition)", "text": " \"Hello World!\" is a piece of contemporary classical music for clarinet-violin-piano trio composed by Iamus Computer in September 2011. It is arguably the first full-scale work entirely composed by a computer without any human intervention and automatically written in a fully-fledged score using conventional musical notation. Iamus generates music scores in PDF and the MusicXML format that can be imported in professional editors such as Sibelius and Finale.", "score": "1.6159455" }, { "id": "27266094", "title": "Hello Out There!", "text": " In 1953, composer Jack Beeson composed a one-act chamber opera based on the play.", "score": "1.6155788" }, { "id": "369150", "title": "Music hall", "text": " not known), composer of \"Here We Are, Here We Are Again\" sung by Mark Sheridan, and \"Jolly Good Luck to the Girl Who Loves a Soldier\" sung by Vesta Tilley. ; Arthur J. Mills (1872–1919), lyricist of \"When I Take My Morning Promenade\" sung by Marie Lloyd, and \"Ship Ahoy! (All The Nice Girls Love A Sailor)\" sung by Hetty King. ; Richard Morton (dates not known), lyricist of \"Twiggy Voo?\" and \"Poor Thing\", both sung by Marie Lloyd. ; C. W. Murphy (1875–1913), composer of \"Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?\" sung by Florrie Forde and \"Hello Hello, Who’s Your Lady Friend?\" ", "score": "1.5862979" }, { "id": "28382619", "title": "Neil Simon's I Ought to Be in Pictures", "text": " \"One Hello\" was performed at the end of the movie by Randy Crawford and written by Carole Bayer Sager and Marvin Hamlisch. An instrumental version of \"One Hello\" is heard at various points in the movie as well. Hamlisch composed the main music for the movie. Just nine months before the movie's premiere, \"One Hello\" was released on June 3, 1981 as Randy Crawford's single and it appeared in the album Windsong.", "score": "1.5506191" }, { "id": "8144005", "title": "Hello, Dolly! (song)", "text": " \"Hello, Dolly!\" is the title song of the popular 1964 musical of the same name. Louis Armstrong's version was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001. The music and lyrics were written by Jerry Herman, who also wrote the scores for many other popular musicals including Mame and La Cage aux Folles.", "score": "1.5363867" }, { "id": "11223798", "title": "Hello (Adele song)", "text": " \"Hello\" was written by Adele and Greg Kurstin and produced by Kurstin, who also played bass, guitar, drums, piano and keyboards, while Adele played drums. \"Hello\" was written in Chiswick, London, something not normally done by Adele, who said she likes to write her music at home. The writing process for the song was slow, taking six months to complete. Initially Adele and Kurstin started writing the first verse; finishing half of the song, six months later Adele contacted Kurstin to finish the song with her, with Kurstin stating he was not sure \"if Adele was ever going to come back and finish it.\" \"Hello\" is a soul piano ballad, played in the key of F minor at a tempo of 79 ", "score": "1.5300756" }, { "id": "27357655", "title": "Howard Hello", "text": " Howard Hello is an American musical group from San Diego, California. Howard Hello was formed by Kenseth Thibideau as a side project from Tarentel in 2001, along with Marty Anderson of Dilute and Wendy Allen of The Court & Spark. They released one album, two EPs and a compilation through Temporary Residence Limited. Raymond Raposa of Castanets played with the band in 2002.", "score": "1.5239053" }, { "id": "25866264", "title": "Hello (Masaharu Fukuyama song)", "text": " \"Hello\" is the tenth single by Japanese artist Masaharu Fukuyama. It was released on February 6, 1995. It was used as the theme song to the drama Saikō no Kataomoi: White Love Story.", "score": "1.5225375" }, { "id": "28334103", "title": "Hello (Joy song)", "text": " SM Entertainment revealed that Joy will be releasing \"Hello\" as the title track for her special album of the same name at 6:00 PM of May 31, 2021. It was reported that starting from the title song, mood samplers and track posters for each song in the album will be released sequentially. The track is a remake of the same name released by singer Park Hye-kyung in 2003. \"Hello\" was composed by Kang Hyun-min, while the lyrics were also written by him along with Park Hye-kyung and Park Ji-won. Musically, it was described as a modern rock genre song. The track is noted for its \"speedy arrangement of cheerful brass music\", in which was described as \"enough to feel a different charm\" from the original song. Moreover, Joy is praised on the track for her \"cool vocals\". The song is composed in the key of D major with a tempo of 93 beats per minute. Lyrically, it is described as \"hopeful\" as it conveys a message of forgetting about the hard days and celebrating a new day.", "score": "1.5190611" }, { "id": "6946918", "title": "Hello (Martin Solveig and Dragonette song)", "text": " \"Hello\" is a song performed by French DJ and record producer Martin Solveig and Canadian synthpop band Dragonette, taken from the former's fifth studio album, Smash (2011). The song was released as the album's lead single on 6 September 2010 by Mercury Records. It is Solveig's most successful single to date, peaking at number one in Austria, Belgium (Flanders), Czech Republic and the Netherlands, while charting within the top 10 in ten other countries. It also reached number one on the Hot Dance Club Songs chart in the United States. Additionally, the song became Solveig's and Dragonette's first appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 in April 2011, eventually peaking at number 46 in June. It has since been certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for sales of 1,000,000 units. The song has been featured in 90210, The Vampire Diaries, Gossip Girl, Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked, and Ted Lasso. It was also featured in Tim Hortons' 2013 ad for their 'Roll up the Rim to Win' promotion. It also used as the intro theme to the TV series Cheer! on CMT. The song appears in the video game Dance Central 3.", "score": "1.5167047" }, { "id": "14348815", "title": "Hello (Poe album)", "text": " Hello is the debut album by the American singer-songwriter Poe. It was released in 1995 on Modern Records.", "score": "1.502958" }, { "id": "28334102", "title": "Hello (Joy song)", "text": " \"Hello\" is a remake song recorded by South Korean singer and Red Velvet member Joy. Originally recorded and released by singer Park Hye-kyung in 2003, the song was re-recorded and was released on May 31, 2021 by SM Entertainment as a title track from her special remake album of the same name. Composed by Kang Hyun-min and also written by him along with Park Hye-kyung and Park Ji-won, the track was described as a modern rock genre song. It is about forgetting the hard days and celebrating a new day. The song peaked at position 10 on the Gaon Digital Chart and Billboard K-Pop Hot 100.", "score": "1.4995323" }, { "id": "1348473", "title": "Hello (Karmin song)", "text": " It was written by band members Amy Heidemann and Nick Noonan, along with production team Stargate, Autumn Rowe and collaborator Claude Kelly. The song began playing on mainstream radio stations July 31, 2012. Hello was the group's second song to top the Hot Dance Club Songs chart after Brokenhearted. The \"Hello, hello, hello\" chorus interpolates the same lyrics from Nirvana's \"Smells Like Teen Spirit\"; the band is given writing credit on the track.", "score": "1.4990299" }, { "id": "4781943", "title": "Jack Beeson", "text": " Jack Hamilton Beeson (July 15, 1921 – June 6, 2010) was an American composer. He was known particularly for his operas, the best known of which are Lizzie Borden, Hello Out There!, and The Sweet Bye and Bye.", "score": "1.495887" }, { "id": "14318182", "title": "Hello (Poe song)", "text": " \"Hello\" is the second single released by singer-songwriter Poe. When first released, the single was a moderate success but fared much better on the charts when a remix of the song was introduced. The music video, which featured a The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari theme was co-directed by her brother, Mark Z. Danielewski.", "score": "1.4929829" }, { "id": "26107121", "title": "Hello (The Capes album)", "text": " Hello is the debut album by South London five-piece, The Capes. It was released by Hard Soul Records mid-October 2005 in the UK and on February 28, 2006, in the US. The album sees the band expanding on the promise of their 2005 Taste EP, fusing catchy Britpop-style hooks with complex arrangements, harmonies and splashes of synth.", "score": "1.4839547" }, { "id": "27818809", "title": "Hello Hum", "text": "Michael Bigelow – Composer ; Greg Calbi – Mastering ; Loel Campbell – Composer, Group Member ; Marianne Collins – Illustrations ; Tim D'Eon – Composer, Group Member ; Tony Doogan – Engineer, Producer ; Dave Fridmann – Additional Music, Bass, Mixing, Producer ; Jud Haynes – Design, Layout ; Jon Samuel – Composer ; Paul Murphy - Composer, Group Member ; Wintersleep – Primary Artist ", "score": "1.4797208" } ]
[ "Hello World! (composition)\n that a human, and not a very good human at that – well, not a compositional genius anyway – could write? Why not use it to find new realms of sound, new kinds of musical ideas?\" Conversely, the musicologist Peter Russell was asked to review \"Hello World!\" for the BBC, based on a video of the live premiere, but he was not given any information about the composer. In his critique, Russell writes \"on listening to this delightful piece of chamber music I could not bring myself to say that it would probably be more satisfying to read the score than listen to it. In fact after repeated hearings, I came to like it\".", "Hello and Welcome\n \"Hello and Welcome\" (titled \"Hello + Welcome\") is a song created by the musical project Enigma, released on 10 March 2006 (see 2006 in music).", "Hello World! (composition)\n The composition is dedicated to the memory of Raymond Scott, an electronic music pioneer and inventor of the Electronium.", "Hello World! (composition)\n \"Hello World!\" is a piece of contemporary classical music for clarinet-violin-piano trio composed by Iamus Computer in September 2011. It is arguably the first full-scale work entirely composed by a computer without any human intervention and automatically written in a fully-fledged score using conventional musical notation. Iamus generates music scores in PDF and the MusicXML format that can be imported in professional editors such as Sibelius and Finale.", "Hello Out There!\n In 1953, composer Jack Beeson composed a one-act chamber opera based on the play.", "Music hall\n not known), composer of \"Here We Are, Here We Are Again\" sung by Mark Sheridan, and \"Jolly Good Luck to the Girl Who Loves a Soldier\" sung by Vesta Tilley. ; Arthur J. Mills (1872–1919), lyricist of \"When I Take My Morning Promenade\" sung by Marie Lloyd, and \"Ship Ahoy! (All The Nice Girls Love A Sailor)\" sung by Hetty King. ; Richard Morton (dates not known), lyricist of \"Twiggy Voo?\" and \"Poor Thing\", both sung by Marie Lloyd. ; C. W. Murphy (1875–1913), composer of \"Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?\" sung by Florrie Forde and \"Hello Hello, Who’s Your Lady Friend?\" ", "Neil Simon's I Ought to Be in Pictures\n \"One Hello\" was performed at the end of the movie by Randy Crawford and written by Carole Bayer Sager and Marvin Hamlisch. An instrumental version of \"One Hello\" is heard at various points in the movie as well. Hamlisch composed the main music for the movie. Just nine months before the movie's premiere, \"One Hello\" was released on June 3, 1981 as Randy Crawford's single and it appeared in the album Windsong.", "Hello, Dolly! (song)\n \"Hello, Dolly!\" is the title song of the popular 1964 musical of the same name. Louis Armstrong's version was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001. The music and lyrics were written by Jerry Herman, who also wrote the scores for many other popular musicals including Mame and La Cage aux Folles.", "Hello (Adele song)\n \"Hello\" was written by Adele and Greg Kurstin and produced by Kurstin, who also played bass, guitar, drums, piano and keyboards, while Adele played drums. \"Hello\" was written in Chiswick, London, something not normally done by Adele, who said she likes to write her music at home. The writing process for the song was slow, taking six months to complete. Initially Adele and Kurstin started writing the first verse; finishing half of the song, six months later Adele contacted Kurstin to finish the song with her, with Kurstin stating he was not sure \"if Adele was ever going to come back and finish it.\" \"Hello\" is a soul piano ballad, played in the key of F minor at a tempo of 79 ", "Howard Hello\n Howard Hello is an American musical group from San Diego, California. Howard Hello was formed by Kenseth Thibideau as a side project from Tarentel in 2001, along with Marty Anderson of Dilute and Wendy Allen of The Court & Spark. They released one album, two EPs and a compilation through Temporary Residence Limited. Raymond Raposa of Castanets played with the band in 2002.", "Hello (Masaharu Fukuyama song)\n \"Hello\" is the tenth single by Japanese artist Masaharu Fukuyama. It was released on February 6, 1995. It was used as the theme song to the drama Saikō no Kataomoi: White Love Story.", "Hello (Joy song)\n SM Entertainment revealed that Joy will be releasing \"Hello\" as the title track for her special album of the same name at 6:00 PM of May 31, 2021. It was reported that starting from the title song, mood samplers and track posters for each song in the album will be released sequentially. The track is a remake of the same name released by singer Park Hye-kyung in 2003. \"Hello\" was composed by Kang Hyun-min, while the lyrics were also written by him along with Park Hye-kyung and Park Ji-won. Musically, it was described as a modern rock genre song. The track is noted for its \"speedy arrangement of cheerful brass music\", in which was described as \"enough to feel a different charm\" from the original song. Moreover, Joy is praised on the track for her \"cool vocals\". The song is composed in the key of D major with a tempo of 93 beats per minute. Lyrically, it is described as \"hopeful\" as it conveys a message of forgetting about the hard days and celebrating a new day.", "Hello (Martin Solveig and Dragonette song)\n \"Hello\" is a song performed by French DJ and record producer Martin Solveig and Canadian synthpop band Dragonette, taken from the former's fifth studio album, Smash (2011). The song was released as the album's lead single on 6 September 2010 by Mercury Records. It is Solveig's most successful single to date, peaking at number one in Austria, Belgium (Flanders), Czech Republic and the Netherlands, while charting within the top 10 in ten other countries. It also reached number one on the Hot Dance Club Songs chart in the United States. Additionally, the song became Solveig's and Dragonette's first appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 in April 2011, eventually peaking at number 46 in June. It has since been certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for sales of 1,000,000 units. The song has been featured in 90210, The Vampire Diaries, Gossip Girl, Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked, and Ted Lasso. It was also featured in Tim Hortons' 2013 ad for their 'Roll up the Rim to Win' promotion. It also used as the intro theme to the TV series Cheer! on CMT. The song appears in the video game Dance Central 3.", "Hello (Poe album)\n Hello is the debut album by the American singer-songwriter Poe. It was released in 1995 on Modern Records.", "Hello (Joy song)\n \"Hello\" is a remake song recorded by South Korean singer and Red Velvet member Joy. Originally recorded and released by singer Park Hye-kyung in 2003, the song was re-recorded and was released on May 31, 2021 by SM Entertainment as a title track from her special remake album of the same name. Composed by Kang Hyun-min and also written by him along with Park Hye-kyung and Park Ji-won, the track was described as a modern rock genre song. It is about forgetting the hard days and celebrating a new day. The song peaked at position 10 on the Gaon Digital Chart and Billboard K-Pop Hot 100.", "Hello (Karmin song)\n It was written by band members Amy Heidemann and Nick Noonan, along with production team Stargate, Autumn Rowe and collaborator Claude Kelly. The song began playing on mainstream radio stations July 31, 2012. Hello was the group's second song to top the Hot Dance Club Songs chart after Brokenhearted. The \"Hello, hello, hello\" chorus interpolates the same lyrics from Nirvana's \"Smells Like Teen Spirit\"; the band is given writing credit on the track.", "Jack Beeson\n Jack Hamilton Beeson (July 15, 1921 – June 6, 2010) was an American composer. He was known particularly for his operas, the best known of which are Lizzie Borden, Hello Out There!, and The Sweet Bye and Bye.", "Hello (Poe song)\n \"Hello\" is the second single released by singer-songwriter Poe. When first released, the single was a moderate success but fared much better on the charts when a remix of the song was introduced. The music video, which featured a The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari theme was co-directed by her brother, Mark Z. Danielewski.", "Hello (The Capes album)\n Hello is the debut album by South London five-piece, The Capes. It was released by Hard Soul Records mid-October 2005 in the UK and on February 28, 2006, in the US. The album sees the band expanding on the promise of their 2005 Taste EP, fusing catchy Britpop-style hooks with complex arrangements, harmonies and splashes of synth.", "Hello Hum\nMichael Bigelow – Composer ; Greg Calbi – Mastering ; Loel Campbell – Composer, Group Member ; Marianne Collins – Illustrations ; Tim D'Eon – Composer, Group Member ; Tony Doogan – Engineer, Producer ; Dave Fridmann – Additional Music, Bass, Mixing, Producer ; Jud Haynes – Design, Layout ; Jon Samuel – Composer ; Paul Murphy - Composer, Group Member ; Wintersleep – Primary Artist " ]
Who was the composer of Ghost?
[ "Hossein Shahabi" ]
composer
Ghost (1998 film)
1,398,877
85
[ { "id": "393452", "title": "Ghost (1990 film)", "text": " The music for Ghost was written by veteran French composer Maurice Jarre, whose work was nominated for the 1990 Academy Award for Best Original Score (won by John Barry for Dances with Wolves). The soundtrack also featured the 1955 song \"Unchained Melody\", composed by Alex North with lyrics by Hy Zaret. This was originally written for the film Unchained – a very different, low-budget movie about prison life. In Ghost, the song appears both in instrumental and vocal form, the latter being the version recorded by Bobby Hatfield of The Righteous Brothers in 1965. The soundtrack album was issued worldwide on Milan Records, but licensed to Varèse Sarabande in North America. It was reissued with two extra tracks in 1995, and later as part of Milan's Silver Screen Edition series with the extra tracks and an interview with Maurice Jarre.", "score": "1.5969038" }, { "id": "1822193", "title": "Ghostwriter", "text": " Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is an example of a well-known composer who was paid to ghostwrite music for wealthy patrons. More recently, composers such as the UK-based Patric Standford (born in 1939) have ghostwritten for symphonic recordings and films such as the Rod McKuen Cello Concerto. In the film industry, a music ghostwriter is a \"person who composes music for another composer but is not credited on the cue sheet or in the final product in any way.\" The practice is considered one of the \"dirty little secrets of the film and television music business\" that is considered unethical, but has been common since the early stages of the film industry. In the early years of film, David Raksin worked as music ghostwriter and orchestrator for Charlie Chaplin; even though Chaplin ", "score": "1.5503018" }, { "id": "1822194", "title": "Ghostwriter", "text": " credited as the score writer, he was considered to be a \"hummer\" (pejorative film industry slang for a person who purports to be a film score composer but who in fact only gives a general idea of the melodies to a ghostwriter). The practice is also common in television, as composers listed on cue sheets are entitled to music royalties every time an episode or theme score appears on television. A 1998 investigation by The Hollywood Reporter revealed that it was especially prevalent among animation companies such as Saban Entertainment, DiC, Ruby-Spears Productions and Hanna-Barbera, which often listed company executives as musicians for the purpose of royalties. Several composers later filed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against Saban Entertainment president Haim Saban, for allegedly taking ownership and credit for their musical compositions.", "score": "1.5497832" }, { "id": "5464767", "title": "A Ghost Story", "text": " Daniel Hart composed the score for the film as another collaboration with David Lowery. It was released by Milan Records on July 7, 2017.", "score": "1.5491707" }, { "id": "7124759", "title": "Ghost (soundtrack)", "text": " Ghost is the official soundtrack, on the Milan Records label, of the 1990 Academy Award- and Golden Globe-winning film Ghost starring Patrick Swayze, Demi Moore and Whoopi Goldberg (who won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as \"Oda Mae Brown\" in this film) and Tony Goldwyn. The score was composed by Maurice Jarre. The album was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Score.", "score": "1.5410721" }, { "id": "31705785", "title": "Hum Tum Aur Ghost", "text": " The music was composed by Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy and Julius Packiam, with the former composing the songs and the latter composing the film score. The lyrics for the songs were written by Javed Akhtar.", "score": "1.5293976" }, { "id": "29742332", "title": "Tan Dun: Ghost Opera", "text": " Tan Dun: Ghost Opera is an album by the Kronos Quartet and Wu Man. The album contains five compositions by Chinese composer Tan Dun written in 1994 for string quartet and pipa. , the composition was still on the Quartet's program.", "score": "1.5219822" }, { "id": "32513705", "title": "Stuart MacRae (composer)", "text": "2013 South Bank Sky Arts Award for Opera for Ghost Patrol. ", "score": "1.5218039" }, { "id": "5802468", "title": "The Ghost (1963 film)", "text": " The Ghost was shot in Rome. It is a Gothic re-imagining of the film Les Diaboliques (1955). The Italian production crew are credited by aliases. The music score is credited to \"Franck Wallace\", whom Italian magazine Bianco e Nero and the Monthly Film Bulletin claim is a pseudonym for Franco Mannino. When Beat Records re-released the score, they found the tapes credited to Francesco De Masi who is not credited in the film. Riccardo Freda had directed Barbara Steele in the horror film The Horrible Dr. Hichcock the previous year. In that film Steele's character was also married to a Doctor Hichcock, but neither character had any connection with those in The Ghost.", "score": "1.5211114" }, { "id": "25288220", "title": "Ghostbusters", "text": " The Ghostbusters score was composed by Elmer Bernstein and performed by the 72-person Hollywood Studio Symphony orchestra at The Village in West Los Angeles, California. It was orchestrated by David Spear and Bernstein's son Peter. Elmer Bernstein had previously scored several of Reitman's films and joined the project early on, before all the cast had been signed. Reitman wanted a grounded, realistic score and did not want the music to tell the audience when something was funny. Bernstein used the ondes Martenot (effectively a keyboard equivalent of a theremin) to produce the \"eerie\" effect. Bernstein had to bring a musician from England to play the instrument because there were so few trained ondists. He also used three Yamaha DX7 synthesizers. In a 1985 ", "score": "1.511634" }, { "id": "13553355", "title": "Bernard Herrmann", "text": " Bernard Herrmann (born Maximillian Herman; June 29, 1911 – December 24, 1975) was an American composer and conductor best known for his work in composing for films. As a conductor, he championed the music of lesser-known composers. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest film composers. An Academy Award-winner (for The Devil and Daniel Webster, 1941; later renamed All That Money Can Buy), Herrmann mainly is known for his collaborations with director Alfred Hitchcock, most famously Psycho, North by Northwest, The Man Who Knew Too Much, and Vertigo. He also composed scores for many other films, including Citizen Kane, Anna and the King of Siam, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, Cape Fear, Fahrenheit 451, and Taxi Driver. He worked extensively in radio drama (composing for Orson Welles), composed the scores for several fantasy films by Ray Harryhausen, and many TV programs, including Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone and Have Gun – Will Travel.", "score": "1.5024014" }, { "id": "9407749", "title": "Ghost Patrol (opera)", "text": " Ghost Patrol was co-commissioned by Scottish Opera and Music Theatre Wales for the 50th birthday celebrations of Scottish Opera. It was developed under \"Operas Made in Scotland\", Scottish Opera's program to encourage new opera writing. The composer, Stuart MacRae, and his librettist, British crime-writer Louise Welsh, had previously collaborated in the program with Remembrance Day, a 15-minute miniature opera created in 2009. The plot of Ghost Patrol recounts the fall-out after heavy-drinking landlord Alasdair discovers that a homeless thief he has apprehended in his pub is someone he knows, Sam, who had been in the same army platoon as him. Once, they had \"colluded in a traumatising atrocity\". The opera has a running time of about 58 minutes and is scored for three singers (tenor, baritone, and soprano) accompanied by a small orchestra of 4 woodwind, 2 brass, percussion, harp and strings.", "score": "1.4992169" }, { "id": "14508035", "title": "Ghost (Jamie-Lee Kriewitz song)", "text": " \"Ghost\" is a song performed by German singer Jamie-Lee Kriewitz. The song represented Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2016 in Stockholm, Sweden, and was written by Thomas Burchia (better known as DJ Thomilla), Anna Leyne, and Conrad Hensel. The song was released as a digital download on 12 December 2015 through Polydor and Island Records. It was also performed as Kriewitz's winner's single during season five of The Voice of Germany.", "score": "1.4937086" }, { "id": "28975419", "title": "Robert Schumann", "text": " a ghost (purportedly the spirit of either Schubert or Mendelssohn) had dictated a \"spirit theme\" to him. The theme was one he had used several times before: in his Second String Quartet, again in his Lieder-Album für die Jugend, and finally in the slow movement of his Violin Concerto. In the days leading up to his suicide attempt, Schumann wrote five variations on this theme for the piano, his last completed work, today known as the Geistervariationen (Ghost Variations). Brahms published it in a supplementary volume to the complete edition of Schumann's piano music. In 1861 Brahms published his Variations for Piano Four Hands, Op. 23, based on this theme. ", "score": "1.4835899" }, { "id": "27591881", "title": "Kip Winger", "text": " Following the release of From the Moon to the Sun, Winger studied with Michael Kurek and composed a thirty-minute symphonic piece, \"Ghosts\", written for strings, piano and harp for a ballet commission. The work had its premiere with the Tucson Symphony Orchestra on November 14–15, 2009. Choreographer Christopher Wheeldon created the ballet \"Ghosts\", which premiered at the San Francisco Ballet on February 9, 2010, with set design by Laura Jellinek, lighting design by M.L. Geiger and costume design by Mark Zappone. Winger was nominated for an Isadora Duncan Award for Excellence in Music. The ballet was a hit and was brought back for a second season in 2010. Winger then composed a four-part work entitled C.F. Kip Winger: Conversations with Nijinsky, intended to celebrate the life of ballet dancer and choreographer Vaslav Nijinsky. The album was recorded by the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra and reached the top of the Traditional Classical Chart on the Billboard music charts. C.F. Kip Winger: Conversations with Nijinsky was nominated in the Best Classical Contemporary Composition category at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards.", "score": "1.4831496" }, { "id": "15462894", "title": "Takashi Niigaki", "text": " On 5 February 2014, Niigaki publicly revealed that he was the ghostwriter behind most of the music previously attributed to Mamoru Samuragochi since 1996. Niigaki went to the press because one of Samuragochi's claimed compositions would be used by Japanese figure skater Daisuke Takahashi, at the then upcoming 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Hiroshima Symphony No. 1 was an adaption of little-known works from earlier composers including Gustav Mahler, as observed by the composer Takeo Noguchi when it was performed on tour by a full orchestra; doubting Samuragochi's claims- sourced entirely by his record label- Noguchi wrote an article on the subject, which was turned ", "score": "1.4793371" }, { "id": "8099108", "title": "Dave Stewart (musician and producer)", "text": " Stewart wrote the musical Barbarella, based on the 1968 film, which premiered in Vienna on 11 March 2004. Stewart wrote music and lyrics (with Glen Ballard) for Ghost the Musical, which opened at the Piccadilly Theatre in London's West End in June 2011.", "score": "1.4744685" }, { "id": "11868202", "title": "Ghost (Swedish band)", "text": " Ghost's third studio album, the follow up to Infestissumam, Meliora was released on 21 August 2015. In an advertisement for the album that aired 28 May on VH1 Classic, it was announced that Papa Emeritus II was \"fired\" and that his successor Papa Emeritus III is his younger brother by a full three months. The song \"Cirice\" was released as a free download from the band's official site on 31 May, and won the 2016 Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance. Papa Emeritus III was officially unveiled with a debut performance in Linköping on 3 June 2015, where the band also performed new songs from the ", "score": "1.4733515" }, { "id": "25760169", "title": "David Earl (composer)", "text": " last few years David has completed two full length operas: Mary and the Conqueror in which Alexander the Great and Mary Renault meet in the afterlife; and 'Strange Ghost', composed to mark the centenary of the death of the iconic poet Rupert Brooke. The latter was premiered in Cambridge in December 2015, directed by Dionysios Kyropoulos, and conducted by Dominic Peckham with James Schouten in the title role. David teaches piano performing to undergraduates at Cambridge University, and is a supervisor for Tripos Composition students. In 2001 he was ordained into the then Western Buddhist Order (now Triratna Buddhist Order) and given the ", "score": "1.4706308" }, { "id": "3724308", "title": "David Sampson (composer)", "text": "Echoes and Other Ghosts, 1986 ; Morning Music, 1986 ; Distant Voices, 1990 ; Strata, 1999 ; Entrance/Exit, 2003 ; A Family Portrait, 2008 ; Chesapeake, 2010 ; Smoky Mountain Fanfare, 2010 ; Still, 2013 ", "score": "1.4695752" } ]
[ "Ghost (1990 film)\n The music for Ghost was written by veteran French composer Maurice Jarre, whose work was nominated for the 1990 Academy Award for Best Original Score (won by John Barry for Dances with Wolves). The soundtrack also featured the 1955 song \"Unchained Melody\", composed by Alex North with lyrics by Hy Zaret. This was originally written for the film Unchained – a very different, low-budget movie about prison life. In Ghost, the song appears both in instrumental and vocal form, the latter being the version recorded by Bobby Hatfield of The Righteous Brothers in 1965. The soundtrack album was issued worldwide on Milan Records, but licensed to Varèse Sarabande in North America. It was reissued with two extra tracks in 1995, and later as part of Milan's Silver Screen Edition series with the extra tracks and an interview with Maurice Jarre.", "Ghostwriter\n Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is an example of a well-known composer who was paid to ghostwrite music for wealthy patrons. More recently, composers such as the UK-based Patric Standford (born in 1939) have ghostwritten for symphonic recordings and films such as the Rod McKuen Cello Concerto. In the film industry, a music ghostwriter is a \"person who composes music for another composer but is not credited on the cue sheet or in the final product in any way.\" The practice is considered one of the \"dirty little secrets of the film and television music business\" that is considered unethical, but has been common since the early stages of the film industry. In the early years of film, David Raksin worked as music ghostwriter and orchestrator for Charlie Chaplin; even though Chaplin ", "Ghostwriter\n credited as the score writer, he was considered to be a \"hummer\" (pejorative film industry slang for a person who purports to be a film score composer but who in fact only gives a general idea of the melodies to a ghostwriter). The practice is also common in television, as composers listed on cue sheets are entitled to music royalties every time an episode or theme score appears on television. A 1998 investigation by The Hollywood Reporter revealed that it was especially prevalent among animation companies such as Saban Entertainment, DiC, Ruby-Spears Productions and Hanna-Barbera, which often listed company executives as musicians for the purpose of royalties. Several composers later filed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against Saban Entertainment president Haim Saban, for allegedly taking ownership and credit for their musical compositions.", "A Ghost Story\n Daniel Hart composed the score for the film as another collaboration with David Lowery. It was released by Milan Records on July 7, 2017.", "Ghost (soundtrack)\n Ghost is the official soundtrack, on the Milan Records label, of the 1990 Academy Award- and Golden Globe-winning film Ghost starring Patrick Swayze, Demi Moore and Whoopi Goldberg (who won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as \"Oda Mae Brown\" in this film) and Tony Goldwyn. The score was composed by Maurice Jarre. The album was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Score.", "Hum Tum Aur Ghost\n The music was composed by Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy and Julius Packiam, with the former composing the songs and the latter composing the film score. The lyrics for the songs were written by Javed Akhtar.", "Tan Dun: Ghost Opera\n Tan Dun: Ghost Opera is an album by the Kronos Quartet and Wu Man. The album contains five compositions by Chinese composer Tan Dun written in 1994 for string quartet and pipa. , the composition was still on the Quartet's program.", "Stuart MacRae (composer)\n2013 South Bank Sky Arts Award for Opera for Ghost Patrol. ", "The Ghost (1963 film)\n The Ghost was shot in Rome. It is a Gothic re-imagining of the film Les Diaboliques (1955). The Italian production crew are credited by aliases. The music score is credited to \"Franck Wallace\", whom Italian magazine Bianco e Nero and the Monthly Film Bulletin claim is a pseudonym for Franco Mannino. When Beat Records re-released the score, they found the tapes credited to Francesco De Masi who is not credited in the film. Riccardo Freda had directed Barbara Steele in the horror film The Horrible Dr. Hichcock the previous year. In that film Steele's character was also married to a Doctor Hichcock, but neither character had any connection with those in The Ghost.", "Ghostbusters\n The Ghostbusters score was composed by Elmer Bernstein and performed by the 72-person Hollywood Studio Symphony orchestra at The Village in West Los Angeles, California. It was orchestrated by David Spear and Bernstein's son Peter. Elmer Bernstein had previously scored several of Reitman's films and joined the project early on, before all the cast had been signed. Reitman wanted a grounded, realistic score and did not want the music to tell the audience when something was funny. Bernstein used the ondes Martenot (effectively a keyboard equivalent of a theremin) to produce the \"eerie\" effect. Bernstein had to bring a musician from England to play the instrument because there were so few trained ondists. He also used three Yamaha DX7 synthesizers. In a 1985 ", "Bernard Herrmann\n Bernard Herrmann (born Maximillian Herman; June 29, 1911 – December 24, 1975) was an American composer and conductor best known for his work in composing for films. As a conductor, he championed the music of lesser-known composers. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest film composers. An Academy Award-winner (for The Devil and Daniel Webster, 1941; later renamed All That Money Can Buy), Herrmann mainly is known for his collaborations with director Alfred Hitchcock, most famously Psycho, North by Northwest, The Man Who Knew Too Much, and Vertigo. He also composed scores for many other films, including Citizen Kane, Anna and the King of Siam, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, Cape Fear, Fahrenheit 451, and Taxi Driver. He worked extensively in radio drama (composing for Orson Welles), composed the scores for several fantasy films by Ray Harryhausen, and many TV programs, including Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone and Have Gun – Will Travel.", "Ghost Patrol (opera)\n Ghost Patrol was co-commissioned by Scottish Opera and Music Theatre Wales for the 50th birthday celebrations of Scottish Opera. It was developed under \"Operas Made in Scotland\", Scottish Opera's program to encourage new opera writing. The composer, Stuart MacRae, and his librettist, British crime-writer Louise Welsh, had previously collaborated in the program with Remembrance Day, a 15-minute miniature opera created in 2009. The plot of Ghost Patrol recounts the fall-out after heavy-drinking landlord Alasdair discovers that a homeless thief he has apprehended in his pub is someone he knows, Sam, who had been in the same army platoon as him. Once, they had \"colluded in a traumatising atrocity\". The opera has a running time of about 58 minutes and is scored for three singers (tenor, baritone, and soprano) accompanied by a small orchestra of 4 woodwind, 2 brass, percussion, harp and strings.", "Ghost (Jamie-Lee Kriewitz song)\n \"Ghost\" is a song performed by German singer Jamie-Lee Kriewitz. The song represented Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2016 in Stockholm, Sweden, and was written by Thomas Burchia (better known as DJ Thomilla), Anna Leyne, and Conrad Hensel. The song was released as a digital download on 12 December 2015 through Polydor and Island Records. It was also performed as Kriewitz's winner's single during season five of The Voice of Germany.", "Robert Schumann\n a ghost (purportedly the spirit of either Schubert or Mendelssohn) had dictated a \"spirit theme\" to him. The theme was one he had used several times before: in his Second String Quartet, again in his Lieder-Album für die Jugend, and finally in the slow movement of his Violin Concerto. In the days leading up to his suicide attempt, Schumann wrote five variations on this theme for the piano, his last completed work, today known as the Geistervariationen (Ghost Variations). Brahms published it in a supplementary volume to the complete edition of Schumann's piano music. In 1861 Brahms published his Variations for Piano Four Hands, Op. 23, based on this theme. ", "Kip Winger\n Following the release of From the Moon to the Sun, Winger studied with Michael Kurek and composed a thirty-minute symphonic piece, \"Ghosts\", written for strings, piano and harp for a ballet commission. The work had its premiere with the Tucson Symphony Orchestra on November 14–15, 2009. Choreographer Christopher Wheeldon created the ballet \"Ghosts\", which premiered at the San Francisco Ballet on February 9, 2010, with set design by Laura Jellinek, lighting design by M.L. Geiger and costume design by Mark Zappone. Winger was nominated for an Isadora Duncan Award for Excellence in Music. The ballet was a hit and was brought back for a second season in 2010. Winger then composed a four-part work entitled C.F. Kip Winger: Conversations with Nijinsky, intended to celebrate the life of ballet dancer and choreographer Vaslav Nijinsky. The album was recorded by the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra and reached the top of the Traditional Classical Chart on the Billboard music charts. C.F. Kip Winger: Conversations with Nijinsky was nominated in the Best Classical Contemporary Composition category at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards.", "Takashi Niigaki\n On 5 February 2014, Niigaki publicly revealed that he was the ghostwriter behind most of the music previously attributed to Mamoru Samuragochi since 1996. Niigaki went to the press because one of Samuragochi's claimed compositions would be used by Japanese figure skater Daisuke Takahashi, at the then upcoming 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Hiroshima Symphony No. 1 was an adaption of little-known works from earlier composers including Gustav Mahler, as observed by the composer Takeo Noguchi when it was performed on tour by a full orchestra; doubting Samuragochi's claims- sourced entirely by his record label- Noguchi wrote an article on the subject, which was turned ", "Dave Stewart (musician and producer)\n Stewart wrote the musical Barbarella, based on the 1968 film, which premiered in Vienna on 11 March 2004. Stewart wrote music and lyrics (with Glen Ballard) for Ghost the Musical, which opened at the Piccadilly Theatre in London's West End in June 2011.", "Ghost (Swedish band)\n Ghost's third studio album, the follow up to Infestissumam, Meliora was released on 21 August 2015. In an advertisement for the album that aired 28 May on VH1 Classic, it was announced that Papa Emeritus II was \"fired\" and that his successor Papa Emeritus III is his younger brother by a full three months. The song \"Cirice\" was released as a free download from the band's official site on 31 May, and won the 2016 Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance. Papa Emeritus III was officially unveiled with a debut performance in Linköping on 3 June 2015, where the band also performed new songs from the ", "David Earl (composer)\n last few years David has completed two full length operas: Mary and the Conqueror in which Alexander the Great and Mary Renault meet in the afterlife; and 'Strange Ghost', composed to mark the centenary of the death of the iconic poet Rupert Brooke. The latter was premiered in Cambridge in December 2015, directed by Dionysios Kyropoulos, and conducted by Dominic Peckham with James Schouten in the title role. David teaches piano performing to undergraduates at Cambridge University, and is a supervisor for Tripos Composition students. In 2001 he was ordained into the then Western Buddhist Order (now Triratna Buddhist Order) and given the ", "David Sampson (composer)\nEchoes and Other Ghosts, 1986 ; Morning Music, 1986 ; Distant Voices, 1990 ; Strata, 1999 ; Entrance/Exit, 2003 ; A Family Portrait, 2008 ; Chesapeake, 2010 ; Smoky Mountain Fanfare, 2010 ; Still, 2013 " ]
Who was the composer of Solo?
[ "Karlheinz Stockhausen", "Karl-Heinz Stockhausen", "Karlheinz Stockhausen" ]
composer
Solo (Stockhausen)
5,785,289
96
[ { "id": "32049154", "title": "Solo (music)", "text": " Solo", "score": "1.5433006" }, { "id": "4634059", "title": "Solo II", "text": " Solo II is the twelfth album by the Portuguese music composer António Pinho Vargas. It was released in 2009. It was later presented with the José Afonso 2010 award.", "score": "1.4921229" }, { "id": "4634052", "title": "Solo (António Pinho Vargas album)", "text": " Solo is the eleventh album by the Portuguese music composer António Pinho Vargas. It was released in 2008.", "score": "1.461764" }, { "id": "7744623", "title": "Solo Avital", "text": " In 2011 Solo was responsible for all the visual design and also composed the complete 240 minutes soundtrack for the German mini series CRIME. Stories taken from Ferdinand von Schirach bestseller VERBRECHEN. The soundtrack was released on iTunes Germany under the titles VERBRECHEN SOUNDTRACK by Solo Avital.", "score": "1.4384924" }, { "id": "31695178", "title": "Solo (Mulgrew Miller album)", "text": " Solo is a solo piano album by Mulgrew Miller. It was recorded in 2000 and released by Space Time Records a decade later.", "score": "1.4366245" }, { "id": "10179170", "title": "Peter Bardens", "text": "\"Solo\" (1985) ", "score": "1.4342906" }, { "id": "8945970", "title": "Solo (Egberto Gismonti album)", "text": " Solo is a solo album by Brazilian composer, guitarist and pianist Egberto Gismonti recorded in 1978 and released on the ECM label.", "score": "1.4232261" }, { "id": "27478393", "title": "Krsna Solo", "text": " Krsna Solo (born Amitav Sarkar) is a music composer, singer-songwriter and a music producer from India, who debuted with the popular Hindi film \"Tanu Weds Manu\" in 2011. Among his awards are a Filmfare R.D. Burman Award, Stardust Award for Best New Music Director. His work also includes Jolly LLB, Tanu Weds Manu Returns, Tamanchey, Oonga and more. One of his mentionable international score is for the documentary called India's Daughter by Leslee Udwin.", "score": "1.4223531" }, { "id": "26105142", "title": "Morison/opit", "text": " Benjamin Morison and Simon Opit and were composers who worked exclusively in collaboration for a period of some years, roughly 1992-1994. As one commentator wrote, \"Much of their work consists of two set of parts written independently, which adds a new radical sense of indeterminacy one might have thought lost in recent works of the experimentalist genre.\" In a text published in 1992, they wrote: \"The score of double arrangement has two names on it, implying that two composers were involved. [...] Suppose it were the true that one composer was responsible for the composition of the music of one duo, the other for that ", "score": "1.4105337" }, { "id": "13075419", "title": "Solo (Dutch band)", "text": " Solo is the musical outfit of Dutch musicians Michiel Flamman and Simon Gitsels. The duo released two albums, of which the latest Solopeople was the biggest success. The album released on label Excelsior Recordings spawned a Dutch top 20 hit with Come Back To Me.", "score": "1.4096453" }, { "id": "6828114", "title": "Double bass", "text": " (born 1933) has performed and recorded more than 300 pieces written by and for him. He writes chamber music, baroque music, classical, jazz, renaissance music, improvisational music and world music US minimalist composer Philip Glass wrote a prelude focused on the lower register that he scored for timpani and double bass. Italian composer Sylvano Bussotti, whose composing career spans from the 1930s to the first decade of the 21st century, wrote a solo work for bass in 1983 entitled Naked Angel Face per contrabbasso. Fellow Italian composer Franco Donatoni wrote a piece called Lem for contrabbasso in the same year. In 1989, French composer ", "score": "1.4058037" }, { "id": "27944906", "title": "Instrumental solo piece", "text": " In music, an instrumental solo piece (from the Italian: solo, meaning alone) is a composition, like an étude, solo sonata, partita, solo suite or impromptus, or an arrangement, written to be played by a single performer. The performer is a soloist. The instrumental solo pieces can be monophonic or polyphonic. There are monophonic instruments like those of the brass and wind sections, that can only produce single notes at one time, and polyphonic instruments, like the guitar and piano, that have the option of also playing with polyphony, which is when notes are played simultaneously.", "score": "1.3927063" }, { "id": "787249", "title": "Solo (Lynne Arriale album)", "text": " Solo is a solo piano album by Lynne Arriale. It was recorded in 2011 and released by Motéma Music.", "score": "1.3815691" }, { "id": "3236804", "title": "Piano Solo", "text": " Piano Solo was an envisaged plot for an Italian coup in 1964 requested by then President of the Italian Republic, Antonio Segni. It was prepared by the commander of the Carabinieri Giovanni de Lorenzo in the beginning of 1964 in close collaboration with the Italian secret service SIFAR, CIA secret warfare expert Vernon Walters, then chief of the CIA station in Rome William King Harvey, and Renzo Rocca, director of the Gladio units within the military secret service SID.", "score": "1.3786845" }, { "id": "31695180", "title": "Solo (Mulgrew Miller album)", "text": " Solo was released by Space Time Records in 2010. The Financial Times described it as \"a masterclass in the traditional jazz virtues of harmonic development and unflagging tempo.\" The New York Amsterdam News suggested that \"it will be the album that fledgling musicians copy and practice by.\"", "score": "1.3759117" }, { "id": "26975199", "title": "List of compositions by Lukas Foss", "text": " that stands apart from this largely neoclassical repertoire is Solo (1981), a hybrid minimalist and twelve-tone work employing as a guiding technical principle the gradual transformation of several pitch collections. At the conclusion of Solo, these pitch collections change from serial to tonal, effecting a remarkable surprise. Of For Lenny, the opera composer Daniel Felsenfeld has written that Foss \"is loving and careful with his treatment, avoiding vulgarity or navel gazing and offering instead a calm (yet not un-bouncy) treatment of this famous tune\". The world-premiere recording of Foss's complete extant piano works was released in 2002 by the Sonatabop.com recording label based in Milwaukee. This recording was completed ", "score": "1.3753341" }, { "id": "8767842", "title": "Solo concerto", "text": "The New Harvard Dictionary of Music. ", "score": "1.3740851" }, { "id": "30918185", "title": "List of songs written by Glenn Miller", "text": " \"Solo Hop\" was a Top Ten hit from the summer of 1935, according to the official Glenn Miller Orchestra web site. Miller composed this for a pick-up band when he started recording for Columbia Records. \"Solo Hop\" included Bunny Berigan on trumpet, Claude Thornhill on piano, and Charlie Spivak on trumpet. It was released by Columbia as a single backed with \"In a Little Spanish Town\", label number CO-3058-D. According to the tsort.info, a website that accesses Billboard chart statistics, based on the research of Billboard chart analyst Joel Whitburn, \"Solo Hop\" reached number seven on the Billboard chart in 1935, staying on the chart for five weeks. George Simon, a friend of Miller, contradicts sources that say it was a top ten hit and says it was barely noticed by record buyers.", "score": "1.3630164" }, { "id": "26341209", "title": "Solo (American band)", "text": " Solo is an American R&B musical group from New York, New York. The original members were Robert Anderson, Darnell Chavis, Eunique Mack and Dan Stokes. The group recorded their eponymous debut album in Minneapolis and released it in 1995. Released on Perspective Records, the album featured production primarily by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. The album produced four singles (\"Heaven\", \"Where Do U Want Me to Put It\", \"He's Not Good Enough\" and \"Blowin' My Mind\") and was eventually certified gold. Solo released their second album, 4 Bruthas & a Bass, in 1998. The album produced only one single, \"Touch Me\", which peaked at #59 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "score": "1.3607249" }, { "id": "5786115", "title": "Solo (Michel Camilo album)", "text": " Solo is a piano album by Michel Camilo. It was recorded in 2004 and released by Telarc.", "score": "1.3592726" } ]
[ "Solo (music)\n Solo", "Solo II\n Solo II is the twelfth album by the Portuguese music composer António Pinho Vargas. It was released in 2009. It was later presented with the José Afonso 2010 award.", "Solo (António Pinho Vargas album)\n Solo is the eleventh album by the Portuguese music composer António Pinho Vargas. It was released in 2008.", "Solo Avital\n In 2011 Solo was responsible for all the visual design and also composed the complete 240 minutes soundtrack for the German mini series CRIME. Stories taken from Ferdinand von Schirach bestseller VERBRECHEN. The soundtrack was released on iTunes Germany under the titles VERBRECHEN SOUNDTRACK by Solo Avital.", "Solo (Mulgrew Miller album)\n Solo is a solo piano album by Mulgrew Miller. It was recorded in 2000 and released by Space Time Records a decade later.", "Peter Bardens\n\"Solo\" (1985) ", "Solo (Egberto Gismonti album)\n Solo is a solo album by Brazilian composer, guitarist and pianist Egberto Gismonti recorded in 1978 and released on the ECM label.", "Krsna Solo\n Krsna Solo (born Amitav Sarkar) is a music composer, singer-songwriter and a music producer from India, who debuted with the popular Hindi film \"Tanu Weds Manu\" in 2011. Among his awards are a Filmfare R.D. Burman Award, Stardust Award for Best New Music Director. His work also includes Jolly LLB, Tanu Weds Manu Returns, Tamanchey, Oonga and more. One of his mentionable international score is for the documentary called India's Daughter by Leslee Udwin.", "Morison/opit\n Benjamin Morison and Simon Opit and were composers who worked exclusively in collaboration for a period of some years, roughly 1992-1994. As one commentator wrote, \"Much of their work consists of two set of parts written independently, which adds a new radical sense of indeterminacy one might have thought lost in recent works of the experimentalist genre.\" In a text published in 1992, they wrote: \"The score of double arrangement has two names on it, implying that two composers were involved. [...] Suppose it were the true that one composer was responsible for the composition of the music of one duo, the other for that ", "Solo (Dutch band)\n Solo is the musical outfit of Dutch musicians Michiel Flamman and Simon Gitsels. The duo released two albums, of which the latest Solopeople was the biggest success. The album released on label Excelsior Recordings spawned a Dutch top 20 hit with Come Back To Me.", "Double bass\n (born 1933) has performed and recorded more than 300 pieces written by and for him. He writes chamber music, baroque music, classical, jazz, renaissance music, improvisational music and world music US minimalist composer Philip Glass wrote a prelude focused on the lower register that he scored for timpani and double bass. Italian composer Sylvano Bussotti, whose composing career spans from the 1930s to the first decade of the 21st century, wrote a solo work for bass in 1983 entitled Naked Angel Face per contrabbasso. Fellow Italian composer Franco Donatoni wrote a piece called Lem for contrabbasso in the same year. In 1989, French composer ", "Instrumental solo piece\n In music, an instrumental solo piece (from the Italian: solo, meaning alone) is a composition, like an étude, solo sonata, partita, solo suite or impromptus, or an arrangement, written to be played by a single performer. The performer is a soloist. The instrumental solo pieces can be monophonic or polyphonic. There are monophonic instruments like those of the brass and wind sections, that can only produce single notes at one time, and polyphonic instruments, like the guitar and piano, that have the option of also playing with polyphony, which is when notes are played simultaneously.", "Solo (Lynne Arriale album)\n Solo is a solo piano album by Lynne Arriale. It was recorded in 2011 and released by Motéma Music.", "Piano Solo\n Piano Solo was an envisaged plot for an Italian coup in 1964 requested by then President of the Italian Republic, Antonio Segni. It was prepared by the commander of the Carabinieri Giovanni de Lorenzo in the beginning of 1964 in close collaboration with the Italian secret service SIFAR, CIA secret warfare expert Vernon Walters, then chief of the CIA station in Rome William King Harvey, and Renzo Rocca, director of the Gladio units within the military secret service SID.", "Solo (Mulgrew Miller album)\n Solo was released by Space Time Records in 2010. The Financial Times described it as \"a masterclass in the traditional jazz virtues of harmonic development and unflagging tempo.\" The New York Amsterdam News suggested that \"it will be the album that fledgling musicians copy and practice by.\"", "List of compositions by Lukas Foss\n that stands apart from this largely neoclassical repertoire is Solo (1981), a hybrid minimalist and twelve-tone work employing as a guiding technical principle the gradual transformation of several pitch collections. At the conclusion of Solo, these pitch collections change from serial to tonal, effecting a remarkable surprise. Of For Lenny, the opera composer Daniel Felsenfeld has written that Foss \"is loving and careful with his treatment, avoiding vulgarity or navel gazing and offering instead a calm (yet not un-bouncy) treatment of this famous tune\". The world-premiere recording of Foss's complete extant piano works was released in 2002 by the Sonatabop.com recording label based in Milwaukee. This recording was completed ", "Solo concerto\nThe New Harvard Dictionary of Music. ", "List of songs written by Glenn Miller\n \"Solo Hop\" was a Top Ten hit from the summer of 1935, according to the official Glenn Miller Orchestra web site. Miller composed this for a pick-up band when he started recording for Columbia Records. \"Solo Hop\" included Bunny Berigan on trumpet, Claude Thornhill on piano, and Charlie Spivak on trumpet. It was released by Columbia as a single backed with \"In a Little Spanish Town\", label number CO-3058-D. According to the tsort.info, a website that accesses Billboard chart statistics, based on the research of Billboard chart analyst Joel Whitburn, \"Solo Hop\" reached number seven on the Billboard chart in 1935, staying on the chart for five weeks. George Simon, a friend of Miller, contradicts sources that say it was a top ten hit and says it was barely noticed by record buyers.", "Solo (American band)\n Solo is an American R&B musical group from New York, New York. The original members were Robert Anderson, Darnell Chavis, Eunique Mack and Dan Stokes. The group recorded their eponymous debut album in Minneapolis and released it in 1995. Released on Perspective Records, the album featured production primarily by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. The album produced four singles (\"Heaven\", \"Where Do U Want Me to Put It\", \"He's Not Good Enough\" and \"Blowin' My Mind\") and was eventually certified gold. Solo released their second album, 4 Bruthas & a Bass, in 1998. The album produced only one single, \"Touch Me\", which peaked at #59 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "Solo (Michel Camilo album)\n Solo is a piano album by Michel Camilo. It was recorded in 2004 and released by Telarc." ]
Who was the composer of To Live?
[ "Tito Schipa", "Raffaele Attilio Amedeo Schipa", "Tito Skipa", "Tito Shipa", "Tito Skipu", "Titus Schipa", "Titto Shippa", "Titto Skipa", "Raffaele Schipa" ]
composer
To Live (1937 film)
2,944,504
98
[ { "id": "30714711", "title": "George Russell (composer)", "text": " In the 1970s Russell was commissioned to write and record 3 major works: Listen to the Silence, a mass for orchestra and chorus for the Norwegian Cultural Fund; Living Time, commissioned by Bill Evans for Columbia Records; and Vertical Form VI for the Swedish Radio. With Living Time (1972), Russell reunited with Bill Evans to offer a suite of compositions which represent the stages of human life. His Live in an American Time Spiral featured many young New York players who would go on to greatness, including Tom Harrell and Ray Anderson. When he was able to form an orchestra for his 1985 work The African Game, he dubbed it the Living Time Orchestra. This 14-member ensemble toured Europe and the U.S., doing frequent weeks at the Village Vanguard, and was praised by New York magazine as \"the most exciting orchestra to hit the city in ", "score": "1.5489275" }, { "id": "2868642", "title": "To Live (1937 film)", "text": " To Live (Italian: Vivere!) is a 1937 Italian musical drama film directed by Guido Brignone and starring Tito Schipa, Caterina Boratto and Nino Besozzi. The film is noted for its title song, composed by Cesare A. Bixio. It was distributed by the Italian subsidiary of MGM.", "score": "1.5208967" }, { "id": "3069872", "title": "I Want to Live! (score)", "text": " I Want to Live!' is the debut film score composed, arranged and conducted by Johnny Mandel, for the 1958 film of the same name directed by Robert Wise. In addition to Mandel's score, the film features jazz themes performed by Gerry Mulligan's Jazz Combo. Two soundtrack albums were released on the United Artists label in 1958. Mandel was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Sound Track Album or Recording of Original Cast From a Motion Picture or Television at the inaugural 1st Annual Grammy Awards in 1959; he lost to André Previn's score for Gigi.", "score": "1.4968076" }, { "id": "1462655", "title": "Philip Springer", "text": " Springer composed and conducted six motion picture scores in Hollywood, including Kill a Dragon (1967); I Sailed to Tahiti with an All Girl Crew (1968); More Dead Than Alive (1969); Impasse (1969); Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970); and Wicked, Wicked (1973). He also scored episodes of the television series Gunsmoke, Mannix, Then Came Bronson, and Medical Center, and composed the theme for Crosswits, a 1970s game show. Springer has composed music for more than 20 musical shows, 3 of which were produced in New York City. He composed the score for the off-Broadway musical The Chosen, based on the best-selling novel by Chaim Potok, in 1988. Songs interpolated in Broadway shows include \"Salesmanship\" (Ziegfeld Follies of '57; lyrics by Carolyn Leigh); and \"You'll Make ", "score": "1.4742582" }, { "id": "26555907", "title": "Peter Boyer", "text": " Niro, Morgan Freeman, and Ed Harris as the narrators for Boyer's work. The Dream Lives On was premiered at Boston's Symphony Hall on May 18, 2010. The event received extensive media attention, was attended by many members of the Kennedy family, and was recorded and telecast on Boston's WCVB-TV. , The Boston Globe wrote: \"Boyer's work accomplishes the goals… of amplifying the texts by these three American icons. His writing draws from the traditions of Williams-esque Hollywood film scores, Broadway musicals, and American neo-Romanticism.\" Conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya appointed Boyer as the Composer-in-Residence for the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra for the ", "score": "1.4726269" }, { "id": "9288474", "title": "Live A Live", "text": " The music was composed and arranged by Yoko Shimomura. After writing music for Capcom on multiple projects including Street Fighter II, Shimomura moved to Square in 1993, fuelled by the wish to compose for RPGs. Live A Live was Shimomura's first major RPG composition, and her first job after arriving at Square. Her only previous work on RPGs was minor work on Breath of Fire prior to leaving Capcom. As with the rest of the game, Shimomura's music reflected the different eras in which the narrative was set. The main theme appeared multiple times through the score in arranged versions, an idea shared by both Shimomura and Tokita. The boss theme \"Megalomania\" was written to be frenetic and exciting. For the motif of Odio, Shimomura used a simulated ", "score": "1.4628453" }, { "id": "11146927", "title": "Tomorrow We Live (1943 film)", "text": " Nicholas Brodzsky is credited for the music, while the orchestration is credited to Roy Douglas, an English composer who was much in demand as an arranger, orchestrator, and copyist of the music of others, notably Richard Addinsell, Ralph Vaughan Williams and William Walton. However it is possible that Brodzsky actually contributed very little. In a memoir in the William Walton Archive, Roy Douglas claimed, \"Brodsky was a so-called composer: I had actually composed entire film scores for him, which went under his name\". In a letter to Roy Douglas dated 23 December 1943, William Walton wrote, \"I'm delighted about your picture. I'll have a good deal to tell you about Brodsky when I see you. In my capacity as music adviser to Two Cities [a film company] it is going to be my duty to have to tick him off!\"", "score": "1.4624498" }, { "id": "25989042", "title": "Edward Williams (composer)", "text": " Edward Aneurin Williams (20 August 1921 – 8 December 2013) was a British composer and electronic music pioneer, best known for his work on the BBC Television series Life on Earth, and as the creator of Soundbeam. Two of the documentaries he composed scores for were Academy Award winners, including Dylan Thomas (1961), which won an Oscar in 1963, and Wild Wings (1965), which won an Oscar in 1967.", "score": "1.447564" }, { "id": "10168656", "title": "I Want to Live (album)", "text": " All tracks composed by John Denver; except where indicated", "score": "1.4440433" }, { "id": "30299680", "title": "Johnny Mandel", "text": " 1949, \"Hershey Bar\" (1950) and \"Pot Luck\" (1953) for Stan Getz, \"Straight Life\" (1953) and \"Low Life\" (1956) for Count Basie, as well as \"Tommyhawk\" (1954) for Chet Baker. Mandel composed, conducted and arranged the music for numerous movie sound tracks. His earliest credited contribution was to I Want to Live! in 1958, which was nominated for three Grammy Awards. His other compositions include \"Suicide Is Painless\" (theme song for the movie and TV series M*A*S*H), \"Close Enough for Love\", \"Emily\" and \"A Time for Love\" (nominated for an Academy Award). \"Emily\" was a favorite of pianist Bill Evans and alto saxophonist Paul Desmond, both of whom included it in live performances until they died, and Evans included it in a duo ", "score": "1.4425335" }, { "id": "26824370", "title": "Lee Holdridge", "text": " Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live ; Nominated, 2002, Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live ; Nominated, 2004, Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live ; Won, 2005, Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live ; Nominated, 2006, Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live Won, 1998, Outstanding Achievement in a Craft: Music Composition/Direction/Lyrics for: Atlanta's Olympic Glory ", "score": "1.4329948" }, { "id": "877668", "title": "Richard Arnell", "text": " Schwartz), and at Hofstra University, New York, from 1968 to 1970, he taught at Trinity College of Music in London between 1947 and 1987, where his students included Peter Tahourdin (1949–52), electronic composer David Hewson, who worked with him on films including Dilemma (1981), Doctor in the Sky (1984), Toulouse-Lautrec (1986), and The Light of the World (1989), was one of his pupils. Arnell composed the music for The Land (1942), a 45-minute documentary film directed by Robert J. Flaherty for the US Department of Agriculture. He was also commissioned by the Ford Motor Company to compose a symphonic suite inspired by the workers in the factory at Dagenham. The resulting work ", "score": "1.4131522" }, { "id": "9703809", "title": "Living Toys", "text": " Living Toys, Op. 9, is a composition for chamber ensemble by the English composer Thomas Adès. It was written in 1993 as a part of his MPhil portfolio in Composition at Cambridge University and premiered at the Barbican Hall in London under Oliver Knussen.", "score": "1.4093299" }, { "id": "32940623", "title": "Thomas Oliphant (lyricist)", "text": " words, music by Conradin Kreutzer, lyrics by Oliphant \"Stay One Moment Gentle Sires\" words and music by Thomas Oliphant. \"Bid Me To Live, and I will Live\" words and music by Thomas Oliphant. \"David of the White Rock\" (Dafydd y Garreg Wen) Welsh words by John Hughes, English words by Oliphant. \"All ye who Music Love\" by Donato Baldassare, English words (which are not a translation) by Thomas Oliphant. \"Where floats the standard\" (Die Fahnenwacht) English version by Thomas Oliphant composed by Peter Josef von Lindpaintner \"Llewelyn, A Dramatic Cantata\" was dedicated to the Prince of Wales. It was composed by Queen Victoria's harpist, John Thomas ('Pencerdd Gwalia'; ", "score": "1.4002461" }, { "id": "30308702", "title": "Accessible Contemporary Music", "text": " The first Composer Alive project was a collaboration between ACM and Beijing based composer Xiaogang Ye in the summer of 2006. Ye composed Datura, which is now published by Schott music, and traveled to Chicago for the World Premiere at the Chicago Cultural Center. ACM's other projects include Sound of Silent Film and Noteplay, an event that allows children to discover the joys of creating and manipulating sound.", "score": "1.3998301" }, { "id": "12040639", "title": "List of musicals by composer: M to Z", "text": " Alive and Living in Dade County (1977) ; Milton Schafer (1920–2020) ; Bravo Giovanni (1962) ; Drat! The Cat! (1965) ; Steve Schalchlin (born 1953) ; The Last Session (1997) ; The Big Voice: God or Merman? (2002) ; Nitra Scharfman ; The Lieutenant (1975); music also by Gene Curty, Chuck Strand ; Ben Schatz ; Dragapella! (2001) ; Ton Scherpenzeel (born 1952) ; Kruimeltje (2000) ; Peter Schickele (born 1935) (member of The Open Window) ; Oh! Calcutta! (1969); music also by Robert Dennis, Stanley Walden ; Paul Schierhorn (1951–2012) ; The News (1985) ; John Schimmel ; Pump Boys ", "score": "1.3988833" }, { "id": "4234390", "title": "To Love Is to Live", "text": " Beth had previously recorded two albums with John & Jehn, and two albums with the band Savages. To Love Is to Live is her fifth studio album with long time partner, collaborator, and producer Johnny Hostile. She hadn't planned to work on a solo album until January 2016, when she woke up in the middle of the night and learned that David Bowie had died. She then listened to Blackstar and the idea to release an album on her own became a necessity. It reminded her that albums outlived artists, so she worked on her new record “as if I was going to die.” To Love Is to Live was composed over a period ", "score": "1.3973339" }, { "id": "30714712", "title": "George Russell (composer)", "text": " The work The African Game, a 45-minute opus for 25 musicians, was described by Robert Palmer of The New York Times as \"one of the most important new releases of the past several decades\" and earned Russell two Grammy nominations in 1985. Russell wrote 9 extended pieces after 1984, among them: Timeline for symphonic orchestra, jazz orchestra, chorus, klezmer band and soloists, composed for the New England Conservatory's 125th anniversary; a re-orchestration of Living Time for Russell's orchestra and additional musicians, commissioned by the Cité de la Musique in Paris in 1994; and It's About Time, co-commissioned by The Arts Council of England and the Swedish Concert Bureau in 1995. In 1986, Russell toured with a group of American and British musicians, resulting in The International Living Time Orchestra. He played with Dave Bargeron, Steve Lodder, Tiger Okoshi, Mike Walker, Brad Hatfield, and Andy Sheppard.", "score": "1.3920388" }, { "id": "3302121", "title": "Louis Levy", "text": " Capricorn (with Richard Addinsell, 1949) ; The Dancing Years (composer Ivor Novello, 1950) ; Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. (composer Robert Farnon, 1951) ; So Little Time (1952) ; The Dam Busters (composers Eric Coates, Leighton Lucas, 1954) ; Yield to the Night (composer Ray Martin, 1956) ; 1984 (composer Malcolm Arnold, 1956) ; Tarzan and the Lost Safari (composer Clifton Parker, 1956) ; Moby Dick (composer Philip Sainton, 1956) ; Let's Be Happy (composers Nicholas Brodszky, Wally Stott, 1957) ; The Young and the Guilty (composer Sydney John Kay, 1957) ; No Time for Tears (composer Francis Chagrin, 1957) ; Woman in a Dressing Gown (1957) (Sole credit for the music, often as musical director, unless otherwise noted) ", "score": "1.383913" }, { "id": "15628727", "title": "Honey, I Blew Up the Kid", "text": " Intrada Records released the record in 1992, in time for the film's release. The score was composed and conducted by Bruce Broughton, who would return to provide the score for Honey, I Shrunk the Audience. \"Stayin Alive\" by the Bee Gees appears in it. So does \"Loco-Motion\" by Carole King, Gerry Goffin, and \"Ours If We Want It\" written by Tom Snow and Mark Mueller. The soundtrack album consists of just the score. In 2017, the label released an expanded edition included Broughton's score for Off His Rockers, the animated short that preceded the film in cinemas.", "score": "1.3797114" } ]
[ "George Russell (composer)\n In the 1970s Russell was commissioned to write and record 3 major works: Listen to the Silence, a mass for orchestra and chorus for the Norwegian Cultural Fund; Living Time, commissioned by Bill Evans for Columbia Records; and Vertical Form VI for the Swedish Radio. With Living Time (1972), Russell reunited with Bill Evans to offer a suite of compositions which represent the stages of human life. His Live in an American Time Spiral featured many young New York players who would go on to greatness, including Tom Harrell and Ray Anderson. When he was able to form an orchestra for his 1985 work The African Game, he dubbed it the Living Time Orchestra. This 14-member ensemble toured Europe and the U.S., doing frequent weeks at the Village Vanguard, and was praised by New York magazine as \"the most exciting orchestra to hit the city in ", "To Live (1937 film)\n To Live (Italian: Vivere!) is a 1937 Italian musical drama film directed by Guido Brignone and starring Tito Schipa, Caterina Boratto and Nino Besozzi. The film is noted for its title song, composed by Cesare A. Bixio. It was distributed by the Italian subsidiary of MGM.", "I Want to Live! (score)\n I Want to Live!' is the debut film score composed, arranged and conducted by Johnny Mandel, for the 1958 film of the same name directed by Robert Wise. In addition to Mandel's score, the film features jazz themes performed by Gerry Mulligan's Jazz Combo. Two soundtrack albums were released on the United Artists label in 1958. Mandel was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Sound Track Album or Recording of Original Cast From a Motion Picture or Television at the inaugural 1st Annual Grammy Awards in 1959; he lost to André Previn's score for Gigi.", "Philip Springer\n Springer composed and conducted six motion picture scores in Hollywood, including Kill a Dragon (1967); I Sailed to Tahiti with an All Girl Crew (1968); More Dead Than Alive (1969); Impasse (1969); Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970); and Wicked, Wicked (1973). He also scored episodes of the television series Gunsmoke, Mannix, Then Came Bronson, and Medical Center, and composed the theme for Crosswits, a 1970s game show. Springer has composed music for more than 20 musical shows, 3 of which were produced in New York City. He composed the score for the off-Broadway musical The Chosen, based on the best-selling novel by Chaim Potok, in 1988. Songs interpolated in Broadway shows include \"Salesmanship\" (Ziegfeld Follies of '57; lyrics by Carolyn Leigh); and \"You'll Make ", "Peter Boyer\n Niro, Morgan Freeman, and Ed Harris as the narrators for Boyer's work. The Dream Lives On was premiered at Boston's Symphony Hall on May 18, 2010. The event received extensive media attention, was attended by many members of the Kennedy family, and was recorded and telecast on Boston's WCVB-TV. , The Boston Globe wrote: \"Boyer's work accomplishes the goals… of amplifying the texts by these three American icons. His writing draws from the traditions of Williams-esque Hollywood film scores, Broadway musicals, and American neo-Romanticism.\" Conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya appointed Boyer as the Composer-in-Residence for the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra for the ", "Live A Live\n The music was composed and arranged by Yoko Shimomura. After writing music for Capcom on multiple projects including Street Fighter II, Shimomura moved to Square in 1993, fuelled by the wish to compose for RPGs. Live A Live was Shimomura's first major RPG composition, and her first job after arriving at Square. Her only previous work on RPGs was minor work on Breath of Fire prior to leaving Capcom. As with the rest of the game, Shimomura's music reflected the different eras in which the narrative was set. The main theme appeared multiple times through the score in arranged versions, an idea shared by both Shimomura and Tokita. The boss theme \"Megalomania\" was written to be frenetic and exciting. For the motif of Odio, Shimomura used a simulated ", "Tomorrow We Live (1943 film)\n Nicholas Brodzsky is credited for the music, while the orchestration is credited to Roy Douglas, an English composer who was much in demand as an arranger, orchestrator, and copyist of the music of others, notably Richard Addinsell, Ralph Vaughan Williams and William Walton. However it is possible that Brodzsky actually contributed very little. In a memoir in the William Walton Archive, Roy Douglas claimed, \"Brodsky was a so-called composer: I had actually composed entire film scores for him, which went under his name\". In a letter to Roy Douglas dated 23 December 1943, William Walton wrote, \"I'm delighted about your picture. I'll have a good deal to tell you about Brodsky when I see you. In my capacity as music adviser to Two Cities [a film company] it is going to be my duty to have to tick him off!\"", "Edward Williams (composer)\n Edward Aneurin Williams (20 August 1921 – 8 December 2013) was a British composer and electronic music pioneer, best known for his work on the BBC Television series Life on Earth, and as the creator of Soundbeam. Two of the documentaries he composed scores for were Academy Award winners, including Dylan Thomas (1961), which won an Oscar in 1963, and Wild Wings (1965), which won an Oscar in 1967.", "I Want to Live (album)\n All tracks composed by John Denver; except where indicated", "Johnny Mandel\n 1949, \"Hershey Bar\" (1950) and \"Pot Luck\" (1953) for Stan Getz, \"Straight Life\" (1953) and \"Low Life\" (1956) for Count Basie, as well as \"Tommyhawk\" (1954) for Chet Baker. Mandel composed, conducted and arranged the music for numerous movie sound tracks. His earliest credited contribution was to I Want to Live! in 1958, which was nominated for three Grammy Awards. His other compositions include \"Suicide Is Painless\" (theme song for the movie and TV series M*A*S*H), \"Close Enough for Love\", \"Emily\" and \"A Time for Love\" (nominated for an Academy Award). \"Emily\" was a favorite of pianist Bill Evans and alto saxophonist Paul Desmond, both of whom included it in live performances until they died, and Evans included it in a duo ", "Lee Holdridge\n Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live ; Nominated, 2002, Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live ; Nominated, 2004, Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live ; Won, 2005, Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live ; Nominated, 2006, Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition for a Drama Series for: One Life to Live Won, 1998, Outstanding Achievement in a Craft: Music Composition/Direction/Lyrics for: Atlanta's Olympic Glory ", "Richard Arnell\n Schwartz), and at Hofstra University, New York, from 1968 to 1970, he taught at Trinity College of Music in London between 1947 and 1987, where his students included Peter Tahourdin (1949–52), electronic composer David Hewson, who worked with him on films including Dilemma (1981), Doctor in the Sky (1984), Toulouse-Lautrec (1986), and The Light of the World (1989), was one of his pupils. Arnell composed the music for The Land (1942), a 45-minute documentary film directed by Robert J. Flaherty for the US Department of Agriculture. He was also commissioned by the Ford Motor Company to compose a symphonic suite inspired by the workers in the factory at Dagenham. The resulting work ", "Living Toys\n Living Toys, Op. 9, is a composition for chamber ensemble by the English composer Thomas Adès. It was written in 1993 as a part of his MPhil portfolio in Composition at Cambridge University and premiered at the Barbican Hall in London under Oliver Knussen.", "Thomas Oliphant (lyricist)\n words, music by Conradin Kreutzer, lyrics by Oliphant \"Stay One Moment Gentle Sires\" words and music by Thomas Oliphant. \"Bid Me To Live, and I will Live\" words and music by Thomas Oliphant. \"David of the White Rock\" (Dafydd y Garreg Wen) Welsh words by John Hughes, English words by Oliphant. \"All ye who Music Love\" by Donato Baldassare, English words (which are not a translation) by Thomas Oliphant. \"Where floats the standard\" (Die Fahnenwacht) English version by Thomas Oliphant composed by Peter Josef von Lindpaintner \"Llewelyn, A Dramatic Cantata\" was dedicated to the Prince of Wales. It was composed by Queen Victoria's harpist, John Thomas ('Pencerdd Gwalia'; ", "Accessible Contemporary Music\n The first Composer Alive project was a collaboration between ACM and Beijing based composer Xiaogang Ye in the summer of 2006. Ye composed Datura, which is now published by Schott music, and traveled to Chicago for the World Premiere at the Chicago Cultural Center. ACM's other projects include Sound of Silent Film and Noteplay, an event that allows children to discover the joys of creating and manipulating sound.", "List of musicals by composer: M to Z\n Alive and Living in Dade County (1977) ; Milton Schafer (1920–2020) ; Bravo Giovanni (1962) ; Drat! The Cat! (1965) ; Steve Schalchlin (born 1953) ; The Last Session (1997) ; The Big Voice: God or Merman? (2002) ; Nitra Scharfman ; The Lieutenant (1975); music also by Gene Curty, Chuck Strand ; Ben Schatz ; Dragapella! (2001) ; Ton Scherpenzeel (born 1952) ; Kruimeltje (2000) ; Peter Schickele (born 1935) (member of The Open Window) ; Oh! Calcutta! (1969); music also by Robert Dennis, Stanley Walden ; Paul Schierhorn (1951–2012) ; The News (1985) ; John Schimmel ; Pump Boys ", "To Love Is to Live\n Beth had previously recorded two albums with John & Jehn, and two albums with the band Savages. To Love Is to Live is her fifth studio album with long time partner, collaborator, and producer Johnny Hostile. She hadn't planned to work on a solo album until January 2016, when she woke up in the middle of the night and learned that David Bowie had died. She then listened to Blackstar and the idea to release an album on her own became a necessity. It reminded her that albums outlived artists, so she worked on her new record “as if I was going to die.” To Love Is to Live was composed over a period ", "George Russell (composer)\n The work The African Game, a 45-minute opus for 25 musicians, was described by Robert Palmer of The New York Times as \"one of the most important new releases of the past several decades\" and earned Russell two Grammy nominations in 1985. Russell wrote 9 extended pieces after 1984, among them: Timeline for symphonic orchestra, jazz orchestra, chorus, klezmer band and soloists, composed for the New England Conservatory's 125th anniversary; a re-orchestration of Living Time for Russell's orchestra and additional musicians, commissioned by the Cité de la Musique in Paris in 1994; and It's About Time, co-commissioned by The Arts Council of England and the Swedish Concert Bureau in 1995. In 1986, Russell toured with a group of American and British musicians, resulting in The International Living Time Orchestra. He played with Dave Bargeron, Steve Lodder, Tiger Okoshi, Mike Walker, Brad Hatfield, and Andy Sheppard.", "Louis Levy\n Capricorn (with Richard Addinsell, 1949) ; The Dancing Years (composer Ivor Novello, 1950) ; Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. (composer Robert Farnon, 1951) ; So Little Time (1952) ; The Dam Busters (composers Eric Coates, Leighton Lucas, 1954) ; Yield to the Night (composer Ray Martin, 1956) ; 1984 (composer Malcolm Arnold, 1956) ; Tarzan and the Lost Safari (composer Clifton Parker, 1956) ; Moby Dick (composer Philip Sainton, 1956) ; Let's Be Happy (composers Nicholas Brodszky, Wally Stott, 1957) ; The Young and the Guilty (composer Sydney John Kay, 1957) ; No Time for Tears (composer Francis Chagrin, 1957) ; Woman in a Dressing Gown (1957) (Sole credit for the music, often as musical director, unless otherwise noted) ", "Honey, I Blew Up the Kid\n Intrada Records released the record in 1992, in time for the film's release. The score was composed and conducted by Bruce Broughton, who would return to provide the score for Honey, I Shrunk the Audience. \"Stayin Alive\" by the Bee Gees appears in it. So does \"Loco-Motion\" by Carole King, Gerry Goffin, and \"Ours If We Want It\" written by Tom Snow and Mark Mueller. The soundtrack album consists of just the score. In 2017, the label released an expanded edition included Broughton's score for Off His Rockers, the animated short that preceded the film in cinemas." ]
Who was the composer of Tailor Wibbel?
[ "Mark Lothar" ]
composer
Tailor Wibbel
1,065,097
76
[ { "id": "7372064", "title": "Tailor Wibbel", "text": " Tailor Wibbel (German:Schneider Wibbel) a 1938 opera by the German composer Mark Lothar. It is based on the 1913 comedy play Wibbel the Tailor by Hans Müller-Schlösser. Müller-Schlösser wrote the opera's libretto. It premiered at the Berlin State Opera on 12 May 1938.", "score": "1.869576" }, { "id": "988221", "title": "Mark Lothar", "text": " Mark Lothar [ló:tar] (born Lothar Hundertmark; 23 May 1902, in Berlin – 6 April 1985, in Munich) was a German composer. In May 1938 his opera Tailor Wibbel, inspired by a play by Hans Müller-Schlösser, was performed at the Berlin State Opera.", "score": "1.7827463" }, { "id": "7371770", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (play)", "text": " According to the author, the story goes back to a true story in Berlin from the time of Kaiser Friedrich Wilhelm IV. A master baker had been involved in a drunken knife fight, and had been sentenced to several weeks in jail. The baker persuaded his journeyman assistant to serve the jail sentence in his stead. However, the journeyman dies in prison, and the baker is declared dead. When this becomes known, the Kaiser pardons the baker. For his play, Müller-Schlösser changed the setting to his hometown of Düsseldorf at the \"period of the French occupation\" following Napoleon’s conquest of the region in the early 1800s. The baker ", "score": "1.702405" }, { "id": "7371769", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (play)", "text": " Wibbel the Tailor (German:Schneider Wibbel) is a comedy play by the German writer Hans Müller-Schlösser which was first performed in 1913. The play takes place in Müller-Schlösser's hometown of Düsseldorf during its occupation by French troops during the Napoleonic Wars. From 1913 to 1956, there were fifteen hundred performances of the play in Germany with actor Paul Henckels in the role of Wibbel. Four feature films and an opera have been based on Müller-Schlösser's play, and the character of Anton Wibbel has become a popular symbol of Düsseldorf.", "score": "1.7023076" }, { "id": "7371772", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (play)", "text": "Wibbel the Tailor (1920 film), a German silent film directed by Manfred Noa (with Hermann Picha as Wibbel) ; Wibbel the Tailor (1931 film), a German film directed by Paul Henckels (with Paul Henckels as Wibbel) ; Wibbel the Tailor (1939 film), a German film directed by Viktor de Kowa (with Erich Ponto as Wibbel) ; Das Sonntagskind, a 1956 West German film directed by Kurt Meisel (with Heinz Rühmann as Wibbel) The play was a popular hit, and spawned a large number of adaptations such as the 1938 opera Tailor Wibbel by Mark Lothar and several films including:", "score": "1.6952755" }, { "id": "7371836", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (1920 film)", "text": "Hermann Picha as Schneider Wibbel ; Margarete Kupfer as Wibbels Frau ; Meinhart Maur as Gefängnisschliesser ; Gustav Trautschold as Gehilfen ; Wilhelm Diegelmann ; Christian Elfeld ; Loo Hardy ; Emil Stammer ", "score": "1.6520844" }, { "id": "7371773", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (play)", "text": "The play does not appear to have been translated into English. ", "score": "1.651234" }, { "id": "7371771", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (play)", "text": " Wibbel, a master tailor. While inebriated, Wibbel had insulted the Emperor Napoleon and been sentenced to a jail term. Again, Wibbel persuades his journeyman to serve his sentence, and the journeyman dies while imprisoned. As Wibbel and his wife Fin watch his own funeral from their window, Wibbel remarks (in dialect) \"Nä, watt bin ich für ’ne schöne Leich\" (literally, \"Well, I am a beautiful corpse”). This line from the play has become famous. After a period in hiding, Wibbel returns to his life by claiming to be his own twin brother, and marries his wife Fin. When the French forces withdraw from Düsseldorf, he announces the deception.", "score": "1.6508083" }, { "id": "7372026", "title": "Hans Müller-Schlösser", "text": " Hans Müller-Schlösser (born June 14, 1884 in Düsseldorf– March 21, 1956 in Düsseldorf) was a German poet and playwright closely associated with his native city of Düsseldorf. Müller-Schlösser is best known for his 1913 play Wibbel the Tailor, which inspired a 1938 opera by Mark Lothar and a number of film adaptations including Wibbel the Tailor (1931) directed by and starring Paul Henckels.", "score": "1.6493982" }, { "id": "7371679", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (1931 film)", "text": " Wibbel the Tailor (German: Schneider Wibbel) is a 1931 German comedy film directed by Paul Henckels and starring Henckels, Thea Grodyn, and Wolfgang Zilzer. It is an adaptation of the 1913 play of the same title by Hans Müller-Schlösser.", "score": "1.6277418" }, { "id": "7371835", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (1920 film)", "text": " Wibbel the Tailor (German: Schneider Wibbel) is a 1920 German silent comedy film directed by Manfred Noa and starring Hermann Picha, Margarete Kupfer and Meinhart Maur. It is an adaptation of the 1913 play Wibbel the Tailor by Hans Müller-Schlösser. It was made by Eiko Film in Berlin. The film's art direction is by Karl Machus.", "score": "1.6169114" }, { "id": "2482937", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (1939 film)", "text": " Wibbel the Tailor (German: Schneider Wibbel) is a 1939 German historical comedy film directed by Viktor de Kowa and starring Erich Ponto, Fita Benkhoff and Irene von Meyendorff. It is an adaptation of the 1913 play Wibbel the Tailor by Hans Müller-Schlösser. It is set in Düsseldorf during its occupation by French troops during the Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815).", "score": "1.5975184" }, { "id": "7371680", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (1931 film)", "text": "Paul Henckels as Schneider Wibbel ; Thea Grodyn as Fina ; Wolfgang Zilzer as Schneidergeselle Zimpel ; Harry Berber as Mölfes ; Ferdinand Hart as Heubes - Oberst der Schützengarde ; Hermann Vallentin as Meunier ; Hugo Fischer-Köppe as Stadtpolizist ; Friedrich Ettel as Küfermeister Krönkel ; Fritz Odemar as Fitzke ; Maria Krahn as Frau Fitzke ; Max Wilmsen as Pangdich ; Gaston Briese as Knipperling ; Albert Walter as Fläsch - Hausierer ; Till Klockow as Hopp-Majänn ; Ferdinand von Alten as Piccard ; Wilhelm Graefe as Wirt ; Josef Dahmen as Sohn des Wirts ; Franz Stein as Nachtwächter ", "score": "1.5920634" }, { "id": "2482938", "title": "Wibbel the Tailor (1939 film)", "text": "Erich Ponto as Anton Wibbel the tailor ; Fita Benkhoff as Fin, his wife ; Irene von Meyendorff as Klementine, nicknamed 'Tinchen' ; Friedrich Benfer as André ; Theo Lucas as Mölfes ; Günther Lüders as tailor journeyman Peter Zimpel / Heinz Zimpel ; Lotte Rausch as Mariechen ; Ludwig Schmitz as Drögendiek ; Albert Florath as Totengräber ; Eva Tinschmann as Frau Heubes ; Paul Heidemann as Kommissar ; Rudolf Klein-Rogge as Pangdich ; Hubert von Meyerinck as Knillich ; Walter Lieck as Fitzkes ; Hans Adalbert Schlettow as Heubes ; S.O. Schoening as Picard ; Max Wilmsen as Krönkel ; Christine von Trümbach as Frau Krönkel ; Boris Alekin as Louis ; Marga Riffa as Frau Pangdich ; Maria Krahn ; Hans Hemes ; Wolfgang Dohnberg ; Robert Forsch ; Artur Malkowsky ; Albert Probeck ; Else Beyer-Andrae ; Elsa Dalands ; Jac Diehl ; Karl Heitmann ; Hilde Munsch ; Gerda Peter ; Lucie Polzin ; Ilse Pütz ; Paul Rehkopf ; Theodor Thony ; Auguste Wanner-Kirsch ; Franz Weber ", "score": "1.517382" }, { "id": "7372065", "title": "Tailor Wibbel", "text": " During the French occupation of Düsseldorf in 1813, during the Napoleonic Wars, a local tailor becomes a thorn in their side.", "score": "1.4915578" }, { "id": "32561085", "title": "Erwin Dressel", "text": " Erwin Dressel (10 June 1909, in Berlin – December 1972, in Berlin) was a German composer and pianist. Following the success of his incidental music for Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, Dressel wrote many operas for the Deutsche Staatsoper. He also arranged music for the radio, concertized as a pianist and wrote orchestral music, including four symphonies; as well as concertos for various instruments (including one for two saxophones).", "score": "1.4684329" }, { "id": "513551", "title": "Lucy Millowitsch", "text": " popular drama piece \"Schneider Wibbel\" (\"Wibbel the Tailor \"). The success of the theatre during the 1950s enabled Lucy Millowitsch to indulge her taste for international travel. In particular, she became a frequent, visitor to Venezuela, engaging in efforts to improve conditions for ethnic groups who would have been identified in Germany at that time as \"indigenous Indians\". Another attraction of the country was that by this time her son Karl Peter (today better known as Pedro Trebbau), by this time in his 20s, was building a career there as a zoologist. In 1960 Lucy Millowitsch married the art collector ", "score": "1.4526367" }, { "id": "25679556", "title": "Helmut Käutner", "text": "Wibbel the Tailor (1939, directed by Viktor de Kowa) ; Film ohne Titel (1948, directed by Rudolf Jugert) ; Nights on the Road (1952, directed by Rudolf Jugert) ", "score": "1.444189" }, { "id": "16278837", "title": "Hermann Riedel", "text": " Hermann Riedel (b. 1847 Burg bei Magdeburg, d. 6 October 1913 Braunschweig) was a German composer. Riedel studied piano and composition at the Vienna Conservatory with Josef Dachs and Felix Otto Dessoff. In 1874, he became a pianist correpetiteur at the Vienna Hofoper. In 1878, he settled in Braunschweig, where he was made music director of the Royal Opera. From 1882 to 1911, he was Kapellmeister of the Braunschweig court orchestra and director of the court theatre ensemble. Riedel is most notable as the author of Der Trompeter von Säkkingen (The Trumpeter of Säckingen), a cycle of songs written to a popular epic poem by Joseph Victor von Scheffel. He also composed the comic opera Der Ritterschlag (The Knight's Dubbing), as well as a series of works of chamber music.", "score": "1.434962" }, { "id": "28921388", "title": "Ebbe Hamerik", "text": " Ebbe Hamerik (5 September 1898 – 12 August 1951) was a Danish composer. Born in Frederiksberg, he was the son of composer Asger Hamerik. He died at the age of 52 in Kattegat when his sailboat sank and he drowned. Notable operas include Stepan (1922), Leonardo da Vinci: 4 Scener af hans Liv (1930), Marie Grubbe, inspired by the life of Marie Grubbe, (1940), Rejsekammeraten (eventyropera 1943) and Drømmerne (1949).", "score": "1.4304469" } ]
[ "Tailor Wibbel\n Tailor Wibbel (German:Schneider Wibbel) a 1938 opera by the German composer Mark Lothar. It is based on the 1913 comedy play Wibbel the Tailor by Hans Müller-Schlösser. Müller-Schlösser wrote the opera's libretto. It premiered at the Berlin State Opera on 12 May 1938.", "Mark Lothar\n Mark Lothar [ló:tar] (born Lothar Hundertmark; 23 May 1902, in Berlin – 6 April 1985, in Munich) was a German composer. In May 1938 his opera Tailor Wibbel, inspired by a play by Hans Müller-Schlösser, was performed at the Berlin State Opera.", "Wibbel the Tailor (play)\n According to the author, the story goes back to a true story in Berlin from the time of Kaiser Friedrich Wilhelm IV. A master baker had been involved in a drunken knife fight, and had been sentenced to several weeks in jail. The baker persuaded his journeyman assistant to serve the jail sentence in his stead. However, the journeyman dies in prison, and the baker is declared dead. When this becomes known, the Kaiser pardons the baker. For his play, Müller-Schlösser changed the setting to his hometown of Düsseldorf at the \"period of the French occupation\" following Napoleon’s conquest of the region in the early 1800s. The baker ", "Wibbel the Tailor (play)\n Wibbel the Tailor (German:Schneider Wibbel) is a comedy play by the German writer Hans Müller-Schlösser which was first performed in 1913. The play takes place in Müller-Schlösser's hometown of Düsseldorf during its occupation by French troops during the Napoleonic Wars. From 1913 to 1956, there were fifteen hundred performances of the play in Germany with actor Paul Henckels in the role of Wibbel. Four feature films and an opera have been based on Müller-Schlösser's play, and the character of Anton Wibbel has become a popular symbol of Düsseldorf.", "Wibbel the Tailor (play)\nWibbel the Tailor (1920 film), a German silent film directed by Manfred Noa (with Hermann Picha as Wibbel) ; Wibbel the Tailor (1931 film), a German film directed by Paul Henckels (with Paul Henckels as Wibbel) ; Wibbel the Tailor (1939 film), a German film directed by Viktor de Kowa (with Erich Ponto as Wibbel) ; Das Sonntagskind, a 1956 West German film directed by Kurt Meisel (with Heinz Rühmann as Wibbel) The play was a popular hit, and spawned a large number of adaptations such as the 1938 opera Tailor Wibbel by Mark Lothar and several films including:", "Wibbel the Tailor (1920 film)\nHermann Picha as Schneider Wibbel ; Margarete Kupfer as Wibbels Frau ; Meinhart Maur as Gefängnisschliesser ; Gustav Trautschold as Gehilfen ; Wilhelm Diegelmann ; Christian Elfeld ; Loo Hardy ; Emil Stammer ", "Wibbel the Tailor (play)\nThe play does not appear to have been translated into English. ", "Wibbel the Tailor (play)\n Wibbel, a master tailor. While inebriated, Wibbel had insulted the Emperor Napoleon and been sentenced to a jail term. Again, Wibbel persuades his journeyman to serve his sentence, and the journeyman dies while imprisoned. As Wibbel and his wife Fin watch his own funeral from their window, Wibbel remarks (in dialect) \"Nä, watt bin ich für ’ne schöne Leich\" (literally, \"Well, I am a beautiful corpse”). This line from the play has become famous. After a period in hiding, Wibbel returns to his life by claiming to be his own twin brother, and marries his wife Fin. When the French forces withdraw from Düsseldorf, he announces the deception.", "Hans Müller-Schlösser\n Hans Müller-Schlösser (born June 14, 1884 in Düsseldorf– March 21, 1956 in Düsseldorf) was a German poet and playwright closely associated with his native city of Düsseldorf. Müller-Schlösser is best known for his 1913 play Wibbel the Tailor, which inspired a 1938 opera by Mark Lothar and a number of film adaptations including Wibbel the Tailor (1931) directed by and starring Paul Henckels.", "Wibbel the Tailor (1931 film)\n Wibbel the Tailor (German: Schneider Wibbel) is a 1931 German comedy film directed by Paul Henckels and starring Henckels, Thea Grodyn, and Wolfgang Zilzer. It is an adaptation of the 1913 play of the same title by Hans Müller-Schlösser.", "Wibbel the Tailor (1920 film)\n Wibbel the Tailor (German: Schneider Wibbel) is a 1920 German silent comedy film directed by Manfred Noa and starring Hermann Picha, Margarete Kupfer and Meinhart Maur. It is an adaptation of the 1913 play Wibbel the Tailor by Hans Müller-Schlösser. It was made by Eiko Film in Berlin. The film's art direction is by Karl Machus.", "Wibbel the Tailor (1939 film)\n Wibbel the Tailor (German: Schneider Wibbel) is a 1939 German historical comedy film directed by Viktor de Kowa and starring Erich Ponto, Fita Benkhoff and Irene von Meyendorff. It is an adaptation of the 1913 play Wibbel the Tailor by Hans Müller-Schlösser. It is set in Düsseldorf during its occupation by French troops during the Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815).", "Wibbel the Tailor (1931 film)\nPaul Henckels as Schneider Wibbel ; Thea Grodyn as Fina ; Wolfgang Zilzer as Schneidergeselle Zimpel ; Harry Berber as Mölfes ; Ferdinand Hart as Heubes - Oberst der Schützengarde ; Hermann Vallentin as Meunier ; Hugo Fischer-Köppe as Stadtpolizist ; Friedrich Ettel as Küfermeister Krönkel ; Fritz Odemar as Fitzke ; Maria Krahn as Frau Fitzke ; Max Wilmsen as Pangdich ; Gaston Briese as Knipperling ; Albert Walter as Fläsch - Hausierer ; Till Klockow as Hopp-Majänn ; Ferdinand von Alten as Piccard ; Wilhelm Graefe as Wirt ; Josef Dahmen as Sohn des Wirts ; Franz Stein as Nachtwächter ", "Wibbel the Tailor (1939 film)\nErich Ponto as Anton Wibbel the tailor ; Fita Benkhoff as Fin, his wife ; Irene von Meyendorff as Klementine, nicknamed 'Tinchen' ; Friedrich Benfer as André ; Theo Lucas as Mölfes ; Günther Lüders as tailor journeyman Peter Zimpel / Heinz Zimpel ; Lotte Rausch as Mariechen ; Ludwig Schmitz as Drögendiek ; Albert Florath as Totengräber ; Eva Tinschmann as Frau Heubes ; Paul Heidemann as Kommissar ; Rudolf Klein-Rogge as Pangdich ; Hubert von Meyerinck as Knillich ; Walter Lieck as Fitzkes ; Hans Adalbert Schlettow as Heubes ; S.O. Schoening as Picard ; Max Wilmsen as Krönkel ; Christine von Trümbach as Frau Krönkel ; Boris Alekin as Louis ; Marga Riffa as Frau Pangdich ; Maria Krahn ; Hans Hemes ; Wolfgang Dohnberg ; Robert Forsch ; Artur Malkowsky ; Albert Probeck ; Else Beyer-Andrae ; Elsa Dalands ; Jac Diehl ; Karl Heitmann ; Hilde Munsch ; Gerda Peter ; Lucie Polzin ; Ilse Pütz ; Paul Rehkopf ; Theodor Thony ; Auguste Wanner-Kirsch ; Franz Weber ", "Tailor Wibbel\n During the French occupation of Düsseldorf in 1813, during the Napoleonic Wars, a local tailor becomes a thorn in their side.", "Erwin Dressel\n Erwin Dressel (10 June 1909, in Berlin – December 1972, in Berlin) was a German composer and pianist. Following the success of his incidental music for Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, Dressel wrote many operas for the Deutsche Staatsoper. He also arranged music for the radio, concertized as a pianist and wrote orchestral music, including four symphonies; as well as concertos for various instruments (including one for two saxophones).", "Lucy Millowitsch\n popular drama piece \"Schneider Wibbel\" (\"Wibbel the Tailor \"). The success of the theatre during the 1950s enabled Lucy Millowitsch to indulge her taste for international travel. In particular, she became a frequent, visitor to Venezuela, engaging in efforts to improve conditions for ethnic groups who would have been identified in Germany at that time as \"indigenous Indians\". Another attraction of the country was that by this time her son Karl Peter (today better known as Pedro Trebbau), by this time in his 20s, was building a career there as a zoologist. In 1960 Lucy Millowitsch married the art collector ", "Helmut Käutner\nWibbel the Tailor (1939, directed by Viktor de Kowa) ; Film ohne Titel (1948, directed by Rudolf Jugert) ; Nights on the Road (1952, directed by Rudolf Jugert) ", "Hermann Riedel\n Hermann Riedel (b. 1847 Burg bei Magdeburg, d. 6 October 1913 Braunschweig) was a German composer. Riedel studied piano and composition at the Vienna Conservatory with Josef Dachs and Felix Otto Dessoff. In 1874, he became a pianist correpetiteur at the Vienna Hofoper. In 1878, he settled in Braunschweig, where he was made music director of the Royal Opera. From 1882 to 1911, he was Kapellmeister of the Braunschweig court orchestra and director of the court theatre ensemble. Riedel is most notable as the author of Der Trompeter von Säkkingen (The Trumpeter of Säckingen), a cycle of songs written to a popular epic poem by Joseph Victor von Scheffel. He also composed the comic opera Der Ritterschlag (The Knight's Dubbing), as well as a series of works of chamber music.", "Ebbe Hamerik\n Ebbe Hamerik (5 September 1898 – 12 August 1951) was a Danish composer. Born in Frederiksberg, he was the son of composer Asger Hamerik. He died at the age of 52 in Kattegat when his sailboat sank and he drowned. Notable operas include Stepan (1922), Leonardo da Vinci: 4 Scener af hans Liv (1930), Marie Grubbe, inspired by the life of Marie Grubbe, (1940), Rejsekammeraten (eventyropera 1943) and Drømmerne (1949)." ]
Who was the composer of To The West?
[ "Henry Russell" ]
composer
To the West
6,001,724
39
[ { "id": "27153854", "title": "Journey to the West (1986 TV series)", "text": " The music for the series was mainly composed by Xu Jingqing (许镜清).", "score": "1.6633818" }, { "id": "3242530", "title": "To the West", "text": " To The West, with words by Charles Mackay and music by Henry Russell, was one of the most popular songs of the mid-nineteenth century in England. Of the song Russell boasted at the time that it created such a furore at the time of the mass emigrations of the 1840s that it \"induced many thousands of people to turn attention to the promises held out by the New World.\"", "score": "1.6141915" }, { "id": "14792169", "title": "Into the West (miniseries)", "text": " A two-disc album of Geoff Zanelli's music was released in 2013 by La-La Land Records.", "score": "1.5810885" }, { "id": "25565717", "title": "List of media adaptations of Journey to the West", "text": "Between 2005 and 2007, the American composer Barry Schrader created a four-part electro-acoustic composition cycle, Monkey King, which was named after the deeds of Sun Wukong. ; The 2008 album Journey to the West is the soundtrack to the musical stageplay Monkey: Journey to the West. It was composed by the English musician Damon Albarn with the UK Chinese Ensemble. The soundtrack itself is only based upon, but not a direct recording of the musical. ", "score": "1.5385581" }, { "id": "13691951", "title": "Journey to the West (soundtrack)", "text": " Journey to the West is the soundtrack to the stage musical Monkey: Journey to the West and is composed by English musician Damon Albarn (of Blur and Gorillaz fame) with the UK Chinese Ensemble. The soundtrack is based upon the musical, but is not a direct recording of it. The album was released as a download, CD, and double vinyl LP in the United Kingdom on 18 August 2008 by XL Recordings. In the United States, the album was released a day later as a download, while a CD was released on 23 September 2008.", "score": "1.5281066" }, { "id": "26673908", "title": "I'm Going to the West", "text": " The folk music standard I'm going to the West is also known by the title Going to the West. It was collected by Alabama professor Byron Arnold from Janie Barnard Couch of Guntersville, Alabama in June or July 1947, and published in an Alabama songbook in 1950.", "score": "1.5194952" }, { "id": "30296109", "title": "La fanciulla del West", "text": " La fanciulla del West (The Girl of the West) is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini to an Italian libretto by Guelfo Civinini and Carlo Zangarini, based on the 1905 play The Girl of the Golden West by the American author David Belasco. Fanciulla followed Madama Butterfly, which was also based on a Belasco play. The opera has fewer of the show-stopping highlights that characterize Puccini's other works, but is admired for its impressive orchestration and for a score that is more melodically integrated than is typical of his previous work. Fanciulla displays influences from composers Claude Debussy and Richard Strauss, without being in any way imitative. Similarities between the libretto and the work ", "score": "1.5020323" }, { "id": "13021489", "title": "Yan Su", "text": " He first rose to prominence in 1964 for playing in the opera Sister Jiang, earned critical acclaim, and he was personally interviewed by Chairman Mao Zedong. But two years later, in the Cultural Revolution, the song was labeled as \"poisonous weed\" and he was cast as a rightist. In 1982, Journey to the West was broadcast on CCTV, the series reached number one in the ratings when it aired in China. The opening theme, Dare to Ask Where is the Road, was written by Yan Su. In 1986 he joined the China Writers Association. In 2015, he was elected \"moved China\" Person of the Year ", "score": "1.4605758" }, { "id": "30112185", "title": "Wilfrid Sanderson", "text": " He worked with a number of lyricists including Frederic Weatherly KC, Helen Taylor, Edward Teschemacher, P.J. O'Reilly, Lancelot Cayley Shadwell and P. H. B. Lyon. His songs were often performed at the popular Saturday afternoon concerts at the Royal Albert Hall, presented by Arthur Boosey & Co. They were also performed at the Promenade Concerts, organised by Sir Henry Wood. Sheet music sales of his most successful song, \"Until\" (1910) sold more than a million copies. It is said that his song \"Drake Goes West\" (1910) was the first song ever to be broadcast on wireless radio by the BBC. ", "score": "1.4594171" }, { "id": "13468074", "title": "West of the West", "text": " West of the West is an album by American artist Dave Alvin, released in 2006. The album pays tribute to California songwriters. It reached number 35 on the Top Independent Albums chart.", "score": "1.4570594" }, { "id": "10916703", "title": "Go West (song)", "text": " The song's title is attributed to the 19th-century quote \"Go West, young man\" commonly attributed to Horace Greeley, a rallying cry for the colonization of the American West, but also an invitation to pursue one's own dreams and individuality. The melody resembles that of the State Anthem of the Soviet Union composed by Alexander Alexandrov. Both the 7″ and 12″ versions of the song were subsequently collected on various greatest hits albums, including a 1997 radio remix which was made in the wake of the success of Pet Shop Boys' 1993 version.", "score": "1.4551204" }, { "id": "14792165", "title": "Into the West (miniseries)", "text": " Sources:", "score": "1.4547305" }, { "id": "638570", "title": "Aaron Copland", "text": " second goal of American Gebrauchsmusik, creating music of wide appeal. Concurrent with The Second Hurricane, Copland composed (for radio broadcast) \"Prairie Journal\" on a commission from the Columbia Broadcast System. This was one of his first pieces to convey the landscape of the American West. This emphasis on the frontier carried over to his ballet Billy the Kid (1938), which along with El Salón México became his first widespread public success. Copland's ballet music established him as an authentic composer of American music much as Stravinsky's ballet scores connected the composer with Russian music and came at an opportune time. He helped fill a vacuum for American choreographers to fill their dance repertory and tapped into ", "score": "1.451251" }, { "id": "8276013", "title": "Miklós Rózsa", "text": " his political beliefs. Rózsa initially declined the offer, saying, \"I don't do westerns.\" However, he agreed to compose the score after being informed, \"It's not a Western, it's an 'Eastern'.\" He produced a strong and varied score, which included a nightclub vocal by a Vietnamese singer, Bạch Yến. However, one cue which incorporated stanzas of \"Onward, Christian Soldiers\" was deleted from the film's final edit. His popular film scores during the 1970s included his last two Billy Wilder collaborations The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970) and Fedora (1978), the Ray Harryhausen fantasy sequel The Golden Voyage of Sinbad (1973), the latter-day film noir Last Embrace ", "score": "1.4505467" }, { "id": "30732454", "title": "West Coast School", "text": " The West Coast School are composers and compositional style(s) associated with the West Coast of the United States, specifically California. Henry Cowell is considered, \"the father of West Coast experimentalism,\" and the influence of traditional Asian and other world musics may be traced back to Cowell. Rather than Orient/Occident, composer Lou Harrison argues for a Pacific/Atlantic conception, where the West Coast is necessarily part of the Pacific, and thus associated with Asia more than Europe. Other influences and interests include the use of tonality, just intonation, and dance. Techniques employed by composers of the West Coast School include found and percussion instruments, such as the Indonesian gamelan. Harrison cites, \"new instruments and new tunings.\" Composers considered to be part of the West Coast School include Henry Cowell, John Cage, Lou Harrison, and Harry Partch. Those four composers were each ultramodernist, Californian (rather than from the East Coast/New York), and gay; all of which would have contributed to marginalization.", "score": "1.4503896" }, { "id": "30501963", "title": "Joe Young (lyricist)", "text": " An early work is the song \"Way Down East\" (©1910) words by Cecil Mack, music by Joe Young and Harold Norman, published by Gotham-Attucks Music Publishing Company.", "score": "1.4451023" }, { "id": "12040500", "title": "List of musicals by composer: A to L", "text": " version of Archy and Mehitabel ; Michael Knight ; Exchange (1970); music also by Robert J. Lowery, Mike Brandt ; Brian Knowles (b. 1946) ; Jane Eyre (1993) ; The Government Inspector (2002) ; Leon Ko (b. 1973) ; Heading East (1999) ; The Good Person of Szechwan (2003) ; Perhaps Love (2005) ; The Legend of the White Snake (2006) ; Angel Falls (2007) ; Field of Dreams (2008) ; Ted Kociolek ; Abyssinia (1987) ; Walter Kollo (1878–1940) ; Springtime of Youth (1922); music also by Sigmund Romberg ; Paris (1928); music also by Cole Porter, Harry Warren, Louis Alter, Fred E. Ahlert ; Joseph ", "score": "1.4433943" }, { "id": "29310955", "title": "Richard Nance", "text": " Composed for and premiered by The Choir of the West, the premier choral ensemble at Pacific Lutheran University, in 2000 and recorded by PLU Multimedia Recordings. The Mass includes the three-part Credo previously published. The remaining movements of the mass were composed at the request of Dr. Sparks for a recording the choir was undertaking in 2000, to showcase the new organ that had been installed in the university’s famed Lagerquist Concert Hall. This formed a 43-minute work in ten movements.", "score": "1.4430988" }, { "id": "15345294", "title": "The West (album)", "text": " The West is a 1999 electronic music album by Matmos.", "score": "1.4415672" }, { "id": "16169767", "title": "List of composers by name", "text": " • Peter Westergaard (1931–2019) • Johann Paul von Westhoff (1656–1705) • Richard Wetz (1875–1935) • Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse (1774–1842) • Paul W. Whear (1925–2021) • Bill Whelan (born 1950) • Scott Wheeler (born 1952) • Eric Whitacre (born 1970) • James Whitbourn (born 1963) • Benjamin Franklin White (1800–1879) • John White (born 1936) • José Silvestre White Lafitte (1836–1918) • Gillian Whitehead (born 1941) • Percy Whitlock (1903–1946) • Thomas Whythorne (1528–1595) • Erasmus Widmann (1572–1634) • Jörg Widmann (born 1973) • Charles-Marie Widor (1844–1937) • Henryk Wieniawski (1835–1880) • Johan Wikmanson (1753–1800) • Mack Wilberg (born ", "score": "1.4392495" } ]
[ "Journey to the West (1986 TV series)\n The music for the series was mainly composed by Xu Jingqing (许镜清).", "To the West\n To The West, with words by Charles Mackay and music by Henry Russell, was one of the most popular songs of the mid-nineteenth century in England. Of the song Russell boasted at the time that it created such a furore at the time of the mass emigrations of the 1840s that it \"induced many thousands of people to turn attention to the promises held out by the New World.\"", "Into the West (miniseries)\n A two-disc album of Geoff Zanelli's music was released in 2013 by La-La Land Records.", "List of media adaptations of Journey to the West\nBetween 2005 and 2007, the American composer Barry Schrader created a four-part electro-acoustic composition cycle, Monkey King, which was named after the deeds of Sun Wukong. ; The 2008 album Journey to the West is the soundtrack to the musical stageplay Monkey: Journey to the West. It was composed by the English musician Damon Albarn with the UK Chinese Ensemble. The soundtrack itself is only based upon, but not a direct recording of the musical. ", "Journey to the West (soundtrack)\n Journey to the West is the soundtrack to the stage musical Monkey: Journey to the West and is composed by English musician Damon Albarn (of Blur and Gorillaz fame) with the UK Chinese Ensemble. The soundtrack is based upon the musical, but is not a direct recording of it. The album was released as a download, CD, and double vinyl LP in the United Kingdom on 18 August 2008 by XL Recordings. In the United States, the album was released a day later as a download, while a CD was released on 23 September 2008.", "I'm Going to the West\n The folk music standard I'm going to the West is also known by the title Going to the West. It was collected by Alabama professor Byron Arnold from Janie Barnard Couch of Guntersville, Alabama in June or July 1947, and published in an Alabama songbook in 1950.", "La fanciulla del West\n La fanciulla del West (The Girl of the West) is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini to an Italian libretto by Guelfo Civinini and Carlo Zangarini, based on the 1905 play The Girl of the Golden West by the American author David Belasco. Fanciulla followed Madama Butterfly, which was also based on a Belasco play. The opera has fewer of the show-stopping highlights that characterize Puccini's other works, but is admired for its impressive orchestration and for a score that is more melodically integrated than is typical of his previous work. Fanciulla displays influences from composers Claude Debussy and Richard Strauss, without being in any way imitative. Similarities between the libretto and the work ", "Yan Su\n He first rose to prominence in 1964 for playing in the opera Sister Jiang, earned critical acclaim, and he was personally interviewed by Chairman Mao Zedong. But two years later, in the Cultural Revolution, the song was labeled as \"poisonous weed\" and he was cast as a rightist. In 1982, Journey to the West was broadcast on CCTV, the series reached number one in the ratings when it aired in China. The opening theme, Dare to Ask Where is the Road, was written by Yan Su. In 1986 he joined the China Writers Association. In 2015, he was elected \"moved China\" Person of the Year ", "Wilfrid Sanderson\n He worked with a number of lyricists including Frederic Weatherly KC, Helen Taylor, Edward Teschemacher, P.J. O'Reilly, Lancelot Cayley Shadwell and P. H. B. Lyon. His songs were often performed at the popular Saturday afternoon concerts at the Royal Albert Hall, presented by Arthur Boosey & Co. They were also performed at the Promenade Concerts, organised by Sir Henry Wood. Sheet music sales of his most successful song, \"Until\" (1910) sold more than a million copies. It is said that his song \"Drake Goes West\" (1910) was the first song ever to be broadcast on wireless radio by the BBC. ", "West of the West\n West of the West is an album by American artist Dave Alvin, released in 2006. The album pays tribute to California songwriters. It reached number 35 on the Top Independent Albums chart.", "Go West (song)\n The song's title is attributed to the 19th-century quote \"Go West, young man\" commonly attributed to Horace Greeley, a rallying cry for the colonization of the American West, but also an invitation to pursue one's own dreams and individuality. The melody resembles that of the State Anthem of the Soviet Union composed by Alexander Alexandrov. Both the 7″ and 12″ versions of the song were subsequently collected on various greatest hits albums, including a 1997 radio remix which was made in the wake of the success of Pet Shop Boys' 1993 version.", "Into the West (miniseries)\n Sources:", "Aaron Copland\n second goal of American Gebrauchsmusik, creating music of wide appeal. Concurrent with The Second Hurricane, Copland composed (for radio broadcast) \"Prairie Journal\" on a commission from the Columbia Broadcast System. This was one of his first pieces to convey the landscape of the American West. This emphasis on the frontier carried over to his ballet Billy the Kid (1938), which along with El Salón México became his first widespread public success. Copland's ballet music established him as an authentic composer of American music much as Stravinsky's ballet scores connected the composer with Russian music and came at an opportune time. He helped fill a vacuum for American choreographers to fill their dance repertory and tapped into ", "Miklós Rózsa\n his political beliefs. Rózsa initially declined the offer, saying, \"I don't do westerns.\" However, he agreed to compose the score after being informed, \"It's not a Western, it's an 'Eastern'.\" He produced a strong and varied score, which included a nightclub vocal by a Vietnamese singer, Bạch Yến. However, one cue which incorporated stanzas of \"Onward, Christian Soldiers\" was deleted from the film's final edit. His popular film scores during the 1970s included his last two Billy Wilder collaborations The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970) and Fedora (1978), the Ray Harryhausen fantasy sequel The Golden Voyage of Sinbad (1973), the latter-day film noir Last Embrace ", "West Coast School\n The West Coast School are composers and compositional style(s) associated with the West Coast of the United States, specifically California. Henry Cowell is considered, \"the father of West Coast experimentalism,\" and the influence of traditional Asian and other world musics may be traced back to Cowell. Rather than Orient/Occident, composer Lou Harrison argues for a Pacific/Atlantic conception, where the West Coast is necessarily part of the Pacific, and thus associated with Asia more than Europe. Other influences and interests include the use of tonality, just intonation, and dance. Techniques employed by composers of the West Coast School include found and percussion instruments, such as the Indonesian gamelan. Harrison cites, \"new instruments and new tunings.\" Composers considered to be part of the West Coast School include Henry Cowell, John Cage, Lou Harrison, and Harry Partch. Those four composers were each ultramodernist, Californian (rather than from the East Coast/New York), and gay; all of which would have contributed to marginalization.", "Joe Young (lyricist)\n An early work is the song \"Way Down East\" (©1910) words by Cecil Mack, music by Joe Young and Harold Norman, published by Gotham-Attucks Music Publishing Company.", "List of musicals by composer: A to L\n version of Archy and Mehitabel ; Michael Knight ; Exchange (1970); music also by Robert J. Lowery, Mike Brandt ; Brian Knowles (b. 1946) ; Jane Eyre (1993) ; The Government Inspector (2002) ; Leon Ko (b. 1973) ; Heading East (1999) ; The Good Person of Szechwan (2003) ; Perhaps Love (2005) ; The Legend of the White Snake (2006) ; Angel Falls (2007) ; Field of Dreams (2008) ; Ted Kociolek ; Abyssinia (1987) ; Walter Kollo (1878–1940) ; Springtime of Youth (1922); music also by Sigmund Romberg ; Paris (1928); music also by Cole Porter, Harry Warren, Louis Alter, Fred E. Ahlert ; Joseph ", "Richard Nance\n Composed for and premiered by The Choir of the West, the premier choral ensemble at Pacific Lutheran University, in 2000 and recorded by PLU Multimedia Recordings. The Mass includes the three-part Credo previously published. The remaining movements of the mass were composed at the request of Dr. Sparks for a recording the choir was undertaking in 2000, to showcase the new organ that had been installed in the university’s famed Lagerquist Concert Hall. This formed a 43-minute work in ten movements.", "The West (album)\n The West is a 1999 electronic music album by Matmos.", "List of composers by name\n • Peter Westergaard (1931–2019) • Johann Paul von Westhoff (1656–1705) • Richard Wetz (1875–1935) • Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse (1774–1842) • Paul W. Whear (1925–2021) • Bill Whelan (born 1950) • Scott Wheeler (born 1952) • Eric Whitacre (born 1970) • James Whitbourn (born 1963) • Benjamin Franklin White (1800–1879) • John White (born 1936) • José Silvestre White Lafitte (1836–1918) • Gillian Whitehead (born 1941) • Percy Whitlock (1903–1946) • Thomas Whythorne (1528–1595) • Erasmus Widmann (1572–1634) • Jörg Widmann (born 1973) • Charles-Marie Widor (1844–1937) • Henryk Wieniawski (1835–1880) • Johan Wikmanson (1753–1800) • Mack Wilberg (born " ]
Who was the composer of The Witch?
[ "Maurice Ravel", "Joseph-Maurice Ravel", "Maurice Joseph Ravel", "Joseph Maurice Ravel" ]
composer
The Witch (ballet)
5,965,071
72
[ { "id": "7989671", "title": "The Witch and the Saint", "text": " The piece was an ordered composition for the Youth Wind Orchestra of Ellwangen (Germany) and it was a present for their 50th anniversary. In 2004, they performed it on their anniversary concert.", "score": "1.6367308" }, { "id": "32244817", "title": "The Witch (ballet)", "text": " The Witch is a ballet made by John Cranko to Maurice Ravel's Piano Concerto in G Major (1931). The premiere took place Friday, 18 August 1950 at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London.", "score": "1.6053174" }, { "id": "13056784", "title": "The Noon Witch", "text": " The piece is scored for the standard 19th-century symphony orchestra with the addition of a bass clarinet and tubular bell. Dvořák's music follows the story closely and the orchestration is often used to illustrate characters and events: the oboe and bass clarinet are used to depict the misbehaving child and the witch respectively, whilst twelve strokes of a bell signal the coming of noon. During the witch's chase, the music alternates between two different time signatures as a further dramatic device. A semi-public performance was given at the Prague Conservatory on 3 June 1896 under Antonín Bennewitz. Its first full public première was on 21 November 1896, in London, under the baton of Henry Wood. The piece lasts about 13 minutes.", "score": "1.5919628" }, { "id": "25431081", "title": "The Witches (1990 film)", "text": " The film contains an orchestral score composed by Stanley Myers. To date, a soundtrack CD has not been released, and the entire score remains obscure. Throughout the score, the Dies irae appears, highly reminiscent of Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique Movement V, \"Dream of a Witches' Sabbath\".", "score": "1.5547786" }, { "id": "6126719", "title": "Larry Weir", "text": " Larry Anthony Weir (born April 11, 1952) is a US songwriter, composer, producer, promoter and managing editor of New Music Weekly magazine. Weir is best known for songs in the musical, Teen Witch (1989), which has become an annual Halloween tradition on several television networks.", "score": "1.5466474" }, { "id": "473850", "title": "Ferdinand Ries", "text": " him. Since 1826, he had had plans to write operas, which he brought to fruition in the years 1827/28. On 15 October 1828, his first opera, The Robber Bride, was premiered in Frankfurt with great success. To the direction of the Dublin Music Festival in 1831 he used a month's stay in London, where he composed his second opera, The Sorceress (published in Germany under the title Liska or the Witch by Gyllensteen). It was premiered on 4 August 1831 at the London Royal Adelphi Theatre. His third opera was composed in 1834 (Die Nacht auf dem Libanon WoO 51), which for ", "score": "1.5392388" }, { "id": "6750524", "title": "Giona Ostinelli", "text": " Giona Ostinelli (born March 12, 1986) is a Swiss–Italian composer who resides and works in Los Angeles. Ostinelli is best known for his critically acclaimed work on Netflix's hit fantasy series The Witcher. The Witcher Original Soundtrack Album, featuring songs and score composed and produced by Ostinelli and his scoring partner Sonya Belousova, has achieved commercial success and critical recognition. The album debuted #1 on iTunes Top Soundtracks with the enormously successful hit single \"Toss A Coin To Your Witcher\" #1 on iTunes Top Soundtrack Songs and #1 on Billboard Digital Rock Songs Sales. The album charted #4 on iTunes for Top Albums (behind only Eminem, Breaking Benjamin, and Chase Rice) and in the top ten in every ", "score": "1.5247997" }, { "id": "32513703", "title": "Stuart MacRae (composer)", "text": "The Witch's Kiss (1997; chamber ensemble) ; Violin Concerto (2001) ; Ancrene Wisse (2002; choir, orchestra) ; Motus (2003; chamber ensemble) ; Echo and Narcissus (2006; chamber ensemble/dance) ; Birches (2007; chamber orchestra) ; Gaudete (2008; soprano and orchestra) ; Earth (2010; orchestra) ", "score": "1.5198902" }, { "id": "13056782", "title": "The Noon Witch", "text": " The Noon Witch (or The Noonday Witch; Polednice), Op. 108, B. 196, is a symphonic poem written in 1896 by Antonín Dvořák which was inspired by the Karel Jaromír Erben poem Polednice from the collection Kytice. Polednice is based on the noon demon \"Lady Midday\" of Slavic mythology. It is one of a set of late orchestral works inspired by national themes which were written after his return to his native Bohemia from the United States.", "score": "1.5191493" }, { "id": "15250086", "title": "Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches", "text": " The Norwegian classical composer Martin Romberg wrote a Mass for mixed choir in seven parts after a selection of poems from Leland's text. This Witch Mass was premiered at the Vestfold International Festival in 2012 with Grex Vocalis. In order to create the right atmosphere for the music, the festival blocked off an entire road tunnel in Tønsberg to use it as a venue. The work was released on CD through Lawo Classics in 2014.", "score": "1.5075183" }, { "id": "7989661", "title": "The Witch and the Saint", "text": " The Witch and the Saint by Steven Reineke is a one movement symphonic band piece describing the lives of Helena and Sibylla, twin sisters born in Germany at the end of the 16th century. The piece has five distinct parts and has become a favorite among audiences and bands though the story behind it has been virtually forgotten.", "score": "1.5044665" }, { "id": "11342391", "title": "George Stansbury", "text": " Tartar Witch and the Pedlar Boy; Waverley; The Vision of the Bard, and Puss in Boots, or Harlequin and the Miller's Son. For Sadler's Wells Theatre he wrote the music for The Little Red Man, or the Witch of the Water Snakes. In addition to his seasons at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, from 1830 Stansbury made various appearances at the Vauxhall Gardens where he played in various new musical works, including Adelaide or the Royal William (1830); The Magic Fan, and The Sedan Chair (1832). In 1833 he played the organ at the funeral of the noted actor Edmund Kean.", "score": "1.5025191" }, { "id": "7550339", "title": "The Amber Witch (opera)", "text": " The Amber Witch is an opera in four acts composed by William Vincent Wallace to an English libretto by Henry Fothergill Chorley, after Lady Duff-Gordon's translation of Meinold's Maria Schweidler: Die Bernsteinhexe. It premiered at Her Majesty's Theatre, London on 28 February 1861 conducted by Charles Hallé with Helen Lemmens-Sherrington in the title role.", "score": "1.4967372" }, { "id": "13848257", "title": "The Witches (novel)", "text": " The book was adapted into an opera by Norwegian composer Marcus Paus and his father, Ole Paus, who wrote the libretto. It premiered in 2008.", "score": "1.4936693" }, { "id": "7989662", "title": "The Witch and the Saint", "text": " The Witch and the Saint has a running time of 10:22. It is a tone poem, composed in 2004. Overall, it’s an epic piece – anyone listening to it without knowing the story behind it would get the impression of a melancholy story being told through powerful musical phrases. The piece opens with a thundering timpani triplet. A Gregorian chant type motif follows quietly and builds throughout the brass instrument section. The dark, threatening feel is broken suddenly by a melody portrayed by an oboe or flute solo as the bells join on after the new mood is established. That certain ", "score": "1.492172" }, { "id": "8270937", "title": "Ole A. Sørli", "text": " Which Witch is a free adaptation opera/musical of an incident from the witch-hunter's handbook, the 15th century Malleus Maleficarum. Producer Sørli wrote the original manuscript, and was executive director of the project.", "score": "1.4803473" }, { "id": "7963129", "title": "Symphonic poem", "text": " and the Witches, 1859), is similar in scope but bolder in style. Musicologist John Clapham writes that Smetana planned these works as \"a compact series of episodes\" drawn from their literary sources \"and approached them as a dramatist rather than as a poet or philosopher.\" He used musical themes to represent specific characters; in this manner he more closely followed the practice of French composer Hector Berlioz in his choral symphony Roméo et Juliette than that of Liszt. By doing so, Hugh Macdonald writes, Smetana followed \"a straightforward pattern of musical description\". Smetana's set of six symphonic poems published under the ", "score": "1.476528" }, { "id": "8645201", "title": "Innerst i sjelen", "text": " \"Innerst i sjelen\" was used later on in the Norwegian opera Heksene in 2007. The opera was based on the similarly titled children's book Heksene by Roald Dahl (known in English as ''The Witches). The opera adaptation of the book was composed by Marcus Paus, Ole's son. The opera was commissioned by Gloppen Musikkfest for their 2008 programming and was first performed in May 2008 during Hardanger Musikkfest in Odda, with a later performance in August of the same year during Gloppen Musikkfest in Sandane. Johann Henrik Neergaard was director and Per Kristian Skalstad was conductor. Ole Paus was libretto in the opera and was the one to perform \"Innerst i sjelen\".", "score": "1.4664707" }, { "id": "3356223", "title": "Halloween III: Season of the Witch", "text": " The soundtrack was composed by John Carpenter and Alan Howarth, who worked together on the score for Halloween II and several other films. Music remained an important element in establishing the atmosphere of Halloween III. Just as in Halloween and Halloween II, there was no symphonic score. Much of the music was composed to solicit \"false startles\" from the audience. The score of Halloween III differed greatly from the familiar main theme of the original and sequel. Carpenter replaced the familiar 10/8 piano melody with an electronic theme (9/16 against a steady 4/4) played on a synthesizer with beeping tonalities. Howarth explains how he and Carpenter composed the music for the third film: \"The music style of John Carpenter and myself has further evolved in this film soundtrack by working exclusively with synthesizers to produce our ", "score": "1.4609712" }, { "id": "7550341", "title": "The Amber Witch (opera)", "text": " it was published in a luxury edition illustrated by Philip Burne-Jones. Wallace had sketched out most of the opera in the US in the mid-1850s, having had the libretto by Chorley to hand for some years, but difficulties in the London theatres held up its production in the capital. Having completed the orchestration of the work at Wiesbaden in 1860, the opera finally premiered at Her Majesty's Theatre on 28 February 1861 with Charles Hallé conducting. The Times reported that the first night's performance was a success and that \"the music is almost as complicated as it is beautiful\". Wallace considered it his best opera, and ", "score": "1.4585428" } ]
[ "The Witch and the Saint\n The piece was an ordered composition for the Youth Wind Orchestra of Ellwangen (Germany) and it was a present for their 50th anniversary. In 2004, they performed it on their anniversary concert.", "The Witch (ballet)\n The Witch is a ballet made by John Cranko to Maurice Ravel's Piano Concerto in G Major (1931). The premiere took place Friday, 18 August 1950 at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London.", "The Noon Witch\n The piece is scored for the standard 19th-century symphony orchestra with the addition of a bass clarinet and tubular bell. Dvořák's music follows the story closely and the orchestration is often used to illustrate characters and events: the oboe and bass clarinet are used to depict the misbehaving child and the witch respectively, whilst twelve strokes of a bell signal the coming of noon. During the witch's chase, the music alternates between two different time signatures as a further dramatic device. A semi-public performance was given at the Prague Conservatory on 3 June 1896 under Antonín Bennewitz. Its first full public première was on 21 November 1896, in London, under the baton of Henry Wood. The piece lasts about 13 minutes.", "The Witches (1990 film)\n The film contains an orchestral score composed by Stanley Myers. To date, a soundtrack CD has not been released, and the entire score remains obscure. Throughout the score, the Dies irae appears, highly reminiscent of Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique Movement V, \"Dream of a Witches' Sabbath\".", "Larry Weir\n Larry Anthony Weir (born April 11, 1952) is a US songwriter, composer, producer, promoter and managing editor of New Music Weekly magazine. Weir is best known for songs in the musical, Teen Witch (1989), which has become an annual Halloween tradition on several television networks.", "Ferdinand Ries\n him. Since 1826, he had had plans to write operas, which he brought to fruition in the years 1827/28. On 15 October 1828, his first opera, The Robber Bride, was premiered in Frankfurt with great success. To the direction of the Dublin Music Festival in 1831 he used a month's stay in London, where he composed his second opera, The Sorceress (published in Germany under the title Liska or the Witch by Gyllensteen). It was premiered on 4 August 1831 at the London Royal Adelphi Theatre. His third opera was composed in 1834 (Die Nacht auf dem Libanon WoO 51), which for ", "Giona Ostinelli\n Giona Ostinelli (born March 12, 1986) is a Swiss–Italian composer who resides and works in Los Angeles. Ostinelli is best known for his critically acclaimed work on Netflix's hit fantasy series The Witcher. The Witcher Original Soundtrack Album, featuring songs and score composed and produced by Ostinelli and his scoring partner Sonya Belousova, has achieved commercial success and critical recognition. The album debuted #1 on iTunes Top Soundtracks with the enormously successful hit single \"Toss A Coin To Your Witcher\" #1 on iTunes Top Soundtrack Songs and #1 on Billboard Digital Rock Songs Sales. The album charted #4 on iTunes for Top Albums (behind only Eminem, Breaking Benjamin, and Chase Rice) and in the top ten in every ", "Stuart MacRae (composer)\nThe Witch's Kiss (1997; chamber ensemble) ; Violin Concerto (2001) ; Ancrene Wisse (2002; choir, orchestra) ; Motus (2003; chamber ensemble) ; Echo and Narcissus (2006; chamber ensemble/dance) ; Birches (2007; chamber orchestra) ; Gaudete (2008; soprano and orchestra) ; Earth (2010; orchestra) ", "The Noon Witch\n The Noon Witch (or The Noonday Witch; Polednice), Op. 108, B. 196, is a symphonic poem written in 1896 by Antonín Dvořák which was inspired by the Karel Jaromír Erben poem Polednice from the collection Kytice. Polednice is based on the noon demon \"Lady Midday\" of Slavic mythology. It is one of a set of late orchestral works inspired by national themes which were written after his return to his native Bohemia from the United States.", "Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches\n The Norwegian classical composer Martin Romberg wrote a Mass for mixed choir in seven parts after a selection of poems from Leland's text. This Witch Mass was premiered at the Vestfold International Festival in 2012 with Grex Vocalis. In order to create the right atmosphere for the music, the festival blocked off an entire road tunnel in Tønsberg to use it as a venue. The work was released on CD through Lawo Classics in 2014.", "The Witch and the Saint\n The Witch and the Saint by Steven Reineke is a one movement symphonic band piece describing the lives of Helena and Sibylla, twin sisters born in Germany at the end of the 16th century. The piece has five distinct parts and has become a favorite among audiences and bands though the story behind it has been virtually forgotten.", "George Stansbury\n Tartar Witch and the Pedlar Boy; Waverley; The Vision of the Bard, and Puss in Boots, or Harlequin and the Miller's Son. For Sadler's Wells Theatre he wrote the music for The Little Red Man, or the Witch of the Water Snakes. In addition to his seasons at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, from 1830 Stansbury made various appearances at the Vauxhall Gardens where he played in various new musical works, including Adelaide or the Royal William (1830); The Magic Fan, and The Sedan Chair (1832). In 1833 he played the organ at the funeral of the noted actor Edmund Kean.", "The Amber Witch (opera)\n The Amber Witch is an opera in four acts composed by William Vincent Wallace to an English libretto by Henry Fothergill Chorley, after Lady Duff-Gordon's translation of Meinold's Maria Schweidler: Die Bernsteinhexe. It premiered at Her Majesty's Theatre, London on 28 February 1861 conducted by Charles Hallé with Helen Lemmens-Sherrington in the title role.", "The Witches (novel)\n The book was adapted into an opera by Norwegian composer Marcus Paus and his father, Ole Paus, who wrote the libretto. It premiered in 2008.", "The Witch and the Saint\n The Witch and the Saint has a running time of 10:22. It is a tone poem, composed in 2004. Overall, it’s an epic piece – anyone listening to it without knowing the story behind it would get the impression of a melancholy story being told through powerful musical phrases. The piece opens with a thundering timpani triplet. A Gregorian chant type motif follows quietly and builds throughout the brass instrument section. The dark, threatening feel is broken suddenly by a melody portrayed by an oboe or flute solo as the bells join on after the new mood is established. That certain ", "Ole A. Sørli\n Which Witch is a free adaptation opera/musical of an incident from the witch-hunter's handbook, the 15th century Malleus Maleficarum. Producer Sørli wrote the original manuscript, and was executive director of the project.", "Symphonic poem\n and the Witches, 1859), is similar in scope but bolder in style. Musicologist John Clapham writes that Smetana planned these works as \"a compact series of episodes\" drawn from their literary sources \"and approached them as a dramatist rather than as a poet or philosopher.\" He used musical themes to represent specific characters; in this manner he more closely followed the practice of French composer Hector Berlioz in his choral symphony Roméo et Juliette than that of Liszt. By doing so, Hugh Macdonald writes, Smetana followed \"a straightforward pattern of musical description\". Smetana's set of six symphonic poems published under the ", "Innerst i sjelen\n \"Innerst i sjelen\" was used later on in the Norwegian opera Heksene in 2007. The opera was based on the similarly titled children's book Heksene by Roald Dahl (known in English as ''The Witches). The opera adaptation of the book was composed by Marcus Paus, Ole's son. The opera was commissioned by Gloppen Musikkfest for their 2008 programming and was first performed in May 2008 during Hardanger Musikkfest in Odda, with a later performance in August of the same year during Gloppen Musikkfest in Sandane. Johann Henrik Neergaard was director and Per Kristian Skalstad was conductor. Ole Paus was libretto in the opera and was the one to perform \"Innerst i sjelen\".", "Halloween III: Season of the Witch\n The soundtrack was composed by John Carpenter and Alan Howarth, who worked together on the score for Halloween II and several other films. Music remained an important element in establishing the atmosphere of Halloween III. Just as in Halloween and Halloween II, there was no symphonic score. Much of the music was composed to solicit \"false startles\" from the audience. The score of Halloween III differed greatly from the familiar main theme of the original and sequel. Carpenter replaced the familiar 10/8 piano melody with an electronic theme (9/16 against a steady 4/4) played on a synthesizer with beeping tonalities. Howarth explains how he and Carpenter composed the music for the third film: \"The music style of John Carpenter and myself has further evolved in this film soundtrack by working exclusively with synthesizers to produce our ", "The Amber Witch (opera)\n it was published in a luxury edition illustrated by Philip Burne-Jones. Wallace had sketched out most of the opera in the US in the mid-1850s, having had the libretto by Chorley to hand for some years, but difficulties in the London theatres held up its production in the capital. Having completed the orchestration of the work at Wiesbaden in 1860, the opera finally premiered at Her Majesty's Theatre on 28 February 1861 with Charles Hallé conducting. The Times reported that the first night's performance was a success and that \"the music is almost as complicated as it is beautiful\". Wallace considered it his best opera, and " ]
Who was the composer of Images?
[ "Claude Debussy", "Claud Debussy", "Debussy", "Claude Achille Debussy", "Achille Claude Debussy", "C. Debussy", "Claude-Achille Debussy", "Achille-Claude", "Achille-Claude Debussy" ]
composer
Images (ballet)
4,549,284
74
[ { "id": "3162685", "title": "Images (Skempton)", "text": " Images is a cycle of piano pieces composed by Howard Skempton in 1989. This work and a variations set, The Durham Strike, are the only large-scale piano works by Skempton, although he has been composing piano music since the beginning of his career. The work was commissioned by Channel 4's HTV West for \"Images\", a six-part television series of documentaries dealing with various aspects of photography. The series was created to mark the 150th anniversary of the invention of photography. The producer, Barrie Gavin, wanted the music to be similar in concept to Erik Satie's Gymnopedies: in the words of the composer, ", "score": "1.5872343" }, { "id": "3162686", "title": "Images (Skempton)", "text": " pieces were to be \"like a sculpture viewed from different angles in a changing light.\" The pianist who performed Images for the TV series was Michael Finnissy. Images comprises eight preludes, two \"songs\" (The Cockfight: a traditional song and Song 2), a set of variations, eight interludes and a postlude (Postlude: The Keel Row). In concert, the order of the pieces is not fixed and is left for the performer to determine. The eight preludes contain the pieces that directly correspond to Gavin's request. Preludes 1&ndash;3, all written on three staves and in 3/8 time, share identical rhythmic and melodic structure of ", "score": "1.4364802" }, { "id": "1035220", "title": "Walter Steffens (composer)", "text": " Monika Fink, who has been pursuing the topic of her doctoral thesis Musik nach Bildern (Music after Pictures) for over three decades, writes that she knows of no other composer who has so intensively and consistently dedicated himself to setting pictorial images to music. Under the supervision of Fink a project was initiated at the Department of Music at the University of Innsbruck to develop and maintain a comprehensive website devoted to the subject area “Music after Pictures” (see Musik nach Bildern). Numerous works by Steffens, especially those from recent years, are listed in this database, e.g., musical compositions on pictures by Peter Paul Rubens, Rembrandt van Rijn, and Emil Schumacher.", "score": "1.4341986" }, { "id": "27270581", "title": "John Palmer (composer)", "text": " 1994. Articles and Papers: Introduction to ‘Images of the mind' (1997). Paper given at the 1997 KlangArt International Congress ‘New Music & Technology’ in Osnabrück, Germany. Published in ‘Musik und Neue Technologie 3, Musik im virtuellen Raum’ (edited by Bernd Enders), Universitätsverlag Rasch, Osnabrück (2000). ISBN: 3-934005-64-0. Conceptual models of interaction: towards a perceptual analysis of interactive composition (1997-8) Paper given at the 1997 Sonic Arts Network Conference, University of Birmingham, UK, 10–12 January 1998. Published in the Seamus Journal, USA, Vol. XIV no. 1, Summer 1999. SEAMUS, Sonic Arts Network Perceptual Abstraction and Electroacoustic Composition (1998) Paper given at the 1998 Seamus Conference, Dartmouth College, NH, USA, 16–18 April 1998 (1997–98). ", "score": "1.4196739" }, { "id": "28801390", "title": "The Photographer", "text": " The Photographer is a three-part mixed media performance accompanied by music (also sometimes referred to as a chamber opera) by composer Philip Glass. The libretto is based on the life and homicide trial of 19th-century English photographer Eadweard Muybridge. Commissioned by the Holland Festival, the opera was first performed in 1982 at the Royal Palace in Amsterdam.", "score": "1.4174821" }, { "id": "6494842", "title": "Eric Salzman", "text": " as: The Nonesuch recording of Nude Paper Sermon was chosen separately by both Dennis Báthory-Kitsz and David Gunn, creators and hosts of the Kalvos & Damian New Music Bazaar, for their \"Top 100\" desert island recordings. In 1967, Salzman founded the \"New Image of Sound\" series at Hunter College, where his theatrical composition Verses and Cantos (or Foxes and Hedgehogs) was performed for the inaugural concert conducted by Dennis Russell Davies alongside the New York premiere of Berio's Laborintus II. In 1972, Pierre Boulez conducted the piece with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. In 1970, Salzman founded the Quog Music Theater, a mixed-media ", "score": "1.4096639" }, { "id": "26998721", "title": "Picture Studies", "text": " Picture Studies is an orchestral suite by the American composer Adam Schoenberg. The work was commissioned by the Kansas City Symphony and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. It was first performed by the Kansas City Symphony conducted by Michael Stern at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in Kansas City on February 1, 2013.", "score": "1.403199" }, { "id": "6513028", "title": "Columbus: Images for Orchestra", "text": " Columbus: Images for Orchestra (Colón: Imágenes para orquesta) is a composition by Spanish composer Leonardo Balada. It was finished in 1991 and uses material from Balada's opera Christopher Columbus.", "score": "1.3999479" }, { "id": "6548285", "title": "Images in Sound (He Xuntian)", "text": " Images in Sound ( 声音图案 ) is a piece for conventional and unconventional instruments, composed by He Xuntian in 1997–2003.", "score": "1.3999008" }, { "id": "3820107", "title": "Ernest Bloch", "text": " with the entire collection of his negatives and prints. Johnson is currently Professor of Art and Design at Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo Ca. An account of his discovery and many of Bloch's images can be found on his website. [ericjohnsonphoto.com] ; Voices in the Wilderness: Six American Neo-Romantic Composers, by Walter Simmons. (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2004) ISBN: 978-0-8108-5728-5 ; Kushner, David Z. The Ernest Bloch Companion, (Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, 2002) ISBN: 978-0-313-27905-8 ; Kintner, Helen Johnston. The Ernest Bloch I Knew (Published by Helen Johnston Kinter, June 2009) ISBN: 978-0-9743356-3-6 ; Werlin, Joella. Suzanne Bloch: Recollections (Familore, Portland, Oregon, 2007) ; Bloch, Suzanne. Ernest Bloch: Creative Spirit: A Program Source Book (Jewish Music Council of the National Jewish Welfare Board, 1976. ; Johnson, Eric B. A Composer's Vision (Aperture 16:3, Millerton, New York, 1972) ", "score": "1.3913167" }, { "id": "30708323", "title": "Images (book)", "text": " Images, first published in 1994 (now out of print), is a book by David Lynch.", "score": "1.3899646" }, { "id": "24965093", "title": "Images (ballet)", "text": "May 24, 1992 Jack Anderson, NY Times ", "score": "1.3865738" }, { "id": "32215593", "title": "Ernst Haas", "text": " In the early 1970s Haas became interested in creating audiovisual slideshows—long sequences of projected imagery with accompanying soundtracks, dissolving from one image into the next. \"I love music,\" he explained, \"and with my audiovisual presentation I can combine music and photography.” After suffering a stroke in December 1985, Haas concentrated on layouts for two books he wanted to publish, one featuring his black and white photographs, the other his color. At the time of his death from a stroke on September 12, 1986, he had been preparing to write his autobiography.", "score": "1.3830984" }, { "id": "15539778", "title": "John Stepan Zamecnik", "text": " John Stepan Zamecnik (May 14, 1872 in Cleveland, Ohio &ndash; June 13, 1953 in Los Angeles, California) was an American composer and conductor. He is best known for the \"photoplay music\" he composed for use during silent films by pianists, organists, and orchestras. Zamecnik used many pseudonyms, including Dorothy Lee, Lionel Baxter, R.L. (Robert) Creighton, Arturo de Castro, \"Josh and Ted\", J. (Jane) Hathaway, Kathryn Hawthorne, Roberta Hudson, Ioane Kawelo, J. Edgar Lowell, Jules Reynard, F. (Frederick) Van Norman, Hal Vinton and Grant Wellesley.", "score": "1.3827233" }, { "id": "26305190", "title": "Images (Kenny Barron album)", "text": " Images is an album by pianist Kenny Barron recorded in New York in 2003 and released on the Sunnyside label.", "score": "1.3759695" }, { "id": "4142559", "title": "The Book of Images", "text": " The Book of Images (Das Buch der Bilder) is a collection of poetry by the Bohemian-Austrian poet and novelist Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926). It was first published in 1902 by Axel Juncker Verlag. It consists of individual poems written from 1899 and forward. An extended version was published in 1906, after Rilke had written The Book of Hours, with which scholars link The Book of Images as a phase in the poet's writing.", "score": "1.3759272" }, { "id": "28712634", "title": "Anthony Braxton", "text": " In his Falling River Musics Braxton began to work on \"image logics\", resulting in graphic scores with large paintings and drawings with smaller legends of various symbols. Performs must find their own meanings in the symbols and construct a path through the score, balancing \"the demands of traditional notation interpretation and esoteric inter-targeting.\"", "score": "1.3659257" }, { "id": "5976138", "title": "Selwyn Image", "text": " Image was an influential writer on design and the first Slade Professor of Fine Arts at Oxford from 1910 to 1916. Between December 1887 and February 1888, Image gave a series of four lectures on Modern Art at Willis' Rooms. Oscar Wilde attended at least one of this series, and reviewed the second lecture in the Sunday Times on 25 January 1888. Image was also a close associate of Arthur Symons and may have shared his then mistress Muriel (Edith Broadbent). Image published a number of essays, contributed introductions and chapters to scholarly publications, and published a poetry collection, Poems and Carols in 1894.", "score": "1.3615706" }, { "id": "24965091", "title": "Images (ballet)", "text": " Images is a ballet made by Miriam Mahdaviani for the New York City Ballet's first Diamond Project to Debussy's \"Gigues\" from Images pour orchestre (1906–12) and \"Nuages\" and \"Fêtes\" from his Nocturnes (1893–99). The premiere took place 30 May 1992 at the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center.", "score": "1.3593802" }, { "id": "31172593", "title": "Images (band)", "text": " Images was a French pop band that existed from 1986 to 1999 and then burst into the formation Émile et Images. The founders, Mario Ramsamy, Jean-Louis Pujade and Richard Seff; came from Toulouse, Occitania. Their biggest hit was \"Les Démons de minuit\" (1986), which was 13 weeks at number 1 on the charts in France.", "score": "1.3578415" } ]
[ "Images (Skempton)\n Images is a cycle of piano pieces composed by Howard Skempton in 1989. This work and a variations set, The Durham Strike, are the only large-scale piano works by Skempton, although he has been composing piano music since the beginning of his career. The work was commissioned by Channel 4's HTV West for \"Images\", a six-part television series of documentaries dealing with various aspects of photography. The series was created to mark the 150th anniversary of the invention of photography. The producer, Barrie Gavin, wanted the music to be similar in concept to Erik Satie's Gymnopedies: in the words of the composer, ", "Images (Skempton)\n pieces were to be \"like a sculpture viewed from different angles in a changing light.\" The pianist who performed Images for the TV series was Michael Finnissy. Images comprises eight preludes, two \"songs\" (The Cockfight: a traditional song and Song 2), a set of variations, eight interludes and a postlude (Postlude: The Keel Row). In concert, the order of the pieces is not fixed and is left for the performer to determine. The eight preludes contain the pieces that directly correspond to Gavin's request. Preludes 1&ndash;3, all written on three staves and in 3/8 time, share identical rhythmic and melodic structure of ", "Walter Steffens (composer)\n Monika Fink, who has been pursuing the topic of her doctoral thesis Musik nach Bildern (Music after Pictures) for over three decades, writes that she knows of no other composer who has so intensively and consistently dedicated himself to setting pictorial images to music. Under the supervision of Fink a project was initiated at the Department of Music at the University of Innsbruck to develop and maintain a comprehensive website devoted to the subject area “Music after Pictures” (see Musik nach Bildern). Numerous works by Steffens, especially those from recent years, are listed in this database, e.g., musical compositions on pictures by Peter Paul Rubens, Rembrandt van Rijn, and Emil Schumacher.", "John Palmer (composer)\n 1994. Articles and Papers: Introduction to ‘Images of the mind' (1997). Paper given at the 1997 KlangArt International Congress ‘New Music & Technology’ in Osnabrück, Germany. Published in ‘Musik und Neue Technologie 3, Musik im virtuellen Raum’ (edited by Bernd Enders), Universitätsverlag Rasch, Osnabrück (2000). ISBN: 3-934005-64-0. Conceptual models of interaction: towards a perceptual analysis of interactive composition (1997-8) Paper given at the 1997 Sonic Arts Network Conference, University of Birmingham, UK, 10–12 January 1998. Published in the Seamus Journal, USA, Vol. XIV no. 1, Summer 1999. SEAMUS, Sonic Arts Network Perceptual Abstraction and Electroacoustic Composition (1998) Paper given at the 1998 Seamus Conference, Dartmouth College, NH, USA, 16–18 April 1998 (1997–98). ", "The Photographer\n The Photographer is a three-part mixed media performance accompanied by music (also sometimes referred to as a chamber opera) by composer Philip Glass. The libretto is based on the life and homicide trial of 19th-century English photographer Eadweard Muybridge. Commissioned by the Holland Festival, the opera was first performed in 1982 at the Royal Palace in Amsterdam.", "Eric Salzman\n as: The Nonesuch recording of Nude Paper Sermon was chosen separately by both Dennis Báthory-Kitsz and David Gunn, creators and hosts of the Kalvos & Damian New Music Bazaar, for their \"Top 100\" desert island recordings. In 1967, Salzman founded the \"New Image of Sound\" series at Hunter College, where his theatrical composition Verses and Cantos (or Foxes and Hedgehogs) was performed for the inaugural concert conducted by Dennis Russell Davies alongside the New York premiere of Berio's Laborintus II. In 1972, Pierre Boulez conducted the piece with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. In 1970, Salzman founded the Quog Music Theater, a mixed-media ", "Picture Studies\n Picture Studies is an orchestral suite by the American composer Adam Schoenberg. The work was commissioned by the Kansas City Symphony and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. It was first performed by the Kansas City Symphony conducted by Michael Stern at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in Kansas City on February 1, 2013.", "Columbus: Images for Orchestra\n Columbus: Images for Orchestra (Colón: Imágenes para orquesta) is a composition by Spanish composer Leonardo Balada. It was finished in 1991 and uses material from Balada's opera Christopher Columbus.", "Images in Sound (He Xuntian)\n Images in Sound ( 声音图案 ) is a piece for conventional and unconventional instruments, composed by He Xuntian in 1997–2003.", "Ernest Bloch\n with the entire collection of his negatives and prints. Johnson is currently Professor of Art and Design at Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo Ca. An account of his discovery and many of Bloch's images can be found on his website. [ericjohnsonphoto.com] ; Voices in the Wilderness: Six American Neo-Romantic Composers, by Walter Simmons. (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2004) ISBN: 978-0-8108-5728-5 ; Kushner, David Z. The Ernest Bloch Companion, (Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, 2002) ISBN: 978-0-313-27905-8 ; Kintner, Helen Johnston. The Ernest Bloch I Knew (Published by Helen Johnston Kinter, June 2009) ISBN: 978-0-9743356-3-6 ; Werlin, Joella. Suzanne Bloch: Recollections (Familore, Portland, Oregon, 2007) ; Bloch, Suzanne. Ernest Bloch: Creative Spirit: A Program Source Book (Jewish Music Council of the National Jewish Welfare Board, 1976. ; Johnson, Eric B. A Composer's Vision (Aperture 16:3, Millerton, New York, 1972) ", "Images (book)\n Images, first published in 1994 (now out of print), is a book by David Lynch.", "Images (ballet)\nMay 24, 1992 Jack Anderson, NY Times ", "Ernst Haas\n In the early 1970s Haas became interested in creating audiovisual slideshows—long sequences of projected imagery with accompanying soundtracks, dissolving from one image into the next. \"I love music,\" he explained, \"and with my audiovisual presentation I can combine music and photography.” After suffering a stroke in December 1985, Haas concentrated on layouts for two books he wanted to publish, one featuring his black and white photographs, the other his color. At the time of his death from a stroke on September 12, 1986, he had been preparing to write his autobiography.", "John Stepan Zamecnik\n John Stepan Zamecnik (May 14, 1872 in Cleveland, Ohio &ndash; June 13, 1953 in Los Angeles, California) was an American composer and conductor. He is best known for the \"photoplay music\" he composed for use during silent films by pianists, organists, and orchestras. Zamecnik used many pseudonyms, including Dorothy Lee, Lionel Baxter, R.L. (Robert) Creighton, Arturo de Castro, \"Josh and Ted\", J. (Jane) Hathaway, Kathryn Hawthorne, Roberta Hudson, Ioane Kawelo, J. Edgar Lowell, Jules Reynard, F. (Frederick) Van Norman, Hal Vinton and Grant Wellesley.", "Images (Kenny Barron album)\n Images is an album by pianist Kenny Barron recorded in New York in 2003 and released on the Sunnyside label.", "The Book of Images\n The Book of Images (Das Buch der Bilder) is a collection of poetry by the Bohemian-Austrian poet and novelist Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926). It was first published in 1902 by Axel Juncker Verlag. It consists of individual poems written from 1899 and forward. An extended version was published in 1906, after Rilke had written The Book of Hours, with which scholars link The Book of Images as a phase in the poet's writing.", "Anthony Braxton\n In his Falling River Musics Braxton began to work on \"image logics\", resulting in graphic scores with large paintings and drawings with smaller legends of various symbols. Performs must find their own meanings in the symbols and construct a path through the score, balancing \"the demands of traditional notation interpretation and esoteric inter-targeting.\"", "Selwyn Image\n Image was an influential writer on design and the first Slade Professor of Fine Arts at Oxford from 1910 to 1916. Between December 1887 and February 1888, Image gave a series of four lectures on Modern Art at Willis' Rooms. Oscar Wilde attended at least one of this series, and reviewed the second lecture in the Sunday Times on 25 January 1888. Image was also a close associate of Arthur Symons and may have shared his then mistress Muriel (Edith Broadbent). Image published a number of essays, contributed introductions and chapters to scholarly publications, and published a poetry collection, Poems and Carols in 1894.", "Images (ballet)\n Images is a ballet made by Miriam Mahdaviani for the New York City Ballet's first Diamond Project to Debussy's \"Gigues\" from Images pour orchestre (1906–12) and \"Nuages\" and \"Fêtes\" from his Nocturnes (1893–99). The premiere took place 30 May 1992 at the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center.", "Images (band)\n Images was a French pop band that existed from 1986 to 1999 and then burst into the formation Émile et Images. The founders, Mario Ramsamy, Jean-Louis Pujade and Richard Seff; came from Toulouse, Occitania. Their biggest hit was \"Les Démons de minuit\" (1986), which was 13 weeks at number 1 on the charts in France." ]
Who was the composer of Kallai Mattum?
[ "Himesh Reshammiya" ]
composer
Kallai Mattum
4,804,637
44
[ { "id": "403829", "title": "Magalir Mattum (1994 film)", "text": " The soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja, while the lyrics for all the songs were written by Vaali. It was released under the label AVM Audio in December 1993. Ilaiyaraaja, using the technique of M. B. Sreenivasan, composed the title track as a choir song. Urvashi was initially displeased with \"Karavai Maadu\" because it contained lyrics she considered were degrading, but after Vaali explained to her why he wrote those words, she was convinced.", "score": "1.7148724" }, { "id": "13156593", "title": "Magalir Mattum (2017 film)", "text": " The film's soundtrack was composed by Ghibran. The soundtrack features seven songs and one instrumentals from the original score. The album was launched at Sathyam Cinemas, Chennai on 26 April 2017. The soundtrack included a song sung by actor Karthi, as well as three short songs sung by the film's leading veteran actresses.", "score": "1.6408144" }, { "id": "29280894", "title": "Unakkaga Mattum", "text": " The soundtrack was composed by film composer Bobby Shankar. The soundtrack, released in 2000, features 6 tracks with lyrics written by Pulamaipithan and Kavi Varma.", "score": "1.6352744" }, { "id": "27712673", "title": "Kaalam (1982 film)", "text": " The music was composed by Shankar–Ganesh and the lyrics were written by Bichu Thirumala.", "score": "1.5974125" }, { "id": "27815932", "title": "Kalla Kulla", "text": " The music of the film was composed by Rajan–Nagendra and the lyrics were written by Chi. Udaya Shankar. The song \"Suthha Muthha\" was received extremely well.", "score": "1.5923002" }, { "id": "25812506", "title": "Bhaaryayum Kaamukiyum", "text": " The music was composed by M. K. Arjunan and the lyrics were written by Chirayinkeezhu Ramakrishnan Nair and Sreekumaran Thampi.", "score": "1.5685236" }, { "id": "265179", "title": "Kasu Irukkanum", "text": " The film score and the soundtrack were composed by film composers Kavin Saradha and Raj Shankar. The soundtrack, released in 2007, features 6 tracks with lyrics written by G. R. and Asura.", "score": "1.5660853" }, { "id": "14498339", "title": "Kaattumallika", "text": " The music was composed by M. S. Baburaj and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi. This was Thampi's first film.", "score": "1.5640031" }, { "id": "31954", "title": "K (composer)", "text": " down a role in his first film 'Yuddham Sei', but had agreed to play one of the leads in Kallapadam. Directed by M.Manikandan of Kaaka Muttai and Kutrame Dhandanai fame, Aandavan Kattalai, his next major release was very well received. The music for the film, including the 9 songs, was supplemented by a background score where the lyrics of the songs were based on the dialogues on screen. In 2017, a Telugu remake of the film was made by Chinni Krishna, named London Babulu, which featured music re-used from K's Tamil original. The remake only featured 5 out of the 9 tracks from the original. Ammani, Lakshmy Ramakrishnan's 3rd film as a director, was ", "score": "1.5577319" }, { "id": "31048955", "title": "Manasukketha Maharasa", "text": " The music was composed by Deva. Lyrics written by Pulamaipithan and Kalidasan in pen name of \"Thirupathooran\". Even though Deva made his debut with the film Mattukara Mannaru (1986), it was this film which gave him a break as a composer.", "score": "1.5502366" }, { "id": "25016743", "title": "Kaamam Krodham Moham", "text": " The music was composed by Shyam and the lyrics were written by Bharanikkavu Sivakumar and Bichu Thirumala.", "score": "1.5429072" }, { "id": "26879144", "title": "Thullum Kaalam", "text": " The film score and the soundtrack were composed by film composer S. P. Boopathy. The soundtrack, released in 2005, features 5 tracks with lyrics written by Viveka, Victor Doss and Dr. Kiruthaya.", "score": "1.5412669" }, { "id": "403832", "title": "Magalir Mattum (1994 film)", "text": " R.P.R. of Kalki appreciated the film for Mohan's writing, Urvashi's performance and Ilaiyaraaja's music, but felt the post-interval scenes were unnecessarily stretched, and criticised Haasan for overacting. The review board of the magazine Ananda Vikatan said the filmmakers must be appreciated for presenting a high-class comedy entertainer without any vulgarity or double entendre dialogues and becoming a benchmark for humour. They said that among the three female leads, Urvashi had lived through the character of a Brahmin woman and made them laugh throughout the film. The review board praised the cinematography and wrote that the filmmakers certainly moved a few steps ahead in their effort to present a neat and entertaining comedy film, and gave Magalir Mattum a rating of 44 marks out of 100.", "score": "1.5394773" }, { "id": "13391810", "title": "Kanavu Variyam", "text": " The music of Kanavu Variyam was composed by Shyam Benjamin. \"Kalla/Manna\", a song from the film which refers to 51 traditional games of rural India, won the Silver Remi for Best Children's Song and won the Best Youth Focus Music Video award at the Bare Bones International Film and Music Festival at Oklahoma, USA.", "score": "1.5383146" }, { "id": "29498232", "title": "Koodanayum Kattu", "text": " The music of the film was composed by Shyam and the lyrics were written by Bichu Thirumala.", "score": "1.5334336" }, { "id": "3449872", "title": "Kathal Paduthum Padu", "text": " The music of the film was composed by T. R. Pappa.", "score": "1.5318527" }, { "id": "32593696", "title": "Vimochanam", "text": " The soundtrack was composed by Ramani, the founder of the Ramani School of Music, while Sasi wrote the lyrics. The background score was composed by Sarma Brothers. The film had many songs performed by Carnatic musician Lalitha Venkataraman. Popular songs include \"Kallai Ozhithida Sattamondru Chennai Congress Aatchiyil Seithanarey\", \"Mahaan Rajaji-yai Ellorum Vaazhthuvomey\" and \"Naattuomey Jayakodi\". The songs were released by Odeon Records.", "score": "1.5307198" }, { "id": "3974278", "title": "Kalyana Mandapam (1965 film)", "text": " Music was composed by Rangasami Parthasarathy, while the lyrics were penned by Vaali and Thellur Dharmarajan.", "score": "1.526504" }, { "id": "8724434", "title": "Naduvula Konjam Pakkatha Kaanom", "text": " The film's soundtrack was composed by Ved Shankar, a former student of KM Music Conservatory, a music school led by A. R. Rahman. Ved Shankar had composed earlier two soundtracks Paalai (2011) and Madhubana Kadai (2012), before this film. The background score was composed by Siddharth Vipin. The album features five tracks, including an instrumental, with lyrics penned by Karthik Netha and the composer himself. The film created a record of sorts by featuring a song, the lines of which were selected from phrases sent in by more than 1,800 people through Facebook. The soundtrack was released on 26 October 2012 at Sathyam Cinemas in Chennai, in the presence of the film's ", "score": "1.5249056" }, { "id": "27734914", "title": "Karpagam Vanthachu", "text": " The film score and the soundtrack were composed by film composer Shankar–Ganesh. The soundtrack, released in 1993, features 7 tracks with lyrics written by Vaali, Muthulingam, Na. Kamarasan and Venkatesh.", "score": "1.5239494" } ]
[ "Magalir Mattum (1994 film)\n The soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja, while the lyrics for all the songs were written by Vaali. It was released under the label AVM Audio in December 1993. Ilaiyaraaja, using the technique of M. B. Sreenivasan, composed the title track as a choir song. Urvashi was initially displeased with \"Karavai Maadu\" because it contained lyrics she considered were degrading, but after Vaali explained to her why he wrote those words, she was convinced.", "Magalir Mattum (2017 film)\n The film's soundtrack was composed by Ghibran. The soundtrack features seven songs and one instrumentals from the original score. The album was launched at Sathyam Cinemas, Chennai on 26 April 2017. The soundtrack included a song sung by actor Karthi, as well as three short songs sung by the film's leading veteran actresses.", "Unakkaga Mattum\n The soundtrack was composed by film composer Bobby Shankar. The soundtrack, released in 2000, features 6 tracks with lyrics written by Pulamaipithan and Kavi Varma.", "Kaalam (1982 film)\n The music was composed by Shankar–Ganesh and the lyrics were written by Bichu Thirumala.", "Kalla Kulla\n The music of the film was composed by Rajan–Nagendra and the lyrics were written by Chi. Udaya Shankar. The song \"Suthha Muthha\" was received extremely well.", "Bhaaryayum Kaamukiyum\n The music was composed by M. K. Arjunan and the lyrics were written by Chirayinkeezhu Ramakrishnan Nair and Sreekumaran Thampi.", "Kasu Irukkanum\n The film score and the soundtrack were composed by film composers Kavin Saradha and Raj Shankar. The soundtrack, released in 2007, features 6 tracks with lyrics written by G. R. and Asura.", "Kaattumallika\n The music was composed by M. S. Baburaj and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi. This was Thampi's first film.", "K (composer)\n down a role in his first film 'Yuddham Sei', but had agreed to play one of the leads in Kallapadam. Directed by M.Manikandan of Kaaka Muttai and Kutrame Dhandanai fame, Aandavan Kattalai, his next major release was very well received. The music for the film, including the 9 songs, was supplemented by a background score where the lyrics of the songs were based on the dialogues on screen. In 2017, a Telugu remake of the film was made by Chinni Krishna, named London Babulu, which featured music re-used from K's Tamil original. The remake only featured 5 out of the 9 tracks from the original. Ammani, Lakshmy Ramakrishnan's 3rd film as a director, was ", "Manasukketha Maharasa\n The music was composed by Deva. Lyrics written by Pulamaipithan and Kalidasan in pen name of \"Thirupathooran\". Even though Deva made his debut with the film Mattukara Mannaru (1986), it was this film which gave him a break as a composer.", "Kaamam Krodham Moham\n The music was composed by Shyam and the lyrics were written by Bharanikkavu Sivakumar and Bichu Thirumala.", "Thullum Kaalam\n The film score and the soundtrack were composed by film composer S. P. Boopathy. The soundtrack, released in 2005, features 5 tracks with lyrics written by Viveka, Victor Doss and Dr. Kiruthaya.", "Magalir Mattum (1994 film)\n R.P.R. of Kalki appreciated the film for Mohan's writing, Urvashi's performance and Ilaiyaraaja's music, but felt the post-interval scenes were unnecessarily stretched, and criticised Haasan for overacting. The review board of the magazine Ananda Vikatan said the filmmakers must be appreciated for presenting a high-class comedy entertainer without any vulgarity or double entendre dialogues and becoming a benchmark for humour. They said that among the three female leads, Urvashi had lived through the character of a Brahmin woman and made them laugh throughout the film. The review board praised the cinematography and wrote that the filmmakers certainly moved a few steps ahead in their effort to present a neat and entertaining comedy film, and gave Magalir Mattum a rating of 44 marks out of 100.", "Kanavu Variyam\n The music of Kanavu Variyam was composed by Shyam Benjamin. \"Kalla/Manna\", a song from the film which refers to 51 traditional games of rural India, won the Silver Remi for Best Children's Song and won the Best Youth Focus Music Video award at the Bare Bones International Film and Music Festival at Oklahoma, USA.", "Koodanayum Kattu\n The music of the film was composed by Shyam and the lyrics were written by Bichu Thirumala.", "Kathal Paduthum Padu\n The music of the film was composed by T. R. Pappa.", "Vimochanam\n The soundtrack was composed by Ramani, the founder of the Ramani School of Music, while Sasi wrote the lyrics. The background score was composed by Sarma Brothers. The film had many songs performed by Carnatic musician Lalitha Venkataraman. Popular songs include \"Kallai Ozhithida Sattamondru Chennai Congress Aatchiyil Seithanarey\", \"Mahaan Rajaji-yai Ellorum Vaazhthuvomey\" and \"Naattuomey Jayakodi\". The songs were released by Odeon Records.", "Kalyana Mandapam (1965 film)\n Music was composed by Rangasami Parthasarathy, while the lyrics were penned by Vaali and Thellur Dharmarajan.", "Naduvula Konjam Pakkatha Kaanom\n The film's soundtrack was composed by Ved Shankar, a former student of KM Music Conservatory, a music school led by A. R. Rahman. Ved Shankar had composed earlier two soundtracks Paalai (2011) and Madhubana Kadai (2012), before this film. The background score was composed by Siddharth Vipin. The album features five tracks, including an instrumental, with lyrics penned by Karthik Netha and the composer himself. The film created a record of sorts by featuring a song, the lines of which were selected from phrases sent in by more than 1,800 people through Facebook. The soundtrack was released on 26 October 2012 at Sathyam Cinemas in Chennai, in the presence of the film's ", "Karpagam Vanthachu\n The film score and the soundtrack were composed by film composer Shankar–Ganesh. The soundtrack, released in 1993, features 7 tracks with lyrics written by Vaali, Muthulingam, Na. Kamarasan and Venkatesh." ]
Who was the composer of I'm in Love?
[ "Bobby Ljunggren", "Robert Vasilis Ljunggren", "Robert Vasilis Engdahl" ]
composer
I'm in Love (Sanna Nielsen song)
75,913
78
[ { "id": "31191650", "title": "I Am in Love", "text": " \"I Am in Love\" is a 1953 popular song written by Cole Porter, for his musical Can-Can, where it was introduced by Peter Cookson.", "score": "1.704954" }, { "id": "9316754", "title": "I'm in Love with a Memory", "text": " The song was composed by Don Lee and George White. It was released on Crescent 101 in 1981/1982.", "score": "1.6949222" }, { "id": "3298068", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn &quot;Champagne&quot; King song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love\" is a 1981 single by singer Evelyn \"Champagne\" King. The single was a hit on three different music charts in the United States, hitting number one on both the Soul and dance charts and number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was the first of two chart entries by King to reach number one on both the Soul and dance charts.", "score": "1.6220545" }, { "id": "12578470", "title": "I'm in Love with You (album)", "text": " Album Singles", "score": "1.6196187" }, { "id": "30740052", "title": "I'm in Love with You (Joy Williams song)", "text": "The song has been frequently popularised through YouTube fan videos. ", "score": "1.61652" }, { "id": "12578469", "title": "I'm in Love with You (album)", "text": "David Krieger - art direction ; Joel Brodsky - photography ; Mia Krinsky - co-ordination ; Bob Scerbo - production supervision ; Abrim Tillmon - arrangement, songwriting ; James Mitchell - arrangement, songwriting, production (credited as Katouzzion) ", "score": "1.6158909" }, { "id": "25529587", "title": "I'm in Love (Melba Moore album)", "text": " I'm in Love is the sixteenth album by singer Melba Moore, released in 1988.", "score": "1.6142516" }, { "id": "9203604", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn King album)", "text": "Singles ", "score": "1.6088564" }, { "id": "8063591", "title": "I'm in Love (Bobby Womack song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love\" is a 1968 song written by Bobby Womack. It was first recorded by Wilson Pickett which gave him a top-ten R&B hit on Billboard's chart in 1968, peaking at number 4 as well as peaking at number 45 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "score": "1.5963302" }, { "id": "9203599", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn King album)", "text": " I'm in Love is the fourth album released by R&B singer Evelyn \"Champagne\" King on RCA Records in 1981. It was produced by Morrie Brown, Willie Lester, Rodney Brown, Kashif, and Lawrence Jones.", "score": "1.5940226" }, { "id": "3298069", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn &quot;Champagne&quot; King song)", "text": "12\" single PD-12244 (US) 7\" single PB-12243 (US) ", "score": "1.5796757" }, { "id": "8900454", "title": "I'm in Love Again (song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love Again\" is a 1956 single by Fats Domino. The song was written by Domino and his longtime collaborator, Dave Bartholomew. The single was Domino's fifth number one on the R&B Best Sellers list, where it stayed at the top for seven weeks. \"I'm in Love Again\" also peaked at number three for two weeks on the pop chart. \"I'm in Love Again\" was a double-sided hit for Domino as the B-side of the pop standard, \"My Blue Heaven\".", "score": "1.571996" }, { "id": "5665289", "title": "I'm in Love (Ginuwine song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love\" is a song by American recording artist Ginuwine. It was co-written and produced by Troy Oliver for his fifth studio album Back II Da Basics (2005). Released as the second and final single from the album, it reached number 69 on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.", "score": "1.5702227" }, { "id": "14060736", "title": "I'm Not at All in Love", "text": " \"I'm Not at All in Love\" is a popular song written by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross, published in 1954. It was first presented in the musical The Pajama Game by Janis Paige. In the 1957 film version, it was sung by Doris Day and it appears in the soundtrack album.", "score": "1.5628413" }, { "id": "12578467", "title": "I'm in Love with You (album)", "text": " I'm in Love with You is the third studio album by American vocal group, The Detroit Emeralds, released in 1973 through Westbound Records.", "score": "1.5525908" }, { "id": "30740050", "title": "I'm in Love with You (Joy Williams song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love with You\" is a 2005 song by Joy Williams off her third album, Genesis. Joy said that the song is dedicated to her husband stating in a Christian interview: ''\"I'm in Love with You\" is a love song to my best friend and the man that I have committed my life to. Nate and I were married in June of last year (2004). Every single line from this song is a memory for me, and each line has been taken from my journal. Nate didn't have any idea I was writing this song. I never told him until the day ", "score": "1.5493213" }, { "id": "8063592", "title": "I'm in Love (Bobby Womack song)", "text": " \"I'm in Love\" was written in response to some of the criticism he had been receiving after marrying the widow of the recently deceased Sam Cooke.", "score": "1.5338006" }, { "id": "12399040", "title": "Jule Styne", "text": " Doris Day in 1948), and \"I Fall In Love Too Easily.\" He collaborated with Leo Robin on the score for the 1955 musical film My Sister Eileen. In 1947, Styne wrote his first score for a Broadway musical, High Button Shoes, with Cahn, and over the next several decades wrote the scores for many Broadway shows, most notably Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Peter Pan (additional music), Bells Are Ringing, Gypsy, Do Re Mi, Funny Girl, Lorelei, Sugar (with a story based on the movie Some Like It Hot, but all new music), and the Tony-winning Hallelujah, Baby!. Styne wrote original music for the short-lived themed amusement park Freedomland U.S.A. ", "score": "1.5290147" }, { "id": "31293273", "title": "In Case You're in Love", "text": "Conductor: Harold Battiste ; Arranger, Producer: Sonny Bono ; Mastering: Bob Irwin ; Engineer: Stan Ross ", "score": "1.5247761" }, { "id": "3298071", "title": "I'm in Love (Evelyn &quot;Champagne&quot; King song)", "text": " Janet Jackson sampled \"I'm In Love\" in her 2004 song \"R&B Junkie.\"", "score": "1.5216331" } ]
[ "I Am in Love\n \"I Am in Love\" is a 1953 popular song written by Cole Porter, for his musical Can-Can, where it was introduced by Peter Cookson.", "I'm in Love with a Memory\n The song was composed by Don Lee and George White. It was released on Crescent 101 in 1981/1982.", "I'm in Love (Evelyn &quot;Champagne&quot; King song)\n \"I'm in Love\" is a 1981 single by singer Evelyn \"Champagne\" King. The single was a hit on three different music charts in the United States, hitting number one on both the Soul and dance charts and number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was the first of two chart entries by King to reach number one on both the Soul and dance charts.", "I'm in Love with You (album)\n Album Singles", "I'm in Love with You (Joy Williams song)\nThe song has been frequently popularised through YouTube fan videos. ", "I'm in Love with You (album)\nDavid Krieger - art direction ; Joel Brodsky - photography ; Mia Krinsky - co-ordination ; Bob Scerbo - production supervision ; Abrim Tillmon - arrangement, songwriting ; James Mitchell - arrangement, songwriting, production (credited as Katouzzion) ", "I'm in Love (Melba Moore album)\n I'm in Love is the sixteenth album by singer Melba Moore, released in 1988.", "I'm in Love (Evelyn King album)\nSingles ", "I'm in Love (Bobby Womack song)\n \"I'm in Love\" is a 1968 song written by Bobby Womack. It was first recorded by Wilson Pickett which gave him a top-ten R&B hit on Billboard's chart in 1968, peaking at number 4 as well as peaking at number 45 on the Billboard Hot 100.", "I'm in Love (Evelyn King album)\n I'm in Love is the fourth album released by R&B singer Evelyn \"Champagne\" King on RCA Records in 1981. It was produced by Morrie Brown, Willie Lester, Rodney Brown, Kashif, and Lawrence Jones.", "I'm in Love (Evelyn &quot;Champagne&quot; King song)\n12\" single PD-12244 (US) 7\" single PB-12243 (US) ", "I'm in Love Again (song)\n \"I'm in Love Again\" is a 1956 single by Fats Domino. The song was written by Domino and his longtime collaborator, Dave Bartholomew. The single was Domino's fifth number one on the R&B Best Sellers list, where it stayed at the top for seven weeks. \"I'm in Love Again\" also peaked at number three for two weeks on the pop chart. \"I'm in Love Again\" was a double-sided hit for Domino as the B-side of the pop standard, \"My Blue Heaven\".", "I'm in Love (Ginuwine song)\n \"I'm in Love\" is a song by American recording artist Ginuwine. It was co-written and produced by Troy Oliver for his fifth studio album Back II Da Basics (2005). Released as the second and final single from the album, it reached number 69 on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.", "I'm Not at All in Love\n \"I'm Not at All in Love\" is a popular song written by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross, published in 1954. It was first presented in the musical The Pajama Game by Janis Paige. In the 1957 film version, it was sung by Doris Day and it appears in the soundtrack album.", "I'm in Love with You (album)\n I'm in Love with You is the third studio album by American vocal group, The Detroit Emeralds, released in 1973 through Westbound Records.", "I'm in Love with You (Joy Williams song)\n \"I'm in Love with You\" is a 2005 song by Joy Williams off her third album, Genesis. Joy said that the song is dedicated to her husband stating in a Christian interview: ''\"I'm in Love with You\" is a love song to my best friend and the man that I have committed my life to. Nate and I were married in June of last year (2004). Every single line from this song is a memory for me, and each line has been taken from my journal. Nate didn't have any idea I was writing this song. I never told him until the day ", "I'm in Love (Bobby Womack song)\n \"I'm in Love\" was written in response to some of the criticism he had been receiving after marrying the widow of the recently deceased Sam Cooke.", "Jule Styne\n Doris Day in 1948), and \"I Fall In Love Too Easily.\" He collaborated with Leo Robin on the score for the 1955 musical film My Sister Eileen. In 1947, Styne wrote his first score for a Broadway musical, High Button Shoes, with Cahn, and over the next several decades wrote the scores for many Broadway shows, most notably Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Peter Pan (additional music), Bells Are Ringing, Gypsy, Do Re Mi, Funny Girl, Lorelei, Sugar (with a story based on the movie Some Like It Hot, but all new music), and the Tony-winning Hallelujah, Baby!. Styne wrote original music for the short-lived themed amusement park Freedomland U.S.A. ", "In Case You're in Love\nConductor: Harold Battiste ; Arranger, Producer: Sonny Bono ; Mastering: Bob Irwin ; Engineer: Stan Ross ", "I'm in Love (Evelyn &quot;Champagne&quot; King song)\n Janet Jackson sampled \"I'm In Love\" in her 2004 song \"R&B Junkie.\"" ]
Who was the composer of Prelude in F major, Op. 49, No. 2?
[ "Alexander Scriabin" ]
composer
Prelude in F major, Op. 49, No. 2 (Scriabin)
5,485,599
41
[ { "id": "32114091", "title": "Prelude in F major, Op. 49, No. 2 (Scriabin)", "text": " Alexander Scriabin's Prelude, Op. 49, No. 2 is the second of his Trois Morceaux Op. 49 (Three Pieces), which were written in 1905. It is notated in F major, 3/4 measure, with a speed of 69 per quarter note, and lasts for 23 measures (and an upbeat). It should be expressed Bruscamente irato (very irate).", "score": "1.967541" }, { "id": "32114092", "title": "Prelude in F major, Op. 49, No. 2 (Scriabin)", "text": "The Glenn Gould Edition: Chopin Piano Sonata No. 3, Mendelssohn Songs without Words etc. (S2K 52622) (also featured on volume 11 of the video Ecstasy and Wit (Sony SHV 48417) ; Mikhail Pletnev: Scriabin: 24 Preludes, Sonatas 4 & 10, etc. (2002) There are recordings by Glenn Gould (from 1973) and Mikhail Pletnev (from 1996).", "score": "1.8630247" }, { "id": "32114149", "title": "Prelude in A minor, Op. 51, No. 2 (Scriabin)", "text": " Alexander Scriabin's Prelude Opus 51 No. 2 is the second of his Quatre Morceaux (Four Pieces) op. 51, published in 1906. It is notated in A minor. It is written in a 6/8 beat in 30 measures (plus upbeat) and should be expressed Lugubre (dire). This is one of several pieces Scriabin never played in public (together with the Sonata No. 6 (op. 62)). He called it \"Shattered Strings\" (German \"Zersprungene Saiten\") when Leonid Sabaneyev reminded him of the piece during a discussion about minor and major. Sabaneyev quotes him with \"Oh, let's not talk about this! This is a ghastly piece! [...] I was in an appalling situation back then. This Prelude, and also the Marche funebre in the First Sonata formed in moments disheartenment... But only these two!\" (referring to his allegation that he had abandoned the minor tonality a long time ago).", "score": "1.8064344" }, { "id": "11754100", "title": "List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude", "text": "BuxWV 136 — Prelude in C major ; BuxWV 137 — Prelude (Prelude, Fuga and Ciacona) in C major ; BuxWV 138 — Prelude in C major ; BuxWV 139 — Prelude in D major ; BuxWV 140 — Prelude in D minor ; BuxWV 141 — Prelude in E major ; BuxWV 142 — Prelude in E minor ; BuxWV 143 — Prelude in E minor ; BuxWV 144 — Prelude in F major ; BuxWV 145 — Prelude in F major ; BuxWV 146 — Prelude in F-sharp minor ; BuxWV 147 — Prelude in G major ; BuxWV 148 — Prelude in G minor ; BuxWV 149 — Prelude in G minor ; BuxWV 150 — Prelude in G minor ; BuxWV 151 — Prelude in A major ", "score": "1.7768768" }, { "id": "1359395", "title": "Prelude, Op. 59, No. 2 (Scriabin)", "text": " The Prelude Op. 59 No. 2 is one of the latest works written by Alexander Scriabin, it was completed in 1910, five years before his death. It is notated as \"Sauvage, Belliqueux\" (Savage/wild, belligerent).", "score": "1.744374" }, { "id": "12719273", "title": "Piano music of Gabriel Fauré", "text": "Prélude No. 1 in D major Prélude No. 2 in C minor Prélude No. 3 in G minor Prélude No. 4 in F major Prélude No. 5 in D minor Prélude No. 6 in E minor Prélude No. 7 in A major Prélude No. 8 in C minor Prélude No. 9 in E minor The nine préludes are among the least known of Fauré's major piano compositions. They were written while the composer was struggling to come to terms with the onset of deafness in his mid-sixties. By Fauré's standards this was a time of unusually prolific output. The préludes were composed in 1909 and 1910, in the ", "score": "1.7284272" }, { "id": "11825477", "title": "Preludes (Chopin)", "text": " The Prelude in C minor, Op. 45 (sometimes listed as Prelude No. 25), was composed in 1841. It was dedicated to Princess E. Czernicheff (Elisaweta Tschernyschewa), and contains widely extending basses and highly expressive and effective chromatic modulations over a rather uniform thematic basis.", "score": "1.7247248" }, { "id": "8791446", "title": "Prelude in C-sharp minor (Rachmaninoff)", "text": " Sergei Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor (Прелюдия), Op. 3, No. 2, is one of the composer's most famous compositions. Part of a set of five piano pieces titled Morceaux de fantaisie, it is a 62-bar prelude in ternary (ABA) form. It is also known as The Bells of Moscow since the introduction seems to reproduce the Kremlin's most solemn carillon chimes. Its first performance was by the composer on 26 September 1892, at a festival called the Moscow Electrical Exhibition. After this première, a review of the concert singled out the Prelude, noting that it had “aroused enthusiasm”. From this point on, its popularity grew. Rachmaninoff later published 23 more preludes to complete a set of 24 preludes covering all the major and minor keys, to emulate earlier sets by Bach, Chopin, Alkan, Scriabin and others.", "score": "1.7156327" }, { "id": "11754101", "title": "List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude", "text": " BuxWV 152 — Prelude in A minor (Phrygian mode) ; BuxWV 153 — Prelude in A minor ; BuxWV 154 — Prelude in B-flat major ; BuxWV 155 — Toccata in D minor ; BuxWV 156 — Toccata in F major ; BuxWV 157 — Toccata in F major ; BuxWV 158 — Praeambulum in A minor ; BuxWV 159 — Chaconne in C minor ; BuxWV 160 — Chaconne in E minor ; BuxWV 161 — Passacaglia in D minor ; BuxWV 162 — Prelude in G major for keyboard (or organ) ; BuxWV 163 — Prelude in G minor for keyboard (or organ) ; BuxWV 164 — Toccata in G major for keyboard (or organ) ; BuxWV 165 — Toccata in G major for keyboard (or organ) ; ", "score": "1.7126677" }, { "id": "11825478", "title": "Preludes (Chopin)", "text": " The untitled Presto con leggierezza in A major was composed in 1834 as a gift for Pierre Wolff and published in Geneva in 1918. Sometimes known as Prelude No. 26, the piece is very short and generally bright in tone.", "score": "1.7114407" }, { "id": "30031638", "title": "Preludes, Op. 23 (Rachmaninoff)", "text": "No. 1 in F minor (Largo) ; No. 2 in B major (Maestoso) ; No. 3 in D minor (Tempo di minuetto) ; No. 4 in D major (Andante cantabile) ; No. 5 in G minor (Alla marcia) ; No. 6 in E major (Andante) ; No. 7 in C minor (Allegro) ; No. 8 in A major (Allegro vivace) ; No. 9 in E minor (Presto) ; No. 10 in G major (Largo) Op. 23 is composed of ten preludes, ranging from two to five minutes in length. Combined, the pieces take around thirty minutes to perform. They are: Rachmaninoff completed Prelude No. 5 in 1901. The remaining preludes were completed after Rachmaninoff's marriage to his cousin Natalia Satina: Nos. 1, 4, and 10 premiered in Moscow on February 10, 1903, and the remaining seven were completed soon thereafter. 1900–1903 were difficult years for Rachmaninoff and his motivation for writing the Preludes was predominantly financial. Rachmaninoff composed the works in the Hotel America, financially dependent on his cousin Alexander Siloti, to whom the Preludes are dedicated.", "score": "1.6863353" }, { "id": "11650098", "title": "List of compositions by Alexander Scriabin", "text": " in A minor, No. 2 from 4 Morceaux, Op. 51 ; piano ; 1906 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|56#1 ; Prélude in E-flat major, No. 1 from 4 Pièces, Op. 56 ; piano ; 1908 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|59#2 ; Prélude, No. 2 from 2 Pièces, Op. 59 ; piano ; 1910 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 67 ; 2 Préludes piano ; 1913 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 74 ; 5 Préludes piano ; 1914 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; colspan=\"5\" data-sort-value=\"999\"| 1. C major 2. A minor 3. G major 4. E minor 5. D major 6. B minor 7. A major 8. F-sharp minor 9. E major 10. C-sharp minor 11. B major ", "score": "1.6856511" }, { "id": "29086417", "title": "Prelude (music)", "text": " minor keys and was published posthumously. ; Casimir Ney wrote a collection of 24 Preludes in all major and minor keys for solo viola from 1849–53. ; Frédéric Chopin wrote 24 Preludes, Op. 28, which cycle through all of the major and minor keys. The odd numbered preludes are in major keys, starting with C major, and each is followed by a prelude in the relative minor key. The paired preludes proceed through the circle of fifths (C major and A minor; G major and E minor; D major and B minor; etc.). Most can be played as stand-alone pieces. ; Alexandre-Pierre François Boëly wrote many Préludes, ", "score": "1.6777475" }, { "id": "6112540", "title": "Prelude and Fugue in F minor, BWV 881", "text": " The Prelude and Fugue in F minor, BWV 881, is a keyboard composition written by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is the twelfth prelude and fugue in the second book of The Well-Tempered Clavier, a series of 48 preludes and fugues by the composer.", "score": "1.6775684" }, { "id": "29002205", "title": "Prelude in E minor, Op. 11, No. 4 (Scriabin)", "text": " Alexander Scriabin's Prelude in E minor, Op. 11, No. 4, composed in Moscow in 1888, was the first of the 24 preludes, Op. 11 written by Scriabin. Intended originally as a ballade, the piece was reworked to its present form and entitled Prelude. Despite the fact that both hands have beautiful melodies indicated with tenutos in bars 1&ndash;3&ndash;9&ndash;11, and the alto voice in the 16, the one for the left hand seems to take the credit as the most beautiful between the two. Tenths arpeggiated in bars 20&ndash;23 lead to the top note of the chord to fall on the beat. This composition's structural form is A (bars 1&ndash;8), A repeated (9&ndash;14), bridge (15&ndash;19), and coda (20&ndash;24), being that the second phrase repeats the first a fourth lower. It is 24 bars long with a Lento tempo marking, and it takes about two minutes to be played.", "score": "1.6758192" }, { "id": "11650097", "title": "List of compositions by Alexander Scriabin", "text": " Préludes piano ; 1901 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 31 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 33 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 35 ; 3 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 37 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 39 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|45#3 ; Prélude in E-flat major, No. 3 from 3 Morceaux, Op. 45 ; piano ; 1904 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 48 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1905 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|49#2 ; Prélude in F major, No. 2 from 3 Morceaux, Op. 49 ; piano ; 1905 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|51#2 ; ", "score": "1.6754987" }, { "id": "28478014", "title": "Preludes (Rachmaninoff)", "text": " In 1892, Rachmaninoff published Morceaux de fantaisie as his Op. 3. This contained five assorted piano pieces all with different titles, the second of which was the Prelude in C minor. Eventually, however, due to the popularity of the piece, Rachmaninoff grew to dislike the piece. He gave the nickname \"Frankenstein\" to the prelude due to the frequency of its playing.", "score": "1.6753623" }, { "id": "28916448", "title": "Prelude in G minor (Rachmaninoff)", "text": " Prelude in G minor, Op. 23, No. 5, is a piece of music by Sergei Rachmaninoff, completed in 1901. It was included in his Opus 23 set of ten preludes, despite having been written two years earlier than the other nine. Rachmaninoff himself premiered the piece in Moscow on February 10, 1903, along with Preludes No. 1 and 2 from Op. 23.", "score": "1.6749867" }, { "id": "11310419", "title": "Alexander Yossifov", "text": " \"Prelude and Fuga\" No 2, for 2 Pianos, 8 hands, was awarded the Grand-Prix \"Kanebo\" in Tokyo, Japan at the Sixth International Competition for Piano Duo Composition in 1999.", "score": "1.6720929" }, { "id": "29086413", "title": "Prelude (music)", "text": " Frédéric Chopin (1810–1849) wrote a set of 24 preludes, Op. 28, often composed in a simple ternary form, which liberated the prelude from its original introductory purpose and allowed it to serve as an independent concert piece. While other pianist-composers, including Muzio Clementi, Johann Nepomuk Hummel and Ignaz Moscheles, had previously published collections of preludes for the benefit of pianists unskilled at improvisatory preluding, Chopin's set renewed the genre. Chopin's set served as a model for other collections of 24 or 25 piano preludes in the major and minor keys, including those by Charles-Valentin Alkan (Op. 31 for piano or organ), Ferruccio Busoni (Op. 37, BV 181), César ", "score": "1.6701221" } ]
[ "Prelude in F major, Op. 49, No. 2 (Scriabin)\n Alexander Scriabin's Prelude, Op. 49, No. 2 is the second of his Trois Morceaux Op. 49 (Three Pieces), which were written in 1905. It is notated in F major, 3/4 measure, with a speed of 69 per quarter note, and lasts for 23 measures (and an upbeat). It should be expressed Bruscamente irato (very irate).", "Prelude in F major, Op. 49, No. 2 (Scriabin)\nThe Glenn Gould Edition: Chopin Piano Sonata No. 3, Mendelssohn Songs without Words etc. (S2K 52622) (also featured on volume 11 of the video Ecstasy and Wit (Sony SHV 48417) ; Mikhail Pletnev: Scriabin: 24 Preludes, Sonatas 4 & 10, etc. (2002) There are recordings by Glenn Gould (from 1973) and Mikhail Pletnev (from 1996).", "Prelude in A minor, Op. 51, No. 2 (Scriabin)\n Alexander Scriabin's Prelude Opus 51 No. 2 is the second of his Quatre Morceaux (Four Pieces) op. 51, published in 1906. It is notated in A minor. It is written in a 6/8 beat in 30 measures (plus upbeat) and should be expressed Lugubre (dire). This is one of several pieces Scriabin never played in public (together with the Sonata No. 6 (op. 62)). He called it \"Shattered Strings\" (German \"Zersprungene Saiten\") when Leonid Sabaneyev reminded him of the piece during a discussion about minor and major. Sabaneyev quotes him with \"Oh, let's not talk about this! This is a ghastly piece! [...] I was in an appalling situation back then. This Prelude, and also the Marche funebre in the First Sonata formed in moments disheartenment... But only these two!\" (referring to his allegation that he had abandoned the minor tonality a long time ago).", "List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude\nBuxWV 136 — Prelude in C major ; BuxWV 137 — Prelude (Prelude, Fuga and Ciacona) in C major ; BuxWV 138 — Prelude in C major ; BuxWV 139 — Prelude in D major ; BuxWV 140 — Prelude in D minor ; BuxWV 141 — Prelude in E major ; BuxWV 142 — Prelude in E minor ; BuxWV 143 — Prelude in E minor ; BuxWV 144 — Prelude in F major ; BuxWV 145 — Prelude in F major ; BuxWV 146 — Prelude in F-sharp minor ; BuxWV 147 — Prelude in G major ; BuxWV 148 — Prelude in G minor ; BuxWV 149 — Prelude in G minor ; BuxWV 150 — Prelude in G minor ; BuxWV 151 — Prelude in A major ", "Prelude, Op. 59, No. 2 (Scriabin)\n The Prelude Op. 59 No. 2 is one of the latest works written by Alexander Scriabin, it was completed in 1910, five years before his death. It is notated as \"Sauvage, Belliqueux\" (Savage/wild, belligerent).", "Piano music of Gabriel Fauré\nPrélude No. 1 in D major Prélude No. 2 in C minor Prélude No. 3 in G minor Prélude No. 4 in F major Prélude No. 5 in D minor Prélude No. 6 in E minor Prélude No. 7 in A major Prélude No. 8 in C minor Prélude No. 9 in E minor The nine préludes are among the least known of Fauré's major piano compositions. They were written while the composer was struggling to come to terms with the onset of deafness in his mid-sixties. By Fauré's standards this was a time of unusually prolific output. The préludes were composed in 1909 and 1910, in the ", "Preludes (Chopin)\n The Prelude in C minor, Op. 45 (sometimes listed as Prelude No. 25), was composed in 1841. It was dedicated to Princess E. Czernicheff (Elisaweta Tschernyschewa), and contains widely extending basses and highly expressive and effective chromatic modulations over a rather uniform thematic basis.", "Prelude in C-sharp minor (Rachmaninoff)\n Sergei Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor (Прелюдия), Op. 3, No. 2, is one of the composer's most famous compositions. Part of a set of five piano pieces titled Morceaux de fantaisie, it is a 62-bar prelude in ternary (ABA) form. It is also known as The Bells of Moscow since the introduction seems to reproduce the Kremlin's most solemn carillon chimes. Its first performance was by the composer on 26 September 1892, at a festival called the Moscow Electrical Exhibition. After this première, a review of the concert singled out the Prelude, noting that it had “aroused enthusiasm”. From this point on, its popularity grew. Rachmaninoff later published 23 more preludes to complete a set of 24 preludes covering all the major and minor keys, to emulate earlier sets by Bach, Chopin, Alkan, Scriabin and others.", "List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude\n BuxWV 152 — Prelude in A minor (Phrygian mode) ; BuxWV 153 — Prelude in A minor ; BuxWV 154 — Prelude in B-flat major ; BuxWV 155 — Toccata in D minor ; BuxWV 156 — Toccata in F major ; BuxWV 157 — Toccata in F major ; BuxWV 158 — Praeambulum in A minor ; BuxWV 159 — Chaconne in C minor ; BuxWV 160 — Chaconne in E minor ; BuxWV 161 — Passacaglia in D minor ; BuxWV 162 — Prelude in G major for keyboard (or organ) ; BuxWV 163 — Prelude in G minor for keyboard (or organ) ; BuxWV 164 — Toccata in G major for keyboard (or organ) ; BuxWV 165 — Toccata in G major for keyboard (or organ) ; ", "Preludes (Chopin)\n The untitled Presto con leggierezza in A major was composed in 1834 as a gift for Pierre Wolff and published in Geneva in 1918. Sometimes known as Prelude No. 26, the piece is very short and generally bright in tone.", "Preludes, Op. 23 (Rachmaninoff)\nNo. 1 in F minor (Largo) ; No. 2 in B major (Maestoso) ; No. 3 in D minor (Tempo di minuetto) ; No. 4 in D major (Andante cantabile) ; No. 5 in G minor (Alla marcia) ; No. 6 in E major (Andante) ; No. 7 in C minor (Allegro) ; No. 8 in A major (Allegro vivace) ; No. 9 in E minor (Presto) ; No. 10 in G major (Largo) Op. 23 is composed of ten preludes, ranging from two to five minutes in length. Combined, the pieces take around thirty minutes to perform. They are: Rachmaninoff completed Prelude No. 5 in 1901. The remaining preludes were completed after Rachmaninoff's marriage to his cousin Natalia Satina: Nos. 1, 4, and 10 premiered in Moscow on February 10, 1903, and the remaining seven were completed soon thereafter. 1900–1903 were difficult years for Rachmaninoff and his motivation for writing the Preludes was predominantly financial. Rachmaninoff composed the works in the Hotel America, financially dependent on his cousin Alexander Siloti, to whom the Preludes are dedicated.", "List of compositions by Alexander Scriabin\n in A minor, No. 2 from 4 Morceaux, Op. 51 ; piano ; 1906 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|56#1 ; Prélude in E-flat major, No. 1 from 4 Pièces, Op. 56 ; piano ; 1908 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|59#2 ; Prélude, No. 2 from 2 Pièces, Op. 59 ; piano ; 1910 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 67 ; 2 Préludes piano ; 1913 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 74 ; 5 Préludes piano ; 1914 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; colspan=\"5\" data-sort-value=\"999\"| 1. C major 2. A minor 3. G major 4. E minor 5. D major 6. B minor 7. A major 8. F-sharp minor 9. E major 10. C-sharp minor 11. B major ", "Prelude (music)\n minor keys and was published posthumously. ; Casimir Ney wrote a collection of 24 Preludes in all major and minor keys for solo viola from 1849–53. ; Frédéric Chopin wrote 24 Preludes, Op. 28, which cycle through all of the major and minor keys. The odd numbered preludes are in major keys, starting with C major, and each is followed by a prelude in the relative minor key. The paired preludes proceed through the circle of fifths (C major and A minor; G major and E minor; D major and B minor; etc.). Most can be played as stand-alone pieces. ; Alexandre-Pierre François Boëly wrote many Préludes, ", "Prelude and Fugue in F minor, BWV 881\n The Prelude and Fugue in F minor, BWV 881, is a keyboard composition written by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is the twelfth prelude and fugue in the second book of The Well-Tempered Clavier, a series of 48 preludes and fugues by the composer.", "Prelude in E minor, Op. 11, No. 4 (Scriabin)\n Alexander Scriabin's Prelude in E minor, Op. 11, No. 4, composed in Moscow in 1888, was the first of the 24 preludes, Op. 11 written by Scriabin. Intended originally as a ballade, the piece was reworked to its present form and entitled Prelude. Despite the fact that both hands have beautiful melodies indicated with tenutos in bars 1&ndash;3&ndash;9&ndash;11, and the alto voice in the 16, the one for the left hand seems to take the credit as the most beautiful between the two. Tenths arpeggiated in bars 20&ndash;23 lead to the top note of the chord to fall on the beat. This composition's structural form is A (bars 1&ndash;8), A repeated (9&ndash;14), bridge (15&ndash;19), and coda (20&ndash;24), being that the second phrase repeats the first a fourth lower. It is 24 bars long with a Lento tempo marking, and it takes about two minutes to be played.", "List of compositions by Alexander Scriabin\n Préludes piano ; 1901 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 31 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 33 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 35 ; 3 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 37 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 39 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1903 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|45#3 ; Prélude in E-flat major, No. 3 from 3 Morceaux, Op. 45 ; piano ; 1904 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; 48 ; 4 Préludes piano ; 1905 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|49#2 ; Prélude in F major, No. 2 from 3 Morceaux, Op. 49 ; piano ; 1905 -style=\"vertical-align: top\" ; data-sort-value=\"999\"|51#2 ; ", "Preludes (Rachmaninoff)\n In 1892, Rachmaninoff published Morceaux de fantaisie as his Op. 3. This contained five assorted piano pieces all with different titles, the second of which was the Prelude in C minor. Eventually, however, due to the popularity of the piece, Rachmaninoff grew to dislike the piece. He gave the nickname \"Frankenstein\" to the prelude due to the frequency of its playing.", "Prelude in G minor (Rachmaninoff)\n Prelude in G minor, Op. 23, No. 5, is a piece of music by Sergei Rachmaninoff, completed in 1901. It was included in his Opus 23 set of ten preludes, despite having been written two years earlier than the other nine. Rachmaninoff himself premiered the piece in Moscow on February 10, 1903, along with Preludes No. 1 and 2 from Op. 23.", "Alexander Yossifov\n \"Prelude and Fuga\" No 2, for 2 Pianos, 8 hands, was awarded the Grand-Prix \"Kanebo\" in Tokyo, Japan at the Sixth International Competition for Piano Duo Composition in 1999.", "Prelude (music)\n Frédéric Chopin (1810–1849) wrote a set of 24 preludes, Op. 28, often composed in a simple ternary form, which liberated the prelude from its original introductory purpose and allowed it to serve as an independent concert piece. While other pianist-composers, including Muzio Clementi, Johann Nepomuk Hummel and Ignaz Moscheles, had previously published collections of preludes for the benefit of pianists unskilled at improvisatory preluding, Chopin's set renewed the genre. Chopin's set served as a model for other collections of 24 or 25 piano preludes in the major and minor keys, including those by Charles-Valentin Alkan (Op. 31 for piano or organ), Ferruccio Busoni (Op. 37, BV 181), César " ]
Who was the composer of Piano Concerto?
[ "Tan Dun", "Dun Tan" ]
composer
Piano Concerto (Tan Dun)
4,060,489
54
[ { "id": "9231752", "title": "Piano Concerto (Carter)", "text": " The Concerto for Piano is a composition for solo piano and orchestra by the American composer Elliott Carter. The work was commissioned by the pianist Jacob Lateiner with support from the Ford Foundation. It was composed between 1964 and 1965 and was first performed at Symphony Hall, Boston on January 6, 1967, by Lateiner and the Boston Symphony Orchestra under the conductor Erich Leinsdorf. The piece was dedicated to the composer Igor Stravinsky for his 85th birthday.", "score": "1.6898053" }, { "id": "2189629", "title": "Piano Concerto (Beach)", "text": " The Piano Concerto in C-sharp minor, Op. 45, is a composition for solo piano and orchestra in four movements by the American composer Amy Beach. The work was composed between September 1898 and September 1899. It was first performed in Boston on April 7, 1900, with the composer as the soloist and the Boston Symphony Orchestra performing under the conductor Wilhelm Gericke. The composition is dedicated to the musician Teresa Carreño and was the first piano concerto by an American female composer.", "score": "1.6605084" }, { "id": "31075606", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 3 (Rachmaninoff)", "text": " Rachmaninoff composed the concerto in Dresden completing it on September 23, 1909. Contemporary with this work are his First Piano Sonata and his tone poem The Isle of the Dead. Owing to its difficulty, the concerto is respected, even feared, by many pianists. Josef Hofmann, the pianist to whom the work is dedicated, never publicly performed it, saying that it \"wasn't for\" him. Gary Graffman lamented he had not learned this concerto as a student, when he was \"still too young to know fear\". Due to time constraints, Rachmaninoff could not practice the piece while in Russia. Instead, he practiced it on a silent keyboard that he brought with him while en route to the United States. The concerto ", "score": "1.65377" }, { "id": "2115723", "title": "Piano Concerto (Paderewski)", "text": " The Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 17, is the only piano concerto written by the Polish composer and pianist Ignacy Jan Paderewski. It was written in the composer's twenties, with the first movement dating back to 1882, although the majority of the work was composed in 1888 and scored in 1889. After its completion, the composer showed the concerto to his friend Saint-Saëns, who admired it, and especially the andante movement. It premiered the same year in Vienna, achieving great success, where it was conducted by Hans Richter. The work was dedicated to Paderewski's teacher Theodor Leschetizky.", "score": "1.6505793" }, { "id": "3372435", "title": "Concerto for Two Pianos (Stravinsky)", "text": " The Concerto for Two Pianos (sometimes also referred to as Concerto for Two Solo Pianos or rather as its Italian original name, Concerto per due pianoforti soli) is a composition by Russian composer Igor Stravinsky. It was finished on November 9, 1935 and, together with his Sonata for Two Pianos, is considered nowadays as one of his major compositions for piano during his neoclassical period. It was also Stravinsky's first work after becoming a French citizen.", "score": "1.6469723" }, { "id": "13965474", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Lieberson)", "text": " The Piano Concerto No. 1 is a composition for solo piano and orchestra by the American composer Peter Lieberson. The work was commissioned by the Boston Symphony Orchestra for its centennial. Lieberson started composing the piece in 1980 and completed it on March 2, 1983. It was written for the pianist Peter Serkin, who first performed the concerto with the Boston Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Seiji Ozawa on April 21, 1983. The piece is dedicated to Peter Serkin and Seiji Ozawa. It was a finalist for the 1984 Pulitzer Prize for Music.", "score": "1.643997" }, { "id": "28768522", "title": "Piano Concerto (Schumann)", "text": " The Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54, by the German Romantic composer Robert Schumann was completed in 1845 and is the composer's only piano concerto. The complete work was premiered in Dresden on 4 December 1845. It is one of the most widely performed and recorded piano concertos from the Romantic period.", "score": "1.6432177" }, { "id": "28768407", "title": "Piano Concerto (Grieg)", "text": " Edmund Neupert on April 3, 1869 in Copenhagen, with Holger Simon Paulli conducting. Some sources say that Grieg himself, an excellent pianist, was the intended soloist, but he was unable to attend the premiere owing to commitments with an orchestra in Christiania (now Oslo). Among those who did attend the premiere were the Danish composer Niels Gade and the Russian pianist Anton Rubinstein, who provided his own piano for the occasion. Neupert was also the dedicatee of the second edition of the concerto (Rikard Nordraak was the original dedicatee), and James Huneker said that he himself composed the first movement ", "score": "1.6420673" }, { "id": "27283569", "title": "Piano Concerto (Copland)", "text": " The Concerto for Piano and Orchestra is a musical composition by the American composer Aaron Copland. The work was commissioned by the conductor Serge Koussevitzky who was then music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. It was first performed on January 28, 1927, by the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Koussevitzky with the composer himself as the soloist. The piece is dedicated to Copland's patron Alma Morgenthau Wertheim.", "score": "1.6410389" }, { "id": "29731004", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 4 (Ries)", "text": " The Piano Concerto No. 4 in C minor, Op. 115 by Ferdinand Ries was composed in Bonn in 1809 but was not published until 1823 when it was released by both H.A. Probst of Leipzig and Birchall & Cº of London with a dedication to Ignaz Moscheles.", "score": "1.6396103" }, { "id": "8418778", "title": "Piano Concerto (Respighi)", "text": " The Piano Concerto in A minor by Ottorino Respighi is a concerto for piano and orchestra written in 1902 and published in 1941. The work takes around 20 minutes to perform.", "score": "1.6385047" }, { "id": "31075605", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 3 (Rachmaninoff)", "text": " Sergei Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30, was composed in the summer of 1909. The piece was premiered on November 28 of that year in New York City with the composer as soloist, accompanied by the New York Symphony Society under Walter Damrosch. The work often has the reputation of being one of the most technically challenging piano concertos in the standard classical piano repertoire.", "score": "1.6374979" }, { "id": "9208021", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Liszt)", "text": " Franz Liszt composed his Piano Concerto No. 1 in E major, S.124 over a 26-year period; the main themes date from 1830, while the final version is dated 1849. The concerto consists of four movements and lasts approximately 20 minutes. It premiered in Weimar on February 17, 1855, with Liszt at the piano and Hector Berlioz conducting.", "score": "1.6335089" }, { "id": "29640226", "title": "List of compositions for piano and orchestra", "text": " Piano Concerto in D (1855) ; Adolphe Biarent ; Rapsodie Wallone (1910) ; Boris Blacher ; Piano Concerto No. 1 (1947) ; Piano Concerto No. 2 (In variable metres) (1952) ; Variations on a Theme of Muzio Clementi (1961) ; Howard Blake ; Piano Concerto ; Arthur Bliss ; Piano Concerto in B-flat (1939) ; Ernest Bloch ; Concerto symphonique in B minor (1947-8) ; Scherzo fantastique (1948) ; Felix Blumenfeld ; Allegro de concert in A major, Op. 7 (1889) ; Emil Bohnke ; Concerto in D minor for piano and orchestra, Op. 14 (1925) ; François-Adrien Boieldieu ; ", "score": "1.6334219" }, { "id": "27461022", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Glazunov)", "text": " Alexander Glazunov composed his Piano Concerto No. 1 in F minor, Opus, 92, in 1911, during his tenure as director of the St. Petersburg Conservatory. The concerto is dedicated to Leopold Godowsky, whom Glazunov had heard on tour in St. Petersburg in 1905.", "score": "1.633416" }, { "id": "16041897", "title": "Piano Concerto (Massenet)", "text": " Jules Massenet's Piano Concerto is a 1902 work for piano solo and orchestra. It is scored for a typical-sized ensemble of the time. The concerto was performed in 1903 by Louis Diémer at the Conservatoire de Paris. After the premiere, it quickly fell into obscurity and is seldom heard today.", "score": "1.6325719" }, { "id": "29640234", "title": "List of compositions for piano and orchestra", "text": "Luigi Dallapiccola ; Piano Concerto ; Franz Danzi ; Piano Concerto in E-flat major ; Peter Maxwell Davies ; Piano Concerto (1997) ; Claude Debussy ; Printemps, L. 61 (1887), symphonic suite for choir, piano, and orchestra ; Fantaisie, L. 73 (1889–90) ; Arthur De Greef ; Piano Concerto No. 1 in C minor (1914) ; Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat minor (1930) ; Frederick Delius ; Piano Concerto in C minor (1897–1906) ; Peter Dickinson ; Piano Concerto (1984) ; Issay Dobrowen ; Piano Concerto in C sharp minor, Op. 20 (1926) ; Ernő Dohnányi ; Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor, Op. 5 (1897-8) ; Variations on a Nursery Tune, Op. 25 (1914) ; Piano ", "score": "1.6316772" }, { "id": "25079719", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Tchaikovsky)", "text": " The Piano Concerto No. 1 in B minor, Op. 23, was composed by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky between November 1874 and February 1875. It was revised in the summer of 1879 and again in December 1888. The first version received heavy criticism from Nikolai Rubinstein, Tchaikovsky's desired pianist. Rubinstein later withdrew his accusations and became a fervent champion of the work. It is one of the most popular of Tchaikovsky's compositions and among the best known of all piano concerti.", "score": "1.6296182" }, { "id": "796096", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 2 (Rachmaninoff)", "text": " The Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18, is a concerto for piano and orchestra composed by Sergei Rachmaninoff between the autumn of 1900 and April 1901. The second and third movements were first performed with the composer as soloist on 2 December 1900. The complete work was premiered, again with the composer as soloist, on 9 November 1901, with his cousin Alexander Siloti conducting. This piece established Rachmaninoff's fame as a concerto composer and is one of his most enduringly popular pieces.", "score": "1.6287975" }, { "id": "10417777", "title": "Piano Concerto No. 24 (Mozart)", "text": " The Piano Concerto No. 24 in C minor, K. 491, is a concerto composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart for keyboard (usually a piano or fortepiano) and orchestra. Mozart composed the concerto in the winter of 1785–1786, finishing it on 24 March 1786, three weeks after completing his Piano Concerto No. 23 in A major. As he intended to perform the work himself, Mozart did not write out the soloist's part in full. The premiere was in early April 1786 at the Burgtheater in Vienna. Chronologically, the work is the twentieth of Mozart's 23 original piano concertos. The work is one of only two minor-key piano concertos that Mozart composed, the other being the No. 20 ", "score": "1.6280286" } ]
[ "Piano Concerto (Carter)\n The Concerto for Piano is a composition for solo piano and orchestra by the American composer Elliott Carter. The work was commissioned by the pianist Jacob Lateiner with support from the Ford Foundation. It was composed between 1964 and 1965 and was first performed at Symphony Hall, Boston on January 6, 1967, by Lateiner and the Boston Symphony Orchestra under the conductor Erich Leinsdorf. The piece was dedicated to the composer Igor Stravinsky for his 85th birthday.", "Piano Concerto (Beach)\n The Piano Concerto in C-sharp minor, Op. 45, is a composition for solo piano and orchestra in four movements by the American composer Amy Beach. The work was composed between September 1898 and September 1899. It was first performed in Boston on April 7, 1900, with the composer as the soloist and the Boston Symphony Orchestra performing under the conductor Wilhelm Gericke. The composition is dedicated to the musician Teresa Carreño and was the first piano concerto by an American female composer.", "Piano Concerto No. 3 (Rachmaninoff)\n Rachmaninoff composed the concerto in Dresden completing it on September 23, 1909. Contemporary with this work are his First Piano Sonata and his tone poem The Isle of the Dead. Owing to its difficulty, the concerto is respected, even feared, by many pianists. Josef Hofmann, the pianist to whom the work is dedicated, never publicly performed it, saying that it \"wasn't for\" him. Gary Graffman lamented he had not learned this concerto as a student, when he was \"still too young to know fear\". Due to time constraints, Rachmaninoff could not practice the piece while in Russia. Instead, he practiced it on a silent keyboard that he brought with him while en route to the United States. The concerto ", "Piano Concerto (Paderewski)\n The Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 17, is the only piano concerto written by the Polish composer and pianist Ignacy Jan Paderewski. It was written in the composer's twenties, with the first movement dating back to 1882, although the majority of the work was composed in 1888 and scored in 1889. After its completion, the composer showed the concerto to his friend Saint-Saëns, who admired it, and especially the andante movement. It premiered the same year in Vienna, achieving great success, where it was conducted by Hans Richter. The work was dedicated to Paderewski's teacher Theodor Leschetizky.", "Concerto for Two Pianos (Stravinsky)\n The Concerto for Two Pianos (sometimes also referred to as Concerto for Two Solo Pianos or rather as its Italian original name, Concerto per due pianoforti soli) is a composition by Russian composer Igor Stravinsky. It was finished on November 9, 1935 and, together with his Sonata for Two Pianos, is considered nowadays as one of his major compositions for piano during his neoclassical period. It was also Stravinsky's first work after becoming a French citizen.", "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Lieberson)\n The Piano Concerto No. 1 is a composition for solo piano and orchestra by the American composer Peter Lieberson. The work was commissioned by the Boston Symphony Orchestra for its centennial. Lieberson started composing the piece in 1980 and completed it on March 2, 1983. It was written for the pianist Peter Serkin, who first performed the concerto with the Boston Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Seiji Ozawa on April 21, 1983. The piece is dedicated to Peter Serkin and Seiji Ozawa. It was a finalist for the 1984 Pulitzer Prize for Music.", "Piano Concerto (Schumann)\n The Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54, by the German Romantic composer Robert Schumann was completed in 1845 and is the composer's only piano concerto. The complete work was premiered in Dresden on 4 December 1845. It is one of the most widely performed and recorded piano concertos from the Romantic period.", "Piano Concerto (Grieg)\n Edmund Neupert on April 3, 1869 in Copenhagen, with Holger Simon Paulli conducting. Some sources say that Grieg himself, an excellent pianist, was the intended soloist, but he was unable to attend the premiere owing to commitments with an orchestra in Christiania (now Oslo). Among those who did attend the premiere were the Danish composer Niels Gade and the Russian pianist Anton Rubinstein, who provided his own piano for the occasion. Neupert was also the dedicatee of the second edition of the concerto (Rikard Nordraak was the original dedicatee), and James Huneker said that he himself composed the first movement ", "Piano Concerto (Copland)\n The Concerto for Piano and Orchestra is a musical composition by the American composer Aaron Copland. The work was commissioned by the conductor Serge Koussevitzky who was then music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. It was first performed on January 28, 1927, by the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Koussevitzky with the composer himself as the soloist. The piece is dedicated to Copland's patron Alma Morgenthau Wertheim.", "Piano Concerto No. 4 (Ries)\n The Piano Concerto No. 4 in C minor, Op. 115 by Ferdinand Ries was composed in Bonn in 1809 but was not published until 1823 when it was released by both H.A. Probst of Leipzig and Birchall & Cº of London with a dedication to Ignaz Moscheles.", "Piano Concerto (Respighi)\n The Piano Concerto in A minor by Ottorino Respighi is a concerto for piano and orchestra written in 1902 and published in 1941. The work takes around 20 minutes to perform.", "Piano Concerto No. 3 (Rachmaninoff)\n Sergei Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30, was composed in the summer of 1909. The piece was premiered on November 28 of that year in New York City with the composer as soloist, accompanied by the New York Symphony Society under Walter Damrosch. The work often has the reputation of being one of the most technically challenging piano concertos in the standard classical piano repertoire.", "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Liszt)\n Franz Liszt composed his Piano Concerto No. 1 in E major, S.124 over a 26-year period; the main themes date from 1830, while the final version is dated 1849. The concerto consists of four movements and lasts approximately 20 minutes. It premiered in Weimar on February 17, 1855, with Liszt at the piano and Hector Berlioz conducting.", "List of compositions for piano and orchestra\n Piano Concerto in D (1855) ; Adolphe Biarent ; Rapsodie Wallone (1910) ; Boris Blacher ; Piano Concerto No. 1 (1947) ; Piano Concerto No. 2 (In variable metres) (1952) ; Variations on a Theme of Muzio Clementi (1961) ; Howard Blake ; Piano Concerto ; Arthur Bliss ; Piano Concerto in B-flat (1939) ; Ernest Bloch ; Concerto symphonique in B minor (1947-8) ; Scherzo fantastique (1948) ; Felix Blumenfeld ; Allegro de concert in A major, Op. 7 (1889) ; Emil Bohnke ; Concerto in D minor for piano and orchestra, Op. 14 (1925) ; François-Adrien Boieldieu ; ", "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Glazunov)\n Alexander Glazunov composed his Piano Concerto No. 1 in F minor, Opus, 92, in 1911, during his tenure as director of the St. Petersburg Conservatory. The concerto is dedicated to Leopold Godowsky, whom Glazunov had heard on tour in St. Petersburg in 1905.", "Piano Concerto (Massenet)\n Jules Massenet's Piano Concerto is a 1902 work for piano solo and orchestra. It is scored for a typical-sized ensemble of the time. The concerto was performed in 1903 by Louis Diémer at the Conservatoire de Paris. After the premiere, it quickly fell into obscurity and is seldom heard today.", "List of compositions for piano and orchestra\nLuigi Dallapiccola ; Piano Concerto ; Franz Danzi ; Piano Concerto in E-flat major ; Peter Maxwell Davies ; Piano Concerto (1997) ; Claude Debussy ; Printemps, L. 61 (1887), symphonic suite for choir, piano, and orchestra ; Fantaisie, L. 73 (1889–90) ; Arthur De Greef ; Piano Concerto No. 1 in C minor (1914) ; Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat minor (1930) ; Frederick Delius ; Piano Concerto in C minor (1897–1906) ; Peter Dickinson ; Piano Concerto (1984) ; Issay Dobrowen ; Piano Concerto in C sharp minor, Op. 20 (1926) ; Ernő Dohnányi ; Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor, Op. 5 (1897-8) ; Variations on a Nursery Tune, Op. 25 (1914) ; Piano ", "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Tchaikovsky)\n The Piano Concerto No. 1 in B minor, Op. 23, was composed by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky between November 1874 and February 1875. It was revised in the summer of 1879 and again in December 1888. The first version received heavy criticism from Nikolai Rubinstein, Tchaikovsky's desired pianist. Rubinstein later withdrew his accusations and became a fervent champion of the work. It is one of the most popular of Tchaikovsky's compositions and among the best known of all piano concerti.", "Piano Concerto No. 2 (Rachmaninoff)\n The Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18, is a concerto for piano and orchestra composed by Sergei Rachmaninoff between the autumn of 1900 and April 1901. The second and third movements were first performed with the composer as soloist on 2 December 1900. The complete work was premiered, again with the composer as soloist, on 9 November 1901, with his cousin Alexander Siloti conducting. This piece established Rachmaninoff's fame as a concerto composer and is one of his most enduringly popular pieces.", "Piano Concerto No. 24 (Mozart)\n The Piano Concerto No. 24 in C minor, K. 491, is a concerto composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart for keyboard (usually a piano or fortepiano) and orchestra. Mozart composed the concerto in the winter of 1785–1786, finishing it on 24 March 1786, three weeks after completing his Piano Concerto No. 23 in A major. As he intended to perform the work himself, Mozart did not write out the soloist's part in full. The premiere was in early April 1786 at the Burgtheater in Vienna. Chronologically, the work is the twentieth of Mozart's 23 original piano concertos. The work is one of only two minor-key piano concertos that Mozart composed, the other being the No. 20 " ]