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62,111,448 |
Z. v Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform
|
Z. v Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform [2002 IESC 14], [2002]; 2 ILRM 215 is an Irish Supreme Court case where the Court ruled that the absence of an oral hearing need not infringe the right of an applicant for refugee status to natural and constitutional justice.
== Background ==
The Appellant, a 53 years of age, of Russian nationality, arrived in Ireland on the 18th of October 1999 and applied for refugee status with the first named respondent.
The applicant therefore sought different relief based on different grounds including,
The first respondent when considering the Appellant's application to be "manifestly unfounded", failed to do it in accordance with the guidelines and/or directions of the UNHCR in respect with this type of case. However, influenced by the findings of the US Supreme Court in Golberg v. Kelly 397 U.S. 254 Finnegan J. granted the Appellant leave to bring judicial review proceedings on one ground which was failure to provide an oral hearing at the appeal stage. and also referred to the Illegal Immigrants (Trafficking) Bill 1999 and stated that: "Whether, on an application, for leave to apply for judicial review in accordance to section 5 of the Illegal Immigrants (Trafficking) Act 2000 brought in relation to a decision to refuse an application for refugee status on the grounds that the application is manifestly unfounded,
(i) It is therefore appropriate to apply the principles set out in O’Keeffe v An Bord Pleanála [1993] IR 39, in particular having regard to the approach of the UNHCR to manifestly unfounded applications for refugee status: and
(ii) The methods or manner used was manifestly unfounded; procedures were and/or were operated by the Respondents, or any of them, and/or as applied to the Applicant’s application were in breach of the Applicant’s constitutional rights and the requirements of natural and constitutional justice.” that, "The Court cannot interfere with the decision of an administrative decision-making authority merely on the grounds that,
It is satisfied that based on the facts as found it would have raised different interference and conclusions or
Where the court is satisfied that case against the decision made by the authority was much stronger than the case of it." which stated that, " ...in most cases, a decision is quashed for unreasonableness, not because of the extent to which it has departed from accepted moral standards but because it is indefensible for being in the teeth of plain reason and common sense. The test of unreasonableness or irrationality in a judicial review is to consider whether the impugned decision plainly and unambiguously flies in the face of fundamental reason and common sense. Where it does, then the decision-maker should be held to have acted ultra vires." The Court concluded that the applicant's appeal against the Minister's rejection of his application for refugee status must be dismissed.
== Subsequent developments ==
Z. v Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform, James Nicholson sitting as the Appeals Authority, Ireland and Attorney General [2002] IESC 14, [2002] 2 ILRM 215 was later applied in Olawale v Refugee Applications Commissioner & Minister for Justice [2002] IEHC 152
|
[
"Séamus Henchy",
"ultra vires",
"Supreme Court of Ireland"
] |
62,111,452 |
Hassan Hayat
|
Hassan Hayat Khan is a Pakistani actor and singer. He is best known for his role as Imran in ARY Digital's Bhool (2019). Hassan becomes the Peace Ambassador Between Pakistan and India in 2018.
== Life and career ==
After completing his education he started his music and created 8 commercial tracks for television and sung in half of them. His first single was "Beqadraa". In 2019 he made his debut in acting in ARY Digital's television series Bhool opposite Affan Waheed and Saboor Aly.
In 2020, Hayat married actress Sadia Ghaffar.
== Discography ==
== Filmography ==
=== Television ===
|
[
"ARY Digital",
"Karachi",
"Sindh, Pakistan",
"Affan Waheed",
"Pakistani",
"The Asian Age",
"Sadia Ghaffar",
"Saboor Aly",
"Bhool (ARY Digital TV series)"
] |
62,111,454 |
Gabriel Da Parma
|
Gabriel Da Parma or Gabriele di Parma (fl. 1370s) was a pirate captain of Bari who become known for raiding ships on the Adriatic coast. He was from the Carrarese family. In 1391, Da Parma wanted revenge against the Ragusans for stopping his raids in the Adriatic sea. The conflicts continued until 1425.
|
[
"floruit"
] |
62,111,459 |
A v Governor of Arbour Hill Prison
|
In A v Governor of Arbour Hill Prison [2006 IESC 45]; [2006] 4 IR 88; [2006] 2 ILRM 481, the Supreme Court of Ireland ruled that a finding that criminal legislation is unconstitutional need not render existing convictions void.
== Background ==
The applicant was convicted before the Dublin Circuit Court on 15 June 2004 of unlawful carnal knowledge of a girl under the age of consent contrary to section 1(1) of the Criminal Law Act 1935 (the 1935 Act). On 24 November 2004 he was sentenced to 3 years imprisonment. Subsequently, in CC v Ireland, the Supreme Court found that that section was inconsistent with the constitutional rights of the accused since it failed to afford the accused the opportunity to defend a statutory rape charge by pleading that he made a reasonable mistake as to the age of the girl. Accordingly, the section was declared unconstitutional pursuant to Article 50 of the Constitution. Also when interpreting an article as constitutional or unconstitutional, a court must consider that article in light of the whole constitution. The Court thought that A's claims had no persuasive elements. This is because his argument essentially means that if any statute prior to 1937 if declared as unconstitutional in the next decade or more, then every decision under that statute will have no legal effect. So, decisions spanning over a long period of time will suddenly become void. This would not be what the common law system envisaged when creating a limitation on retrospective effect. Also without such limitation, allowing every previous decision to be set aside would be a great injustice to all the victims and against the fundamentals of society. Previous case law which addressed retrospective effect has also upheld the principle that there needs to be limitations on this effect. The Constitution requires that there needs to be a distinction between a declaration of invalidity and retrospective effects of such declarations. A declaration of invalidity should not be applied to all existing previous decisions as this would be disadvantageous to an ordered society, victims of those cases and a coherent legal system. The general principle has always been that a declaration of unconstitutionality will not affect judicial decisions which has already reached a final stage of decision. There can be exceptional situations where an accused argues that such a decision have denied him justice and thus should be deemed as void. However, A's case do not possess any exceptional circumstances hence the general rule should apply.
The Supreme Court overturned the High Court judgement on the basis that A cannot now question the legal validity of his detention when his case already reached a final stage of decision in terms of conviction and punishment. Moreover, he was claiming that his detention was unlawful. He was not looking to re-open his case or appeal against the previously decided judgement. Hence, retrospective effect cannot be applicable in his circumstances as the limitation to such an effect is that it is not germane to finalized judicial decisions.
== Subsequent developments ==
In Ireland, this case reinforced the jus tertii rule:A person who seeks to invalidate a statutory provision must do so by reference to the effect of the provision on his own rights.
|
[
"jus tertii",
"Unlawful carnal knowledge",
"Coat of arms of Ireland",
"Jus tertii",
"Supreme Court of Ireland",
"unlawful carnal knowledge",
"High Court (Ireland)"
] |
62,111,462 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Darî
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was delete. RL0919 (talk) 23:46, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Darî===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Unsourced and couldn't find sources for this tribe Semsurî (talk) 12:30, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of People-related deletion discussions. Semsurî (talk) 12:30, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Ethnic groups-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 12:44, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Turkey-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:28, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Iran-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:28, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Iraq-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:28, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete unable find any sources in any language for this term or for other related terms used in the article. Mccapra (talk) 09:54, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete as WP:Original Research. I am pretty sure the author somehow confused the Dari language as a tribe name. The language page should really be at Darî.4meter4 (talk) 19:14, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"Dari language",
"WP:Original Research",
"Darî"
] |
62,111,465 |
MJELR v Rettinger
|
MJELR v Rettinger [2010 IESC 45], [2010] 3 IR 783, was a case in which the Irish Supreme Court ruled that to resist the application of a European Arrest Warrant on the basis that it would result in treatment contrary to Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), the wanted individual must offer substantial grounds to believe that he or she would be exposed to a real risk of such treatment.
== Background ==
On 23 September 2008 a Regional Judge at the District Court at Krakow issued a European Arrest Warrant for Robert Rettinger in Poland. the appellant must provide "evidence capable of establishing substantial grounds for believing that he would be exposed to a real risk of being subjected to treatment contrary to Article 3 were he to be surrendered", and that, "he will suffer treatment contrary to Article 3, or is it sufficient for him to show that, on the balance of probabilities, there is a real risk that he will suffer such treatment?" Fennelly J. stated that the Court was obliged to refuse an application a European Arrest Warrant if 'there are reasonable grounds for believing that' the person sought would be subjected to 'inhuman or degrading treatment'. The Judge argued that this would be the first time for the Court to consider 'the standard of proof which it and consequently the High Court must apply in European Arrest Warrant cases when a person facing surrender complains of the danger of being subjected, if surrendered, to inhuman or degrading treatment in the issuing Member State'. Fennelly J stated that the High Court judge did not question the appellants right to argue against his surrender when there was a true risk of his rights being breached under the ECHR, and furthermore the existing case law did not address the issue for the Court. Fennelly suggested that the 'entire application should be remitted to the High Court for reconsideration in the light of the appropriate standard of proof, as explained by this Court'.
Conclusion
Both Fennelly J and Denham J, after considering the case, allowed the appeal on the basis that the matter would be remitted to the High Court judge who was requested to apply an appropriate test for considering the risk to the appellant's rights if extradited.
== Subsequent developments ==
Fred Muwema v Facebook Ireland Limited [2018] IECA 104 Mr. Justice Michael Peart referred to this case when the Judge was considering evidence that has to be 'adduced to support the assertion of the real risk of a breach of the constitutional right relied upon'.
|
[
"Adrian Hardiman",
"Irish Supreme Court",
"European Convention on Human Rights",
"Oireachtas",
"Application for release",
"Poland",
"List of Irish Supreme Court cases",
"List of Judges of the High Court (Ireland)",
"Procedural law",
"Human Rights",
"List of Judges of the Supreme Court of Ireland",
"European Arrest Warrant",
"Patrick McCarthy (judge)",
"Coat of arms of Ireland",
"Unlawful detention",
"Supreme Court of Ireland",
"Extradition",
"Susan Denham",
"inhuman or degrading treatment",
"High Court (Ireland)"
] |
62,111,467 |
Category:Episode lists with unformatted story or teleplay credits
|
This category tracks transclusions of that use raw Wikicode for italicizing Story and Teleplay credits instead of using .
|
[] |
62,111,480 |
Anwar Tjokroaminoto Cabinet
|
The Anwar Cabinet () was the fifth cabinet established by the State of Pasundan. It was composed of 11 ministers. Its term of office ran from 11 to 23 January 1950.
==Background==
After the recognition of Indonesia by the Dutch government on 27 December 1949, the previous prime minister Djumhana Wiriaatmadja resigned as the prime minister. Djumhana was replaced by Anwar Tjokroaminoto, the son of the national hero Oemar Said Tjokroaminoto. Initially, after the resignation, the task of forming the new cabinet and the position of the prime minister was given to . Sewaka accepted this offer, but he also insisted that the programs of the cabinet would carry out efforts towards the dissolution of the State of Pasundan. Sewaka's demands were firmly rejected by Wiranatakusumah. The task was therefore given to Anwar Tjokroaminoto. Anwar was given the mandate to form the cabinet by Wiranatakusumah on 7 January 1950. He finished forming his cabinet on 9 January 1950, and the cabinet was installed on 11 January 1950.
There were several changes regarding to the nomenclature of the ministries in the Anwar Cabinet. There were two new ministries, the Ministry of Religious Affairs and the Ministry of Enlightenment.
After the resignation of Wiranatakusumah, the central government of the United States of Indonesia (RUSI) ordered Sewaka as the commissar of the RUSI for the State of Pasundan on 4 February 1950. The handover of the authority from Wiranatakusumah to Sewaka occurred on 10 February 1950. With the appointment of Sewaka, the State of Pasundan was under direct control of the United States of Indonesia.
|
[
"Oemar Said Tjokroaminoto",
"Djerman Prawirawinata",
"APRA coup d'état",
"Ministry of Social Affairs (Pasundan)",
"Oesman Joedakoesoemah",
"Natsir Cabinet",
"Ministry of Economy (Pasundan)",
"Soeriakartalegawa",
"Bandung",
"Ministry of Home Affairs (Pasundan)",
"United States of Indonesia",
"Sjafei Wirakusumah",
"P. J. Gerke",
"Barnas Wiratanuningrat",
"Republic of Indonesia",
"Ahmad Hassan (Indonesian politician)",
"Third Djumhana Cabinet",
"Ministry of Education (Pasundan)",
"Ministry of Finance (Pasundan)",
"Ministry of Transportation and Irrigation (Pasundan)",
"Ministry of Justice (Pasundan)",
"Wiranatakusumah V",
"Anwar Tjokroaminoto",
"Suradiradja",
"Ministry of Health (Pasundan)",
"Prime Minister of Pasundan",
"State of Pasundan",
"Semarang",
"Raden Adipati Aria Muharam Wiranatakusumah",
"Djundjunan Setiakusuma"
] |
62,111,486 |
Category:Military personnel who died by suicide by nationality
|
[] |
|
62,111,502 |
Really Love (film)
|
Really Love is a 2020 American romantic drama film directed by Angel Kristi Williams and co-written with Felicia Pride. The film is set in Washington, D.C., and centers the romance between a struggling artist (Kofi Siriboe) and an ambitious law student (Yootha Wong-Loi-Sing). Really Love debuted in October 2020 at AFI Film Festival. It received mainly positive critical reception and leads Wong-Loi-Sing and Siriboe received a Special Jury Recognition for Acting at South by Southwest.
==Plot==
"Set in a gentrifying Washington, D.C., a rising Black painter tries to break into a competitive art world, while balancing a whirlwind romance he never expected."
==Cast==
Kofi Siriboe as Isaiah Maxwell, a struggling artist
Yootha Wong-Loi-Sing as Stevie Richmond, an ambitious law student
Blair Underwood as Jerome Richmond, Stevie's Father
Uzo Aduba as Chenai Hungwe
Mack Wilds as Nick Wright, Isaiah's friend since childhood
Naturi Naughton as Sicily Richmond, Stevie's cousin
Suzzanne Douglas as Anne Richmond, Stevie's mother
Michael Ealy as Yusef Davis, Isaiah's colleague
Jade Eshete as Mecca Gerima
GoldLink as himself
== Production ==
Really Love is director Angel Kristi Williams' feature film debut and Felicia Pride's debut screenplay.
Williams stated that she was inspired by films including In the Mood For Love, Blue Valentine, and Love Jones. It was produced and financed by Homegrown Pictures and Charles D. King's production company MACRO. Uzo Aduba, Naturi Naughton, Tristan Wilds, Yootha Wong-Loi-Sing, and Jade Eshete were announced as cast members on July 26, 2018. Michael Ealy was announced on July 31, 2018. The film is one of the last projects completed by Suzzanne Douglas prior to her death in 2021. Really Love began streaming on Netflix on August 25, 2021.
== Soundtrack ==
The official soundtrack with an original jazz score composed by Khari Mateen was released on September 17, 2021. Screenwriter Felicia Pride said the soundtrack's ambiance was influenced by tracks like "Sumthin Sumthin (Mellosmoothe)" by Maxwell from the film Love Jones.
In a review for Film Threat, Alex Saveliev compared the film to If Beale Street Could Talk and praised it as a "gentle, poignant examination of two young people at the dawn of self-discovery". In a similarly positive review, Robert Daniels wrote for The Playlist, "“Really Love” is a timeless black romance. Kristi Williams is an assured new voice already nestling herself inside audiences’ hearts."
== Awards and nominations ==
=== 2020 SXSW ===
Nominee, Grand Jury Award for Narrative Feature – Angel Kristi Williams
Winners, Special Jury Recognition for Acting – Yootha Wong-Loi-Sing and Kofi Siriboe
|
[
"Kamasi Washington",
"Suzzanne Douglas",
"In the Mood for Love",
"Blue Valentine (film)",
"Washington, D.C.",
"COVID-19 pandemic",
"Rotten Tomatoes",
"Ari Lennox",
"Blair Underwood",
"Naturi Naughton",
"Jade Eshete",
"Mel Jones",
"If Beale Street Could Talk (film)",
"GoldLink",
"American Film Institute Awards",
"Love Jones (film)",
"Christian Scott (musician)",
"Sxsw",
"romantic drama",
"Baltimore",
"Felicia Pride",
"Michael Ealy",
"AFI Film Festival",
"Netflix",
"Film Threat",
"Tristan Wilds",
"Baltimore Museum of Art",
"Maxwell (musician)",
"Uzo Aduba",
"Parkway Theatre (Baltimore)",
"South by Southwest",
"Park Heights, Baltimore",
"Kofi Siriboe",
"American Film Institute",
"Angel Kristi Williams",
"Baltimore School for the Arts"
] |
62,111,503 |
File:Montu Ni Bittu film poster.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,111,508 |
Category:Ptolemaic navy
|
[] |
|
62,111,516 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Plush Hall Films
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was Speedy delete, non-admin closure. Ten Pound Hammer • (What did I screw up now?) 17:02, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Plush Hall Films===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
fails WP:GNG Wakowako (talk) 12:43, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
----
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
|
[
"WP:GNG",
"Plush Hall Films"
] |
62,111,532 |
Category:Achaemenid navy
|
[] |
|
62,111,540 |
Hezbollah–Israel conflict
|
Hezbollah, a Shia Islamist political party and militant organization that was established in Lebanon in 1985, has been involved in a long-running conflict with Israel as part of the Iran–Israel proxy conflict and the Israeli–Lebanese conflict.
==History==
The two sides' first engagement occurred during the Lebanese Civil War, as Iran became increasingly involved in Lebanon's internal affairs. With funding from the Iranian government and training and supervision from Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Hezbollah was built up in Syrian-occupied Lebanon by various religious clerics amidst the 1982 Lebanon War, primarily as a Khomeinist force opposed to the Free Lebanon State and the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon.
Hezbollah controls southern Lebanon and is supported and funded by Iran and serves as their proxy in regional wars. From the inception of Hezbollah to the present the establishment of a Palestinian state and the return of Palestinian refugees to what became Israel has been a primary goal for Hezbollah. Hezbollah not only opposes the government and policies of the State of Israel, but also each and every Jewish civilian who lives in Israel. Its 1985 manifesto reportedly states "our struggle will end only when this entity [Israel] is obliterated. We recognize no treaty with it, no ceasefire, and no peace agreements."
==Timeline==
Engagements between Israel and Hezbollah are a part of the wider Iran–Israel proxy conflict, including:
South Lebanon conflict (1985–2000), in which Hezbollah was the primary force opposing Israel and the South Lebanon Army
2000–2006 Shebaa Farms conflict, a low-level border conflict between Hezbollah and Israel
2006 Lebanon War, a military conflict between Hezbollah and Israel
January 2015 Mazraat Amal incident and January 2015 Shebaa Farms incident between Hezbollah and Israel
Israeli–Syrian ceasefire line incidents during the Syrian civil war
Iran–Israel conflict during the Syrian civil war
Operation Northern Shield
2023 Israel–Lebanon shellings
Israel–Hezbollah conflict (2023–present)
2024 Israeli invasion of Lebanon
|
[
"Free Lebanon State",
"Israeli occupation of Southern Lebanon",
"Operation Northern Shield",
"Iran–Israel proxy conflict",
"Khomeinism",
"2024 Israeli invasion of Lebanon",
"Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps",
"Syrian occupation of Lebanon",
"2006 Lebanon War",
"January 2015 Shebaa Farms incident",
"2023 Israel–Lebanon shellings",
"Israel–Hezbollah conflict (2023–present)",
"Iran–Israel conflict during the Syrian civil war",
"1982 Lebanon War",
"2000–2006 Shebaa Farms conflict",
"January 2015 Mazraat Amal incident",
"Iran",
"Lebanon",
"Israeli invasion of Lebanon (2024–present)",
"Lebanon War (disambiguation)",
"Islamist Shi'ism",
"Israel",
"Israeli–Lebanese conflict",
"Syrian War (disambiguation)",
"The New York Review of Books",
"Lebanese Civil War",
"South Lebanon conflict (1985–2000)",
"Israeli–Syrian ceasefire line incidents during the Syrian civil war",
"Southern Lebanon",
"List of rocket attacks from Lebanon on Israel",
"Hezbollah"
] |
62,111,542 |
Category:Kishinev pogrom
|
[] |
|
62,111,548 |
AMS v Minister for Justice and Equality
|
Ams v Minister for Justice and Equality, [2015] 1 ILRM 170; [2014] IESC 65, was an Irish Supreme Court case where the Court held that Section 18 (4) of the Refugee Act 1996 allowed the Minister of Justice to assess the potential financial strain that a refugee's dependents would place on the State while deciding on an application for entry.
== Background ==
Irish law allows the possibility of family reunification cases. A family member of a refugee in Ireland may apply to this provision. There are two classes of members identified by legislation: Section 18 (4) of the Refugee Act 1996. Section 18(3) states that automatic entitlement to the reunification is granted to spouses, unmarried minors and parents of minor refugees. This case is an appeal of that decision, by the Appellant (the Minister).
It was established that the Mr. S's mother and sister were financially dependent on Mr. S. However, due to Mr.S's only income being his social welfare payments the Minister deemed that the reunification would be a financial burden to the State.
=== Issues ===
The first issue relevant to this appeal concerns the determination of the proper interpretation of Section 18 of the Refugee Act 1996. The second issue is in regards to the question of proportionality. The principle of proportionality must have been applied by the Minister in his refusing the family reunification of Mr. S's family members. The court held it was not within the Ministers' power to decide whether a reunification would result in a financial burden on the State: "However, again for the reasons set out in this judgment, I am satisfied that MacEochaidh J. was correct to conclude that the decision of the Minister to refuse family reunification in respect of the mother and the minor sister of Mr. S was disproportionate on the facts of this case. No wider financial consequences other than those applicable to just those persons were taken into account." which decided that the Minister has the power to deny an application where the applicant is found to not have future means to support his dependants, without State intervention. This judgement established that each case must be assessed independently.
|
[
"Judicial review",
"hypertension",
"Asylum seeker",
"Immigration",
"Coat of arms of Ireland",
"Addis Ababa",
"dementia",
"Supreme Court of Ireland",
"chronic liver disease",
"rheumatism",
"Mogadishu",
"Ethiopia",
"the Refugee Act 1996",
"Depression (mood)"
] |
62,111,549 |
Dreamboys
|
Dreamboys is a male revue brand with touring theatre shows and nightclub residencies. It was first created by Bari Bacco who no longer is associated to the present company. Dreamboys is known for its male striptease performances and for its dancers' distinctive toned physiques. The brand currently perform over 600 shows per annum, with over 100 different performers and approximately 250,000 guests in attendance.
== Overview ==
Established in 1987 by Bari Bacco, Dreamboys was the first all-male stripping troupe in the UK. Bacco did not allow the Dreamboys to go fully nude in shows due to restrictions imposed by Westminster City Council. "The G-String is the dividing line between Obscenity and Eroticism, Its all what you don't see, not what you do see? Pictures in the mind that keeps the viewer coming back for more".
The Dreamboys first launched at the Peter Stringfellows venue, the London Hippodrome, to an audience of 2000 women. After the success of the show Dreamboys took up permanent residency at Jaquelines nightclub in Wardour St Soho London. Many celebrities visited the show in Soho including Cleo Rocos, Bananarama. The popularity of the Dreamboys followed through to hundreds of performances on television with major stars - Elton, Cliff, Dame Edna, Pamela Anderson, Amy Winehouse and TV charity shows 'Children in Need'. Soon after major tours around the world were booked including Russia, Dubai, Germany, Malta, Denmark, Sweden, Cyprus, Turkey, Greece. Billionaire Philip Green booked the Dreamboys for his 50th Birthday Party in Cyprus. The Dreamboys dressed in Roman Togas performed for the guests along with Rod Stewart, Tom Jones, Demis Roussos, George Benson, Earth, Wind & Fire. The Grand Order of Lady Water Ratlings booked the Dreamboys to perform at the Grosvenor House Hotel on Londons Park Lane, for a host of celebrity stars. The evening was compered by Barbra Windsor who introduced the boys performance by saying "Who needs any American Strippers, when we have our own fabulous Dreamboys!". The pinnacle of their showbiz career was a presentation to PRINCESS DIANA and dance sequences with the SPICEGIRLS in the film 'SPICEWORLD'.
As of 2011, Bari Bacco is no longer associated with the Dreamboys.
Each year, the group releases an annual calendar featuring the current Dreamboys.
==Touring show==
The Dreamboys produce a touring theatre show and have performed in the UK and internationally. The troupe tour the UK with a theatre show combining high-energy dance routines with male striptease and audience participation. As of 2017 the lead dancer and choreographer has been Jordan Darrell, a former backing dancer for Rita Ora. Various items of merchandise are produced in association with the touring show, including clothing, homewares, theatre programs and calendars.
In 2015 the management of Dreamboys commented that the depiction of male strip shows in Magic Mike XXL was a "public liability claim waiting to happen".
In 2018, the Dreamboys pushed the Guild Hall in Preston into administration, in order to secure funds owed to them by the venue.
==Nightclub Residencies==
The Dreamboys also perform in resident nightclubs across the UK. In 2018, Dreamboys was involved in a lawsuit over cancelled hen party bookings in Cardiff which they claim “tarnished” their reputation.
==Notable performers, dancers and hosts==
Gaz Beadle, reality television personality known for appearing in the MTV reality series Geordie Shore & Ex on the Beach.
Scotty T, reality television personality known for appearing in the MTV reality series Geordie Shore & Celebrity Big Brother.
Rogan O'Connor, reality television personality known for appearing on MTV's Ex on the Beach.
Jake Quickenden, English singer, reality television personality and contestant on The X Factor in 2012 and 2014, I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! and Dancing on Ice.
Dan Osborne, former cast member of The Only Way Is Essex.
Zac Smith, contestant on The Bridge, British version of .
Michael Griffiths, reality television personality known for appearing on Love Island and MTV's Ex on the Beach.
Jordan Darrell, choreographer and judge on The Real Dirty Dancing.
==In popular culture==
In 1991, the Dreamboys were invited to play gods in a scene with the British Youth Opera and Ballet at Whitehall Palace for a charity gala in celebration of Princess Diana's birthday. Princess Diana met the boys after the show and is reported to have said 'You aren't wearing very much tonight.' One of the boys replied 'You should see us in our show'.
In 1997, the Dreamboys featured in Spice World (film), a 1997 British musical comedy film starring pop girl group the Spice Girls who all play themselves.
In 1988 the Sun newspaper ran a double-page spread featuring a line-up of The Dreamboys. It was headlined "Who's got the best bot in Britain?" and called on readers to phone in with their preferences.
In 2003 the British model Nell McAndrew launched the new Daily Play lottery game from Camelot with the help of The Dreamboys.
In 2013 the Dreamboys were featured in an hour-long documentary special on Channel 4 titled "Confessions of a Male Stripper".
In 2020 the Dreamboys were part of a week-long documentary series on Channel 5 (British TV channel) titled "Adults Only" exploring the lives of those with adult professions.
In 2020 a Love Island contestant turned Dreamboys dancer, was featured in a BBC documentary titled "Life after Reality TV" exploring the good and the bad of the reality TV industry.
|
[
"reality television",
"Russia",
"Erotic",
"Magic Mike XXL",
"Celebrity Big Brother (British TV series)",
"Earth, Wind & Fire",
"Channel 5 (British TV channel)",
"I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!",
"The Only Way Is Essex",
"Love Island (franchise)",
"Denmark",
"Pamela Anderson",
"Grosvenor House Hotel",
"El Puente (TV series)",
"Channel 4",
"Jake Quickenden",
"Gaz Beadle",
"Love Island (2015 TV series, series 5)",
"Dan Osborne",
"The X Factor (British TV series)",
"Spice World (film)",
"Scotty T",
"Dancing on Ice",
"United Kingdom",
"Soho",
"Geordie Shore",
"Nell McAndrew",
"Rita Ora",
"The Real Dirty Dancing",
"BBC",
"Ex on the Beach (British TV series)",
"striptease"
] |
62,111,552 |
Doherty v Reynolds and St. James's Hospital Board
|
Doherty v Reynolds and St. James's Hospital Board [2004] IESC 42 was a case of medical negligence in which the Supreme Court of Ireland confirmed that, under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, where an injury would not be expected to occur without negligence in the management of something, negligence on the part of those charged with the thing's management may be presumed from the mere fact of injury.
== Background ==
Mr Doherty was from County Galway and prior to the proceedings had been an electrician and married with three children. He had started to complain of gastric discomfort by way of heartburn and acid reflux. He underwent a procedure to have resolved what had been established as "a loose valve at the end of the oesophagus." After surgery, Mr. Doherty awoke and became aware of pain in his right shoulder. He had made inquiries with the nurse as to pain relief, which in his evidence to the court was not effective. He had mentioned to both a doctor and nurse prior to his discharge of his considerable pain. Later attending his own GP regarding the same complaint he was admitted to Beaumont Hospital, which in turn "had raised a query with the surgeon." (in St. James'). One possibility it was contended was that his arm may have motioned off the table, but this was something with which the two neurologists gave conflicting reasons.
When evidence came before the court, the nurses who had been working during the time of the Plaintiff's admission did give evidence on the matter. However, "they were giving evidence seven years after the event"
== Holding of the Supreme Court ==
The Court was mindful that "the fact that the staff of the hospital cannot, at a particular remove of time, give honest evidence that they recall how a particular patient was dealt with is, of course, a fact to which the court must have regard". In recognizing the work of the surgeon in this instance the court referenced Stuart-Smith L.J. in Delaney v Southmead Health Authority 26 BLMR 111 where he stated: "in the case of a doctor or an anaesthetist who adopts a regular practice, very often that is all he can say unless there is some reason why he should adopt a different process in a particular case...". The Court ruled that the trial judge had erred in assuming that because the hospital staff were unable to recall the specific details of what transpired during the operation itself, they were unable to discharge the burden of proof resting on them of establishing that they had not been negligent. The Court therefore ordered a new trial.
|
[
"heartburn",
"Coat of arms of Ireland",
"oesophagus",
"Res ipsa loquitur",
"Supreme Court of Ireland",
"General practitioner",
"Gastroesophageal reflux disease",
"Medical malpractice",
"res ipsa loquitur",
"County Galway",
"St. James's Hospital",
"Beaumont Hospital, Dublin"
] |
62,111,559 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/retargetlinks.com
|
== Links ==
retargetlinks.com resolves to [//104.18.54.201 104.18.54.201]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 5 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,111,581 |
Augustus Anwyl-Passingham
|
Colonel Augustus Mervyn Owen Anwyl Anwyl-Passingham CBE DL JP (31 August 1880 – 22 November 1955) was a British soldier, recruiting officer and Territorial Army organiser.
== Early life and family ==
Born in 1880 in Dover, Anwyl-Passingham belonged to a family of Anglo-Welsh gentry. He was the second and youngest son of Major Robert Townshend Passingham, JP, DL (1843–1893), of Bala, Merionethshire, and his wife Lucy Emma (d. 1909), eldest daughter of Thomas Jeffreys Badger of Kingsland, Shropshire. In 1888, his father assumed the additional name of Anwyl. His elder brother was the soldier Robert Townshend Anwyl-Passingham, OBE (1867–1926), and two of his sisters married Italian noblemen.
== Career ==
=== Military ===
Anwyl-Passingham was educated at Dover College, before joining The Middlesex Regiment in 1899 as a second lieutenant; he served in the Second Boer War (1901–02),
In January 1916, he was appointed a staff captain in the War Office with the temporary rank of major; he was promoted to the full rank in July 1916, and in September he was appointed an assistant inspector of registration and recruiting in the War Office. He was made a deputy director of recruiting with responsibility for Wales and was promoted to temporary colonel in August 1917; he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1918 New Year Honours for his services.
Anwyl-Passingham left that post and the temporary rank in May 1918, and was "recalled to the colours". According to his obituary in The Times, he served in Italy and was mentioned in dispatches.
=== Retirement and later life ===
In 1924, Anwyl-Passingham became secretary of the Middlesex Territorial Army and Air Force Association, serving until 1945. He died on November 22, 1955.
|
[
"Shropshire",
"Justice of the peace",
"The Times",
"Colonel (United Kingdom)",
"staff captain",
"Captain (United Kingdom)",
"World War I",
"Upper Silesia",
"Hadejia",
"Robert Townshend Anwyl-Passingham",
"Poland",
"second lieutenant",
"colonel",
"The Middlesex Regiment",
"deputy lieutenant",
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"Italy",
"lieutenant",
"temporary rank",
"Bala, Gwynedd",
"Deputy lieutenant",
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"Wales",
"Kingsland, Shropshire",
"Nigeria",
"Middlesex Territorial Army and Air Force Association",
"1942 New Year Honours",
"Major (rank)",
"London",
"Dover College",
"Commander of the Order of the British Empire",
"Second Boer War",
"Middlesex",
"Dover",
"United Kingdom",
"Sokoto (city)",
"Royal West African Frontier Force",
"iarchive:visitationofengl18howa/page/64",
"Belfast riots",
"mentioned in dispatches",
"High Sheriff of Middlesex",
"Officer of the Order of the British Empire",
"1918 New Year Honours (OBE)"
] |
62,111,598 |
Template:Jair Bolsonaro sidebar
|
[
"President of Brazil",
"Pension reform in Brazil",
"2022 Brazilian general election",
"Michelle Bolsonaro",
"Carlos Bolsonaro",
"Attempted assassination of Jair Bolsonaro",
"2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires",
"Jair Bolsonaro 2022 presidential campaign",
"Flávio Bolsonaro",
"2021 Brazilian military crisis",
"COVID-19 CPI",
"Inauguration of Jair Bolsonaro",
"Auxílio Brasil",
"Ele Não movement",
"Eduardo Bolsonaro",
"List of international presidential trips made by Jair Bolsonaro",
"Jair Bolsonaro 2018 presidential campaign",
"Bolsominion",
"commons:Category:Jair Bolsonaro",
"2023 Brazilian Congress attack",
"Ineligibility of Jair Bolsonaro",
"Covaxgate",
"COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil",
"Presidency of Jair Bolsonaro",
"2021 Brazilian protests",
"Cabinet of Jair Bolsonaro",
"Jair Bolsonaro",
"2018 Brazilian general election",
"Moro x Bolsonaro Case",
"Opinion polling on the Jair Bolsonaro presidency",
"European Union–Mercosur free trade agreement"
] |
|
62,111,600 |
Uncertain States
|
Uncertain States (UCS) is a British lens-based artists' project that publishes and distributes a free quarterly broadsheet newspaper. UCS, founded in 2009 by Fiona Yaron-Field, David George and Spencer Rowell, also hold group photography exhibitions.
Uncertain States is distributed free of charge at UK art galleries and museums including the Turner Contemporary, Tate Britain, Victoria and Albert Museum, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Ikon Gallery, and Open Eye Gallery.
In 2016 UCS inspired the formation of a similar Scandinavian project, Uncertain States Scandinavia.
==Exhibitions==
The Bank Gallery, November 2014. Including work by Cat Steven, Richard Sawdon-Smith, Radoslav Daskalov, David George, Ania Dabrowska, Karl Ohiri, Fiona Yaron-Field and Richard Ansett.
Four Corners Gallery, October 2015. Including work by Julia Fullerton-Batten, Zoe Childerley, Jolanta Dolewska, Nigel Grimmer, Flore Gardner, David Severn, Rosy Martin, Simon Brann Thorpe and Karolina Lebek.
Mile End Arts Pavilion, November 2016. Including work by Sarah Amy Fishlock.
Safehouse 1 as part of Peckham 24, May 2017. Curated by Zelda Cheatle, including work by Mark Aitken, David George, Jonty Sale, and Fiona Yaron-Field.
Photofusion Photography Centre, March 2019.
|
[
"Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art",
"Richard Ansett",
"Spencer Rowell",
"Sarah Amy Fishlock",
"Nordic Light Festival of Photography",
"Zelda Cheatle",
"Victoria and Albert Museum",
"Karl Ohiri",
"The Guardian",
"Turner Contemporary",
"Tate Britain",
"Four Corners Gallery",
"Ikon Gallery",
"Karolina Lebek",
"The Independent",
"Open Eye Gallery",
"Julia Fullerton-Batten",
"British Journal of Photography"
] |
62,111,607 |
Morton A. Cheesman House
|
The Morton A. Cheesman House, at 2320 Walker Lane in what is now Holladay, Utah, was built in 1912–13. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
|
[
"Ware & Treganza",
"Ware and Treganza",
"Walter Ware",
"William S. Hebbard",
"National Park Service",
"American Craftsman architecture",
"Holladay, Utah",
"Irving Gill",
"National Register of Historic Places",
"Knight–Mangum House",
"Alberto O. Treganza"
] |
62,111,610 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Herki
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was keep. (non-admin closure) Natg 19 (talk) 07:06, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Herki===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Unsourced for about a decade Semsurî (talk) 13:05, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Ethnic groups-related deletion discussions. Semsurî (talk) 13:05, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep added a encyclopedic reference found on the German WP, subject seems noteworthy enough to me. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Initramfs (talk • contribs) 13:38, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep added refs. There are sufficient in English without recourse to other languages. Mccapra (talk) 20:31, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Iran-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:31, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Iraq-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:31, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep, meets WP:GNG, thanks to above editors for improving article with sourced information. Coolabahapple (talk) 01:59, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:GNG",
"Herki"
] |
62,111,617 |
Module:Percentage
|
--
-- This module implements Template:Percentage
--
local p = {}
local math_module = require( "Module:Math" )
local precision = math_module._precision
local sortkey = require( "Module:Sortkey" )
local function rnd(num, digits)
-- This function implements
return math_module._precision_format(tostring(num), digits)
end
local function oom(num)
-- This function implements
return math_module._order(tostring(num))
end
function _nonscinote(num)
-- This function undoes scientific notation
if mw.ustring.match(num or '', '^%s*(%d)%.(%d+)]*>×10([%-−]*)(%d)%s*$') then
local a,b,c,d = mw.ustring.match(num or '', '^%s*(%d)%.(%d+)]*>×10([%-−]*)(%d)%s*$')
d = tonumber(d) or 1
if c ~= '' then
return '0.' .. mw.ustring.rep('0', d - 1) .. a .. b
else
return a .. mw.ustring.sub(b .. mw.ustring.rep('0', d ), 1, d)
end
end
return num
end
local function fmtout(num,snote)
if snote then
return _nonscinote(num)
else
return num
end
end
function _percentage(n1, n2, prec, suffix, pad, sigfig, sn)
local pct = 100*n1/n2
skey = ''
-- prec = math.floor(prec)
if sigfig ~= '' then
if pct ~= 0 then
return skey .. fmtout(rnd(pct, tonumber(sigfig) - oom(pct) - 1), sn) .. suffix
else
return skey .. fmtout(rnd(pct, tonumber(sigfig) - 3), sn) .. suffix
end
end
if pad ~= '' then
return skey .. fmtout(rnd(pct, prec), sn) .. suffix
end
prec = (prec < 0) and 0 or prec
if pct ~= 0 then
pct = ((pct < 0) and -1 or 1)*math.floor(math.abs(pct * 10^prec) + 0.5) / 10^prec
end
return skey .. fmtout(pct, sn) .. suffix
end
function p.main(frame)
local args = frame.args[1] and frame.args or frame:getParent().args
local yesno = require('Module:Yesno')
return _percentage(
tonumber(args[1]) or 0,
tonumber(args[2]) or 100,
tonumber(args[3]) or tonumber(args['pad']) or 0,
args['%'] or '%', args['pad'] or '',
args['sigfig'] or '',
yesno(args['nonscinote'] or 'no')
)
end
return p
|
[] |
62,111,626 |
Karl Schneider (art director)
|
Karl Schneider (1916 – 1996) was a German art director. He was active in East German cinema from 1949 onwards, at the state-controlled Babelsberg Studios, but later worked in the West.
==Selected filmography==
The Blue Swords (1949)
Quartet of Five (1949)
The Benthin Family (1950)
The Axe of Wandsbek (1951)
The Empress of China (1953)
Der Teufel vom Mühlenberg (1955)
Les Misérables (1958)
Peter Voss, Thief of Millions (1958)
Every Day Isn't Sunday (1959)
Hot Pavements of Cologne (1967)
Our Doctor is the Best (1969)
Count Dracula (1970)
|
[
"Germany",
"Daun",
"The Empress of China (film)",
"German Empire",
"Hot Pavements of Cologne",
"The Axe of Wandsbek (1951 film)",
"Der Teufel vom Mühlenberg",
"Count Dracula (1970 film)",
"art director",
"Quartet of Five",
"Peter Voss, Thief of Millions (1958 film)",
"Babelsberg Studios",
"Our Doctor is the Best",
"The Benthin Family",
"Berlin",
"East German",
"The Blue Swords",
"Every Day Isn't Sunday (1959 film)",
"Les Misérables (1958 film)"
] |
62,111,631 |
Template:Did you know nominations/Judith (Matthus)
|
DES (talk)DESiegel Contribs 22:08, 27 October 2019 (UTC)DESiegel Contribs 22:07, 27 October 2019 (UTC)|}}
|
[
"Siegfried Matthus",
"Deutscher Fernsehfunk",
"Wikipedia talk:Did you know",
"Judith (Matthus)",
"{{TALKPAGENAME}}",
"Komische Oper Berlin",
"baritone",
"Talk:{{SUBPAGENAME}}",
"Harry Kupfer",
"Semperoper",
"WP:AGF"
] |
62,111,641 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Mirawdale
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was no consensus. SoWhy 09:01, 11 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Mirawdale===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Only reference used is unattainable and almost no information available on Google (other than http://www.mesop.de/tribal-power-making-comeback-in-iraqi-kurdistan-overriding-democracy-law/ which only mentions the tribe once). Semsurî (talk) 13:11, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Ethnic groups-related deletion discussions. Semsurî (talk) 13:11, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Iran-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:34, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Iraq-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:34, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment, have found this "Qaladze has a population of approximately 70,000 people who belong primarily to the Mirawdale tribe." from page 2 of Office of the Special Inspector General For Iraq Reconstruction - Abattoir (Slaughterhouse) in Qaladze Sulaymaniyah, Iraq (i note that the creator of this article also started teh Qaladze article), Mirawdale also have(?) a Library of Congress Subject Heading - (450 UF Mirawdale (Kurdish tribe)), people identify themselves as "Mirawdale" (here and here), and Kamal Mirawdily, but more may be needed? Coolabahapple (talk) 01:38, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Natg 19 (talk) 07:06, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment and a snippet here. Mccapra (talk) 00:23, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, North America1000 18:27, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
Weak keep. It's a people group acknowledged by the United States government. That's enough to have an article. If we delete it, that's tantamount to participating in erasure.4meter4 (talk) 03:52, 11 November 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"Qaladze",
"Kamal Mirawdily",
"Mirawdale"
] |
62,111,654 |
Gericke
|
Gericke is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Arne Gericke (born 1964), German politician
Carla Gericke (born 1972), American writer, activist, and former lawyer born in South Africa
Hans Gericke (1912–2014), German architect and urban planner
Helmuth Gericke (1909–2007), German mathematician
Hermann Gericke (born 1931), Swiss swimmer
Lisa Sophie Gericke (born 1995), German bobsledder
Lothar Gericke (born 1950), German swimmer
Michael Gericke (born 1956), American graphic designer
Otto von Guericke (1602–1686), German scientist, inventor and politician whose name was spelled "Gericke" until 1666
Samuel Theodor Gericke (1665–1730), German painter
Shane Gericke, American novelist
Walter Gericke (1907–1991), German paratroop officer in the Luftwaffe of Nazi Germany
Wilhelm Gericke (1845–1925), Austrian-born conductor and composer
|
[
"Walter Gericke",
"Shane Gericke",
"Wilhelm Gericke",
"Hans Gericke",
"Helmuth Gericke",
"Hermann Gericke",
"Lothar Gericke",
"Michael Gericke",
"Otto von Guericke",
"Carla Gericke",
"Arne Gericke",
"Lisa Sophie Gericke",
"Samuel Theodor Gericke"
] |
62,111,665 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Loop (concept)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was Speedy delete, non-admin closure. Ten Pound Hammer • (What did I screw up now?) 17:02, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Loop (concept)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
"About us"/promo tone, appears to fail WP:NCORP/WP:GNG - no significant coverage in external sources (excluding the subject-owned sources, all of the sources I checked were tangential mention of the company or owner in a list of awards and were likely submitted by the subject). Wasn't able to do a thorough BEFORE search, since there's more than one startup with this name and it's a common noun. creffett (talk) 13:15, 20 October 2019 (UTC) creffett (talk) 13:15, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Business-related deletion discussions. creffett (talk) 13:15, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Technology-related deletion discussions. creffett (talk) 13:15, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Israel-related deletion discussions. creffett (talk) 13:15, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete Very promotional and reads like an attempt to use Wikipedia as a web host, speaking on behalf of Loop, speaking of what "Loop wants", "Loop's vision", what "Loop believes". Even titling it with the disambiguator "(concept)" comes off as a marketing touch, given that the text places it as, alternately, a movement and an incubator. Largoplazo (talk) 13:21, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Speedy delete per WP:G11. I see the article has already been tagged with this, but I am lodging my support for a speedy deletion here. Dreamy Jazz 🎷 talk to me | my contributions 14:19, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
----
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
|
[
"Loop (concept)",
"WP:GNG",
"WP:G11",
"WP:NCORP"
] |
62,111,667 |
Sikorsky Raider X
|
The Sikorsky Raider X (stylized in all-caps as RAIDER X) (Sikorsky S-102) is a compound helicopter concept with two coaxial rotors and a single pusher propeller, designed by the Sikorsky Aircraft division of Lockheed Martin for the United States Army Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft (FARA) program. The Raider X concept was announced in October 2019. In March 2020, the Army selected the Raider X and the Bell 360 Invictus from a field of five design concept candidates. The Raider X and 360 Invictus concepts were to be built as flying prototypes for a competition scheduled for 2023. The FARA program was cancelled in 2024.
==Development==
Contracts were awarded in April 2019 to develop concept design candidates for FARA; five different teams were selected, including Sikorsky.
Sikorsky presented the Raider X concept candidate at the annual meeting of the Association of the United States Army on October 14, 2019. The Raider X concept was derived from the earlier Sikorsky S-97 Raider, which had been developed for the Army's Armed Aerial Scout program; the S-97 was in turn developed from the Sikorsky X2 prototype compound coaxial helicopter. A larger Sikorsky–Boeing SB-1 Defiant was also developed from the X2 under the Army's Future Vertical Lift program to create a joint multi-role rotorcraft; the SB-1 was a candidate for the Future Long Range Assault Aircraft program. The Sikorsky compound helicopter designs all use coaxial rigid rotors and a pusher propeller, which Sikorsky has collectively named "X2 Technology".
On March 25, 2020, the Army selected the Raider X and Bell 360 Invictus concept design candidates to proceed to an eventual flight competition; flying prototypes of each candidate design will be constructed, followed by test flights in 2022 leading up to a competitive flying demonstration no later than fall 2023. Sikorsky had already begun construction of its Raider X prototype by February 2020.
The US Army is cancelling its next generation Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft (FARA) program, service officials announced on 8 February 2024, taking a potential multi-billion-dollar contract off the table and throwing the service’s long-term aviation plans into doubt.
Raider X was powered up in April 2024, but Sikorsky has no plans for flights.
==Design==
The Raider X, as required by FARA program specifications, is designed to use a single General Electric T901 engine. The GE T901 was developed under the Army's Improved Turbine Engine Program as the new engine for existing and future Army rotorcraft. Based on S-97 and X2 performance, Raider X is expected to have a maximum speed exceeding with a service ceiling greater than . Swift Engineering will design and build the fuselage.
The cockpit uses side-by-side seats instead of the tandem seating typical of American attack helicopters; internal weapons and sensors are mounted using a modular system, in accordance with FARA specifications, to anticipate future upgrades and obsolescence.
==Specifications (Raider X)==
|
[
"Sikorsky Aircraft",
"Sikorsky S-97",
"attack helicopter",
"Future Long Range Assault Aircraft",
"coaxial rotors",
"Bell 360 Invictus",
"compound helicopter",
"Tandem",
"United States",
"Propeller (aeronautics)",
"Future Vertical Lift",
"turboshaft",
"Sikorsky S-97 Raider",
"Sikorsky–Boeing SB-1 Defiant",
"Association of the United States Army",
"Improved Turbine Engine Program",
"Swift Engineering",
"helicopter",
"Sikorsky S-69",
"Lockheed Martin",
"General Electric T901",
"United States Army",
"Armed Aerial Scout",
"Sikorsky X2",
"Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft"
] |
62,111,674 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Motikan
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was keep. (non-admin closure) Natg 19 (talk) 07:06, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Motikan===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Unsourced for a decade Semsurî (talk) 13:16, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Ethnic groups-related deletion discussions. Semsurî (talk) 13:16, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep I’ve added sources without looking in Turkish, Kurdish or Farsi, and ignoring google book snippet views. There’s certainly enough to support the notability of this topic. Mccapra (talk) 19:48, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Turkey-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:36, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep per WP:HEY. This is another article on a Kurdish tribe that has been fixed recently. Bearian (talk) 18:37, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:HEY",
"Motikan"
] |
62,111,675 |
Shaikh Salahuddin
|
Shaikh Salahuddin may refer to:
Sheikh Salahuddin (Karachi politician) (born 1956)
Shaikh Salahuddin (Hyderabad politician) (fl. 2008)
Sheikh Salahuddin (cricketer) (1969–2013)
|
[
"Sheikh Salahuddin (cricketer)",
"Shaikh Salahuddin (Hyderabad politician)",
"Sheikh Salahuddin (Karachi politician)"
] |
62,111,686 |
Ajri
|
Ajri may refer to:
Ajri, India, a village in India
Ajri Demirovski, Yugoslavian Turkish singer
|
[
"Ajri Demirovski",
"Ajri, India"
] |
62,111,688 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Mangur (Kurdish tribe)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was keep. (non-admin closure) Natg 19 (talk) 07:03, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Mangur (Kurdish tribe)===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Unsourced for over a decade and the Mangur is a small tribe so one could question its notability (https://books.google.com/books?id=o1NsBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA377&dq=&hl=da&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiWjpuv9qrlAhVdAxAIHS19AL8Q6AEIQjAD#v=onepage&q=%22Mangur%20tribe%22&f=false) Semsurî (talk) 13:19, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Ethnic groups-related deletion discussions. Semsurî (talk) 13:19, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Strong keep I’ve added some material and refs. There are dozens of sources on the Mangur in a Google books search, though many are only snippet views. In any case from the sources I can see it is clear that notability is established. Mccapra (talk) 17:57, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep There are references to the Mangur people in journals and also many scattered references to the people in books - . While these sources do not give substantial information about the tribe - they mostly give a few sentences or a paragraph or two (one or two may have more), collectively I think they are sufficient to indicate notability. Hzh (talk) 10:36, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Iran-related deletion discussions. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:39, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep, meets WP:GNG, improvements to article made, and sources highlighted by above editors reflect its wikinotableness. Coolabahapple (talk) 00:48, 23 October 2019 (UTC)
Keep per WP:HEY. It has been extensively improved. Bearian (talk) 18:33, 26 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"Mangur (Kurdish tribe)",
"WP:GNG",
"WP:HEY"
] |
62,111,713 |
File:KDRI TheDrive101.7-830 logo.png
|
== Summary ==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,111,721 |
Piera Aiello
|
Piera Aiello (; born 2 July 1967) is an Italian police informant and politician known for her stand against the Mafia. She was elected to the Chamber of Deputies. In 2019, she was named as one of the BBC's 100 Women. She did not love her husband and took the pill to avoid giving birth to a child. Her husband found out and raped her. Her husband was killed in 1991 and she and her three-year-old daughter witnessed the killing. She decided to name her husband's killers, a decision supported by her sister-in-law Rita Atria and antimafia magistrate Paolo Borsellino. The judge was later killed in the Via D'Amelio bombing on 19 July 1992, less than two months after his colleague Giovanni Falcone had been killed.
Aiello felt abandoned by her sister and to an enquiry into the politician Vincenzo Culicchia, who had been mayor of Partanna for thirty years.
She married again in 2000 and her husband was aware of her background. She would occasionally give talks about her story for the police to schools, but her face and name were always disguised. Eventually her teenage daughter found paintings she had made in her attic that were signed with her abandoned name. She told her daughter the whole story and decided that she needed to be more active. She decided to take up an offer by the Five Star Movement to run for political office encouraged by her daughter. because of threats from the mafia, she wore a veil to protect her identity.
In 2021, during her mandate as Deputy, she graduated in political sciences at Università degli Studi eCampus with a final dissertation (« tesi di laurea ») in private law.
==Studies==
She graduated in 2021 in political sciences at the Università degli Studi eCampus
|
[
"Five Star Movement",
"Via D'Amelio bombing",
"Università degli Studi eCampus",
"Giovanni Falcone",
"100 Women (BBC)",
"Paolo Borsellino",
"Rita Atria",
"Capaci bombing",
"Partanna",
"Chamber of Deputies (Italy)",
"Sicilian Mafia",
"the pill",
"Vincenzo Culicchia",
"Marsala"
] |
62,111,725 |
File:Canberra Capitals logo new.png
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[
"University of Canberra Capitals"
] |
62,111,727 |
Oldest capital derby
|
Oldest capital derby or Oldest Sofia derby () is the name of the football match between the oldest still existing teams in the capital of Bulgaria: Slavia Sofia and Levski Sofia. Matches between the two sides have been played almost continuously ever since a football league in Bulgaria has existed. The two teams regularly competed for the title before World War II. Levski have never been relegated from the top flight, while Slavia have missed only one season, for political reasons. This is the most frequently played match in Bulgarian football.
== History ==
Established in 1913 and 1914, respectively, Slavia and Levski are the two oldest, still-existing football teams from Sofia. Both teams won the Bulgarian Republican Championship several times prior to the Second World War. Slavia managed to win six national titles before 1945, while Levski won three national titles, and one Bulgarian Cup.
The two teams are also among the most successful when it comes to the Bulgarian Cup. Levski has won a record 26, while Slavia has won 8. They have also played against each other twice in the finals of the competition. The first final between them occurred in 1996. The match did not even finish, with Slavia being awarded a walkover in their favor, due to Levski deciding to abandon the game in the 75th minute. 22 years later, the two sides again met in the final, in 2018. The game ended in a goalless draw, after which Slavia won on penalties, thus winning their eight title overall. In 2021, the two rivals met again in the quarter-finals of the tournament, with Slavia winning once again by the score of 2–1. However, Levski is the dominant force in this rivalry, historically.
== Official match statistics==
===Head-to-head ranking in First League (1948–2023)===
• Total: Slavia Sofia with 12 higher finishes, Levski Sofia with 62 higher finishes (as of the end of the 2022–23 season).
==Trophies==
Notes:
Bulgarian Cup section includes Soviet Army Cup as major Cup tournament.
Soviet Army Cup section includes the period after 1982 as secondary Cup tournament.
People's Republic of Bulgaria Cup section includes the period before 1982 as secondary Cup tournament.
Italics indicates defunct tournaments.
==Statistics==
===Biggest wins===
====Slavia wins====
4–1 - 1925/1926; 1931/1932; 26 October 1958; 24 March 1990
====Levski wins====
5–0 - 1941/1942; 28 October 2005
Notes:
Slavia walkover win with 4:0 in 1996 Bulgarian Cup Final is not included.
|
[
"1954 A Group",
"1987–88 A Group",
"1961–62 A Group",
"1948–49 A Group",
"1957 A Group",
"Bulgaria",
"1952 A Group",
"2000–01 A Group",
"2007–08 A Group",
"PFC Slavia Sofia",
"2021–22 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)",
"1959–60 A Group",
"1994–95 A Group",
"1980–81 A Group",
"Sofia",
"1973–74 A Group",
"1960–61 A Group",
"1963–64 A Group",
"1971–72 A Group",
"1989–90 A Group",
"walkover",
"1972–73 A Group",
"1955 A Group",
"2019–20 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)",
"1988–89 A Group",
"2020–21 Bulgarian Cup",
"2010–11 A Group",
"PFC Levski Sofia",
"1956 A Group",
"2012–13 A Group",
"2017–18 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)",
"1983–84 A Group",
"1996 Bulgarian Cup Final",
"1986–87 A Group",
"1999–2000 A Group",
"Stadion Aleksandar Shalamanov",
"1951 A Group",
"1985–86 A Group",
"1958–59 A Group",
"2004–05 A Group",
"1995–96 A Group",
"Vasil Levski National Stadium",
"1967–68 A Group",
"1990–91 A Group",
"1969–70 A Group",
"2005–06 A Group",
"1984–85 A Group",
"1982–83 A Group",
"1997–98 A Group",
"1975–76 A Group",
"2022–23 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)",
"1993–94 A Group",
"First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)",
"2008–09 A Group",
"2002–03 A Group",
"2011–12 A Group",
"1966–67 A Group",
"1958 A Group",
"1968–69 A Group",
"1981–82 A Group",
"1998–99 A Group",
"1964–65 A Group",
"1974–75 A Group",
"Stadion Georgi Asparuhov",
"2006–07 A Group",
"Soviet Army Cup",
"1976–77 A Group",
"1977–78 A Group",
"1962–63 A Group",
"1991–92 A Group",
"2014–15 A Group",
"2018–19 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)",
"2015–16 A Group",
"2017–18 Bulgarian Cup",
"1950 A Group",
"1996–97 A Group",
"1978–79 A Group",
"Bulgarian Supercup",
"1953 A Group",
"1965–66 A Group",
"2013–14 A Group",
"1979–80 A Group",
"Bulgarian Cup",
"2009–10 A Group",
"1992–93 A Group",
"2020–21 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)",
"2001–02 A Group",
"1970–71 A Group",
"2003–04 A Group",
"2016–17 First Professional Football League (Bulgaria)"
] |
62,111,730 |
Template:Paramount Pictures films
|
[
"List of Paramount Pictures films (2020–2029)",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (2010–2019)",
"BET",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1960–1969)",
"Go Fish Pictures",
"List of Miramax films",
"List of Nickelodeon Movies productions",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1930–1939)",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1970–1979)",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1990–1999)",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1920–1929)",
"Paramount Pictures",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1940–1949)",
"Paramount Vantage",
"Paramount Animation",
"MTV Entertainment Studios",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1912–1919)",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1950–1959)",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (1980–1989)",
"List of United International Pictures films",
"Paramount Players",
"Insurge Pictures",
"Lists of Paramount Pictures films",
"List of Paramount Pictures films (2000–2009)"
] |
|
62,111,734 |
File:Hungama House film poster.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,111,737 |
Category:Lists of Paramount Pictures films
|
[] |
|
62,111,739 |
Christian Frederick Ramftler
|
Christian Frederick Ramftler (1780–1832) was a German born teacher, minister, and supporter of missionaries, serving the Moravian Church, who worked for most of his career in England. He founded the Moravian Church in Brockweir, Gloucestershire.
==Birth, education and early career in Germany==
Ramftler was born at the Moravian settlement at Barby in 1780, into an old Moravian family. At the age of seven he was sent to the Moravian school at Kleinwelka; he then entered the Pædagogium at Barby, and completed his education by studying theology at Niesky. After completing his studies, he served the Moravian Church as a schoolmaster for two years, first at Neusalz an der Oder, in Prussia (now Nowa Sól, Poland) and then at Uhyst. To his surprise, he then ‘received a call to England’. He consulted the Lot; the Lot gave consent; and he came to England in 1803.
==Life in England==
After arriving in England, he served as a master in the Moravian’s boarding-school at Fairfield, Droylsden, in Lancashire.
In 1809 or 1810 he was called as minister to the Moravian settlement at Bedford.
When Ramftler accepted the call to the ministry, he was informed that he would have to marry, and wife was found for him by the Church (following Moravian tradition, this would have involved consulting the Lot). She was Elizabeth Groves, and they married in 1810. The marriage is reported to have been a happy one. Their daughter, Elizabeth Groves Ramftler was born on 2 October 1815, and baptised on 8 October 1815.
In 1812, Ramftler moved to the Moravian settlement at Fulneck, in Pudsey, West Yorkshire, where he was stationed twelve years, until 1824.
Ramftler moved to Bristol in 1824. At Bristol, he was noted for his missionary zeal; he took an interest in the conversion of the Jews (through the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews), often spoke at public meetings on behalf of the Church Missionary Society; and travelled on behalf of the London Association in Aid of Moravian Missions (Registered Charity No. 247127).
==Responses to Ramftler’s death==
In a letter informing him of Ramftler’s death, the poet and hymn writer James Montgomery was asked to write a suitable hymn (Montgomery had been received into the Moravian communion by Ramftler). The result was ‘Rest from thy labour, rest’ (On the death of a Minister).
Rev. Thomas Grinfield published Select Remains of Rev C. F. Ramftler in 1833. This was advertised as containing ‘several valuable Sermons, which Mr. Ramftler had occasionally composed, and a Series of interesting Extracts from his Journals and Correspondence’. The Remains were favourably reviewed in The West of England Journal of Science and Literature; the reviewer remarking ‘Mr Grinfield has acted the part of a faithful and judicious biographer, in laying before his readers the infirmities as well as the excellencies of this most elevated character, and it is to be wished that this example were more generally followed on such occasions’.
==Character==
Ramftler’s character was described as '… rough and abrupt; at heart he was gentle as a woman. He was a strict disciplinarian, a keen questioner, and an unflinching demander of a Christian walk. Not one jot or tittle would he allow his people to yield to the loose ways of the world. In his sermons he dealt hard blows at cant; and in his private conversation he generally managed to put his finger upon the sore spot. … In all his habits Ramftler was strictly methodical. He always rose before six; he always finished his writing by eleven; and he kept a list of the texts from which he preached'.
|
[
"Bedford",
"Nowa Sól",
"Droylsden",
"Bristol",
"Brockweir",
"Fulneck Moravian Church",
"Church's Ministry Among Jewish People",
"Fairfield Moravian Church",
"Charitable organization",
"Princess Charlotte of Wales (1796–1817)",
"Kleinwelka",
"Niesky",
"Church Mission Society",
"Uhyst",
"Barby, Germany",
"Moravian Church",
"James Montgomery (poet)",
"Pudsey"
] |
62,111,747 |
Template:Percentage/testcases
|
== Default ==
== Expressions ==
== Commas ==
== Precision ==
== Pad ==
== Sigfig ==
|
[] |
62,111,762 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1912–1919)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released between 1912 and 1919.
==1912==
==1913==
==1914==
==1915==
==1916==
==1917==
==1918==
==1919==
|
[
"Aristocracy (film)",
"Riddle Gawne",
"The Homebreaker",
"Nugget Nell",
"Those Without Sin",
"A Sporting Chance (1919 Paramount film)",
"His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz (1914 film)",
"The Italian (1915 film)",
"The Mating of Marcella",
"His Mother's Boy",
"The Make-Believe Wife",
"Nobody Home (film)",
"Widow by Proxy",
"Scarlet Days",
"The Silent Man (film)",
"Wanted: A Husband",
"The Girl of the Golden West (1915 film)",
"True Heart Susie",
"The Witness for the Defense",
"'Blue Blazes' Rawden",
"To Have and to Hold (1916 film)",
"Carmen (1915 Cecil B. DeMille film)",
"The Golden Chance",
"Stepping Out (1919 film)",
"The Foundling (1915 film)",
"The Lottery Man (1919 film)",
"A Woman of Impulse",
"Vive la France!",
"Behind the Scenes (1914 film)",
"It Pays to Advertise (1919 film)",
"As Men Love",
"The Woman God Forgot",
"Love Letters (1917 film)",
"Little Women (1918 film)",
"The Lie (1918 film)",
"On the Level (1917 film)",
"The Knickerbocker Buckaroo",
"The Dictator (1915 film)",
"The Invisible Bond",
"The Conspiracy (1914 film)",
"A Mormon Maid",
"Bab's Diary",
"Her Own People",
"A Desert Wooing",
"Believe Me, Xantippe",
"Audrey (1916 film)",
"Why Smith Left Home",
"I'll Get Him Yet",
"Madame Jealousy",
"Peppy Polly",
"After Five",
"The Ragamuffin",
"The Stronger Love",
"Her Country First",
"The Lonesome Chap",
"The Border Wireless",
"The Commanding Officer",
"The Lost Paradise (1914 film)",
"A Roadside Impresario",
"Rose o' the River",
"Paid in Full (1919 film)",
"The Avalanche (1919 film)",
"The Son of His Father",
"A Doll's House (1918 film)",
"The Greatest Thing in Life",
"The Winning Girl",
"The World for Sale",
"The Long Trail (film)",
"The Fortunes of Fifi",
"Bound in Morocco",
"The Little Gray Lady",
"An American Citizen",
"Out of the Wreck",
"At First Sight (1917 film)",
"The Old Homestead (1915 film)",
"The Antics of Ann",
"The White Heather",
"The Daughter of MacGregor",
"Mrs. Black Is Back",
"Behind the Door (film)",
"The Clue",
"The Eternal Temptress",
"The Fighting Hope",
"The Morals of Marcus (1915 film)",
"The House with the Golden Windows",
"The Sea Wolf (1913 film)",
"Julia Crawford Ivers",
"Poor Schmaltz",
"My Lady Incog",
"Her Final Reckoning",
"Partners Three",
"Brewster's Millions (1914 film)",
"The Making of Maddalena",
"Wagon Tracks",
"Luck in Pawn",
"Forbidden Paths",
"Nan of Music Mountain",
"Giving Becky a Chance",
"Alias Mike Moran",
"The Parson of Panamint (1916 film)",
"Blackbirds (1915 film)",
"The Bottle Imp (1917 film)",
"Come on In (film)",
"The Rug Maker's Daughter",
"Venus in the East",
"The Clever Mrs. Carfax",
"An International Marriage",
"Caprice (1913 film)",
"Jesse L. Lasky",
"Jane (1915 film)",
"The White Man's Law",
"Private Peat",
"'Twas Ever Thus",
"The Poor Boob",
"The Wild Olive",
"The Heart of Jennifer",
"The Brute (1914 film)",
"23 1/2 Hours' Leave",
"The Poor Little Rich Girl",
"Something to Do",
"Hearts Adrift",
"The Call of the Cumberlands",
"A Petticoat Pilot",
"The Spitfire (1914 film)",
"The Lincoln Cycle",
"The Puppet Crown",
"Heart of the Wilds",
"Tyrant Fear",
"The Man from Home (1914 film)",
"What's His Name",
"The Spider (1916 film)",
"His Parisian Wife",
"Public Opinion (1916 film)",
"The Evil Eye (1917 film)",
"The Firing Line",
"The Mystery of the Yellow Room (1919 film)",
"The Woman Next Door (1919 film)",
"Madame la Presidente",
"Heart's Desire (1917 film)",
"The Guilty Man",
"Red Hot Dollars",
"The Better Man (1914 film)",
"Secret Service (1919 film)",
"Diplomacy (1916 film)",
"The Law of the North",
"The Yankee Girl",
"The Woman in the Case (1916 American film)",
"Chelsea 7750",
"The Patchwork Girl of Oz (1914 film)",
"Under Cover (1916 film)",
"Big Timber (1917 film)",
"Kilmeny (film)",
"The Dark Star (1919 film)",
"The Slave Market (film)",
"The Lady of Red Butte",
"Fuss and Feathers",
"The Black Wolf (film)",
"The Code of Marcia Gray",
"The Man on the Box",
"The Prince and the Pauper (1915 film)",
"Rags (1915 film)",
"The Master Mind (1914 film)",
"Under the Top",
"The Day of Days (film)",
"The Only Son (1914 film)",
"Witchcraft (1916 film)",
"The Honorable Friend",
"The Song of Songs (1918 film)",
"The House of Silence",
"Uncle Tom's Cabin (1918 film)",
"We Can't Have Everything",
"The Countess Charming",
"Bella Donna (1915 film)",
"Oh, You Women!",
"The Squaw Man (1914 film)",
"What Money Can't Buy (film)",
"My Cousin",
"Jim the Penman (1915 film)",
"Hulda from Holland",
"The Claws of the Hun",
"The Trouble Buster",
"The Firefly of France",
"The Rescuing Angel",
"Women's Weapons",
"Male and Female",
"Selfish Yates",
"The Money Corral",
"Category:Lists of films by studio",
"The Innocent Lie",
"The Hired Man (film)",
"Sold (1915 film)",
"The Haunted Bedroom",
"What Every Woman Learns",
"He Comes Up Smiling",
"The Judgment House",
"The Amazons (1917 film)",
"The Man from Painted Post",
"Flare-Up Sal",
"The Jaguar's Claws",
"The Fatal Card",
"Out of the Drifts",
"Under the Greenwood Tree (1918 film)",
"A Very Good Young Man",
"Nanette of the Wilds",
"The Cook of Canyon Camp",
"It's No Laughing Matter",
"When Do We Eat? (1918 film)",
"The Heart of Paula",
"Destiny's Toy",
"Seven Keys to Baldpate (1917 film)",
"Freckles (1917 film)",
"The Crystal Gazer",
"Tom Sawyer (1917 film)",
"Great Expectations (1917 film)",
"The Blacklist (film)",
"Turning the Tables (film)",
"The Rise of Jennie Cushing",
"Rule G (film)",
"The False Faces",
"The Final Close-Up",
"The Danger Mark",
"For Better, for Worse (1919 film)",
"False Colors (1914 film)",
"Nearly a Lady",
"Are You a Mason? (1915 film)",
"The Devil-Stone",
"Famous Players Film Company",
"Stolen Goods (film)",
"Quicksand (1918 film)",
"The Million",
"The Grim Game",
"Putting It Over",
"The Captive (1915 film)",
"The Thousand-Dollar Husband",
"The Varmint",
"Out of a Clear Sky",
"Hit-The-Trail Holliday",
"The Secret Garden (1919 film)",
"The Miracle of Love (film)",
"The Majesty of the Law",
"The Price Mark",
"The Dub",
"Ashes of Embers",
"Resurrection (1912 film)",
"The Plow Girl",
"A Kiss for Susie",
"The Road to Love",
"Helene of the North",
"The Family Skeleton",
"The Misleading Widow",
"Where the Trail Divides",
"The Mystery Girl",
"Poor Little Peppina",
"Castles for Two",
"The Poppy Girl's Husband",
"The Traveling Salesman (1916 film)",
"The Straight Road",
"Sadie Love",
"The Honor of His House",
"His Neighbor's Wife",
"Victory (1919 film)",
"Marta of the Lowlands",
"The Woman (1915 film)",
"Tess of the Storm Country (1914 film)",
"Say! Young Fellow",
"Men, Women, and Money",
"Johnny Get Your Gun",
"One More American",
"Let's Get a Divorce",
"The Incorrigible Dukane",
"Stella Maris (1918 film)",
"Little Sunset",
"Good Gracious, Annabelle",
"Cinderella (1914 film)",
"Arms and the Girl (film)",
"Gambier's Advocate",
"Oliver Twist (1916 film)",
"The Secret Game (1917 film)",
"Rustling a Bride",
"Hashimura Togo",
"The Marriage Ring",
"Mirandy Smiles",
"The Undying Flame",
"The Reform Candidate",
"A Lady of Quality (1913 film)",
"Still Waters (1915 film)",
"Rolling Stones (film)",
"The Spirit of '17",
"Eyes of the Soul",
"The Silver King (1919 film)",
"The Roaring Road (1919 film)",
"The Unknown (1915 drama film)",
"Till I Come Back to You",
"Wild Youth (film)",
"The Ring and the Man",
"The Sign of the Cross (1914 film)",
"The American Beauty",
"Headin' South",
"Maggie Pepper",
"His Last Dollar",
"On the Quiet",
"Lost and Won (1917 film)",
"Mice and Men (film)",
"In Mizzoura",
"The Right Direction",
"The Moth and the Flame (1915 film)",
"Love Insurance",
"Each Pearl a Tear",
"Her Better Self",
"May Blossom (film)",
"Jack and Jill (1917 film)",
"The Love Route",
"Mr. Grex of Monte Carlo",
"A Woman's Triumph",
"The Eternal Grind",
"Burning Daylight: The Adventures of 'Burning Daylight' in Civilization",
"Mrs. Dane's Defense (1918 film)",
"Nearly a King",
"The Third Kiss (1919 film)",
"The Running Fight",
"The Girl Who Came Back (1918 film)",
"Square Deal Sanderson",
"Hearts of the World",
"The Lost Bridegroom",
"How Could You, Jean?",
"The Hidden Pearls",
"Pudd'nhead Wilson (film)",
"A Gentleman of Leisure (1915 film)",
"Anton the Terrible",
"Zaza (1915 film)",
"Such a Little Pirate",
"Branding Broadway",
"Her Triumph",
"Happy Though Married",
"Young Romance (film)",
"The Girl Dodger",
"The Virtuous Thief",
"The Cost of Hatred",
"Barbary Sheep (film)",
"Niobe (film)",
"An Innocent Adventuress",
"The Golden Fetter",
"The Bravest Way",
"The Red Widow",
"The World Apart",
"Jane Goes A-Wooing",
"The Dawn of a Tomorrow (1915 film)",
"Captain Kidd, Jr.",
"Aftermath (1914 film)",
"Counterfeit (1919 film)",
"The Storm (1916 film)",
"John Barleycorn (film)",
"The Mummy and the Hummingbird",
"The Evil Thereof (1916 film)",
"Sunshine Molly",
"The Gentleman from Indiana",
"Ready Money (film)",
"The Bargain (1914 film)",
"The Victory of Conscience",
"The Hope Chest",
"The Squaw Man's Son",
"Crooked Straight",
"William C. DeMille",
"Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley",
"The Valley of the Giants (1919 film)",
"Sapho (1917 film)",
"The Love Burglar",
"Leah Kleschna (film)",
"The Chechako",
"A Girl of Yesterday",
"Betty to the Rescue",
"The Vamp (1918 film)",
"Playing the Game",
"National Film Registry",
"The Crucible (1914 film)",
"The Eternal City (1915 film)",
"The Unafraid",
"The House of the Lost Court",
"A Romance of the Redwoods",
"David Harum (1915 film)",
"The Love Mask",
"The Heart of Youth",
"Naughty, Naughty (1918 film)",
"Coals of Fire (1918 film)",
"Extravagance (1919 film)",
"The Kiss (1916 film)",
"The Immigrant (1915 film)",
"Sunshine Nan",
"The Sheriff's Son",
"The Spirit of Romance (film)",
"Her Strange Wedding",
"Peer Gynt (1915 film)",
"The Inner Shrine",
"Rose of the World (1918 film)",
"He Fell in Love with His Wife",
"The Hungry Heart",
"John Petticoats",
"You're Fired (film)",
"The Highway of Hope",
"A Girl Like That",
"Huck and Tom",
"The Primrose Ring (film)",
"The Hypocrites (1915 film)",
"The Goat (1918 film)",
"The Little Princess (1917 film)",
"Sweet Kitty Bellairs (1916 film)",
"His Sweetheart",
"The Martyrdom of Philip Strong",
"Less Than the Dust",
"A Girl Named Mary",
"The Making of Bobby Burnit",
"Rimrock Jones",
"The Rainbow Princess",
"The Redemption of David Corson",
"Burning Daylight: The Adventures of 'Burning Daylight' in Alaska",
"Valley of the Moon (1914 film)",
"The Country Boy (film)",
"The Foundling (1916 film)",
"The Lash (1916 film)",
"The Winning of Sally Temple",
"The Sunset Trail (1917 film)",
"The Widow's Might (1918 film)",
"Missing (1918 film)",
"Sleeping Fires",
"The Cheat (1915 film)",
"The Wax Model",
"The Pride of Jennico (film)",
"The Egg Crate Wallop",
"Lost in Transit (film)",
"Pasquale (film)",
"The Home Town Girl",
"The Bachelor's Romance",
"A Romance of Happy Valley",
"Exile (1917 film)",
"The Victoria Cross (film)",
"The Secret Orchard",
"The Things We Love",
"Anne of Green Gables (1919 film)",
"Gretna Green (1915 film)",
"La Tosca (1918 film)",
"Hay Foot, Straw Foot",
"The Man from Mexico",
"The Port of Missing Men",
"Little Pal (1915 film)",
"The City of Dim Faces",
"The Kaiser's Shadow",
"Pretty Mrs. Smith",
"On Record (film)",
"His Own Home Town",
"Clothes (1914 film)",
"The Magic Cloak of Oz",
"The Test of Honor",
"David Garrick (1916 film)",
"The Warrens of Virginia (1915 film)",
"His Majesty, Bunker Bean (1918 film)",
"The Cruise of the Make-Believes",
"Little Lady Eileen",
"A Coney Island Princess",
"Buckshot John",
"Paramount Pictures",
"The Man from Funeral Range",
"The Prison Without Walls",
"The Girl at Home",
"The Caprices of Kitty",
"The Voice in the Fog",
"The Source (1918 film)",
"The Seven Swans",
"A Daughter of the Wolf",
"Jules of the Strong Heart",
"The Silent Partner (1917 film)",
"The Call of the North (1914 film)",
"Sandy (1918 film)",
"Little Comrade",
"Other Men's Wives",
"Each to His Kind",
"His Official Fiancée",
"Prunella (1918 film)",
"Battling Jane",
"The Typhoon",
"The Law of the Land (film)",
"The Market of Souls",
"Madame Butterfly (1915 film)",
"The Count of Monte Cristo (1913 film)",
"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1917 film)",
"The Woman Thou Gavest Me (film)",
"Old Wives for New",
"Dangerous Hours",
"The Country Mouse",
"Rose of the Rancho (1914 film)",
"M'Liss (1918 film)",
"Martin Eden (1914 film)",
"Wildflower (1914 film)",
"A Modern Musketeer",
"The Miracle Man (1919 film)",
"The Hostage (1917 film)",
"The Great Love (1918 film)",
"The Tongues of Men",
"Betty in Search of a Thrill",
"The Two Brides",
"Tess of the d'Urbervilles (1913 film)",
"Three Men and a Girl",
"The Race (1916 film)",
"The Selfish Woman",
"Fedora (1918 film)",
"The Little American",
"Boots (film)",
"Wild and Woolly (1917 film)",
"The Career of Katherine Bush",
"The Years of the Locust",
"The Ghost Breaker (1914 film)",
"Chimmie Fadden Out West",
"Hard Boiled (1919 film)",
"A Son of Erin",
"The Wild Goose Chase (1915 film)",
"Lydia Gilmore",
"Little Miss Hoover",
"Mile-a-Minute Kendall",
"The Feud Girl",
"His Wife's Friend",
"A Society Exile",
"The Reward of Patience",
"The Dummy (1917 film)",
"The Biggest Show on Earth",
"The Saleslady",
"The Way of a Man with a Maid (film)",
"The Life Line",
"The Dupe",
"The Pursuit of the Phantom",
"The Hun Within",
"Let's Elope (film)",
"The White Pearl (1915 film)",
"Little Miss Optimist",
"The Busher",
"The Soul of Kura San",
"The Whispering Chorus",
"Brother Officers",
"Help Wanted (1915 film)",
"The Heir to the Hoorah",
"The Tiger Man",
"Louisiana (1919 film)",
"The Teeth of the Tiger (film)",
"The Secret Sin",
"Les Amours de la reine Élisabeth",
"The Law of Men (1919 film)",
"Hawthorne of the U.S.A.",
"Puppy Love (1919 film)",
"The Dream Girl (film)",
"Unclaimed Goods",
"Molly Make-Believe",
"Good-Bye, Bill",
"Kindling (1915 film)",
"The Sowers",
"Chimmie Fadden",
"The Moment Before",
"Molly Entangled",
"Happiness of Three Women",
"Soldiers of Fortune (1919 film)",
"The American Consul",
"The Marcellini Millions",
"The Valentine Girl",
"Silks and Satins",
"Johanna Enlists",
"The Splendid Romance",
"Fires of Faith",
"The Dancing Girl (1915 film)",
"The Marriage of Kitty",
"The Gypsy Trail",
"The Quest of Life",
"Armstrong's Wife",
"Don't Change Your Husband",
"The Goose Girl (1915 film)",
"A Good Little Devil",
"The Governor's Lady (1915 film)",
"Rich Man, Poor Man (1918 film)",
"The Circus Man",
"Cecil B. DeMille",
"For the Defense (1916 film)",
"Fanchon the Cricket",
"String Beans (film)",
"Common Ground (1916 film)",
"Broadway Jones (film)",
"The Bond Between",
"Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (1919 film)",
"The Big Sister (film)",
"The Blue Bird (1918 film)",
"Love Me (1918 film)",
"L'apache",
"Bab's Matinee Idol",
"The Daughter of the Hills",
"The Case of Becky (1915 film)",
"Everywoman (1919 film)",
"Cameo Kirby (1914 film)",
"In Pursuit of Polly",
"Less Than Kin",
"The Yellow Pawn",
"Snobs (film)",
"The County Chairman (1914 film)",
"A Gutter Magdalene",
"Joan the Woman",
"When We Were Twenty-One",
"Love's Conquest",
"The World's Great Snare",
"Viviette",
"Arizona (1918 film)",
"The Port of Doom",
"Here Comes the Bride (1919 film)",
"The Tides of Barnegat",
"Girls (1919 film)",
"Too Much Johnson (1919 film)",
"The Love That Lives",
"Reaching for the Moon (1917 film)",
"The Call of the East",
"Sacrifice (1917 film)",
"Come Out of the Kitchen",
"The Heart of Nora Flynn",
"The Pride of the Clan",
"A Nine O'Clock Town",
"The Scales of Justice (film)",
"One of Our Girls",
"Tennessee's Pardner",
"Redeeming Love (film)",
"The Spanish Jade (1915 film)",
"The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1916 film)",
"The Land of Promise",
"In Again, Out Again",
"Alien Souls",
"Saints and Sinners (1916 film)",
"Out of the Shadow (1919 film)",
"Seventeen (1916 film)",
"Pettigrew's Girl",
"The Unwelcome Mrs. Hatch",
"A School for Husbands",
"Too Many Millions (1918 film)",
"Erstwhile Susan",
"The Girl Who Stayed at Home",
"The Prisoner of Zenda (1913 film)",
"Greased Lightning (1919 film)",
"The Arab (1915 film)",
"The Chorus Lady",
"An Hour Before Dawn",
"Esmerelda (1915 film)",
"Davy Crockett (1916 film)",
"Told in the Hills",
"The Little Boy Scout",
"Ben Blair (film)",
"The Sporting Life (1918 film)",
"Such a Little Queen (1914 film)",
"The Clown (1916 film)",
"Shark Monroe",
"The Virginian (1914 film)",
"Miss George Washington",
"The Eagle's Mate",
"Down to Earth (1917 film)",
"Mr. Fix-It (1918 film)",
"The Squaw Man (1918 film)",
"Wolves of the Rail",
"In the Bishop's Carriage",
"The Smugglers (1916 film)",
"Susie Snowflake",
"The Intrigue",
"Temptation (1915 film)",
"More Deadly Than the Male",
"The Masqueraders (film)",
"Green Eyes (1918 film)",
"The Cinema Murder",
"The Seven Sisters (1915 film)",
"Bill Henry (film)",
"The House of Lies (1916 film)",
"Maria Rosa (1916 film)",
"The Narrow Trail",
"Unprotected",
"Eve's Daughter",
"The Marriage Price",
"Out of the Darkness (1915 film)",
"Breed of Men",
"An Odyssey of the North",
"The Mysterious Miss Terry",
"An Adventure in Hearts",
"The Pretty Sister of Jose (1915 film)",
"Mistress Nell",
"Her Father's Son",
"Keys of the Righteous",
"The Ghost House (film)",
"The Explorer (film)",
"Bab's Burglar",
"Unconquered (1917 film)",
"The Heir of the Ages",
"You Never Saw Such a Girl",
"Snow White (1916 film)",
"Resurrection (1918 film)",
"The Fair Barbarian",
"Captain Courtesy",
"Double Crossed (1917 film)",
"A Daughter of the Old South"
] |
62,111,772 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1920–1929)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 1920s.
==1920==
==1921==
==1922==
==1923==
==1924==
==1925==
==1926==
==1927==
|
[
"The Last Outlaw (1927 film)",
"Her Sturdy Oak",
"Footlights (1921 film)",
"Abie's Irish Rose (1928 film)",
"The Enchanted Hill",
"Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford (1921 film)",
"The Vanishing Pioneer",
"The Valley of Silent Men",
"The World's Champion",
"The Wanderer (1925 film)",
"Children of Jazz",
"Three Weekends",
"Prodigal Daughters",
"His Private Life (1928 film)",
"Underworld (1927 film)",
"A Dangerous Woman (1929 film)",
"One Glorious Day",
"Speedy (film)",
"The Pioneer Scout",
"Forbidden Fruit (1921 film)",
"For the Defense (1922 film)",
"Beyond (1921 film)",
"Oh, Lady, Lady",
"Sick Abed",
"The Kid Brother",
"Now We're in the Air",
"Peter the Great (1922 film)",
"Ebb Tide (1922 film)",
"Code of the West (1925 film)",
"The Little French Girl",
"Don't Tell Everything",
"North of the Rio Grande",
"The House That Jazz Built",
"The Amateur Wife",
"The City of Silent Men",
"If You Believe It, It's So",
"Moran of the Lady Letty",
"Fireman, Save My Child (1927 film)",
"An Amateur Devil",
"The Secret Spring",
"Tomorrow's Love",
"Behind the Front (film)",
"Ritzy",
"The Bedroom Window (1924 film)",
"The Palm Beach Girl",
"Dangerous Money (1924 film)",
"The Popular Sin",
"The Lane That Had No Turning",
"The Tiger's Claw",
"Burglar Proof",
"One Wild Week",
"Missing Millions",
"Triumph (1924 film)",
"Forty Winks (1925 film)",
"So's Your Old Man",
"The Female (1924 film)",
"Drums of the Desert (1927 film)",
"His Tiger Lady",
"The Doctor's Secret (1929 film)",
"The Mighty (1929 film)",
"The Fighting Chance (1920 film)",
"One Woman to Another",
"The Racket (1928 film)",
"The Golden Bed",
"Traveling Salesman (1921 film)",
"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920 film)",
"Tell Your Children",
"The Love Special",
"Ben Ames Williams",
"The First Kiss (1928 American film)",
"The Stolen Kiss",
"Get Your Man (1927 film)",
"Glorifying the American Girl",
"Why Change Your Wife?",
"The Little Minister (1921 film)",
"The Wedding March (1928 film)",
"The Case of Lena Smith",
"Argentine Love",
"The Face in the Fog",
"Thomas H. Ince",
"The Street of Sin",
"When Knighthood Was in Flower (1922 film)",
"The Fast Freight",
"The Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu",
"The Wild Goose (film)",
"Miss Brewster's Millions",
"Judy of Rogue's Harbor",
"The Toll Gate",
"Remodeling Her Husband",
"One a Minute",
"Coming Through (1925 film)",
"A Private Scandal",
"The Splendid Crime",
"Man Power (film)",
"Thou Art the Man (1920 film)",
"Silk Hosiery",
"Swim Girl, Swim",
"A Kiss in Time (film)",
"Hairpins (film)",
"The Exciters (film)",
"Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1928 film)",
"Lily of the Dust",
"Such a Little Queen (1921 film)",
"Jesse James (1927 film)",
"Old Ironsides (film)",
"Little Miss Rebellion",
"The Testing Block",
"Fog Bound",
"King, Queen, Joker",
"Knockout Reilly",
"Young Mrs. Winthrop",
"The Ne'er-Do-Well",
"The World's Applause",
"It (1927 film)",
"Paris Green (film)",
"The Fourteenth Man",
"The Rough Riders (film)",
"Bobbed Hair (1922 film)",
"Sham (film)",
"Blackbirds (1920 film)",
"Excuse My Dust (1920 film)",
"The Education of Elizabeth",
"Old Home Week (film)",
"Sally of the Sawdust",
"Sentimental Tommy",
"Her Love Story",
"Three Cuckoo Clocks",
"Womanhandled",
"Anna Ascends",
"Rough House Rosie",
"The Magic Cup",
"Empty Hands",
"The Right to Love (1920 film)",
"Her First Elopement",
"Something Different (1920 film)",
"To the Ladies (film)",
"A Prince There Was",
"Black Is White",
"The Purple Highway",
"Darkened Rooms",
"The Hell Diggers",
"The Sins of St. Anthony",
"What's Worth While?",
"Sixty Cents an Hour",
"The Inside of the Cup (film)",
"The Show-Off (1926 film)",
"The Rainmaker (1926 film)",
"The Sorrows of Satan (film)",
"The Prince Chap",
"The Fifty-Fifty Girl",
"The Glimpses of the Moon (film)",
"To Please One Woman",
"The Pony Express (1925 film)",
"River of Romance",
"Mr. Billings Spends His Dime",
"Why Bring That Up?",
"Just Around the Corner (1921 film)",
"Out of the Chorus",
"Exit the Vamp",
"The Land of Hope (1921 film)",
"Ruggles of Red Gap (1923 film)",
"Sand!",
"Grumpy (1923 film)",
"The Charm School (film)",
"The Fleet's In (1928 film)",
"Wild, Wild Susan",
"Hotel Imperial (1927 film)",
"Let's Get Married (1926 film)",
"The Mysterious Rider (1927 film)",
"Bluebeard's 8th Wife",
"The Flame (1923 film)",
"Sinners in Heaven",
"Three Word Brand (1921 film)",
"The Dictator (1922 film)",
"The Top of the World (film)",
"Humoresque (1920 film)",
"Sea Horses (film)",
"Universal Television",
"The Snob (1921 film)",
"Grass (1925 film)",
"The Deep Purple (1920 film)",
"The Great Gatsby (1926 film)",
"My Lady's Garter",
"The Indian Tomb (1921 film)",
"Huckleberry Finn (1920 film)",
"Behind Masks",
"Mrs. Temple's Telegram",
"The Call of the Canyon (film)",
"The Truthful Liar",
"Paradise for Two (1927 film)",
"Madame Pompadour (1927 film)",
"The Lady Lies (film)",
"Treasure Island (1920 film)",
"Eve's Secret",
"Flying Pat",
"Hush Money (1921 film)",
"The Wild Party (1929 film)",
"The Heart Specialist (1922 film)",
"Conrad in Quest of His Youth",
"Desert Gold (1926 film)",
"Kit Carson (1928 film)",
"Night Life of New York",
"A Man Must Live",
"The Jailbird",
"The Spanish Jade (1922 film)",
"Easy to Get",
"Lord Jim (1925 film)",
"The Speed Girl",
"Saturday Night (1922 film)",
"Blonde or Brunette",
"Red Hair (film)",
"Merton of the Movies (1924 film)",
"Blind Alleys (film)",
"The Kentuckians",
"For Heaven's Sake (1926 film)",
"The Little Clown",
"Stark Love",
"Men and Women (1925 film)",
"The Ghost Breaker (1922 film)",
"The Frisky Mrs. Johnson",
"Diplomacy (1926 film)",
"The Good Provider",
"A Woman of the World",
"The Grand Duchess and the Waiter",
"The Blind Goddess (1926 film)",
"Something to Think About",
"The Bonded Woman",
"Variety (1925 film)",
"Stephen Steps Out",
"Manhattan (1924 film)",
"The Silver King (1929 film)",
"The Easy Road",
"Nurse Marjorie",
"The Studio Murder Mystery",
"Back Home and Broke",
"Bought and Paid For",
"The Sleepwalker (1922 film)",
"The Top of New York",
"Rolled Stockings",
"Cabaret (1927 film)",
"The Young Rajah",
"The Restless Sex",
"Feel My Pulse",
"Bella Donna (1923 film)",
"Peter Pan (1924 film)",
"Padlocked",
"Alarm Clock Andy",
"Her Gilded Cage",
"The Rainbow Man",
"A Full House",
"Metropolis (1927 film)",
"Hollywood (1923 film)",
"Illusion (1929 film)",
"The Secret Hour (film)",
"Java Head (1923 film)",
"Thirty Days (1922 film)",
"Her Winning Way",
"Jealousy (1929 film)",
"Beggar on Horseback (film)",
"Don't Call Me Little Girl",
"Love's Boomerang",
"The Nth Commandment",
"The Goose Hangs High",
"The Go-Getter (1923 film)",
"Something Always Happens (1928 film)",
"Dangerous Lies (1921 film)",
"Beggars of Life",
"Take Me Home (1928 film)",
"Charming Sinners",
"The Affairs of Anatol",
"White Oak (film)",
"Back Pay (1922 film)",
"The Potters (film)",
"In the Name of Love (1925 film)",
"After the Show (film)",
"J.M. Barrie",
"Tiger Love (1924 film)",
"Welcome Danger",
"Shanghai Bound",
"The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1923 film)",
"Burning Sands (1922 film)",
"The Life of the Party (1920 film)",
"What Happened to Jones (1920 film)",
"Too Wise Wives",
"Soft Cushions",
"The Quarterback (1926 film)",
"Hungarian Rhapsody (1928 film)",
"A Sainted Devil",
"Passing Through (1921 film)",
"The Letter (1929 film)",
"The Bonnie Brier Bush",
"Moana (1926 film)",
"The Ten Commandments (1923 film)",
"The Woman on Trial",
"She Couldn't Help It",
"The Magnificent Flirt",
"The Spotlight (film)",
"Racing Hearts",
"Born to the West (1926 film)",
"God Gave Me Twenty Cents",
"The Law of the Yukon",
"Borderland (1922 film)",
"The Stranger (1924 film)",
"The Charmer (1925 film)",
"The Princess of New York",
"Fair Week",
"The Crown of Lies",
"Her Own Money",
"The Air Mail",
"Mary's Ankle",
"Janus Films",
"Deep Waters (1920 film)",
"A Heart to Let",
"What's Your Hurry?",
"The Green Temptation",
"Looping the Loop",
"The Faith Healer",
"The Swan (1925 film)",
"The Shopworn Angel (1928 film)",
"Irish Luck (1925 film)",
"A Kiss in a Taxi",
"Room and Board (1921 film)",
"The Lucky Devil",
"The Sunset Legion",
"The Man I Love (1929 film)",
"A Society Scandal",
"White and Unmarried",
"The Woman Who Walked Alone",
"Away Goes Prudence",
"The Plaything of Broadway",
"The Cocoanuts",
"Sweet Lavender (1920 film)",
"The Heritage of the Desert (film)",
"The Saturday Night Kid",
"A Cumberland Romance",
"Wild Horse Mesa (1925 film)",
"Three Sinners",
"The Dancin' Fool",
"The Guilty One",
"Innocents of Paris",
"The Cheat (1923 film)",
"EMKA, Ltd.",
"Marry Me (1925 film)",
"We're All Gamblers",
"Blood and Sand (1922 film)",
"The Soul of France",
"Adam's Rib (1923 film)",
"The Bait (1921 film)",
"The Spanish Dancer",
"The Tree of Knowledge (1920 film)",
"The Sins of Rosanne",
"All Soul's Eve",
"Travelin' On (film)",
"The Copperhead",
"Dark Secrets",
"Chinatown Nights (1929 film)",
"The Bachelor Daddy",
"Sacred and Profane Love (film)",
"The Next Corner",
"The Alaskan",
"The Four Feathers (1929 film)",
"Leroy Clemens",
"Kid Boots (film)",
"Too Many Kisses",
"The Battle of Paris",
"The Pride of Palomar",
"His Children's Children",
"Beyond the Rocks (film)",
"The Cost (1920 film)",
"Jenny Be Good",
"The Best People",
"The Ace of Cads",
"O'Malley of the Mounted (1921 film)",
"What a Night! (1928 film)",
"Held by the Enemy (film)",
"Too Much Speed",
"lost film",
"Always Audacious",
"The Canary Murder Case (film)",
"Experience (1921 film)",
"A Gentleman of Leisure (1923 film)",
"Wedding Bills",
"You Never Can Tell (1920 film)",
"The Woman in the Suitcase",
"Dawn of the East",
"The White Flower",
"Fashions for Women",
"Lovers in Quarantine",
"The Soul of Youth",
"Outcast (1922 film)",
"The Ladder of Lies",
"The Light That Failed (1923 film)",
"A Son of His Father",
"A Lady in Love",
"Manslaughter (1922 film)",
"Stage Struck (1925 film)",
"Arthur Schnitzler",
"Let It Rain (1927 film)",
"The Outside Woman",
"The New Klondike",
"Straight Is the Way (1921 film)",
"Making a Man",
"New York (1927 film)",
"The Rookie's Return",
"The Mating Call",
"On with the Dance (1920 film)",
"Her Beloved Villain",
"Chickens (1921 film)",
"The World and His Wife",
"The Vanishing American",
"The Last Waltz (1927 film)",
"The Gay Defender",
"Shadows of Paris (1924 film)",
"Flower of Night",
"The Gilded Lily (1921 film)",
"The Dressmaker from Paris",
"Open Range (1927 film)",
"Honeymoon Hate",
"The Eagle of the Sea",
"Divorce Made Easy",
"The Legion of the Condemned",
"The Beauty Shop (film)",
"The Idol of the North",
"Wealth (film)",
"The False Road",
"Academy Award",
"Fascinating Youth",
"Kick In (1922 film)",
"Zaza (1923 film)",
"The Great Day",
"Nancy from Nowhere",
"The Six Best Cellars",
"Idols of Clay (1920 film)",
"Two Flaming Youths",
"Eyes of the Heart (film)",
"Terror Island",
"The Golden Princess",
"National Film Registry",
"Appearances (film)",
"Betrayal (1929 film)",
"Love's Greatest Mistake",
"Crooked Streets",
"James Oliver Curwood",
"A Homespun Vamp",
"Rugged Water",
"Senorita (film)",
"Hula (film)",
"The Case of Becky",
"Running Wild (1927 film)",
"Warner Bros.",
"The Village Sleuth",
"The Home Stretch",
"Buried Treasure (1921 film)",
"Find the Woman",
"Varsity (film)",
"Under the Lash",
"The Heart Raider",
"Wild Bill Hickok (film)",
"Beau Geste (1926 film)",
"Too Many Crooks (1927 film)",
"Two Weeks with Pay",
"The Manicure Girl",
"Sporting Goods",
"South of Suva",
"The Song and Dance Man",
"The Cowboy and the Lady (1922 film)",
"The Marriage Maker",
"A Game Chicken",
"The Cat's Pajamas",
"The Mystery Road",
"Lady Rose's Daughter",
"The Ordeal (film)",
"Stairs of Sand",
"The American Venus",
"Beau Revel",
"Half Way to Heaven (1929 film)",
"Figures Don't Lie",
"The Law and the Woman",
"Woman Trap (1929 film)",
"The Patriot (1928 film)",
"The Siren Call",
"Code of the Sea",
"Nobody's Money",
"Crazy to Marry",
"Time to Love (1927 film)",
"Across the Continent",
"Leap Year (1924 film)",
"Serenade (1927 film)",
"The Fear Market",
"Wet Paint (film)",
"The Lost Romance",
"Icebound (1924 film)",
"The Big Killing (1928 film)",
"Pied Piper Malone",
"Miss Bluebeard",
"Are Parents People?",
"Technicolor",
"Adventure (1925 film)",
"Cosmopolitan Productions",
"The Spaniard (film)",
"Children of Divorce (1927 film)",
"Midnight (1922 film)",
"The Furnace (1920 film)",
"The Impossible Mrs. Bellew",
"Food for Scandal",
"Hold That Lion (1926 film)",
"Any Woman",
"North of 36",
"John B. Hymer",
"The City of Masks",
"Wages of Virtue",
"The Young Diana",
"Ducks and Drakes",
"Warming Up (1928 film)",
"The Marriage Playground",
"While Satan Sleeps",
"The Passionate Pilgrim (1921 film)",
"A Gentleman of Paris (1927 film)",
"Cappy Ricks",
"Too Much Wife",
"The Man Who Fights Alone",
"Easy Come, Easy Go (1928 film)",
"A Night of Mystery",
"The Wolf of Wall Street (1929 film)",
"Only 38",
"Fast Company (1929 film)",
"An Old Fashioned Boy",
"The Campus Flirt",
"Adam und Eva",
"Half a Bride",
"The Side Show of Life",
"The Snow Bride",
"His House in Order (1920 film)",
"A City Sparrow",
"Harold Lloyd",
"Sins of the Fathers (1928 film)",
"Paramount Pictures",
"Fool's Paradise (1921 film)",
"Moonlight and Honeysuckle",
"Guilty of Love (film)",
"Brewster's Millions (1921 film)",
"The Call of the North (1921 film)",
"Little Italy (1921 film)",
"Fashions in Love",
"The Man Unconquerable",
"Grounds for Divorce (1925 film)",
"Wolf Song",
"Don't Call It Love (film)",
"Mantrap (1926 film)",
"The Showdown (1928 film)",
"Loves of an Actress",
"Midsummer Madness (1921 film)",
"You Never Know Women",
"Behind the German Lines",
"A Wise Fool",
"The Dance of Life (film)",
"The Canadian (film)",
"Beau Sabreur",
"Everything for Sale (1921 film)",
"All of a Sudden Peggy",
"Homecoming (1928 film)",
"Monsieur Beaucaire (1924 film)",
"Wanderer of the Wasteland (1924 film)",
"First Love (1921 film)",
"Love and Learn (1928 film)",
"The Drag Net",
"Close Harmony (1929 film)",
"The Last Command (1928 film)",
"Woman-Proof",
"A Kiss in the Dark (1925 film)",
"The Breaking Point (1924 film)",
"The Untamed Lady",
"What Every Woman Knows (1921 film)",
"The Night Club (film)",
"The New York Idea (1920 film)",
"The Dollar-a-Year Man",
"Dangerous Curves (1929 film)",
"The Sawdust Paradise",
"The Thirteenth Commandment",
"The Light of Western Stars (1925 film)",
"Double Speed",
"Contraband (1925 film)",
"Nothing but the Truth (1929 film)",
"Tell It to Sweeney",
"The Docks of New York",
"Tillie's Punctured Romance (1928 film)",
"Pointed Heels",
"A Daughter of Luxury",
"The Devil's Cargo",
"Say It Again (film)",
"Wife Savers",
"Homeward Bound (1923 film)",
"Forever (1921 film)",
"The Old Homestead (1922 film)",
"Gasoline Gus",
"The Covered Wagon",
"The Man Who Found Himself (1925 film)",
"Someone to Love (1928 film)",
"The Ancient Highway",
"Forgotten Faces (1928 film)",
"Her Husband's Trademark",
"Nice People (film)",
"Marquis Preferred",
"Let's Be Fashionable",
"The Crowded Hour",
"A Social Celebrity",
"Sweetie (1929 film)",
"Beauty's Worth",
"Arizona Bound (1927 film)",
"The Woman With Four Faces",
"Forbidden Paradise",
"Over the Border (1922 film)",
"Proxies (film)",
"Half an Hour",
"Life (1920 film)",
"The Fast Set",
"The Shock Punch",
"Morals (film)",
"Her Husband's Friend",
"The Price of Possession",
"Tip Toes",
"The Lady of the Harem",
"The Story Without a Name",
"Gentlemen of the Press",
"Rent Free",
"Miss Hobbs",
"Aloma of the South Seas (1926 film)",
"Mary Ellen Comes to Town",
"The Great Moment (1921 film)",
"A Kiss for Cinderella (film)",
"The March Hare (1921 film)",
"Adam and Eva",
"Singer Jim McKee",
"Volcano! (1926 film)",
"It's the Old Army Game",
"Paying the Piper (film)",
"My American Wife (1922 film)",
"The Dummy (1929 film)",
"Bluff (1924 film)",
"Partners in Crime (1928 film)",
"What's Your Husband Doing?",
"Open All Night (1924 film)",
"Flaming Barriers",
"A Virginia Courtship",
"The Way of All Flesh (1927 film)",
"Heliotrope (film)",
"Good and Naughty (film)",
"Welcome Home (1925 film)",
"The White Circle",
"Interference (film)",
"The Runaway (1926 film)",
"Men (1924 film)",
"The King on Main Street",
"To the Last Man (1923 film)",
"Ladies Must Live (1921 film)",
"Jack Straw (1920 film)",
"Miss Lulu Bett (film)",
"Seven Keys to Baldpate (1925 film)",
"The Carnation Kid",
"The Return of Sherlock Holmes (1929 film)",
"The Sheik (film)",
"Homer Comes Home",
"The Confidence Man (film)",
"Behold My Wife! (1920 film)",
"Universum Film AG",
"Mannequin (1926 film)",
"Cecil B. DeMille",
"Casey at the Bat (1927 film)",
"The Water Hole",
"Unguarded Women",
"Thunderbolt (1929 film)",
"The Hole in the Wall (1929 film)",
"Tin Gods",
"Ladies of the Mob",
"The Coast of Folly",
"The Garden of Weeds",
"Shadow of the Law (1926 film)",
"Madame Sans-Gêne (1925 film)",
"Salomy Jane (1923 film)",
"At the End of the World",
"A Romantic Adventuress",
"The Laughing Lady (1929 film)",
"The Woman God Changed",
"Is Matrimony a Failure?",
"Not So Long Ago",
"New Lives for Old",
"The Fighting Coward (1924 film)",
"Love 'Em and Leave 'Em (film)",
"Doomsday (1928 film)",
"The Jucklins (film)",
"The Enemy Sex",
"Service for Ladies (1927 film)",
"Nell Gwyn (1926 film)",
"The Thundering Herd (1925 film)",
"Sackcloth and Scarlet",
"We're in the Navy Now",
"Just Married (1928 film)",
"Sunset Pass (1929 film)",
"The Greene Murder Case (film)",
"The Leopardess",
"The Border Legion (1924 film)",
"The Bride's Play",
"The Love Charm",
"You'd Be Surprised (film)",
"On the High Seas",
"Redskin (film)",
"Big Brother (1923 film)",
"Hot News",
"The Luck of the Irish (1920 film)",
"The Cradle of Courage",
"The Dawn of a Tomorrow (1924 film)",
"The Criterion Collection",
"Our Leading Citizen (1922 film)",
"The Bronze Bell",
"39 East (film)",
"Frontier of the Stars",
"New Brooms",
"Through a Glass Window",
"Sinners (1920 film)",
"Her Face Value",
"A Dark Lantern",
"Chang: A Drama of the Wilderness",
"Robert Louis Stevenson",
"Below the Surface (1920 film)",
"Manhattan Cocktail (film)",
"Shootin' Irons",
"A Regular Fellow (1925 film)",
"The Virginian (1929 film)",
"Wings (1927 film)",
"Worldly Goods",
"Moran of the Marines",
"Cobra (1925 film)",
"The Conquest of Canaan",
"Manhandled (1924 film)",
"Singed Wings",
"Boomerang Bill",
"Three Live Ghosts (1922 film)",
"The Moral Sinner",
"Fools for Luck",
"Nevada (1927 film)",
"Locked Doors",
"The Ghost in the Garret",
"Man of the Forest (1926 film)",
"The Dark Mirror (1920 film)",
"To Have and to Hold (1922 film)",
"The Street of Forgotten Men",
"The Cradle (1922 film)",
"Barbed Wire (1927 film)",
"Hands Up! (1926 film)",
"Lawful Larceny (1923 film)",
"The Humming Bird",
"The Wheel of Life (1929 film)",
"Ten Modern Commandments",
"The Whistle (1921 film)",
"She's a Sheik",
"Paths to Paradise",
"Joe May",
"Fine Manners",
"Everybody's Acting",
"Salome of the Tenements",
"West of the Water Tower",
"Evening Clothes",
"Afraid to Love",
"Changing Husbands",
"Sheltered Daughters",
"That Royle Girl",
"Stranded in Paris",
"Special Delivery (1927 film)",
"The City Gone Wild",
"The City That Never Sleeps (film)",
"Peter Vernon's Silence",
"Enchantment (1921 film)",
"The Telephone Girl (1927 film)",
"The Trouble with Wives",
"Pink Gods",
"Drums of Fate",
"The Silent Partner (1923 film)",
"The Lucky Lady",
"Law of the Lawless (1923 film)",
"London (1926 film)",
"The Man Who Saw Tomorrow (1922 film)",
"The Love Doctor",
"Feet of Clay (1924 film)",
"The Crimson Challenge",
"Dancing Mothers",
"Tillie (film)",
"The Great Impersonation (1921 film)",
"Clarence (1922 film)",
"Tongues of Flame",
"That's My Baby (1926 film)",
"The Man from Home (1922 film)",
"The Sea Wolf (1920 film)",
"You Can't Fool Your Wife (1923 film)",
"April Folly",
"The Witching Hour (1921 film)",
"East of Suez (1925 film)",
"Lost: A Wife",
"The Woman from Moscow",
"Avalanche (1928 film)",
"The Rustle of Silk",
"Forlorn River (1926 film)",
"Civilian Clothes"
] |
62,111,776 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1930–1939)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 1930s. All films (with a few exceptions) are currently owned by Universal Television through EMKA, Ltd.
==1930==
==1931==
==1932==
==1933==
==1934==
==1935==
==1936==
==1937==
==1938==
==1939==
|
[
"Persons in Hiding",
"Harold Gray",
"Blonde Trouble",
"The Girl from Scotland Yard",
"13 Hours by Air",
"This Is the Night (1932 film)",
"For the Defense (1930 film)",
"Million Dollar Legs (1932 film)",
"Sinners in the Sun",
"Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police",
"Her Bodyguard",
"A Bedtime Story",
"Hold 'Em Navy",
"I'm No Angel",
"Sooky",
"Collegiate (1936 film)",
"The Thundering Herd (1933 film)",
"The Big Broadcast",
"I Love That Man",
"She's No Lady",
"The World and the Flesh",
"Some Like It Hot (1939 film)",
"Rulers of the Sea",
"Bulldog Drummond in Africa",
"Two Kinds of Women (1932 film)",
"Wayward (film)",
"The Girl in 419",
"Florida Special",
"The Cat and the Canary (1939 film)",
"Good Dame",
"A Lady's Profession",
"Dude Ranch (film)",
"Kick In (1931 film)",
"The Strange Case of Clara Deane",
"Search for Beauty",
"Prison Farm (film)",
"Jennie Gerhardt (film)",
"Campus Confessions",
"Wives Never Know",
"Turn Off the Moon",
"Mountain Music (film)",
"The Right to Love (1930 American film)",
"High, Wide, and Handsome",
"Tomorrow and Tomorrow (film)",
"Make Way for Tomorrow",
"The Devil Is Driving (1932 film)",
"Her Wedding Night",
"Once a Lady",
"Seven Days Leave (1930 film)",
"A Man from Wyoming",
"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931 film)",
"All the King's Horses (film)",
"Merrily We Go to Hell",
"The Crusades (1935 film)",
"Jamaica Inn (film)",
"Thrill of a Lifetime (film)",
"The Girl Habit",
"Man of the World (film)",
"The Misleading Lady (1932 film)",
"Midnight (1939 film)",
"Undercover Doctor",
"Monte Carlo (1930 film)",
"The Plainsman",
"Bulldog Drummond's Peril",
"The Santa Fe Trail (1930 film)",
"Dr. Kildare",
"Internes Can't Take Money",
"Scandal Sheet (1931 film)",
"Give Us This Night",
"Four Frightened People",
"Silver on the Sage",
"M (1931 film)",
"Love Among the Millionaires",
"Little Orphan Annie (1938 film)",
"Heritage of the Desert (1939 film)",
"Early to Bed (1936 film)",
"Girl Without a Room",
"Rhythm on the Range",
"Take a Chance (1933 film)",
"The Big Broadcast of 1936",
"Cafe Society (1939 film)",
"The Gracie Allen Murder Case",
"No Man of Her Own (1932 film)",
"Up Pops the Devil",
"The Return of Sophie Lang",
"Dangerous Nan McGrew",
"Invitation to Happiness",
"Shoot the Works (film)",
"Shanghai Express (film)",
"Once in a Blue Moon (1935 film)",
"Ruggles of Red Gap",
"Bulldog Drummond Escapes",
"The Kibitzer",
"Lady Be Careful",
"Duck Soup (1933 film)",
"F-Man",
"The Llano Kid",
"Along Came Love (1936 film)",
"Hotel Haywire",
"The House That Shadows Built",
"A Doctor's Diary",
"Man of the Forest (1933 film)",
"Tip-Off Girls",
"Horse Feathers",
"Heart of the West (film)",
"The Light That Failed (1939 film)",
"Without Regret (film)",
"Night Club Scandal",
"Daughter of the Dragon",
"Rich Man's Folly",
"Vessel of Wrath",
"The Barrier (1937 film)",
"Broken Lullaby",
"True Confession",
"Nero-Film",
"Shanghai (1935 film)",
"Desert Gold (1936 film)",
"The Gang Buster",
"Alice's Adventures in Wonderland",
"Drift Fence",
"Hopalong Cassidy Returns",
"The Last Train from Madrid",
"The General Died at Dawn",
"Strangers in Love",
"Dancers in the Dark",
"Terror Aboard",
"College Holiday",
"Double Door (film)",
"Gulliver's Travels (1939 film)",
"Shadow of the Law (1930 film)",
"Spawn of the North",
"The Jungle Princess",
"City Streets (1931 film)",
"Universal Television",
"Sarah and Son",
"Hello, Everybody!",
"Mississippi (film)",
"The Lawyer's Secret",
"Million Dollar Legs (1939 film)",
"Mayflower Pictures",
"The President Vanishes (film)",
"You Belong to Me (1934 film)",
"Rose of the Rancho (1936 film)",
"Percy Crosby",
"Bluebeard's Eighth Wife",
"Gun Smoke (1931 film)",
"Call of the Prairie",
"You and Me (1938 film)",
"The Star Maker (1939 film)",
"Only the Brave (1930 film)",
"The Blue Cross (short story)",
"Pride of the West",
"Ladies Love Brutes",
"I'd Give My Life",
"Forbidden Adventure",
"Arrest Bulldog Drummond",
"This Man in Paris",
"Street of Chance (1930 film)",
"Ladies of the Big House",
"Forgotten Commandments",
"Three on the Trail (film)",
"Valiant Is the Word for Carrie",
"I Met Him in Paris",
"The Big Pond",
"Union Pacific (film)",
"Bulldog Drummond",
"Clarence (1937 film)",
"North of the Rio Grande (1937 film)",
"Dangerous to Know",
"Double or Nothing (1937 film)",
"Wells Fargo (film)",
"Guilty as Hell",
"Skippy (film)",
"Borderland (1937 film)",
"Stolen Heaven (1931 film)",
"Big Executive",
"Man on the Flying Trapeze",
"Forlorn River (1937 film)",
"She Done Him Wrong",
"The Woman Accused",
"Paris in Spring",
"The Texans",
"Sing You Sinners (film)",
"18 Minutes",
"Yours for the Asking",
"The Texan (1930 film)",
"My American Wife (1936 film)",
"Blossoms on Broadway",
"White Woman",
"Every Day's a Holiday (1937 film)",
"Personal Maid",
"The Conquering Horde",
"One Hour Late",
"Never Say Die (1939 film)",
"Torch Singer",
"Honeymoon in Bali",
"...One Third of a Nation...",
"The Night Angel",
"Turner Entertainment",
"Rose Bowl (film)",
"Back Door to Heaven",
"Rocky Mountain Mystery",
"It Pays to Advertise (1931 film)",
"Tom Sawyer, Detective",
"The Light of Western Stars (1930 film)",
"The Beloved Bachelor",
"Follow Thru",
"Love Me Tonight",
"Cassidy of Bar 20",
"Swing High, Swing Low (film)",
"The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn",
"From Hell to Heaven",
"Young Eagles (film)",
"Touchdown (1931 film)",
"Love in Bloom (film)",
"Midnight Madonna",
"People Will Talk (1935 film)",
"Second Italo-Ethiopian War",
"The Smiling Lieutenant",
"Goin' to Town",
"Mama Loves Papa (1933 film)",
"Dishonored (film)",
"Men Without Names",
"Janus Films",
"Palm Springs (1936 film)",
"Tropic Holiday",
"24 Hours (1931 film)",
"Three Cheers for Love",
"Waikiki Wedding",
"Republic Pictures",
"Mary Burns, Fugitive",
"Here is My Heart",
"The Case Against Mrs. Ames",
"The Mad Parade",
"Heritage of the Desert (1932 film)",
"Madison Square Garden (film)",
"The Notorious Sophie Lang",
"Romance in the Dark",
"The Moon's Our Home",
"Derelict (film)",
"Timothy's Quest (1936 film)",
"Maurice Bedel",
"The Wiser Sex",
"The Benson Murder Case (film)",
"Grumpy (1930 film)",
"Wanderer of the Wasteland (1935 film)",
"Lady and Gent",
"Enter Madame (1935 film)",
"Car 99",
"EMKA, Ltd.",
"Scandal Street (1938 film)",
"Working Girls (1931 film)",
"Jonathan Swift",
"Texas Trail (1937 film)",
"The Lady's from Kentucky",
"Three-Cornered Moon",
"To the Last Man (1933 film)",
"Girls About Town (film)",
"Screen Guild Productions",
"The Love Parade",
"The Vagabond King (1930 film)",
"I Take This Woman (1931 film)",
"Annapolis Farewell",
"Tom Sawyer, Detective (film)",
"Law of the Pampas",
"Wedding Present (film)",
"Honeymoon Lane (film)",
"King of Gamblers",
"Stolen Life (1939 film)",
"I'm from Missouri",
"Columbia Pictures",
"The Song of Songs (1933 film)",
"Madame Racketeer",
"No Limit (1931 film)",
"Champagne Waltz",
"Beau Geste (1939 film)",
"Men with Wings",
"Theodore Dreiser",
"Cradle Song (1933 film)",
"What a Life (film)",
"Nevada (1935 film)",
"The Devil's Holiday",
"Rumba (1935 film)",
"This Way Please",
"Strictly Personal (film)",
"Ride a Crooked Mile",
"The Texas Rangers (1936 film)",
"S. S. Van Dine",
"Ebb Tide (1937 film)",
"The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1936 film)",
"Kiss and Make-Up",
"Hotel Imperial (1939 film)",
"The Bride Comes Home",
"Hands Across the Table",
"One Hour with You",
"Murders in the Zoo",
"Ladies Should Listen",
"Slightly Scarlet (1930 film)",
"G. K. Chesterton",
"Disgraced!",
"Queen High",
"This Day and Age (film)",
"The Social Lion",
"Desire (1936 film)",
"If I Were King",
"Cocoanut Grove (film)",
"Ambush (1939 film)",
"The Crime of the Century (1933 film)",
"Rustlers' Valley",
"The Crime Nobody Saw",
"Death Takes a Holiday",
"Poppy (1936 film)",
"In Old Mexico",
"Too Much Harmony",
"The Big Broadcast of 1937",
"The Glass Key (1935 film)",
"The Miracle Man (1932 film)",
"Tonight Is Ours",
"Design for Living (film)",
"Father Brown, Detective",
"The False Madonna",
"Behind the Make-Up",
"Academy Award",
"Fatal Lady",
"Disbarred (film)",
"Zaza (1939 film)",
"Menace (1934 American film)",
"Renegade Trail",
"One-Third of a Nation",
"Animal Crackers (1930 film)",
"Many Happy Returns (1934 film)",
"National Film Registry",
"Sony Pictures",
"The Sap from Syracuse",
"An American Tragedy (film)",
"Here Comes Cookie",
"Ship Cafe",
"Midnight Club (film)",
"Soak the Rich",
"Our Neighbors – The Carters",
"With Byrd at the South Pole",
"Warner Bros.",
"Four Hours to Kill!",
"The Eagle's Brood",
"The Broken Wing (1932 film)",
"All of Me (1934 film)",
"Sitting Pretty (1933 film)",
"The Lives of a Bengal Lancer (film)",
"Behold My Wife! (1934 film)",
"Illegal Traffic",
"Hop-Along Cassidy",
"Bar 20 Justice",
"The Magnificent Lie (1931 film)",
"Wagon Wheels (film)",
"The Virtuous Sin",
"Spendthrift (film)",
"Elmer and Elsie",
"The Great Gambini",
"Disputed Passage",
"The Silent Enemy (1930 film)",
"Anybody's Woman",
"The Cheat (1931 film)",
"Hold 'Em Yale (1935 film)",
"70,000 Witnesses",
"Honor Among Lovers",
"Thunder Below",
"Her Jungle Love",
"Love on Toast",
"Maid of Salem",
"Boy Trouble",
"Angel (1937 film)",
"Stolen Heaven (1938 film)",
"Three Married Men",
"Murder with Pictures",
"Born to the West",
"Finn and Hattie",
"Fighting Caravans",
"This Reckless Age",
"Bolero (1934 film)",
"Lone Cowboy (film)",
"Bulldog Drummond's Bride",
"Hunted Men",
"Young Man of Manhattan",
"The Adventures of Tom Sawyer",
"Monkey Business (1931 film)",
"The Blue Angel",
"Island of Lost Men",
"So Red the Rose (film)",
"The Border Legion (1930 film)",
"Peter Ibbetson",
"Paramount on Parade",
"Ernest Hemingway",
"The Old Fashioned Way (film)",
"Technicolor",
"Eight Girls in a Boat (1934 film)",
"The Mysterious Rider (1938 film)",
"Say It in French",
"The Witching Hour (1934 film)",
"No More Women (1934 film)",
"Let's Go Native",
"The Accusing Finger",
"The Gilded Lily (1935 film)",
"Secrets of a Secretary",
"Private Worlds",
"No One Man",
"True to the Navy",
"Women Love Once",
"20th Century Studios",
"King of Alcatraz",
"On Such a Night (1937 film)",
"Daughter of Shanghai",
"Sunset Pass (1933 film)",
"Millions in the Air",
"Murder at the Vanities",
"Forgotten Faces (1936 film)",
"Wild Money",
"Golden Harvest (film)",
"Pick-Up (1933 film)",
"Tarnished Lady",
"The Sign of the Cross (1932 film)",
"Follow the Leader (1930 film)",
"Song of the Eagle",
"Harold Lloyd",
"Rango (1931 film)",
"Paramount Pictures",
"The Princess Comes Across",
"Partners in Crime (1937 film)",
"Tabu: A Story of the South Seas",
"Cleopatra (1934 film)",
"Hell and High Water (1933 film)",
"The Preview Murder Mystery",
"Crime Without Passion",
"A Son Comes Home",
"Tom Sawyer (1930 film)",
"The Man from Yesterday",
"The Arkansas Traveler (film)",
"Mark Twain",
"Burning Up (film)",
"Partners of the Plains",
"Melody in Spring",
"Night of Mystery (1937 film)",
"Alice in Wonderland (1933 film)",
"McFadden's Flats (1935 film)",
"The Big Broadcast of 1938",
"Ready for Love (1934 film)",
"Thanks for the Memory (film)",
"Charles Dickens",
"My Sin",
"A Farewell to Arms (1932 film)",
"Mark of the Avenger",
"Men Are Like That",
"Till We Meet Again (1936 film)",
"Belle of the Nineties",
"The Scoundrel (1935 film)",
"The Buccaneer (1938 film)",
"Wings in the Dark",
"Television Spy",
"International House (1933 film)",
"The Mysterious Rider (1933 film)",
"Hopalong Rides Again",
"Arizona Mahoney",
"She Made Her Bed",
"Murder Goes to College",
"$1,000 a Touchdown",
"The Royal Family of Broadway",
"Huckleberry Finn (1931 film)",
"Paris Honeymoon",
"Bulldog Drummond Comes Back",
"King of Chinatown",
"Under-Cover Man",
"The Story of Temple Drake",
"Scrooge (1935 film)",
"Bar 20 Rides Again",
"One Sunday Afternoon (1933 film)",
"Skippy (comic strip)",
"Applause (1929 film)",
"Heads Up (1930 film)",
"College Swing",
"The Billion Dollar Scandal",
"Anything Goes (1936 film)",
"The Lemon Drop Kid (1934 film)",
"Now and Forever (1934 film)",
"And Sudden Death",
"The Great Victor Herbert",
"Benno Vigny",
"Accent on Youth (film)",
"Only Saps Work",
"Along Came Youth",
"Two for Tonight",
"She Asked for It",
"Ladies' Man (1931 film)",
"Sophie Lang Goes West",
"The Spoilers (1930 film)",
"John Meade's Woman",
"Hollywood Boulevard (1936 film)",
"Wild Horse Mesa (1932 film)",
"This Man Is News",
"Honey (1930 film)",
"Academy Award for Best Picture",
"Klondike Annie",
"Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen",
"Luxury Liner (1933 film)",
"An American Tragedy",
"His Double Life",
"Limehouse Blues (film)",
"Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (1934 film)",
"All Women Have Secrets",
"The Phantom President",
"Stolen Harmony",
"Every Night at Eight",
"Professor Beware",
"The Magnificent Fraud",
"Lewis Carroll",
"Wharf Angel",
"Outcast (1937 film)",
"Too Many Parents",
"Sudden Money",
"Thirty-Day Princess",
"We're Not Dressing",
"Evenings for Sale",
"Manslaughter (1930 film)",
"Movie Crazy",
"Her Husband Lies",
"His Woman",
"Fast and Loose (1930 film)",
"The Gracie Allen Murder Case (film)",
"College Rhythm",
"Universum Film AG",
"Hills of Old Wyoming",
"The Last Round-Up (1934 film)",
"Death of a Champion",
"Gambling Ship (1933 film)",
"Laughter (1930 film)",
"St. Louis Blues (1939 film)",
"Heart of Arizona",
"Confessions of a Co-Ed",
"Morocco (film)",
"The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde",
"Range War",
"The Vanishing Frontier",
"A Christmas Carol",
"Bulldog Drummond's Revenge",
"Go West, Young Man (1936 film)",
"Devil and the Deep",
"Unmarried (1939 film)",
"The Last Outpost (1935 film)",
"Anybody's War",
"Silence (1931 film)",
"The Frontiersmen",
"The Milky Way (1936 film)",
"Hopalong Cassidy",
"Thunder Trail",
"Tillie and Gus",
"College Scandal",
"Mind Your Own Business (film)",
"Sea Legs (film)",
"Give Me a Sailor",
"Hideaway Girl",
"Grand Jury Secrets",
"The Virginia Judge (film)",
"Big Brown Eyes",
"Private Scandal",
"The Return of Dr. Fu Manchu",
"The Night of Nights",
"Two-Fisted",
"Service for Ladies (1932 film)",
"Night After Night (film)",
"Safety in Numbers (1930 film)",
"Doctor Rhythm",
"The Pursuit of Happiness (1934 film)",
"Caught (1931 film)",
"June Moon (film)",
"The Criterion Collection",
"Dangerous Paradise (1930 film)",
"Federal Theatre Project",
"The Sea God",
"Make Me a Star (film)",
"The Way to Love",
"Hot Saturday",
"The Great Flirtation",
"Easy to Take",
"Walt Disney Studios (division)",
"Exclusive (film)",
"College Humor (film)",
"Cohen Media Group",
"Island of Lost Souls (1932 film)",
"King of the Jungle (1933 film)",
"The Scarlet Empress",
"Girl of the Ozarks",
"Trail Dust (film)",
"Through the Looking-Glass",
"Sons of the Legion",
"Let's Make a Million",
"Sunset Trail",
"A Stolen Life (1946 film)",
"The Aldrich Family",
"Supernatural (film)",
"It's a Gift",
"Unfaithful (1931 film)",
"Madame Butterfly (1932 film)",
"Smart Girl (film)",
"Robert Louis Stevenson",
"Man About Town (1939 film)",
"Blonde Venus",
"Border Flight",
"Little Miss Marker (1934 film)",
"Night Work (1939 film)",
"Sky Bride",
"Booloo",
"Artists and Models (1937 film)",
"Touchdown, Army",
"The Arizona Raiders",
"Little Orphan Annie",
"Artists and Models Abroad",
"Her Master's Voice",
"Our Leading Citizen (1939 film)",
"The Devil Is a Woman (1935 film)",
"Woman Trap (1936 film)",
"Trouble in Paradise (1932 film)",
"Come On Marines!",
"The Trumpet Blows",
"He Learned About Women",
"Straight from the Shoulder (1936 film)",
"Coronado (1935 film)",
"The Night of June 13",
"Feet First",
"Murder by the Clock",
"Souls at Sea",
"You're Telling Me!",
"If I Had a Million",
"Roadhouse Nights",
"Under the Tonto Rim (1933 film)",
"The Secret Call",
"She Loves Me Not (1934 film)",
"Six of a Kind",
"The Eagle and the Hawk (1933 film)",
"Home on the Range (1935 film)",
"The Road to Reno (1931 film)",
"Here Comes the Groom (1934 film)",
"Husband's Holiday",
"Easy Living (1937 film)",
"Fleischer Studios",
"The Sky Parade",
"The Vice Squad",
"Playboy of Paris",
"Gulliver's Travels"
] |
62,111,778 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1940–1949)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 1940s. All films (with a few exceptions) are currently owned by Universal Television through EMKA, Ltd.
==1940==
==1941==
==1942==
==1943==
==1944==
==1945==
==1946==
==1947==
==1948==
==1949==
|
[
"Rope of Sand",
"Typhoon (1940 film)",
"Dear Ruth (film)",
"Safari (1940 film)",
"The Man in Half Moon Street",
"Salty O'Rourke",
"I Love a Soldier",
"Top o' the Morning (1949 film)",
"Cross My Heart (1946 film)",
"A Night at Earl Carroll's",
"Hold Back the Dawn",
"Tombstone, the Town Too Tough to Die",
"The Ghost Breakers",
"One Body Too Many",
"Hail the Conquering Hero",
"Unconquered (1947 film)",
"Rangers of Fortune",
"Road to Utopia",
"Dancing on a Dime",
"The Imperfect Lady (1947 film)",
"The Perils of Pauline (1947 film)",
"Bring on the Girls (film)",
"Dear Wife",
"So Evil My Love",
"Sweater Girl (film)",
"Incendiary Blonde",
"Henry Aldrich, Editor",
"Bob Hope",
"Beyond Glory",
"Blaze of Noon",
"Timber Queen (1944 film)",
"Doomed Caravan",
"World Premiere (film)",
"Dr. Cyclops",
"Let's Face It (film)",
"Beyond the Blue Horizon (film)",
"True to the Army",
"Waterfront at Midnight",
"The Bride Wore Boots",
"Adventure in Diamonds",
"Caught in the Draft",
"Calcutta (1947 film)",
"No Time for Love (1943 film)",
"The Story of Dr. Wassell",
"Stick to Your Guns (film)",
"Rainbow Island (1944 film)",
"Suddenly, It's Spring",
"Border Vigilantes",
"Whispering Smith",
"Big Town Scandal",
"Remember the Night",
"I Want a Divorce",
"Among the Living (1941 film)",
"Skylark (1941 film)",
"Bahama Passage",
"The Affairs of Susan",
"The Heiress",
"My Favorite Blonde",
"Night Has a Thousand Eyes",
"Dangerous Passage",
"Second Chorus",
"Alaska Highway (film)",
"Double Exposure (1944 film)",
"Universal Television",
"Life with Henry",
"Fear in the Night (1947 film)",
"Academy Award for Best Original Song",
"public domain",
"Torpedo Boat (film)",
"Mayflower Pictures",
"The Perfect Marriage",
"Song of Surrender",
"Road to Rio",
"Louisiana Purchase (film)",
"Pacific Blackout",
"The New York Times",
"Danger Street (1947 film)",
"The Accused (1949 film)",
"Sidewalks of London",
"Murder, He Says",
"The Blue Dahlia",
"This Gun for Hire",
"Untamed (1940 film)",
"The Light of Western Stars (1940 film)",
"A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1949 film)",
"They Made Me a Killer",
"Those Were the Days!",
"White Christmas (song)",
"Two Years Before the Mast (film)",
"Welcome Stranger (1947 film)",
"The Day Will Dawn",
"The Well Groomed Bride",
"Hot Cargo",
"Dream Girl (1948 film)",
"Happy Go Lucky (1943 film)",
"You're the One (1941 film)",
"Big Town (1947 film)",
"Buy Me That Town",
"Star Spangled Rhythm",
"No Hands on the Clock",
"The Way of All Flesh (1940 film)",
"Variety Girl",
"Moon Over Burma",
"Road to …",
"Power Dive",
"Albuquerque (film)",
"Manhandled (1949 film)",
"Henry Aldrich Plays Cupid",
"The Hard-Boiled Canary",
"The Forest Rangers (film)",
"To Each His Own (1946 film)",
"Hostages (1943 film)",
"The Uninvited (1944 film)",
"Henry Aldrich for President",
"The Emperor Waltz",
"Knights of the Range",
"Speed to Spare",
"Take It Big",
"Arise, My Love",
"Tornado (1943 film)",
"O.S.S. (film)",
"The Miracle of Morgan's Creek",
"Dynamite (1949 film)",
"You Came Along",
"Streets of Laredo (film)",
"Lucky Jordan",
"Alias Nick Beal",
"EMKA, Ltd.",
"The Night of January 16th (film)",
"Bride of Vengeance",
"Standing Room Only (1944 film)",
"The Searching Wind",
"Buck Benny Rides Again",
"Wild Harvest",
"Double Indemnity",
"Henry and Dizzy",
"The Parson of Panamint (1941 film)",
"Road to Morocco",
"I Cover Big Town",
"Adventure Island (film)",
"Santa Fe Marshal",
"Road to Zanzibar",
"Seventeen (1940 film)",
"Hidden Gold (1940 film)",
"Where There's Life",
"Duffy's Tavern (film)",
"Jungle Flight",
"Wide Open Town",
"Two Cities Films",
"Miss Susie Slagle's",
"I Live on Danger",
"The Sainted Sisters",
"Irving Berlin",
"Gambler's Choice",
"The Virginian (1946 film)",
"Practically Yours",
"Nothing but the Truth (1941 film)",
"Priorities on Parade",
"Street of Chance (1942 film)",
"The Stork Club (film)",
"Dr. Broadway",
"Special Agent (1949 film)",
"The Remarkable Andrew",
"I Wanted Wings",
"People Are Funny (film)",
"Victory (1940 film)",
"The Big Clock (film)",
"The Great Moment (1944 film)",
"Emergency Squad (1940 film)",
"National Film Registry",
"Sony Pictures",
"The Good Fellows",
"Monsieur Beaucaire (1946 film)",
"Midnight Manhunt",
"Lady Bodyguard",
"California (1947 film)",
"Disaster (film)",
"Our Hearts Were Young and Gay (film)",
"French Without Tears (film)",
"St. Martin's Lane (film)",
"Mr. Bug Goes to Town",
"Our Hearts Were Growing Up",
"Reaching for the Sun",
"Cherokee Strip (film)",
"Parole Fixer",
"And Now Tomorrow",
"Night in New Orleans",
"Frenchman's Creek (film)",
"Bing Crosby",
"The Trouble with Women (film)",
"Wrecking Crew (1942 film)",
"Twilight on the Trail",
"Dark Mountain (film)",
"Here Come the Waves",
"Saigon (1948 film)",
"Shaggy (film)",
"Follow That Woman",
"Henry Aldrich, Boy Scout",
"Night Plane from Chungking",
"The National Barn Dance",
"Mr. Reckless",
"The Lady Eve",
"Aloma of the South Seas (1941 film)",
"Riding High (1943 film)",
"Three Men from Texas",
"The Glass Key (1942 film)",
"Virginia (1941 film)",
"Glamour Boy (film)",
"The Hitler Gang",
"The Monster and the Girl",
"My Own True Love",
"Submarine Alert",
"Going My Way",
"Christmas in July (film)",
"Ladies' Man (1947 film)",
"Paramount Pictures",
"Fly-by-Night (film)",
"Melange Pictures",
"Easy Come, Easy Go (1947 film)",
"Isn't It Romantic? (1948 film)",
"The Navy Way",
"A Medal for Benny",
"The Palm Beach Story",
"The Paleface (1948 film)",
"I Walk Alone",
"Kitty (1945 film)",
"Opened by Mistake",
"Pirates on Horseback",
"High Explosive (film)",
"Wildcat (1942 film)",
"Riders of the Timberline",
"The Great Man's Lady",
"Are Husbands Necessary? (1942 film)",
"For Whom the Bell Tolls (film)",
"Mystery Sea Raider",
"Queen of the Mob",
"Out of This World (1945 film)",
"Henry Aldrich's Little Secret",
"Las Vegas Nights",
"Ministry of Fear",
"Pine-Thomas Productions",
"Texas Rangers Ride Again",
"Comin' Round the Mountain (1940 film)",
"The Showdown (1940 film)",
"Sullivan's Travels",
"The Major and the Minor",
"The Great Lover (1949 film)",
"The Unseen (1945 film)",
"Academy Award for Best Picture",
"Take a Letter, Darling",
"Wake Island (film)",
"Flying Blind (film)",
"Lady in the Dark (film)",
"Golden Earrings",
"Blue Skies (1946 film)",
"You Can't Ration Love",
"And the Angels Sing",
"Red, Hot and Blue (film)",
"Aerial Gunner",
"Holiday Inn",
"Minesweeper (film)",
"El Paso (film)",
"The Lady Has Plans",
"Salute for Three",
"My Heart Belongs to Daddy (film)",
"The Lost Weekend (film)",
"Sorry, Wrong Number",
"The Great McGinty",
"A Foreign Affair",
"Miss Tatlock's Millions",
"Reap the Wild Wind",
"New York Town",
"West Point Widow",
"The Fleet's In",
"The Round Up (1941 film)",
"Forced Landing (1941 film)",
"Henry Aldrich Gets Glamour",
"China (1943 film)",
"Hold That Blonde",
"Holiday Inn (film)",
"Caged Fury (1948 film)",
"Hatter's Castle (film)",
"Hopalong Cassidy",
"Henry Aldrich Haunts a House",
"Sony Pictures Television",
"Henry Aldrich Swings It",
"Till We Meet Again (1944 film)",
"My Favorite Brunette",
"The Strange Love of Martha Ivers",
"Sealed Verdict",
"The Great Gatsby (1949 film)",
"Kiss the Boys Goodbye",
"Love Letters (1945 film)",
"Women Without Names (1940 film)",
"In Old Colorado",
"Rhythm on the River",
"Samson and Delilah (1949 film)",
"Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (1942 film)",
"Masquerade in Mexico",
"Hazard (1948 film)",
"High Powered",
"Dixie (film)",
"Stagecoach War",
"The Hour Before the Dawn",
"The Aldrich Family",
"My Friend Irma (film)",
"The Biscuit Eater (1940 film)",
"Chicago Deadline",
"Road to Singapore",
"Big Town After Dark",
"So Proudly We Hail!",
"Swamp Fire",
"One Night in Lisbon",
"The Mad Doctor (1941 film)",
"North West Mounted Police (film)",
"True to Life (film)",
"Desert Fury",
"Outlaws of the Desert",
"Five Graves to Cairo",
"The Quarterback (1940 film)",
"Golden Gloves (1940 film)",
"Tokyo Rose (film)",
"Birth of the Blues",
"The Shepherd of the Hills (1941 film)",
"Sorrowful Jones",
"Scared Stiff (1945 film)",
"Seven Were Saved",
"Love Thy Neighbor (1940 film)",
"Secret of the Wastelands",
"The Farmer's Daughter (1940 film)"
] |
62,111,779 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1950–1959)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 1950s.
==1950==
==1951==
==1952==
==1955==
==1958==
==1959==
|
[
"My Friend Irma Goes West",
"Paid in Full (1950 film)",
"Three Violent People",
"The Man Who Could Cheat Death",
"Fear Strikes Out",
"Wild Is the Wind (1957 film)",
"Anything Goes (1956 film)",
"Run for Cover (film)",
"Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (film)",
"The Hangman (1959 film)",
"Pony Express (film)",
"Pine-Thomas Productions",
"The Redhead and the Cowboy",
"My Son John",
"Rear Window",
"War and Peace (1956 film)",
"The Buster Keaton Story",
"The Girls of Pleasure Island",
"The Trouble with Harry",
"The Buccaneer (1958 film)",
"Dark City (1950 film)",
"Caribbean Gold",
"The Lawless",
"The Delicate Delinquent",
"When Worlds Collide (1951 film)",
"Secret of the Incas",
"Copper Canyon (film)",
"National Film Registry",
"Mr. Music",
"The Eagle and the Hawk (1950 film)",
"Sony Pictures",
"Strategic Air Command (film)",
"The Birds and the Bees (film)",
"Loving You (1957 film)",
"Don't Give Up the Ship (film)",
"The Black Orchid (film)",
"Botany Bay (film)",
"Little Boy Lost (1953 film)",
"Appointment with Danger",
"That's My Boy (1951 film)",
"I Married a Monster from Outer Space",
"The Matchmaker (1958 film)",
"But Not for Me (film)",
"Career (1959 film)",
"Warpath (film)",
"Stalag 17",
"The Caddy",
"Maracaibo (film)",
"Rock-A-Bye Baby (film)",
"Warner Bros.",
"Union Station (film)",
"Hot Spell (film)",
"That Kind of Woman",
"Funny Face",
"Alaska Seas",
"The File on Thelma Jordon",
"The Rose Tattoo (film)",
"Sailor Beware (1952 film)",
"The Sad Sack",
"The Great Missouri Raid",
"Here Come the Girls (1953 film)",
"Branded (1950 film)",
"Spain",
"Easter Sunday",
"The Lemon Drop Kid",
"Zero Hour!",
"Peking Express (film)",
"The Search for Bridey Murphy",
"Tropic Zone (film)",
"Somebody Loves Me (film)",
"Teacher's Pet (1958 film)",
"The Jayhawkers!",
"Thunder in the Sun",
"When Hell Broke Loose",
"The Young Captives",
"Fancy Pants (film)",
"Flight to Tangier",
"Ace in the Hole (1951 film)",
"Detective Story (1951 film)",
"Darling, How Could You!",
"The Atomic City",
"Roman Holiday",
"Jivaro (film)",
"Road to...",
"Knock on Wood (film)",
"Another Time, Another Place (1958 film)",
"Universal Pictures",
"The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956 film)",
"Rhubarb (1951 film)",
"The Last Outpost (1951 film)",
"Passage West (film)",
"The Ten Commandments (1956 film)",
"As Young as We Are",
"Last Train from Gun Hill",
"Son of Paleface",
"Hear Me Good",
"Riding High (1950 film)",
"Forever Female",
"You're Never Too Young",
"Lucy Gallant",
"Sony Pictures Television",
"The Bridges at Toko-Ri",
"The Seven Little Foys",
"The Space Children",
"The Colossus of New York",
"Tripoli (film)",
"Hong Kong (film)",
"Cassino to Korea",
"We're No Angels (1955 film)",
"The Goldbergs (film)",
"The Lonely Man",
"Houseboat (film)",
"Tokyo After Dark",
"King Creole",
"The Scarlet Hour",
"Just for You (1952 film)",
"The Country Girl (1954 film)",
"Tempest (1958 film)",
"Casanova's Big Night",
"The War of the Worlds (1953 film)",
"Flaming Feather",
"Red Mountain (film)",
"Sangaree (film)",
"Here Comes the Groom (1951 film)",
"The Proud and Profane",
"Vertigo (film)",
"Captain China",
"Off Limits (1953 film)",
"Academy Awards",
"The Greatest Show on Earth (film)",
"The Vanquished",
"The Desperate Hours (1955 film)",
"Let's Dance (1950 film)",
"The Blazing Forest",
"Encore (1951 film)",
"Paramount Pictures",
"The Five Pennies",
"Jumping Jacks",
"Jamaica Run",
"Spanish Affair (1957 film)",
"Desire Under the Elms (film)",
"Shane (film)",
"Tarzan's Greatest Adventure",
"Road to Bali",
"Money from Home",
"Ulysses (1954 film)",
"Those Redheads from Seattle",
"The Stars Are Singing",
"Living It Up",
"The Court Jester",
"Mambo (film)",
"Conquest of Space",
"Captain Carey, U.S.A.",
"A Place in the Sun (1951 film)",
"Godzilla, King of the Monsters!",
"The Furies (1950 film)",
"My Favorite Spy (1951 film)",
"The Rainmaker (1956 film)",
"Country Music Holiday",
"Manuela (1957 film)",
"The Party Crashers",
"The Devil's Hairpin",
"Hollywood or Bust",
"Silver City (1951 film)",
"Beau James",
"The Blob (1958 film)",
"The Mountain (1956 film)",
"Hurricane Smith (1952 film)",
"Quebec (1951 film)",
"September Affair",
"Aaron Slick from Punkin Crick",
"Submarine Command",
"About Mrs. Leslie",
"The Leather Saint",
"Crosswinds (film)",
"Sunset Boulevard (film)",
"Thunder in the East (1951 film)",
"Sabrina (1954 film)",
"To Catch a Thief",
"The Trap (1959 film)",
"Li'l Abner (1959 film)",
"Trio (1950 film)",
"Come Back, Little Sheba (1952 film)",
"Short Cut to Hell",
"Anything Can Happen",
"The Geisha Boy",
"At War with the Army",
"Dear Brat",
"Martin and Lewis",
"Carrie (1952 film)",
"public domain",
"The Girl Rush",
"The Far Horizons",
"That Certain Feeling (film)",
"The Vagabond King (1956 film)",
"Hell's Island",
"The Mating Season (film)",
"The Naked Jungle",
"St. Louis Blues (1958 film)",
"Elephant Walk",
"The Hot Angel",
"White Christmas (film)",
"Artists and Models",
"Houdini (1953 film)",
"Scared Stiff (1953 film)",
"Denver and Rio Grande (film)",
"Red Garters (film)",
"Omar Khayyam (1957 film)",
"The Savage (1952 film)",
"The Turning Point (1952 film)",
"High Hell",
"Cease Fire (1953 film)",
"NBC",
"Arrowhead (1953 film)",
"The Joker Is Wild",
"Mister Rock and Roll (film)",
"Something to Live For (film)",
"Pardners",
"The Stooge",
"3 Ring Circus",
"The Tin Star",
"No Man of Her Own (1950 film)"
] |
62,111,781 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1960–1969)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 1960s.
==1960==
==1961==
==1966==
==1967==
==1968==
==1969==
|
[
"Skidoo (film)",
"Ace High (1968 film)",
"Heller in Pink Tights",
"Medium Cool",
"Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad (film)",
"The Sterile Cuckoo",
"Crack in the World",
"Gunn (film)",
"It Started in Naples",
"Barbarella (film)",
"The Brain (1969 film)",
"The Nutty Professor (1963 film)",
"Seven Slaves Against the World",
"The Disorderly Orderly",
"The Psychopath (1966 film)",
"Villa Rides",
"Tarzan the Magnificent",
"In Harm's Way",
"Blind Date (1959 film)",
"National Film Registry",
"Siege of Syracuse (film)",
"The Swinger",
"Where's Jack?",
"The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance",
"Easy Come, Easy Go (1967 film)",
"A New Kind of Love",
"Downhill Racer",
"Seven Days in May",
"StudioCanal",
"The Young Ones (1961 film)",
"Hostile Guns",
"Becket (1964 film)",
"Warning Shot (1967 film)",
"The Revenge of Spartacus",
"The Idol (1966 film)",
"Foxhole in Cairo",
"A Breath of Scandal",
"Samuel Bronston",
"Duel of the Titans",
"Warner Bros.",
"The Slender Thread",
"Hell Is for Heroes (film)",
"Buckskin (film)",
"A Touch of Larceny",
"Drop Dead Darling",
"One-Eyed Jacks",
"Smashing Time",
"Man-Trap",
"Kid Rodelo",
"if....",
"Promise Her Anything",
"The Diary of an Innocent Boy",
"Come Blow Your Horn (film)",
"Ring of Spies",
"Danger: Diabolik",
"Sylvia (1965 film)",
"Targets",
"The Errand Boy",
"The Son of Captain Blood",
"Blood and Roses",
"The Patsy (1964 film)",
"Arizona Bushwhackers",
"The Girls on the Beach",
"Boeing Boeing (1965 film)",
"Hey, Let's Twist!",
"Walk a Tightrope",
"Robinson Crusoe on Mars",
"This Property Is Condemned",
"Waco (1966 film)",
"Hud (1963 film)",
"Where Love Has Gone (film)",
"The Family Jewels (film)",
"The Last of the Secret Agents?",
"Is Paris Burning? (film)",
"Barefoot in the Park (film)",
"The Busy Body (film)",
"Up the Junction (film)",
"Bandits in Milan",
"The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (film)",
"Under Ten Flags",
"Fort Utah (film)",
"Monte Carlo or Bust!",
"Universal Pictures",
"Blueprint for Robbery",
"Fun in Acapulco",
"Dance of Death (1969 film)",
"The Counterfeit Traitor",
"C'mon, Let's Live a Little",
"My Side of the Mountain (film)",
"Tempean Films",
"On the Double (film)",
"Summer and Smoke (film)",
"The Carpetbaggers (film)",
"Africa Texas Style",
"The Fall of the Roman Empire (film)",
"True Grit (1969 film)",
"All in a Night's Work (film)",
"Treasure of San Gennaro",
"My Geisha",
"The Rat Race",
"Embassy Pictures",
"Seconds (1966 film)",
"Half a Sixpence (film)",
"Conspiracy of Hearts",
"Two Weeks in September",
"The Last Safari",
"Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer",
"Who's Minding the Store?",
"The President's Analyst",
"Young Fury",
"Law of the Lawless (1964 film)",
"Too Late Blues",
"G.I. Blues",
"Prisoner of the Volga",
"Judith (1966 film)",
"The Bliss of Mrs. Blossom",
"Escape from Zahrain",
"Apache Uprising",
"Papa's Delicate Condition",
"The Caper of the Golden Bulls",
"Will Penny",
"Inadmissible Evidence (film)",
"Daring Game (film)",
"A Girl Named Tamiko",
"The Bellboy",
"The Spirit Is Willing",
"The Omegans",
"Anyone Can Play",
"All the Way Home (1963 film)",
"Fräulein Doktor (film)",
"Hatari!",
"Sebastian (1968 film)",
"Black Spurs",
"Grand Slam (1967 film)",
"Isabel (film)",
"Tarzan and the Great River",
"The Long Day's Dying",
"The Skull (film)",
"Paramount Pictures",
"Riot (1969 film)",
"Only When I Larf (film)",
"The Savage Innocents",
"The World of Suzie Wong (film)",
"Alfie (1966 film)",
"The Big Night (1960 film)",
"Love with the Proper Stranger",
"Circus World (film)",
"Romeo and Juliet (1968 film)",
"Johnny Reno",
"Fever Heat",
"Girls! Girls! Girls!",
"Project X (1968 film)",
"The Ladies Man",
"Town Tamer",
"Hurry Sundown (film)",
"Situation Hopeless... But Not Serious",
"Nevada Smith",
"The Sea Pirate",
"It's Only Money",
"Once Upon a Time in the West",
"Cinderfella",
"The Pigeon That Took Rome",
"Harlow (Paramount film)",
"Tarzan and the Jungle Boy",
"The Stranger (1967 film)",
"Gaumont Film Company",
"The Vulture (1967 film)",
"The Boy Who Stole a Million",
"Red Tomahawk",
"The Deadly Bees",
"The Penthouse (1967 film)",
"Visit to a Small Planet",
"A Boy Ten Feet Tall",
"Dr. Terror's House of Horrors",
"The Assassination Bureau",
"Paris When It Sizzles",
"Brushfire (film)",
"The Naked Prey",
"Island of the Lost",
"Walk Like a Dragon",
"Roustabout (film)",
"Donovan's Reef",
"Uptight (film)",
"Psycho (1960 film)",
"El Dorado (1966 film)",
"Red Line 7000",
"Waterhole No. 3",
"The Pleasure of His Company",
"Beach Ball",
"Stage to Thunder Rock",
"Assault on a Queen",
"Breakfast at Tiffany's (film)",
"Paradise, Hawaiian Style",
"Rogues' Gallery (1968 film)",
"Rosemary's Baby (film)",
"In the Wake of a Stranger",
"My Six Loves",
"Who's Been Sleeping in My Bed?",
"Blue Hawaii",
"Who's Got the Action?",
"Love in a Goldfish Bowl",
"Ådalen 31",
"Five Branded Women",
"Oh! What a Lovely War",
"Sands of the Kalahari",
"The Upper Hand (film)",
"Paint Your Wagon (film)",
"A Talent for Loving (film)",
"Jack the Ripper (1959 film)",
"The Red Tent (film)",
"The Brotherhood (1968 film)",
"No Way to Treat a Lady (film)",
"Wives and Lovers (film)",
"Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film",
"The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders",
"The Strange Affair",
"The Sons of Katie Elder",
"Regal Cinemas",
"Funeral in Berlin (film)",
"The Italian Job",
"Hello Down There",
"Blue (1968 film)",
"Spyglass Media Group",
"Lionsgate Films",
"Lady in a Cage",
"Mosfilm",
"Chuka (film)",
"Goodbye, Columbus (film)",
"5 Card Stud",
"The Odd Couple (film)",
"The Night of the Grizzly",
"Gentle Giant (film)"
] |
62,111,784 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1970–1979)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 1970s.
==1970==
==1971==
==1972==
==1973==
==1974==
==1975==
==1977==
==1978==
|
[
"Darling Lili",
"Dino De Laurentiis",
"Hitler: The Last Ten Days",
"Grease (film)",
"The Kirlian Witness",
"Foul Play (1978 film)",
"Man on a Swing",
"Plaza Suite (film)",
"Alberto Grimaldi",
"Lady Sings the Blues (film)",
"Serpico",
"Bad Company (1972 film)",
"King Kong (1976 film)",
"Jonathan Livingston Seagull (film)",
"David Paradine Productions",
"Islands in the Stream (film)",
"ABC Circle Films",
"The Education of Sonny Carson",
"The First Circle (1973 film)",
"Bloodline (1979 film)",
"Deadhead Miles",
"The Pied Piper (1972 film)",
"The Warriors (film)",
"The Day of the Locust (film)",
"National Film Registry",
"Shanks (film)",
"Charlotte's Web (1973 film)",
"Harold and Maude",
"The Big Bus",
"Marathon Man (film)",
"Last of the Red Hot Lovers (film)",
"Leadbelly (film)",
"The Possession of Joel Delaney (film)",
"Otto Preminger",
"Lorimar Television",
"StudioCanal",
"A Doll's House (1973 Garland film)",
"Looking for Mr. Goodbar (film)",
"American Hot Wax",
"Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon",
"A Gunfight",
"Saturday Night Fever",
"Astral Media",
"Tales That Witness Madness",
"Quaker Oats Company",
"The Man (1972 film)",
"Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown",
"The Bad News Bears Go to Japan",
"The Deserter (1971 film)",
"Hurricane (1979 film)",
"Connecting Rooms",
"The Bear and the Doll",
"Aladdin and His Magic Lamp (1970 film)",
"Posse (1975 film)",
"The Parallax View",
"Waterloo (1970 film)",
"Tigon British Film Productions",
"Scalawag (film)",
"Bug (1975 film)",
"Alfredo, Alfredo",
"Desperate Characters (film)",
"Sunburn (1979 film)",
"David L. Wolper",
"Turner Entertainment",
"The Conversation",
"Norwood (film)",
"Brother Sun, Sister Moon",
"Players (1979 film)",
"The Legend of Nigger Charley",
"T.R. Baskin",
"Bang the Drum Slowly (film)",
"Murphy's War",
"Death on the Nile (1978 film)",
"The Tenant",
"Once Is Not Enough (film)",
"National Film Finance Corporation",
"Three Days of the Condor",
"Malpaso Productions",
"The Friends of Eddie Coyle",
"Woodfall Film Productions",
"The Duellists",
"Save the Children (film)",
"ITV Studios",
"Hit!",
"Death Wish (1974 film)",
"First Love (1977 film)",
"Castle Hill Productions",
"Universal Pictures",
"Face to Face (1976 film)",
"Daisy Miller (film)",
"Heaven Can Wait (1978 film)",
"Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood",
"United Feature Syndicate",
"Unman, Wittering and Zigo (film)",
"On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (film)",
"Days of Heaven",
"Let's Scare Jessica to Death",
"Innocent Bystanders (film)",
"Telefilm Canada",
"Bill Melendez Productions",
"Janus Films",
"Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory",
"The Last Tycoon (1976 film)",
"Pretty Baby (1978 film)",
"Four Flies on Grey Velvet",
"The Godfather Part II",
"Embassy Pictures",
"The Klansman",
"The Lawyer (film)",
"The Conformist (film)",
"Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer",
"American Zoetrope",
"Star Spangled Girl",
"The One and Only (1978 film)",
"The Adventurers (1970 film)",
"United Artists",
"The Out-of-Towners (1970 film)",
"Lionsgate Studios",
"American Broadcasting Company",
"Save the Tiger",
"Fear Is the Key (film)",
"Malicious (1973 film)",
"The Gambler (1974 film)",
"Deep End (film)",
"Black Beauty (1971 film)",
"Fraternity Row (film)",
"The Bad News Bears",
"Real Life (1979 film)",
"Phase IV (1974 film)",
"Dogpound Shuffle",
"French Postcards",
"Don't Look Now",
"Thieves (1977 film)",
"The Bad News Bears in Breaking Training",
"Up in Smoke",
"Tropic of Cancer (film)",
"The Molly Maguires",
"Hemdale Film Corporation",
"Little Fauss and Big Halsy",
"A New Leaf (film)",
"A Separate Peace (film)",
"Charley One-Eye",
"The Optimists (1973 film)",
"Chinatown (1974 film)",
"The Criterion Collection",
"Joseph Andrews (film)",
"Goin' South",
"Oliver's Story",
"Walt Disney Studios (division)",
"The Memory of Justice",
"RSO Records",
"The Dove (1974 film)",
"King of the Gypsies (film)",
"Citizen's Band (film)",
"The Little Prince (1974 film)",
"British Lion Films",
"Child's Play (1972 film)",
"Paper Moon (film)",
"Ash Wednesday (1973 film)",
"Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell",
"ITC Entertainment",
"Paramount Pictures",
"Captain Kronos – Vampire Hunter",
"Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me (film)",
"Black Sunday (1977 film)",
"Hannie Caulder",
"Murder on the Orient Express (1974 film)",
"The Serpent's Egg (film)",
"Lifeguard (film)",
"de Passe Entertainment",
"Scott Free Productions",
"The Shootist",
"Framed (1975 film)",
"1900 (film)",
"An Almost Perfect Affair",
"The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (film)",
"Mandingo (film)",
"Friends (1971 film)",
"Bugsy Malone",
"Orca (1977 film)",
"First Artists",
"Bryna Productions",
"Joe Hill (film)",
"Meatballs (film)",
"Hustle (1975 film)",
"Sorcerer (film)",
"The Mattei Affair",
"Prophecy (film)",
"Borsalino (film)",
"Hammer Film Productions",
"The Godfather",
"Filmways",
"Starting Over (1979 film)",
"Catch-22 (film)",
"Mikey and Nicky",
"Z.P.G.",
"Warner Bros. Home Entertainment",
"Three Tough Guys",
"Emmanuelle 2",
"Nashville (film)",
"Star Trek: The Motion Picture",
"Mahogany (film)",
"The Directors Company",
"Lee Mendelson Films",
"Universal Television",
"Famous Players",
"The Great Gatsby (1974 film)",
"Badge 373",
"WUSA (film)",
"The First Nudie Musical",
"North Dallas Forty",
"Such Good Friends",
"The Confession (1970 film)",
"Hanna-Barbera Productions",
"The Longest Yard (1974 film)",
"Love Story (1970 film)",
"Goodtimes Enterprises",
"The Shadow of Chikara",
"Battle of Sutjeska (film)",
"Survive! (film)",
"Handle with Care (1977 film)",
"Julian Schlossberg",
"Lipstick (1976 film)",
"Warner Bros. Pictures",
"The Soul of Nigger Charley",
"Play It Again, Sam (film)",
"EMI Films",
"Lionsgate Films",
"Mosfilm",
"Sheila Levine Is Dead and Living in New York",
"The White Dawn",
"the Rank Organisation",
"Escape from Alcatraz (film)",
"Super Fly T.N.T."
] |
62,111,787 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1980–1989)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 1980s.
==1980==
==1981==
==1982==
==1983==
==1984==
==1985==
==1986==
==1987==
==1988==
==1989==
|
[
"Dino De Laurentiis",
"American Gigolo",
"Crimes of the Heart (film)",
"Raw Deal (1986 film)",
"Popeye (film)",
"We're No Angels (1989 film)",
"Crocodile Dundee",
"RKO Pictures",
"Hot Pursuit (1987 film)",
"Grease 2",
"Falling in Love (1984 film)",
"The Keep (film)",
"The Outsider (1979 film)",
"Beverly Hills Cop II",
"Racing with the Moon",
"Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter",
"Wildwood Enterprises, Inc",
"Uncommon Valor",
"Lookin' to Get Out",
"National Film Registry",
"Second-Hand Hearts",
"Testament (1983 film)",
"The Presidio (film)",
"Brillstein Entertainment Partners",
"Beverly Hills Cop",
"Breaking Glass (film)",
"Lorimar Television",
"The Golden Child",
"Night School (1981 film)",
"Venom (1981 film)",
"Friday the 13th: A New Beginning",
"Jekyll and Hyde... Together Again",
"Some Kind of Hero",
"Walt Disney Pictures",
"Body Slam (film)",
"PolyGram Filmed Entertainment",
"Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade",
"Escape to Victory",
"Footloose",
"Heidi's Song",
"Vestron Pictures",
"16 Days of Glory",
"Major League (film)",
"Fire with Fire (1986 film)",
"Dragonslayer (1981 film)",
"Witness (1985 film)",
"Going Ape!",
"Back to the Beach",
"Rialto Pictures",
"Trading Places",
"Joy of Sex (film)",
"Debra Hill",
"Little Darlings",
"I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can",
"Blue City (film)",
"Morgan Creek Productions",
"American Playhouse",
"Summer Rental",
"Baby It's You (film)",
"The Transformers: The Movie",
"Ferris Bueller's Day Off",
"Stephen J. Friedman (producer)",
"Best Defense",
"King David (film)",
"Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan",
"Friday the 13th (1980 film)",
"Paternity (film)",
"Shirley Valentine (film)",
"My Bloody Valentine (film)",
"Rustlers' Rhapsody",
"Eddie Murphy",
"Blue Velvet (film)",
"Ray Stark",
"Atlantic City (1980 film)",
"United Feature Syndicate",
"Still Smokin (film)",
"Coast to Coast (1980 film)",
"Pretty in Pink",
"Don Simpson",
"Allied Stars",
"From the Hip (film)",
"Telefilm Canada",
"Daniel (1983 film)",
"Staying Alive (1983 film)",
"The Elephant Man (1980 film)",
"Man, Woman and Child (film)",
"Janus Films",
"The Sender",
"First Monday in October (film)",
"Coming to America",
"Permanent Record (film)",
"Airplane II: The Sequel",
"Fatal Attraction",
"Lady Jane (1986 film)",
"American Zoetrope",
"Harlem Nights",
"S.O.B. (film)",
"Top Secret!",
"Thief of Hearts",
"Kelly (film)",
"Rough Cut (1980 film)",
"Trick or Treat (1986 film)",
"Planes, Trains and Automobiles",
"Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood",
"April Fool's Day (1986 film)",
"Explorers (film)",
"Hughes Entertainment",
"Friday the 13th Part III",
"Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives",
"The Dead Zone (film)",
"Friday the 13th Part 2",
"Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan",
"An Officer and a Gentleman",
"Gallipoli (1981 film)",
"Firstborn (1984 film)",
"The Criterion Collection",
"Manhunter (film)",
"Hemdale Film Corporation",
"White Dog (1982 film)",
"Fat Man and Little Boy (film)",
"Black Rain (1989 American film)",
"Ordinary People",
"The Bedroom Window (1987 film)",
"Amblin Entertainment",
"Evil Dead II",
"Jerry Bruckheimer Films",
"RSO Records",
"Children of a Lesser God (film)",
"The Blue Iguana",
"Campus Man",
"Mommie Dearest (film)",
"The Accused (1988 film)",
"The Hunter (1980 film)",
"Some Kind of Wonderful (film)",
"Flashdance",
"Paramount Pictures",
"That Was Then... This Is Now",
"Eddie Murphy Raw",
"List of Brooksfilms productions",
"Student Bodies",
"Summer School (1987 film)",
"Propaganda Films",
"Scrooged",
"Rattle and Hum",
"Radioactive Dreams",
"The Fan (1981 film)",
"Phobia (1980 film)",
"Nijinsky (film)",
"The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!",
"The River Rat",
"Young Sherlock Holmes",
"Hanna-Barbera",
"Maximum Overdrive",
"Raiders of the Lost Ark",
"Lucasfilm",
"Melendez Films",
"Silver Bullet (film)",
"The Untouchables (film)",
"Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (and Don't Come Back!!)",
"A New Life (film)",
"She's Having a Baby",
"Star Trek III: The Search for Spock",
"The Honorary Consul (film)",
"Heartburn (film)",
"Pet Sematary (1989 film)",
"Compromising Positions",
"Cousins (1989 film)",
"Gung Ho (film)",
"48 Hrs.",
"Airplane!",
"The Experts (1989 film)",
"Plain Clothes (1988 film)",
"The Sea Wolves",
"Hamburger Hill",
"Let It Ride (film)",
"AFI Catalog of Feature Films",
"D.A.R.Y.L.",
"The Whoopee Boys",
"Tai-Pan (film)",
"Urban Cowboy",
"Love and Money (film)",
"Tucker: The Man and His Dream",
"Top Gun",
"Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom",
"It Came from Hollywood",
"Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains",
"Critical Condition (film)",
"Serial (1980 film)",
"Alliance Films",
"Clue (film)",
"The Man Who Wasn't There (1983 film)",
"Gas (1981 film)",
"King Kong Lives",
"Savage Islands (film)",
"My Little Pony: The Movie (1986 film)",
"Crocodile Dundee II",
"Big Top Pee-wee",
"Fighting Back (1982 American film)",
"De Laurentiis Entertainment Group",
"Macaroni (film)",
"Ragtime (film)",
"Star Trek V: The Final Frontier",
"Terms of Endearment",
"Warner Bros. Pictures",
"Lionsgate Films",
"The Lords of Discipline (film)",
"Reds (film)",
"Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home",
"Distant Thunder (1988 film)",
"Partners (1982 film)",
"The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981 film)"
] |
62,111,791 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (1990–1999)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 1990s.
==1990==
==1991==
==1992==
==1993==
==1994==
==1995==
==1996==
==1997==
==1998==
==1999==
|
[
"Alan Parker",
"The Indian in the Cupboard (film)",
"Dino De Laurentiis",
"The Rainmaker (1997 film)",
"Mace Neufeld",
"Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult",
"Star Trek: First Contact",
"Bob Roberts",
"The Two Jakes",
"Cool World",
"The Saint (1997 film)",
"Dear God (film)",
"Switchback (film)",
"The Addams Family (1991 film)",
"Primal Fear (film)",
"Robert Rehme",
"Patriot Games (film)",
"Neal H. Moritz",
"Juice (1992 film)",
"Jade (1995 film)",
"Cruise/Wagner Productions",
"A Very Brady Sequel",
"The Beautician and the Beast",
"All I Want for Christmas (film)",
"Orion Pictures",
"1492: Conquest of Paradise",
"Mutual Film Company",
"Wildwood Enterprises, Inc",
"Body Parts (1991 film)",
"Thinner (film)",
"The Odd Couple II",
"National Film Registry",
"Imagine Entertainment",
"The Brady Bunch Movie",
"Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country",
"Tales from the Darkside: The Movie",
"Rysher Entertainment",
"Titanic (1997 film)",
"Viacom (1952–2005)",
"Hyperion Pictures",
"200 Cigarettes",
"Todd Black",
"Milk Money (film)",
"The Browning Version (1994 film)",
"Interscope Communications",
"Lassie (1994 film)",
"The Relic",
"FairyTale: A True Story",
"MTV Entertainment Studios",
"Laurence Mark",
"Addams Family Values",
"Forrest Gump",
"The Zanuck Company",
"Barry Levinson",
"Ghost (1990 film)",
"Andre (film)",
"Kiss the Girls (1997 film)",
"Double Jeopardy (1999 film)",
"Frankie and Johnny (1991 film)",
"PolyGram Filmed Entertainment",
"Nick of Time (film)",
"Mother (1996 film)",
"School Ties",
"Talent for the Game",
"Days of Thunder",
"Broadway Video",
"Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights",
"Harriet the Spy (film)",
"True Colors (film)",
"British Board of Film Classification",
"Stepping Out (1991 film)",
"Whispers in the Dark (film)",
"What's Eating Gilbert Grape",
"Blue Chips",
"Mission: Impossible (film)",
"Davis Entertainment",
"Bringing Out the Dead",
"Fire in the Sky",
"The Butcher's Wife",
"Orange Sky Golden Harvest",
"Bopha!",
"Stephen J. Friedman (producer)",
"Congo (film)",
"Brain Donors",
"Joe Wizan",
"Village Roadshow Pictures",
"ITV Studios",
"Twilight (1998 film)",
"The Firm (1993 film)",
"Necessary Roughness (film)",
"Stanley R. Jaffe",
"Mandalay Pictures",
"Spelling Television",
"Universal Pictures",
"Election (1999 film)",
"Eddie Murphy",
"Comedy Central Films",
"Sikelia Productions",
"Searching for Bobby Fischer",
"Ray Stark",
"Clueless",
"Mercari",
"In & Out (film)",
"Lightstorm Entertainment",
"Don Simpson",
"Capitol Films",
"Angela's Ashes (film)",
"Ladybugs (film)",
"Escape from L.A.",
"Valhalla Entertainment",
"SNL Studios",
"Hard Rain (film)",
"The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear",
"Impact Pictures",
"Sleepy Hollow (film)",
"Scott Rudin",
"Sliver (film)",
"Mirage Enterprises",
"Deep Impact (film)",
"Saving Private Ryan",
"David Heyman",
"The Wood",
"American Zoetrope",
"Indecent Proposal",
"Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer",
"Flight of the Intruder",
"The Ladd Company",
"The General's Daughter (film)",
"Leap of Faith (film)",
"Jon Avnet",
"Dolly Parton",
"Night Falls on Manhattan",
"It's All True: Based on an Unfinished Film by Orson Welles",
"Virtuosity",
"He Said, She Said (film)",
"Steve Tisch",
"South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut",
"A Night at the Roxbury",
"Pontiac Moon",
"The Real Blonde",
"Superstar (1999 film)",
"A Civil Action (film)",
"Star Trek: Insurrection",
"Welcome Home, Roxy Carmichael",
"Robert W. Cort",
"Regarding Henry",
"Sliding Doors",
"The Truman Show",
"Varsity Blues (film)",
"Amblin Entertainment",
"Samuel Goldwyn Films",
"The First Wives Club",
"K2 (film)",
"Jerry Bruckheimer Films",
"The Godfather Part III",
"Coneheads (film)",
"Home for the Holidays (1995 film)",
"Wayne's World 2",
"Wayne's World (film)",
"Touchstone Pictures",
"Thom Mount",
"A Smile Like Yours",
"David Brown (producer)",
"The Rugrats Movie",
"Nobody's Fool (1994 film)",
"ITC Entertainment",
"Paramount Pictures",
"20th Century Fox",
"Payback (1999 film)",
"Graveyard Shift (1990 film)",
"Jennifer 8",
"Beavis and Butt-Head Do America",
"Kiss Me, Guido",
"Beverly Hills Cop III",
"Stuart Saves His Family",
"Internal Affairs (film)",
"Sabrina (1995 film)",
"Intersection (1994 film)",
"Private Parts (1997 film)",
"Miramax",
"Columbia Pictures",
"Event Horizon (film)",
"The Geffen Film Company",
"Légende Entreprises",
"Star Trek Generations",
"Losing Isaiah",
"Scott Free Productions",
"Soapdish",
"A Show of Force",
"Lawrence Gordon (producer)",
"Clear and Present Danger (film)",
"Capella Films",
"Alive (1993 film)",
"Klasky Csupo",
"Arsenio Hall",
"The Hunt for Red October (film)",
"Boomerang (1992 film)",
"Icon Productions",
"Breakdown (1997 film)",
"Dead Man on Campus",
"The Ghost and the Darkness",
"Jimmy Hollywood",
"Eye for an Eye (1996 film)",
"A Simple Plan (film)",
"Funny About Love",
"Almost an Angel",
"The Education of Little Tree (film)",
"Bebe's Kids",
"Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy",
"Lakeshore Entertainment",
"Allied Filmmakers",
"Andrea Iervolino",
"The Kennedy/Marshall Company",
"Working Title Films",
"Vampire in Brooklyn",
"Gary Lucchesi",
"The Out-of-Towners (1999 film)",
"There Goes the Neighborhood (film)",
"Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker",
"Another 48 Hrs.",
"The Temp (film)",
"The Talented Mr. Ripley (film)",
"Drop Zone (film)",
"The Phantom (1996 film)",
"The Perfect Weapon (1991 film)",
"Sherry Lansing",
"Flashback (1990 film)",
"Braveheart",
"'Til There Was You",
"AFI Catalog of Feature Films",
"The Evening Star",
"Good Burger",
"Intermedia Films",
"The Montecito Picture Company",
"Paula Weinstein",
"Jodie Foster",
"Wendy Finerman",
"Snake Eyes (1998 film)",
"Tommy Boy",
"Savoy Pictures",
"Island World",
"David Permut",
"Jordan Kerner",
"Crazy People",
"Flesh and Bone (film)",
"Nickelodeon Movies",
"Face/Off",
"I.Q. (film)",
"Tollin/Robbins Productions",
"Scholastic Corporation",
"The Thing Called Love",
"Pet Sematary Two",
"Runaway Bride (film)",
"Robert Evans",
"Warner Bros. Pictures",
"The Kushner-Locke Company",
"Dead Again",
"Black Sheep (1996 film)",
"DreamWorks Pictures"
] |
62,111,793 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (2000–2009)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 2000s.
==2000==
==2001==
==2002==
==2004==
==2006==
|
[
"Twisted (2004 film)",
"PDI/DreamWorks",
"Revelations Entertainment",
"The Hunted (2003 film)",
"Mark Canton",
"Paranormal Activity",
"The Sum of All Fears (film)",
"Down to Earth (2001 film)",
"Freedom Writers",
"Revolution Studios",
"The Kerner Entertainment Company",
"Shaft (2000 film)",
"GK Films",
"WingNut Films",
"Bad Robot",
"The Zanuck Company",
"Stardust (2007 film)",
"Ghost Town (2008 film)",
"The Donners' Company",
"Suspect Zero",
"Lara Croft: Tomb Raider – The Cradle of Life",
"Tupac: Resurrection",
"Friday the 13th (2009 film)",
"Artisan Entertainment",
"Marvel Studios",
"Jerry Zucker",
"Monsters vs. Aliens",
"Shout! Studios",
"Allspark",
"Jason Reitman",
"The Four Feathers (2002 film)",
"Comedy Central Films",
"World Trade Center (film)",
"Mark Amin",
"Radar Pictures",
"Domestic Disturbance",
"David T. Friendly",
"Marci X",
"Valhalla Motion Pictures",
"Zomba Group",
"HBO Films",
"Jack Black",
"Rugrats in Paris: The Movie",
"Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow",
"Bernd Eichinger",
"Amaru Entertainment",
"Nacho Libre",
"Sony Music Entertainment",
"A&E Networks",
"Jersey Films",
"Di Bonaventura Pictures",
"Marv Studios",
"DreamWorks Animation",
"The Weather Man",
"The Wayans Brothers",
"The Manchurian Candidate (2004 film)",
"ThinkFilm",
"Blades of Glory",
"20th Century Fox",
"Changing Lanes",
"Laurie MacDonald",
"Fireworks Entertainment",
"Miramax",
"Things We Lost in the Fire (film)",
"Dance Flick",
"The Score (2001 film)",
"Over the Hedge",
"Walden Media",
"The Next Best Thing",
"New Line Cinema",
"Imagine That (film)",
"O Entertainment",
"Aftermath Entertainment",
"The Wild Thornberrys Movie",
"The Lovely Bones (film)",
"Participant (company)",
"Bristol Bay Productions",
"Snow Day (2000 film)",
"I Love You, Man",
"DC Entertainment",
"Lionsgate Films",
"The Ladies Man (2000 film)",
"Apatow Productions",
"Alfie (2004 film)",
"Hotel for Dogs (film)",
"Virtual Studios",
"Lara Croft: Tomb Raider",
"Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius",
"Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007 film)",
"Howard Baldwin",
"K-19: The Widowmaker",
"Film4 Productions",
"Wonder Boys (film)",
"Jackass: The Movie",
"Happy Madison Productions",
"Crocodile Dundee in Los Angeles",
"Paycheck (film)",
"Laurence Mark",
"Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events",
"The Core",
"Constantin Film",
"Aardman Animations",
"The Hours (film)",
"The Ruins (film)",
"Sean Bailey",
"Village Roadshow Pictures",
"BBC Film",
"Robert Fox (producer)",
"Screen International",
"Star Trek: Nemesis",
"Jerry Seinfeld",
"The Prince & Me",
"Beyond Borders (film)",
"Dete Meserve",
"Norbit",
"Escape Artists",
"Mission: Impossible 2",
"The Original Kings of Comedy",
"Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull",
"Lynda Obst",
"Failure to Launch (film)",
"Danish Film Database",
"Along Came a Spider (film)",
"Drillbit Taylor",
"Zoolander",
"Summit Entertainment",
"Last Holiday (2006 film)",
"Rugrats Go Wild",
"Next (2007 film)",
"Murderball (film)",
"Tropic Thunder",
"Barnyard (film)",
"Columbia Pictures",
"40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks",
"Robert Simonds",
"The Honeymooners (2005 film)",
"The Spiderwick Chronicles (film)",
"The Last Kiss (2006 film)",
"Save the Last Dance",
"Flushed Away",
"Star Trek (2009 film)",
"Working Title Films",
"Danny DeVito",
"Ingenious Media",
"Cloverfield",
"Kung Fu Panda (film)",
"Vinyl Films",
"Shooter (2007 film)",
"School of Rock",
"Blumhouse Productions",
"Warner Bros. Pictures",
"Jared and Jerusha Hess",
"Filmauro",
"Participant Productions",
"The Longest Yard (2005 film)",
"Gavin Polone",
"Mace Neufeld",
"Up in the Air (2009 film)",
"The Soloist",
"Hot Rod (2007 film)",
"Team America: World Police",
"Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa",
"ImageMovers",
"VH1",
"Mutual Film Company",
"National Film Registry",
"Bee Movie",
"Vanilla Sky",
"We Were Soldiers",
"The Italian Job (2003 film)",
"Curtis Hanson",
"The Love Guru",
"Rules of Engagement (film)",
"British Board of Film Classification",
"Fairview Entertainment",
"Crystal Lake Entertainment",
"Davis Entertainment",
"Collateral (film)",
"Napoleon Dynamite",
"Transformers (film)",
"Enemy at the Gates",
"Zodiac (film)",
"Flags of Our Fathers (film)",
"Mandalay Pictures",
"Universal Pictures",
"Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star",
"Red Hour Productions",
"David Bergstein",
"Hey Arnold!: The Movie",
"SNL Studios",
"Lee Rich",
"Dreamgirls (film)",
"The Perfect Score",
"Walter F. Parkes",
"Timeline (2003 film)",
"Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer",
"3 Arts Entertainment",
"Charlotte's Web (2006 film)",
"Clockstoppers",
"Better Luck Tomorrow",
"Mean Girls",
"Jackass Number Two",
"Interscope Records",
"Jonathan Demme",
"Phoenix Pictures",
"Orange County (film)",
"Robert W. Cort",
"Crossroads (2002 film)",
"Richard Linklater",
"Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (film)",
"G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra",
"Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen",
"The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (film)",
"The Stepford Wives (2004 film)",
"Paramount Pictures",
"Seven Arts Pictures",
"Lucky Break (2001 film)",
"Disturbia (film)",
"Coach Carter",
"Strange Wilderness",
"The Stone Quarry",
"Bless the Child",
"Beowulf (2007 film)",
"Eagle Eye",
"Klasky Csupo",
"K/O Paper Products",
"Platinum Dunes",
"Lakeshore Entertainment",
"Arnold Kopelson",
"The Kennedy/Marshall Company",
"Bloom (company)",
"Shangri-La Entertainment",
"Æon Flux (film)",
"Dickhouse Productions",
"Against the Ropes",
"Chris Rock",
"The Uninvited (2009 film)",
"Andrew Lazar",
"Mission: Impossible III",
"What Women Want",
"Legendary Entertainment",
"Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat",
"Spyglass Media Group",
"DreamWorks Pictures",
"Reno 911!: Miami",
"Eidos Interactive",
"Watchmen (2009 film)",
"Cruise/Wagner Productions",
"Shady Records",
"Moshe Diamant",
"Hardball (film)",
"National Geographic Society",
"Extreme Ops",
"StudioCanal",
"Serving Sara",
"The Fighting Temptations",
"Michael De Luca",
"MTV Entertainment Studios",
"Without a Paddle",
"Vertigo Entertainment",
"Broadway Video",
"Abandon (film)",
"John Singleton",
"David Foster (film producer)",
"RCA Records",
"Leonine Holding",
"Malpaso Productions",
"She's the Man",
"Toho",
"Stop-Loss (film)",
"Level 1 Entertainment",
"United Plankton Pictures",
"Lucky Numbers",
"Academy Award for Best Animated Feature",
"War of the Worlds (2005 film)",
"Scott Rudin",
"Shrek the Third",
"How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days",
"The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie",
"Michael Shamberg",
"Four Brothers (film)",
"Neal Street Productions",
"Yours, Mine & Ours (2005 film)",
"Narc (film)",
"Farrelly brothers",
"Rat Race (film)",
"Amblin Entertainment",
"Walt Disney Studios (division)",
"Donald De Line",
"David Brown (producer)",
"Craig Bartlett",
"Pootie Tang",
"Elizabethtown (film)",
"Lawrence Gordon (producer)",
"Icon Productions",
"Lucasfilm",
"Bad News Bears",
"Iron Man (2008 film)",
"The Heartbreak Kid (2007 film)",
"Intermedia Films",
"Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging",
"The Montecito Picture Company",
"Sahara (2005 film)",
"Emmett/Furla Oasis",
"Nickelodeon Movies",
"Australian Classification Board",
"Tollin/Robbins Productions",
"Robert Evans",
"Get Rich or Die Tryin' (film)",
"Fox Searchlight Pictures",
"Sean Daniel"
] |
62,111,795 |
File:The Man with the Glass Eye.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,111,798 |
Sebastian Payne
|
Sebastian Early Anthony Payne (born 2 July 1989) is a British journalist and former think tank director. He began his career with stints at The Daily Telegraph and The Spectator, before joining the Financial Times in 2016, where he eventually rose to become the paper's Whitehall correspondent. In 2022, he left the paper to become director of the think tank Onward. He left the think tank and joined The Times as a writer and columnist at the end of 2024.
== Early life ==
Payne was born on 2 July 1989, in Gateshead, England. He attended St Thomas More Catholic School, Blaydon, and later the private day school Dame Allan's School for sixth form, where he began studying politics. At Durham University, he studied computer science. He was media editor of the student newspaper Palatinate, in 2010 with a Bachelor of Science.
After graduation,
== Career ==
Payne volunteered for Conservative Campaign Headquarters during the 2010 general election campaign.
Payne became a data reporter at The Daily Telegraph in 2011, before leaving the paper the following year. He was an online editor of The Spectator magazine and the deputy editor of its Coffee House blog from 2012 to 2015. He was also managing editor of the magazine. at the beginning of 2016. and presented the weekly Payne's Politics podcast.
In 2021, Pan Macmillan published Payne's book, Broken Heartlands: A Journey Through Labour's Lost England, about the red wall areas that voted for the Conservative Party at the 2019 general election.
In November 2022, Pan Macmillan published The Fall of Boris Johnson, Payne's book about Prime Minister Boris Johnson's downfall.
In December 2022, Payne left the Financial Times to become director of the think tank Onward.
In 2023, Payne applied to be the Conservative prospective parliamentary candidate for the 2023 Selby and Ainsty by-election and was shortlisted but not selected. Later that year, he applied to be the party's candidate in West Suffolk for the 2024 general election, but was defeated by Nick Timothy. Payne unsuccessfully ran to be the Conservative candidate in several other seats, including Bromsgrove, Bridlington and the Wolds, Waveney Valley, and Surrey Heath. With the close of nominations for seats on 7 June, Payne failed to be selected for a seat at the 2024 general election.
== Personal life ==
Payne lives in Archway, North London. He married Sophia Gaston on 20 July 2019. Gaston is a London School of Economics visiting fellow and Head of Foreign Policy and UK Resilience at the conservative think tank Policy Exchange.
|
[
"Gateshead",
"Waveney Valley (UK Parliament constituency)",
"Boris Johnson",
"2023 Selby and Ainsty by-election",
"The Spectator",
"sixth form",
"Palatinate (newspaper)",
"Durham University",
"The Times",
"St Thomas More Catholic School, Blaydon",
"Master of Arts",
"Purple Radio",
"The Daily Telegraph",
"The Washington Post",
"Van Mildert College, Durham",
"Bromsgrove (UK Parliament constituency)",
"PRS for Music",
"City, University of London",
"Conservative Party (UK)",
"2010 United Kingdom general election",
"Red wall (British politics)",
"Laurence Stern fellowship",
"Dame Allan's School",
"The Guardian",
"Onward (think tank)",
"Bridlington and The Wolds (UK Parliament constituency)",
"think tank",
"Archway, London",
"Bachelor of Science",
"Whitehall",
"Financial Times",
"Blaydon",
"Tyne and Wear",
"West Suffolk (UK Parliament constituency)",
"Policy Exchange",
"Nick Timothy",
"2019 United Kingdom general election",
"2024 United Kingdom general election",
"Conservative Campaign Headquarters",
"prospective parliamentary candidate",
"London School of Economics",
"Pan Macmillan",
"Surrey Heath (UK Parliament constituency)"
] |
62,111,799 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (2010–2019)
|
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Paramount Pictures and released in the 2010s.
==2010==
==2011==
==2012==
==2014==
==2015==
==2016==
==2017==
==2018==
|
[
"Transformers: Age of Extinction",
"PDI/DreamWorks",
"Skydance Media",
"Element Pictures",
"Pain & Gain",
"Thor (film)",
"Cowboys & Aliens",
"Tencent Pictures",
"Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit",
"Tad, the Lost Explorer",
"The Gambler (2014 film)",
"Revolution Studios",
"Book Club (film)",
"Zoolander 2",
"Natalie Portman",
"GK Films",
"WingNut Films",
"Bad Robot",
"Anonymous Content",
"Fences (film)",
"Katalyst Films",
"If I Were Rich (2019 film)",
"Deadline Hollywood",
"Noah (2014 film)",
"Bumblebee (film)",
"es:Tensión sexual no resuelta",
"Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Animated Feature",
"The Big Short (film)",
"Rise of the Guardians",
"Marvel Studios",
"Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues",
"Terminator: Dark Fate",
"The Adventures of Tintin (film)",
"Jason Reitman",
"es:Los Futbolísimos (película)",
"William Brent Bell",
"Super 8 (2011 film)",
"Reliance Entertainment",
"Katy Perry: Part of Me",
"Flight (2012 film)",
"Screen Australia",
"The Avengers (2012 film)",
"Irish Film Board",
"Gemini Man (film)",
"di Bonaventura Pictures",
"Di Bonaventura Pictures",
"Same Kind of Different as Me (film)",
"DreamWorks Animation",
"Daddy's Home (film)",
"New Republic Pictures",
"Monster Trucks (film)",
"20th Century Fox",
"Laurie MacDonald",
"FilmNation Entertainment",
"Paranormal Activity 2",
"Shadow Dancer (2012 film)",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"Platinum Studios",
"Rocket Pictures",
"Atresmedia Cine",
"Nobody's Fool (2018 film)",
"Pet Sematary (2019 film)",
"Walden Media",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014 film)",
"BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film",
"Top Five",
"Starburns Industries",
"Dora and the Lost City of Gold",
"Plan B Entertainment",
"The Film Arcade",
"Dinner for Schmucks",
"No Strings Attached (film)",
"Selma (film)",
"Goat (2016 film)",
"AFI Catalog of Feature Films",
"Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa",
"Star Trek Into Darkness",
"Bhansali Productions",
"Wonder Park",
"Participant (company)",
"BBC Films",
"Red Granite Pictures",
"Iron Man 3",
"Paramount Players",
"Insurge Pictures",
"Ilion Animation Studios",
"Seven Bucks Productions",
"Staten Island Summer",
"Jack Reacher (film)",
"Lionsgate Films",
"Telefónica",
"Little Stranger (film company)",
"Blue Story",
"Category:Lists of films by studio",
"Apatow Productions",
"Bluegrass Films",
"Variety Insight",
"Mr. Mudd",
"Tyler Perry",
"Annapurna Pictures",
"DNA Films",
"Harpo Films",
"Joe Medjuck",
"Gary Sanchez Productions",
"Rings (2017 film)",
"How to Train Your Dragon (2010 film)",
"Producers Guild of America Award for Best Theatrical Motion Picture",
"Project Almanac",
"Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film",
"Downsizing (2017 film)",
"True Grit (2010 film)",
"The Weinstein Company",
"Lightworkers Media",
"Area 51 (film)",
"Jerry Bruckheimer",
"Producers Guild of America Award for Best Animated Motion Picture",
"Regency Enterprises",
"BBC Film",
"Sikelia Productions",
"Captain America: The First Avenger",
"Movistar+",
"Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse",
"Paramount Vantage",
"Jackass 3D",
"Office Christmas Party",
"Black Bear Pictures",
"Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters",
"Viacom18 Studios",
"Transformers: Dark of the Moon",
"Alibaba Pictures",
"The Devil Inside (film)",
"Little Fockers",
"MRC (company)",
"The Hollywood Reporter",
"China Movie Channel",
"Paranormal Activity 4",
"Flynn Picture Company",
"Shutter Island (film)",
"Whiskey Tango Foxtrot (film)",
"Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones",
"Labor Day (film)",
"Shochiku",
"Columbia Pictures",
"Image Nation",
"Action Point",
"Hasbro Studios",
"The Cloverfield Paradox",
"American Film Institute",
"Screen Daily",
"Anomalisa",
"BAFTA Award for Best Film",
"Terminator Genisys",
"BET",
"Hot Tub Time Machine 2",
"Paranormal Activity 3",
"Case 39",
"What Men Want (2019 film)",
"Tad the Lost Explorer and the Secret of King Midas",
"Annihilation (film)",
"Strange Weather Films",
"Method Animation",
"Brother Nature (film)",
"Overlord (2018 film)",
"The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water",
"Blinding Edge Pictures",
"TSG Entertainment",
"Ingenious Media",
"Allen Shapiro",
"June Pictures",
"Shrek Forever After",
"Scooter Braun",
"The Coen Brothers",
"Captive (2015 film)",
"Mother!",
"Baywatch (film)",
"Young Adult (film)",
"Blumhouse Productions",
"Warner Bros. Pictures",
"Hugo (film)",
"The Wolf of Wall Street (2013 film)",
"Mace Neufeld",
"Dark Castle Entertainment",
"Hasbro",
"Marv Films",
"Steven Paul",
"ImageMovers",
"Mutual Film Company",
"Imagine Entertainment",
"Tulip Fever",
"Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension",
"Penske Media Corporation",
"Padmaavat",
"Suburbicon",
"Sherlock Gnomes",
"Telecinco Cinema",
"Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol",
"Vittorio Cecchi Gori",
"Eli (2019 film)",
"Kung Fu Panda 2",
"Fairview Entertainment",
"Access Industries",
"Playing with Fire (2019 film)",
"Pure Flix Entertainment",
"Gore Verbinski",
"Annie Award for Best Animated Feature",
"Universal Pictures",
"Tribeca Productions",
"Capture the Flag (film)",
"The Little Prince (2015 film)",
"Interstellar (film)",
"Fosun International",
"Jeff Schaffer",
"Mandeville Films",
"Red Hour Productions",
"Aragón Televisión",
"Rango (2011 film)",
"Lightstorm Entertainment",
"Televisión Española",
"13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi",
"Footloose (2011 film)",
"RatPac Entertainment",
"Bron Studios",
"Eva (2011 film)",
"Hercules (2014 film)",
"Qwerty Films",
"Craig Zadan",
"Walter F. Parkes",
"IM Global",
"Smokehouse Pictures",
"Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer",
"Scott Rudin Productions",
"Emmett/Furla/Oasis Films",
"Transformers: The Last Knight",
"Mandate Pictures",
"Everybody Wants Some!! (film)",
"Ciné+ OCS",
"Phoenix Pictures",
"Fremantle (company)",
"Drunk Wedding",
"Jay Roach",
"MTV Films",
"Paramount Pictures",
"Will Packer Productions",
"Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted",
"Florence Foster Jenkins (film)",
"Saturn Films",
"VicScreen",
"Crawl (2019 film)",
"The Last Airbender (film)",
"XXX: Return of Xander Cage",
"Relativity Media",
"K/O Paper Products",
"An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power",
"The Loved Ones (film)",
"Puss in Boots (2011 film)",
"Platinum Dunes",
"Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Picture",
"Instant Family",
"The Kennedy/Marshall Company",
"Wild Bunch",
"Reel FX",
"Ghost in the Shell (2017 film)",
"Daddy's Home 2",
"Dickhouse Productions",
"Syncopy Inc.",
"Cirque du Soleil",
"Fábrica de Cine",
"Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation",
"Ben-Hur (2016 film)",
"Mission: Impossible – Fallout",
"DMG Entertainment",
"World War Z (film)",
"Legendary Entertainment",
"Allspark (company)",
"Spyglass Media Group",
"10 Cloverfield Lane",
"DreamWorks Pictures",
"Room in Rome",
"21 Laps Entertainment",
"The Intervention (film)",
"CatchPlay",
"TheWrap",
"Cameron Pace Group",
"Fake Empire (company)",
"Netflix",
"Academy Award for Best Picture",
"Tomorrow, When the War Began (film)",
"De Line Pictures",
"Broadway Video",
"Allied (film)",
"G.I. Joe: Retaliation",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows",
"AEG Live",
"Actual Films",
"Pathé",
"The Dictator (2012 film)",
"The Fighter",
"Amblin Partners",
"United Plankton Pictures",
"Academy Award for Best Animated Feature",
"Intrepid Pictures",
"Scott Rudin",
"Protozoa Pictures",
"Rocketman (film)",
"A Quiet Place (film)",
"British Film Institute",
"Denver and Delilah Productions",
"Justin Bieber: Never Say Never",
"Island Records",
"Amblin Entertainment",
"Samuel Goldwyn Films",
"DJ Films",
"Canal+ (French TV channel)",
"Walt Disney Studios (division)",
"Lava Bear Films",
"Men, Women & Children (film)",
"Indian Paintbrush (company)",
"Appian Way Productions",
"Variety (magazine)",
"Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures",
"Iron Man 2",
"Silence (2016 film)",
"Star Trek Beyond",
"She's Out of My League",
"Cirque du Soleil: Worlds Away",
"Infinitum Nihil",
"The Guilt Trip (film)",
"A Thousand Words (film)",
"Instituto de Crédito Oficial",
"Fifth Season (company)",
"One Race Films",
"Jack Reacher: Never Go Back",
"Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama",
"Fun Size",
"Megamind",
"The Montecito Picture Company",
"Avi Arad",
"Worldview Entertainment",
"Indiewire.com",
"Ghost: Mouichido Dakishimetai",
"Paramount Animation",
"Nickelodeon Movies",
"Momentum Pictures",
"Arrival (film)",
"Morning Glory (2010 film)"
] |
62,111,803 |
2019–20 Pallacanestro Trieste season
|
The 2019–20 season is Pallacanestro Trieste's 45th in existence and the club's 2nd consecutive season in the top flight of Italian basketball.
== Overview ==
The 2019-20 season was hit by the coronavirus pandemic that compelled the federation to suspend and later cancel the competition without assigning the title to anyone. Trieste ended the championship in 16th position.
== Kit ==
Supplier: Adidas / Sponsor: Allianz
== Players ==
===Current roster===
===Depth chart===
===Squad changes ===
====In====
|}
====Out====
|}
==== Confirmed ====
|}
==== Coach ====
== Competitions ==
=== Serie A ===
|
[
"Pallalcesto Amatori Udine",
"Gaziantep Basketbol",
"Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball",
"Chris Wright (basketball, born 1989)",
"Hrvoje Perić",
"Luciana Mosconi Ancona",
"Giga Janelidze",
"William Mosley",
"Boulazac Basket Dordogne",
"Napoli Basket (2016)",
"Twarde Pierniki Toruń",
"Adidas",
"2019–20 LBA season",
"Scaligera Basket Verona",
"Kodi Justice",
"Akil Mitchell",
"Ricky Hickman",
"PalaTrieste",
"DeQuan Jones",
"CB Breogán",
"Reyer Venezia",
"Pallacanestro Trieste",
"Basket Zielona Góra",
"Zoran Dragić",
"Derek Cooke",
"Orlandina Basket",
"COVID-19 pandemic in Italy",
"Jon Elmore",
"Aquila Basket Trento",
"Juan Fernández (basketball)",
"Eugenio Dalmasson",
"2020–21 Pallacanestro Trieste season",
"Jamarr Sanders",
"Justin Knox",
"Hapoel Holon",
"KK Partizan",
"Pallacanestro Orzinuovi",
"Dinamo Cagliari",
"Andrea Coronica",
"Matteo Da Ros",
"Deron Washington",
"Lega Basket Serie A",
"Hamilton Honey Badgers",
"Allianz",
"Italian Basketball Federation",
"Iacopo Demarchi",
"ratiopharm Ulm",
"Daniele Cavaliero",
"Alessandro Cittadini",
"Brose Bamberg",
"Pallacanestro Varese",
"Riccardo Cervi",
"Artūrs Strautiņš"
] |
62,111,806 |
List of Paramount Pictures films (2020–2029)
|
The following is a list of films produced by Paramount Pictures and released (or scheduled to be released) in the 2020s.
All films listed are theatrical releases unless specified.
A ‡ signifies a streaming release exclusively through Paramount+.
A § signifies a simultaneous release to theaters and on Paramount+.
A * signifies a streaming release through a third-party streaming service.
== Released ==
===Undated films===
===In development===
|
[
"Fuzzy Door Productions",
"The Contractor (2022 film)",
"Sunday Night Productions",
"Scream (2022 film)",
"Novocaine (2025 film)",
"Variety Insight",
"Dark Castle Entertainment",
"Skydance Media",
"XYZ Films",
"H. G. Wells",
"Lionsgate Canada",
"21 Laps Entertainment",
"Spell (film)",
"Eagle Vision (company)",
"Temple Hill Entertainment",
"Watchmen Chapter I",
"Smile 2",
"simultaneous release",
"Avatar Studios (production company)",
"Vicious (film)",
"Trey Parker and Matt Stone",
"The Space Between (2021 film)",
"Mighty Oak (film)",
"Amazon MGM Studios",
"Sonic the Hedgehog 4 (film)",
"Apartment 7A",
"Edgar Reitz",
"Marza Animation Planet",
"Spin Master",
"Senior Year (2022 film)",
"The Really Useful Group",
"The Trial of the Chicago 7",
"Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning",
"Pumpkinhead (film series)",
"Imagine Entertainment",
"The Naked Gun (2025 film)",
"TheWrap",
"Eon Productions",
"To Catch a Thief (novel)",
"Clifford the Big Red Dog (film)",
"Like a Boss (film)",
"GK Films",
"Michael B. Jordan",
"Spice Girls",
"Bad Robot",
"Coming 2 America",
"MTV Entertainment Studios",
"Under the Boardwalk (2023 film)",
"Mindy Kaling",
"Netflix",
"Paranormal Activity: Next of Kin",
"Jackass Forever",
"Walt Disney Pictures",
"Vertigo Entertainment",
"Susan Headley",
"Constantin Film",
"Babylon (2022 film)",
"Weed Road Pictures",
"Mean Girls (2024 film)",
"Penske Media Corporation",
"Broadway Video",
"Untitled Jack Ryan film",
"The In Between",
"Scream VI",
"Telecinco Cinema",
"TC Productions",
"Sunset Boulevard (musical)",
"The Tiger's Apprentice (film)",
"Transformers One",
"Deadline Hollywood",
"Beyblade (manga)",
"Davis Entertainment",
"Mattel Films",
"Blur Studio",
"Ferris Bueller's Day Off",
"Jerry & Marge Go Large",
"Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (film)",
"Aamir Khan",
"Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One",
"Point Grey Pictures",
"Killers of the Flower Moon (film)",
"Bob Marley: One Love",
"Red Wagon Entertainment",
"Better Man (film)",
"Roofman (film)",
"Atlas Entertainment",
"Roth/Kirschenbaum Films",
"Playtone",
"Awesomeness Films",
"On the Come Up (film)",
"Love and Monsters (film)",
"Digital Spy",
"STX Entertainment",
"Spin Master Entertainment",
"Pet Sematary: Bloodlines",
"Projected Picture Works",
"New York (magazine)",
"Genre Films",
"Possession (1981 film)",
"Sweet Dreams (2024 film)",
"Eddie Murphy",
"Body Cam (film)",
"Thunder Road Films",
"Laal Singh Chaddha",
"Marc Platt Productions",
"Sikelia Productions",
"Little Stranger (company)",
"Toho",
"United Plankton Pictures",
"Damien Chazelle",
"Mighty Mouse",
"OddBall Entertainment",
"Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (film)",
"Untitled Trey Parker film",
"Fragile Films",
"Endeavor Content",
"Art release",
"Kenya Barris",
"Sleepy Hollow (film)",
"The Rhythm Section",
"One Cool Films",
"Watchmen Chapter II",
"Cross Creek Pictures",
"The Angry Birds Movie 2",
"Conundrum Entertainment",
"Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie",
"A Quiet Place: Day One",
"Walter F. Parkes",
"Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer",
"Republic Pictures",
"Crave (streaming service)",
"Heart of the Beast",
"3 Arts Entertainment",
"Regretting You (film)",
"Entertainment One",
"Valiant Entertainment",
"Snake Eyes (2021 film)",
"Viacom18 Studios",
"19 Entertainment",
"Rumble (2021 film)",
"Likely Story",
"Akiva Goldsman",
"Gary Dauberman",
"Northern Ireland Screen",
"DNEG Animation",
"G.I. Joe (film series)",
"PGLang",
"André Øvredal",
"Tuff Gong",
"Paw Patrol: The Movie",
"Without Remorse (film)",
"MRC (company)",
"An Officer and a Gentleman",
"Rainbow Six (novel)",
"80 for Brady",
"Organ Trail (film)",
"My Animal (film)",
"di Bonaventura Pictures",
"Warner Bros. Animation",
"Di Bonaventura Pictures",
"The Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender",
"The Hollywood Reporter",
"JoBlo.com",
"TikTok",
"Vertigo (film)",
"Amblin Entertainment",
"Jerry Bruckheimer Films",
"Scream 7",
"Huayi Brothers",
"Infinite (film)",
"Paw Patrol: The Dino Movie",
"Cinesite",
"Significant Other (film)",
"Appian Way Productions",
"New Republic Pictures",
"YouTube",
"Variety (magazine)",
"Todd Garner",
"The Running Man (2025 film)",
"Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures",
"IF (film)",
"Vanity Fair (magazine)",
"Storm Reid",
"Tobey Maguire",
"Paramount Pictures",
"Sierra/Affinity",
"Brooksfilms",
"199 Productions",
"Laurie MacDonald",
"FilmNation Entertainment",
"The Tomorrow War",
"Hasbro Entertainment",
"Sega Sammy Holdings",
"SpringHill Company",
"Screen Rant",
"Cloverfield (franchise)",
"The Lovebirds (2020 film)",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"Team Downey",
"Miramax",
"Open Road Films",
"State Street Pictures",
"Sega Sammy Group",
"Harbinger (comic book)",
"Hasbro Studios",
"Apple Studios",
"The Saint (Simon Templar)",
"September 5 (film)",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem",
"Scott Free Productions",
"Your Name",
"Scary Movie (film series)",
"Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves",
"Maximum Effort",
"Gloria Sanchez Productions",
"Gunpowder & Sky",
"Walden Media",
"Jackass (franchise)",
"Klasky Csupo",
"The Lost City (2022 film)",
"Lucasfilm",
"The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run",
"Secret Headquarters",
"Reel FX Creative Studios",
"Plan B Entertainment",
"Glenn Close",
"Amazon Studios",
"Rob Minkoff",
"American Girl",
"Douglas Wick",
"Platinum Dunes",
"Fortis Films",
"WWE Studios",
"Top Gun: Maverick",
"Paramount+",
"Pixie (film)",
"Fifth Season (company)",
"Rovio Entertainment",
"Walter Hamada",
"Warner Bros. Home Entertainment",
"Paws of Fury: The Legend of Hank",
"Dentsu",
"Development of Star Trek 4",
"Atomic Monster",
"Dear Santa (2024 film)",
"Mark Wahlberg",
"Smurfs (film)",
"Goddard Textiles",
"Vox Media Studios",
"Ingenious Media",
"Aniventure",
"Harry Houdini",
"The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants",
"Dan Friedkin",
"David Permut",
"Rugrats",
"Nevermoor: The Trials of Morrigan Crow",
"The Longest Yard (1974 film)",
"Jordan Kerner",
"Spontaneous (film)",
"Paramount Animation",
"Danjaq LLC",
"Michael Bay",
"Tad, the Lost Explorer and the Emerald Tablet",
"Nickelodeon Movies",
"Face/Off",
"Paramount Players",
"Brookwell McNamara Entertainment",
"Scholastic Corporation",
"Major Matt Mason",
"Orphan: First Kill",
"Transformers: Rise of the Beasts",
"Animation Magazine",
"Sonic the Hedgehog (film)",
"Blumhouse Productions",
"Spyglass Media Group",
"Bollywood Hungama",
"DC Entertainment",
"Gladiator II",
"Us Weekly",
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Last Ronin",
"A Quiet Place Part II",
"Radio Silence (collective)",
"DreamWorks Pictures",
"Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny",
"Smile (2022 film)",
"Radio Silence Productions",
"Original Film",
"Children of Blood and Bone (film)"
] |
62,111,807 |
The Speckled Bird
|
The Speckled Bird is an autobiographical novel, by the Irish poet, writer, mystic and Nobel laureate in literature in 1923, W. B. Yeats. The novel has been written in four versions, between 1896 - 1903, and Yeats has given this name to the last version, taken from the Old Testament, Book of Jeremiah, chapter 12, verse 9: "Mine heritage is unto me as a speckled bird, the birds round about are against her; come ye, assemble all the beasts of the field, come to devour." The novel was never published during Yeats's lifetime. As referred to by Yeats himself when he wrote in his Autobiographies, in its chapter, The Trembling of the Veil: a novel that I could neither write nor cease to write, which had Hodos Chameliontos for its theme . The novel was published for the first time in 1976, including the three previous variants which Yeats wrote for his novel. The second edition, with new annotations being added, was published in 2003. Both of the editions were edited, expounded and elucidated, by the author and literary critic William H. O'donnell.
==Background and setting==
Yeats started to work on The Speckled Bird in 1896 and wrote four recognizably different versions of it before ceasing to work on his venture in 1903. The novel is "finished" in the sense that its plot reaches an ending, but Yeats did not complete the extensive refining and revising which would have been obligatory to bring the speckled bird up to his literary merits.
Given that perspective and Yeats's point of view that elaborated surface realism was essential in writing novels, it was almost unavoidable that The Speckled Bird's 744 manuscript pages would include a very large portion of biographical matter. The major characters are corresponding to Yeats, his father, Maud Gonne, MacGregor Mathers, and Olivia Shakespear. The location is based on the country houses of Edward Martyn, Count Florimond de Basterot, and Lady Gregory in County Galway and County Clare. But The Speckled Bird is not a roman à clef. Instead, real-life aspects were selected from a variety of sources according to the direct artistic objective and gathered together into fictional synthesis.
The Speckled Bird, as an autobiographical novel, is related in its context to Yeats's attempt to found a mystical order of Celtic Mysteries. During the period when he was working on the novel, his written articles and papers on some publications, were full of statements in which he expressed his wish that the predominating age of science and materialism, would soon be replaced by a new age of imagination, artistic beauty, and vivid symbols. It is not surprising that those general views are repeated in the novel, but the correspondences between Yeats's Celtic Mystical Order and the novel's mystical society are particularly close. In the novel, the autobiographical hero adamantly requires that the rituals for his mystical order be formed from knowledge that comes in dreams and visions. As Yeats said of the Celtic Mysteries Order rituals: "My rituals were not to be made deliberately, like a poem, but all got by that method Mathers had explained to me" of visions induced by symbols. The Celtic Mystical Order was to "find its manuals of devotion in all imaginative literature." This religion of beauty and of the power of the visionary imagination holds a central place in all versions of the novel, even though the hero's attempt to organize a mystical society does not appear until the 1900 and 1902 versions.
The main theme for the novel was described by Yeats as the Hodos Chameliontos (the path of the Chameleon). Broadly speaking, Yeats refers to his occult involvement among the ranks of the mystical order of the Golden Dawn, during this period (the end of the 1890s), as the background for writing the novel. This term is taken from a hand-written text, a Cabbalistic one, shown to Yeats, by Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers, which includes a coloured diagram of the ten Cabalistic sephiroth and their interconnecting lines (or "paths"). The term itself refers to the right path, which the students of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn must pursue, in order to proceed themselves through that Hodos Chameliontos and in order to attain for themselves that very knowledge of the adept. Also, the students must progress through this path without deviation, "turning neither aside unto the right hand, nor unto the left wherein are the wicked and frightening" paths that would lead to incertitude and debacle. Only "the path of the Chameleon, that Path namely, which is alone moving upwards" to supernatural wisdom will lead them so.
==Plot==
===First version===
The first version, written in early 1897, is basically a tale of idealized love, informed by Plato's thought and a highly valuable work of art. It is set in the Aran Islands, where the young hero's peculiar father has built a house and keeps the customary prayer hours until, after the Virgin Mary appears in a vision, he dedicates himself solely to visions. A visit by the beautiful young heroine fills the hero with romantic love that accompanies the mystical reverence he has bequeathed from his father, although the hero himself does not see any Marian apparition, in contrast to his father's ones.
==Primary Sources==
OCCULTURE: W.B. YEATS’ PROSE FICTION AND THE LATE NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH-CENTURY OCCULT REVIVAL; A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED FOR THE DEGREE DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY BY LAURA A. SWARTZ
==Footnotes==
|
[
"Lady Gregory",
"Aran Islands",
"Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers",
"John Butler Yeats",
"Plato",
"Ireland",
"Old Testament",
"Edward Martyn",
"County Clare",
"Book of Jeremiah",
"County Galway",
"Maud Gonne",
"Chameleon",
"W. B. Yeats",
"Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn",
"Olivia Shakespear",
"Count Florimond de Basterot"
] |
62,111,818 |
Swimming at the 2019 African Games – Women's 1500 metre freestyle
|
The Women's 1500 metre freestyle competition of the 2019 African Games was held on 21 August 2019.
==Records==
Prior to the competition, the existing world and championship records were as follows.
== Results ==
=== Final ===
The final was started on 21 August at 17:00.
|
[
"Hania Moro",
"Shanghai",
"2019 African Games",
"Wendy Trott",
"Katie Ledecky",
"Roxanne Tammadge",
"Majda Chebaraka",
"Maputo",
"Samantha Randle",
"Carla Antonopoulos",
"Douaa Eddahbi",
"Indianapolis, Indiana",
"Swimming at the 2023 African Games – Women's 1500 metre freestyle",
"Inass Rachidi",
"Swimming at the 2015 African Games – Women's 1500 metre freestyle"
] |
62,111,819 |
Muhammad Anis
|
Muhammad Anis (born 26 June 1957) is an Indonesian engineer and academic administrator who became UI's rector from 2014 until 2019. He was previously the university's academic director from 2003 from 2007 and first deputy rector from 2007 until 2013.
== Early life and education ==
Muhammad Anis was born on 26 June 1957 in Jakarta, Indonesia. He attended Yayasan Perguruan Cikini as a child and graduated from in 1976. In 1977, he enrolled in the Metallurgy Department at the Faculty of Engineering, University of Indonesia (FTUI). In August, 1983, he became the first student in his cohort to graduate from the Metallurgy Department. In 1988, Anis earnt a master degree in metallurgy from the University of Sheffield. In 1991, he completed a doctoral degree.
== Academic career ==
Anis initially worked as a teaching assistant in the Metallurgy Department at FTUI, but in 1984 began to work as an engineer in the private sector. FTUI asked him back, and in January 1985, Anis became a lecturer in the Metallurgy Department and, soon after, the department's secretary. He left in 1986 to attend graduate school in the United Kingdom. Anis returned to FTUI in 1992, where he was tasked with creating a postgraduate metallurgy degree program. With Anis as coordinator, the program opened in August 1992. From 1993 to 1997, Anis worked as an assistant dean one, and then until 2000 as assistant dean five.
Anis returned to lecturing in the early 2000s, and was elected as the Head of the Metallurgy Department. He changed the name of the department to Department of Metallurgy and Materials, and established the Centre for Material Processing and Failure Analysis (CMPFA). After 2002, he was promoted to director of education at the university by rector . After 2007, he was appointed deputy rector for academic and student affairs by .
|
[
"Indonesia",
"Jakarta",
"University of Indonesia",
"Bambang Wibawarta",
"Ari Kuncoro",
"University of Sheffield"
] |
62,111,826 |
Irfan Yousaf
|
Irfan Yousaf (born 25 February 1980) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"field hockey",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,111,841 |
2020 Rugby Europe Championship
|
The 2020 Rugby Europe Championship is the fourth season of the Rugby Europe International Championships, the premier rugby union competition for European national teams outside the Six Nations Championship. The competing teams are Belgium, Georgia, Romania, Russia and Spain (the top five teams from 2019), and Portugal, who qualified after defeating Germany in the promotion/relegation play-off of the 2019 Championship.
==Participants==
==Table==
== Fixtures ==
=== Week 1 ===
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
=== Week 2 ===
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
=== Week 3 ===
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
=== Week 4 ===
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
=== Week 5 ===
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
|style="vertical-align:top"|
|style="vertical-align: top; width:40%"|
|}
|}
----
==International broadcasters==
|
[
"Rugby TV",
"Belgium national rugby union team",
"Italian Rugby Federation",
"Bogdan Fedotko",
"J. W. Bell",
"Madrid",
"João Granate",
"Otar Giorgadze",
"Jon Zabala",
"Azamat Bitiev",
"Rugby Europe International Championships",
"Lasha Malaghuradze",
"Antoine Vassart",
"Víctor Sánchez (rugby union)",
"Alan Williams (Belgian rugby union)",
"Captain (sports)",
"Giorgi Nutsubidze",
"Beka Gorgadze",
"Ryan Godsmark",
"Germany national rugby union team",
"Thomas Wallraf",
"Shota Tevzadze",
"Andrea Piardi",
"Jordi Jorba",
"UTC+01",
"Giorgi Tkhilaishvili",
"Beka Saghinadze",
"Daniel Plai",
"Romania national rugby union team",
"Giorgi Javakhia",
"Mathieu Verschelden",
"Thomas De Molder",
"Vladimir Podrezov",
"Ignacio Contardi",
"Yuri Kushnarev",
"Santiago Santos",
"Thibault de Freitas",
"Moscow Time",
"Alexandru Țăruș",
"Stadionul Ion Oblemenco",
"Georgian Rugby Union",
"Ian Kenny (rugby union)",
"Pierre Nueno",
"Cristian Șerban",
"Craig Evans (referee)",
"Vincent Tauzia",
"Dan Jones (Rugby Union referee)",
"Lasha Jaiani",
"Guillaume Rouet",
"Julien Massimi",
"Kirill Golosnitsky",
"Six Nations Championship",
"Rugby Football Union",
"Manuel Mora (rugby union)",
"Tomás Appleton",
"Gilian Benoy",
"Evgeny Elgin",
"Dmitry Gerasimov (rugby union)",
"João Vasco Côrte-Real",
"Iulian Hartig",
"2020 Rugby Europe Championship squads",
"Ionuț Dumitru",
"Khetag Dzobelov",
"Davit Kacharava",
"Pedro Lucas (rugby union)",
"Eme Peki",
"Shalva Sutiashvili",
"Louis de Moffarts",
"French Rugby Federation",
"Allan Williams (Belgian rugby union)",
"José Rebelo de Andrade",
"Georgia Time",
"TVR 1",
"Aia Arena (Kutaisi)",
"Aleksey Shcherban",
"Dorin Lazăr",
"António Vidinha",
"Tom Herenger",
"Ionuț Mureșan",
"UTC+03",
"Waterloo, Belgium",
"Andrea Rabago",
"Eén",
"Constantin Pristăviță",
"Stade Jean-Bouin (Paris)",
"Shalva Mamukashvili",
"Lionel Tauli",
"Try (rugby union)",
"Complexo Desportivo da Caldas da Rainha",
"Manuel Cardoso Pinto",
"Tornike Jalaghonia",
"Match TV",
"Evgeny Mishechkin",
"Kaliningrad Time",
"Imedi Media Holding",
"Kuban Stadium",
"Zurabi Zhvania",
"Nicolas Onuțu",
"Graeme Ormiston",
"Cédric Wieme",
"Nodar Tcheishvili",
"Guillaume Mortier",
"Kutaisi",
"Caldas da Rainha",
"Demur Tapladze",
"Mikheil Nariashvili",
"Victor Gresev",
"Giorgi Chkoidze",
"Ovidiu Cojocaru",
"Inigo Atorrasagasti",
"Francisco Bruno",
"Craig Dowsett (rugby union)",
"Gillian Benoy",
"Sam Grove-White",
"Scottish Rugby Union",
"Guillaume Ajac",
"Beka Gigashvili",
"Tom Foley (Rugby Union referee)",
"Costa Cardoso Pinto",
"Guram Gogichashvili",
"Lyn Jones",
"Spain national rugby union team",
"Fernando Martín López",
"Kamil Sobota",
"Taylor Gontineac",
"Lionel Campergue",
"Jorge Abecasis",
"Mikheil Gachechiladze",
"Vincente del Hoyo Portoles",
"Chris Busby (rugby union)",
"Guillaume Piron",
"Guillermo Domínguez",
"UTC+02",
"Romanian Television",
"David Wallis (rugby union)",
"Bautista Eduardo Guemes",
"Ionel Badiu",
"Fisht Olympic Stadium",
"Estadio Nacional Complutense",
"Antim Cup",
"Lucas Rubio",
"2019–20 Rugby Europe International Championships",
"Facundo Domínguez",
"Fréderic Quercy",
"Gaspard Lalli",
"Anton Sychev",
"VK (service)",
"Adrian Moțoc",
"Sergey Chernyshev (rugby union)",
"Maxime Jadot (rugby union)",
"Charly Malie",
"Mikheil Meskhi Stadium",
"Cătălin Fercu",
"Konstantin Mikautadze",
"Stanislav Sel'skiy",
"António Monteiro (rugby union)",
"Yegor Zykov",
"Aka Tabutsadze",
"Stepan Khokhlov",
"David Costa (rugby union)",
"Marius Simionescu",
"Thomas de Molder",
"Lisbon",
"Krasnodar",
"Nathan Bontems",
"Kaliningrad",
"Lucas de Connick",
"Rodrigo Bento",
"Stephen John Barnes",
"Facundo Munilla",
"Manuel Eusebio",
"Robert Neagu",
"Tudorel Bratu",
"Giorgi Begadze",
"Vano Karkadze",
"Frédéric Cocqu",
"John Wessell Bell",
"Tom Cocqu",
"Alexander Todua",
"German Davydov",
"Thierry Futeu",
"Estádio Universitário de Lisboa",
"Josh Peters (rugby union)",
"Eugen Căpățână",
"Georgia Rugby Union",
"Mihai Macovei",
"Swiss Rugby Federation",
"Giorgi Tsutskiridze",
"Ben Blain",
"Julien Berger",
"Giorgi Melikidze",
"Radu Petrescu (rugby referee)",
"Davit Gigauri",
"2019 Rugby Europe Championship",
"Alexis Cuffolo",
"Nikita Vavilin",
"Loic Bournonville",
"Gautier Minguillón",
"Nika Amashukeli",
"Eastern European Time",
"Julen Goia",
"Jean Sousa",
"Manuel Picão",
"Bastien Gallaire",
"Victor Sánchez Borrego",
"Davit Niniashvili",
"Duarte Torgal",
"Jean Maurice Deccuber",
"Ionel Melinte",
"Lasha Khmaladze",
"Ivo Morais",
"Valentín Ambrosio",
"Fred Quercy",
"Stade Communal Fallon",
"Vitaly Zhivatov",
"Eric Madeira",
"Stadionul Municipal (Botoșani)",
"Tbilisi",
"Alberto Alonso Blanco",
"Levan Chilachava",
"Central European Time",
"Brad Linklater",
"Anthony Alves",
"Tamaz Mchedlidze",
"Boris Paichadze Dinamo Arena",
"rugby union",
"Valery Morozov",
"Tomás Munilla",
"William van Bost",
"Kaliningrad Stadium",
"Vasil Lobzhanidze",
"Alexsandr Il`in",
"Johannes van Heerden",
"Teledeporte",
"Nathan Paila",
"José Vareta",
"Thibault Álvarez",
"Giorgi Kveseladze",
"RTVE",
"Daniil Potikhanov",
"Portuguese Rugby Federation",
"Georgia national rugby union team",
"Marco Pinto Ferrer",
"Romanian Rugby Federation",
"Vicente del Hoyo",
"UTC+00",
"Andrey Polivalov",
"Diogo Hasse Ferreira",
"Francisco Fernandes",
"Matthew Bebe Smith",
"Botoșani",
"Irish Rugby Football Union",
"Bruno Vliegen",
"Mirian Modebadze",
"Manuel Ordás",
"Tedo Abzhandadze",
"Moldovan Rugby Federation",
"João Freudenthal",
"Mike Tadjer",
"Gela Aprasidze",
"Sport TV",
"Fisht Stadium",
"João Belo (rugby union)",
"Martín Alonso",
"José Lima (rugby union)",
"Richard Stewart (rugby union)",
"Rugby TV Portugal",
"Vasily Artemyev",
"Thomas Dienst",
"Andrey Garbuzov (rugby union)",
"Rugby Europe TV",
"Vlăduț Popa",
"Adrian Ion",
"Zurab Dzneladze",
"Duarte Azevedo",
"Ludovic Cayre",
"Matthew Robert Foulds",
"Lisbon University Stadium",
"Dany Antunes",
"Michael Walkter-Fitton",
"J. P. Doyle",
"Costel Burțilă",
"Federico Couto",
"Florin Surugiu",
"Bertrand Billi",
"Spanish Rugby Federation",
"Sochi",
"Vicente del Hoyo Portoles",
"João Lima (rugby union)",
"Florin Vlaicu",
"Tudor Boldor",
"Thibaut de Freitas",
"Gauthier Gibouin",
"Rodrigo Marta",
"Brussels",
"Andy Robinson",
"Craiova",
"Sean Gallagher (Rugby Union referee)",
"José Madeira",
"Bastien Didieu",
"Alberto Blanco (rugby union)",
"Gautier Gibouin",
"Soso Matiashvili",
"RTBF Sport",
"Ramil Gaisin",
"Patrice Lagisquet",
"Ross Mabon",
"Russia national rugby union team",
"Dragoș Ser",
"Vasily Dorofeev",
"Cristi Chirică",
"Mamukashvili",
"UTC+04",
"Rafaelle Storti",
"Diogo Ferreira (rugby union)",
"Central European Summer Time",
"Alvar Gimeno",
"Merab Sharikadze",
"Evgeny Matveev",
"Portugal national rugby union team",
"Vladislav Sozonov",
"Welsh Rugby Union",
"Auvio",
"Paris",
"Levan Maisashvili",
"Lucas Guillaume",
"Western European Time"
] |
62,111,844 |
Ali Raza (field hockey)
|
Ali Raza (born 10 November 1976) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics and the 2004 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"field hockey",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"2004 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,111,854 |
Imran Yousuf
|
Imran Yousuf (born 23 December 1978) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"field hockey",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,111,860 |
Atif Bashir (field hockey)
|
Atif Bashir (born 1 March 1971) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He retired in 2002 after an injury. He is married and has two kids. He has 6 sisters and 3 brothers who are older than him. His father died in 1980 and his mother died in 2012. He currently resides in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan. He competed in the men's tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"field hockey",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,111,869 |
Sameer Hussain
|
Sameer Hussain (born 14 February 1982) is a Pakistani field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
|
[
"Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament",
"field hockey",
"2000 Summer Olympics",
"Field hockey"
] |
62,111,884 |
Shada Mountain Reserve
|
Shada Mountain Reserve is a natural reserve in Saudi Arabia managed by the Saudi Wildlife Authority. The reserve is home to key plant and animal species including the endangered Arabian leopard.
== Plant and animal species ==
The reserve is known for the largest variety of flora in the region. There are approximately 500 plant species reported in this reserve.
|
[
"Nature reserve",
"Saudi Arabia",
"Genet (animal)",
"caracal",
"Striped hyena",
"List of protected areas of Saudi Arabia",
"Arabian wolf",
"Al Bahah",
"Saudi Wildlife Authority",
"Arabian leopard"
] |
62,111,899 |
Module:SimpleDebug
|
--2020-06-16 fix error when vtos(nil), then it showed two nil
--2020-06-08 if a variable is a function now is displayed as function (before "function")
--2020-06-06 fix error which occasionally happens when a value == nil
local p = {}
p.s = ''
p.tab = {
oneline = true,
allidx = false,
}
p.dec = -1
p.maxlines = {
num = 100,
doerror = true,
}
p.enabled = true
p.nowiki = false
p.nohtml = false
p._plaintext = false
p.counter = false
local LinCount = 0
local vep = ' • '
local function MessRaised (n)
return '\n\nIt has been reached to '..n..', you can change this limit with "maxlines.num".'
end
local function arrow()
return ' => '
end
function p.breakline ()
LinCount = LinCount + 1
p.s = p.s..'\n\n'
if p.counter then
p.s = p.s..LinCount..vep
end
if (LinCount > p.maxlines.num) and p.maxlines.doerror then
p.pa = p.s..MessRaised(p.maxlines.num)
error (p.s,0)
end
end --breakline
local function CheckWhereName (wn, what)
if wn == nil then
return '"'..what..'" == nil'
elseif (type(wn) == "table") then
return 'Table as "'..what..'"!'
else
return wn
end
end --CheckWhereName
function p._plain (text) --Modified from "Module:Plain text"
if not text then return end
text = mw.text.killMarkers(text)
gsub(' ', ' ') --replace nbsp spaces with regular spaces
gsub('', ', ') --replace br with commas
gsub('(.-)', '%1') --remove spans while keeping text inside
gsub('(.-)', '%1') --remove bold while keeping text inside
gsub('(.-)', '%1') --remove italic while keeping text inside
gsub('(.-)', '%1') --remove bold while keeping text inside
gsub('(.-)', '%1') --remove bold while keeping text inside
gsub('<.->.-<.->', '') --strip out remaining tags and the text inside
gsub('<.->', '') --remove any other tag markup
gsub('%[%[%s*[Ff]ile%s*:.-%]%]', '') --strip out files
gsub('%[%[%s*[Ii]mage%s*:.-%]%]', '') --strip out use of image:
gsub('%[%[%s*[Cc]ategory%s*:.-%]%]', '') --strip out categories
gsub('%[%^%-|', '') --strip out piped link text
gsub('[%[%]]', '') --then strip out remaining [ and ]
gsub("'", "") --strip out bold italic markup
gsub("?", "") --not stripping out ' gives correct output for bolded text in quotes
gsub('----', '') --remove ---- lines
gsub("^%s+", "") --strip leading
gsub("%s+$", "") --and trailing spaces
gsub("%s+", " ") --strip redundant spaces
return text
end --plain
function p._plain_len (text)
return mw.ustring.len (p._plain(text))
end
function p.plain (frame)
return p._plain (frame.args[1])
end
function p.plain_len (frame)
return p._plain_len (frame.args[1])
end
local function totext (text)
if p._plaintext then
return p._plain (text)
else
return text
end
end --totext
local function NumToStr (N)
if (p.dec == -1) or (N == math.floor(N)) then
return tostring(N)
else
return tostring (math.floor ((N*10^p.dec)+0.5) / (10^p.dec))
end
end --NumToStr
local iniTab1Line = true
function p.containsTab (avar)
local result = false
for k,v in pairs(avar) do
if type(v) == 'table' then
result = true
break
end
end
return result
end --containsTab
local var
local function DumTab (tbl, indent)
if not indent then indent = 1 end
local toprint = " {\r\n"
indent = indent + 2
for k, v in pairs(tbl) do
toprint = toprint..string.rep(" ", indent)
local id = k
if (type(k) == "string") then
k = '"'..k..'"'
end
toprint = toprint.."["..k.."] = "
if (type(v) == "number") then
toprint = toprint..NumToStr(v)..",\r\n"
elseif (type(v) == "string") then
toprint = toprint.."\""..totext(v).."\",\r\n"
elseif (type(v) == "table") then
if iniTab1Line and (not p.containsTab (v)) then
local wds = '{'
for kk,vv in pairs(v) do
if (p.tab.allidx == true) or (type(kk) ~= 'number') then
wds = wds..'['..kk..']='..var(vv)..', '
else
wds = wds..var(vv)..', '
end
end
toprint = toprint..wds.."},\r\n"
else
toprint = toprint..DumTab(v, indent + 2)..",\r\n"
end
else
toprint = toprint.."\""..tostring(v).."\",\r\n"
end
end
toprint = toprint..string.rep(" ", indent-2).."}"
return toprint
end --DumTab
function var (avar)
local EndStr = ''
if avar == nil then
EndStr = 'nil'
elseif type(avar) == 'table' then
if #avar > 0 then
p.s = p.s..'\r\n'
end
if p.tab.oneline then
local wds = '{ '
for k,v in pairs(avar) do
if (p.tab.allidx == true) or (type(k) ~= 'number') then
wds = wds..'['..k..']='..var(v)..', '
else
wds = wds..var(v)..', '
end
end
EndStr = wds .. '} '
else
EndStr = DumTab (avar)
end
elseif type(avar) == 'number' then
EndStr = NumToStr (avar)
elseif type(avar) == 'boolean' then
if avar == true then
EndStr = 'true'
else
EndStr = 'false'
end
elseif type(avar) == 'function' then
EndStr = 'function'
else
avar = totext (tostring(avar))
if p.nohtml then
avar = string.gsub (avar, "<", "⪡")
avar = string.gsub (avar, ">", "⪢")
end
EndStr = '"'..avar..'"'
end
return EndStr
end --var
function p.w (where)
if p.enabled then
return CheckWhereName (where, 'w')
end
end --w
local function varx (avar)
iniTab1Line = p.tab.oneline
if p.tab.oneline and (type(avar) == 'table') then
p.tab.oneline = not p.containsTab(avar)
end
local ss = var(avar)
p.tab.oneline = iniTab1Line
return ss
end --varx
function p.v (...)
if p.enabled then
local str = ''
if #arg == 0 then
str = 'nil'
else
local c = 0
for k, i in ipairs(arg) do
c = k
end
--error (c)
for i = 1, #arg do
if str ~= '' then
str = str..vep
end
str = str..varx(arg[i])
end
end
return str
end
end --v
function p.wv (where, ...)
if p.enabled then
return CheckWhereName(where,'w')..arrow()..p.v(unpack(arg))
end
end --wv
function p.nv (...)
if p.enabled then
if math.mod(#arg,2) ~= 0 then
EndStr = 'Any parameter has not a name or variable'
else
local s = ''
local IsName = true
function Concat(wds)
if s ~= '' then
if IsName then
s = s..vep
else
s = s..': '
end
end
s = s..wds
end
for i = 1, #arg do
if IsName then
Concat (CheckWhereName(arg[i],'n'))
IsName = false
else
Concat (varx(arg[i]))
IsName = true
end
end
EndStr = s
end
return EndStr
end
end --nv
function p.wnv (where, ...)
if p.enabled then
return CheckWhereName(where,'w')..arrow()..p.nv (unpack(arg))
end
end
----------
local function EnabAndBl ()
if p.enabled then
if LinCount < p.maxlines.num then
p.breakline ()
return true
else
p.s = p.s..MessRaised(p.maxlines.num)
error (p.s)
return false
end
else
return false
end
end --EnabAndBl
function p.wtos (where)
if EnabAndBl () then
p.s = p.s..p.w (where)
end
end --wtos
function p.vtos (...)
if EnabAndBl () then
local end_nil_count = arg["n"] - #arg
p.s = p.s..p.v (unpack(arg))
if #arg == 0 then
end_nil_count = end_nil_count-1
end
for i = 1, end_nil_count do
p.s = p.s..vep..'nil'
end
end
end --vtos
function p.wvtos (where, ...)
if EnabAndBl () then
p.s = p.s..p.wv (where,unpack(arg))
end
end --wvtos
function p.nvtos (...)
if EnabAndBl () then
local end_nil_count = arg["n"] - #arg
if end_nil_count > 0 then
for i = 1, arg["n"] do
if math.mod(i,2) ~= 0 then
p.s = p.s..arg[i]..': '
else
p.s = p.s..p.v(arg[i])
if i < arg["n"] then
p.s = p.s..vep
end
end
end
else
p.s = p.s..p.nv (unpack(arg))
end
end
end --nvtos
function p.wnvtos (where, ...)
if EnabAndBl () then
local end_nil_count = arg["n"] - #arg
if end_nil_count > 0 then
p.s = p.s..where..arrow()
for i = 1, arg["n"] do
if math.mod(i,2) ~= 0 then
p.s = p.s..arg[i]..': '
else
p.s = p.s..p.v(arg[i])
if i < arg["n"] then
p.s = p.s..vep
end
end
end
else
p.s = p.s..p.wnv (where, unpack(arg))
end
end
end --wnvtos
return p
|
[
"^%"
] |
62,111,902 |
Chandragad Fort
|
Chandragad Fort / Dhavalgad Fort ( ) is a fort located 182 km from Mumbai, in raigad district, of Maharashtra. This fort was an important fort in raigad district as a watch over for the Varandha Ghattrade routes from Bhor to kokan. The fort is surrounded by forest and hill slopes.
==History==
The fort is close to the Krishna river valley. The fort was captured By Chh.Shivaji Maharaj from Chandrarao More on 15 January 1656 along with Kangori and Rayari. After the death of Chh. Sambhaji maharaj this fort was captured by Itkadar Khan Aka Zulfikar khan who was a commander of Aurangzeb.
==How to reach==
The trek route starts from Village Dhavale which is located in District Raigad ,Taluka Poladpur. Poladpur to Dhavale distance is 20– 25 km. The path passes through the small Shelarwadi hamlet.
==Places to see==
There are about 14 rock-cut water tanks and few dilapidated building structures on the fort and one shivleeng is their.
|
[
"Sambhaji",
"Bhor",
"Military history of India",
"raigad district",
"Mumbai",
"Maratha Army",
"Maratha titles",
"List of forts in Maharashtra",
"List of Maratha dynasties and states",
"East India Company",
"Maratha War of Independence",
"British Raj",
"Raigad district",
"Battles involving the Maratha Empire",
"Varandha Ghat",
"Krishna River",
"Sahyadri",
"Aurangzeb",
"List of forts in India",
"Marathi people",
"Maharashtra",
"Shivaji"
] |
62,111,909 |
96th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery
|
96th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery, was an air defence unit of Britain's Territorial Army (TA) formed in West Yorkshire during the period of international tension leading up to the outbreak of World War II. It defended the West Riding during the early part of the war and then served in the Middle East. The regiment continued in the postwar TA until amalgamated in 1955.
==Origin==
The Territorial Army was rapidly expanded following the Munich Crisis, particularly the Anti-Aircraft (AA) branch of the Royal Artillery (RA). 96th Anti-Aircraft Regiment, RA was among the new units raised in the spring of 1939. It was formed in the West Yorkshire towns of Castleford and Halifax in April and was soon joined by an experienced TA battery from Leeds:
Regimental Headquarters (RHQ) at Castleford
186 AA Battery at Oulton – from 66th (Leeds Rifles) (West Yorkshire Regiment) AA Regiment, joined after May 1939
287 AA Battery at Pontefract – originally intended for 92nd Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery, which never formed
294 AA Battery at Castleford
295 AA Battery at Halifax
296 AA Battery at Halifax – from 66th (Leeds Rifles) AA Regiment
==World War II==
===Mobilisation and Phoney War===
In June 1939, as the international situation worsened, a partial mobilisation of Anti-Aircraft Command's TA units was begun in a process known as 'couverture', whereby each unit did a month's tour of duty in rotation to man selected AA gun and searchlight positions. On 24 August, ahead of the declaration of war, AA Command was fully mobilised at its war stations. The new regiment mobilised as part of 31 (North Midland) AA Brigade in 7th AA Division, defending Yorkshire including the Gun Defence Areas (GDAs) at Leeds and Sheffield.
Luckily, the months of the Phoney War that followed mobilisation allowed AA Command to address its equipment and manpower shortages. When the War Office released the first intakes of Militiamen to the Command in early 1940, most were found to be in low physical categories and without training. 31 AA Bde reported that out of 1000 recruits sent for duty, '50 had to be discharged immediately because of serious medical defects, another 20 were judged to be mentally deficient and a further 18 were unfit to do any manual labour such as lifting ammunition'. Fitness and training was greatly improved by the time Britain's AA defences were seriously tested during the Battle of Britain and Blitz.
===Battle of Britain===
On 1 June 1940, all RA units manning the older 3-inch or newer 3.7-inch and 4.5-inch guns were designated as Heavy AA (HAA) regiments to distinguish them from the new Light AA (LAA) regiments appearing in the order of battle. 66th (Leeds Rifles) HAA Rgt left 31 AA Bde during 1940 and was sent to the Orkney and Shetland Defences (OSDEF) to defend the Royal Navy's base at Scapa Flow; it took 296 HAA Bty with it as its third battery, leaving 96th HAA with four (187, 286, 294, 295).
The main action in the Battle of Britain was over Southern England, but after its defeat the Luftwaffe turned its attention to night bombing of London and the industrial cities of the UK. On 1 November 1940 AA Command created a new 10th AA Division by taking the two southern brigade areas from 7th AA Division together with a newly-formed 62 AA Bde. 96th HAA Regiment was assigned to 62 AA Bde, which had responsibility for the air defence of Leeds and Sheffield while 31 AA Bde concentrated on East Yorkshire and the Humber.
===The Blitz===
At the time 10th AA Division was created, the industrial towns of the UK were under regular attack by night, to which the limited AA defences replied as best they could. West Yorkshire, despite its important industrial facilities, steelworks, aircraft and ordnance factories, was at a considerable distance from the Luftwaffe 's bases and was less often raided than coastal targets and The Midlands. Nevertheless, Sheffield was badly bombed on 12 and 15 December 1940 (the Sheffield Blitz), Leeds on 14 March 1941 (the Leeds Blitz), Hull on 18 March (the Hull Blitz) and on 7 and 8 May, when Sheffield was also hit again. There were still too few AA guns for the tasks set them, and in March 1941 AA Command was obliged to shift some HAA guns from Sheffield to Liverpool, which was under much heavier attack.
The Blitz ended in May 1941. The regiment sent a cadre to 209th HAA Training Regiment at Blandford Camp to provide the basis for a new 447 HAA Bty; this was formed on 12 June 1941 and joined the regiment on 19 September to replace 287 HAA Bty which transferred to the newly-formed 128th HAA Rgt. 296 HAA Battery returned to 66th (Leeds Rifles) HAA Rgt on 10 February 1942, and on 2 April 447 HAA Bty was reduced to a cadre and sent to 211th HAA Training Rgt at Oswestry to form a new 447 (Mixed) HAA Bty, 'Mixed' indicating that women from the Auxiliary Territorial Service were integrated into the unit. The reformed battery then helped to form a new 161st (Mixed) HAA Rgt.
===Middle East===
96th HAA Regiment was among the flow of reinforcements being sent to Middle East Forces (MEF), arriving by October 1942. After the Second Battle of El Alamein, 96th HAA Rgt formed part of the defences of the Suez Canal, Cairo and the port of Suez under 21 AA Bde. The regiment remained with the Eastern Mediterranean AA Group throughout 1943, but by the beginning of 1944 the air threat had diminished and manpower was urgently required elsewhere. In the summer of 1944, 96th HAA Rgt was one of a number of AA units whose men were drafted to other units (often infantry) and the regiment and its batteries were placed in suspended animation on 20 June.
==Postwar==
When the TA was reconstituted in 1947 the regiment was reformed at Woodlesford, outside Leeds, as 496 (Mixed) Heavy AA Regiment. ('Mixed' now indicated that members of the Women's Royal Army Corps were integrated into the unit). It formed part of 69 AA Brigade at Leeds.
AA Command was disbanded on 10 March 1955 and there were wholescale amalgamations among its units. 496 HAA Regiment merged into 466 (Leeds Rifles) LAA Rgt in which it formed R Battery. In 1961 the TA was further reduced and 466th HAA Rgt was converted back to infantry and merged with its original parent unit, 7th (Leeds Rifles) Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment.
|
[
"Suez Canal",
"Blandford Camp",
"62nd Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)",
"Pontefract",
"31st (North Midland) Anti-Aircraft Brigade",
"West Riding of Yorkshire",
"Luftwaffe",
"East Yorkshire",
"Oulton, West Yorkshire",
"Leeds Blitz",
"Cadre (military)",
"Women's Royal Army Corps",
"Middle East Command",
"Cairo",
"128th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery",
"Liverpool",
"Castleford",
"West Yorkshire",
"Oswestry",
"Sheffield",
"Territorial Army (United Kingdom)",
"Auxiliary Territorial Service",
"Humber",
"Munich Crisis",
"Leeds",
"Woodlesford",
"Leeds Rifles",
"Halifax, West Yorkshire",
"43rd Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)",
"War Office",
"Royal Navy",
"10th Anti-Aircraft Division (United Kingdom)",
"Second Battle of El Alamein",
"QF 4.5-inch Mk I – V naval gun",
"Martin Farndale",
"The Blitz",
"66th (Leeds Rifles) (West Yorkshire Regiment) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery",
"Phoney War",
"QF 3-inch 20 cwt",
"QF 3.7-inch AA gun",
"21st Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)",
"Shetland",
"7th Anti-Aircraft Division (United Kingdom)",
"Royal Artillery",
"Militia (United Kingdom)",
"Orkney",
"The National Archives (United Kingdom)",
"Anti-Aircraft Command",
"World War II",
"The Midlands",
"Scapa Flow",
"Suez",
"Hull Blitz",
"161st (Mixed) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery",
"Sheffield Blitz",
"Battle of Britain"
] |
62,111,911 |
Category:The Leftovers (TV series)
|
Articles related to the American television series The Leftovers.
__NOGALLERY__
|
[
"The Leftovers (TV series)"
] |
62,111,913 |
Category:Book series introduced in 1928
|
[] |
|
62,111,920 |
Our Doctor Is the Best
|
Our Doctor is the Best (German: Unser Doktor ist der Beste) is a 1969 West German comedy film directed by Harald Vock and starring Roy Black, Helga Anders and Peter Weck.
The film's sets were designed by the art director Karl Schneider.
==Plot==
Young doctor Leonhard Somner, who just finished his degree starts an internship in the private hospital of its chief Professor Jansen. Initially, he is mistaken by Nurse Lonie as a repairman requested to repair the hospital's chief's private bathroom and ends up being late for his first day in work. The hospital chief is not impressed as he already has some prejudices against Dr. Somner, who unknowingly received help by a friend to secure the internship. The strict head nurse also tries to confuse him with his first diagnosis of little Wilma in the children's ward, but soon realises that Leonhard is quite knowledgeable in his field. Widowed car seller Waldemar Kosel sustains a concussion while demonstrating a car to the said Dr. Somner ends up in the same hospital. Meanwhile his underage daughter Monika has the time of her life, being home alone and with her friend Hotte they play all kinds of pranks on the ever unpopular choleric study councillor Zackgiebel, who lives in the same building as the kids.
In hospital nurse Lonie and Dr. Sommer fall in love with each other, yet there is some jealousy when Dr. Sommer spends significant time with the hospital owner's wife - although nothing serious happens. Study councillor Zackgiebel informs Monika's strict aunt about her misdemeanors who is not impressed, as for a long time she is convinced that her brother-in-law cannot take proper care of his unruly daughter and wants custody of Monika. When a visit by the aunt is announced Monika and Hotte prepare a specially wet welcome for the aunt. Yet Dr Sommer, who promised Waldemar Kosel to keep an eye on his daughter while he is in hospital comes in just at the right time and can convince them, that any prank will make them more inclined to request sole custody for the aunt. Especially as she brought a child service worker in tow. with Leonhard's help they manage to clean the messy apartment up just in time and the visitors find a well behaved girl in a spic and span tidy apartment, making the study councillor Zackgiebel loose his credibility and her father retains custody.
In hospital Loni makes up with Leonhard, but also manages to matchmake Waldemar Kosel with the strict head nurse Hildegart. Leonhard finds out why Professor Jansen has prejudices against him, but his friend who organised the internship with his aunt, a big benefactor of the hospital can clarify the situation and Leonhard's reputation is rehabilitated. Yet the children's ward he worked in was supposed to be closed down, in favour of turning the rooms into a lab. While the benefactor thinks that the Professor intended to extend the children's ward, the professor has to change his mind on the closure. but Monika, Hotte and their friends had meanwhile Co e up with their own plan to help Leonhard out of gratefulness and save the children's ward by pretending they all have the measles. The professor detects the deceit, yet is not angry. He then makes Leonhard the chief of the children's ward. Leonhard, Lonie and the children then go to the park and the film ends with them singing a sing and Leonhard and Lonie sharing a kiss.
==Cast==
Roy Black as Dr. Leonhard Sommer
Helga Anders as Loni Vogt
Peter Weck as Studienrat Zackgiebel
Christiane Schmidtmer as Frau Janssen
Joachim Hansen as Professor Frederik Janssen
Corinna Genest as Oberschwester Hildegart
Petra Esser as Monika Kosel
Gerhard Acktun as Hotte
Wilma Landkroon as Wilma
Maria Brockerhoff as Freundin von Frau Janssen
Gerhart Lippert as Dr. Walter Moll
Max Mairich as Schuldirektor
Edda Seippel as Eva-Maria Klarwein
Käthe Haack as Alma Carisius
Sissy Löwinger as Krankenschwester
Helga Weigmann as Walters Freundin
Karin Heske as Krankenschwester
Karl-Heinz Peters as Patient mit Gipsbein
Willy Schultes as Pförtner
Klaus Hoeft as Lonis Freund
Georg Thomalla as Waldemar Kosel
Karl Spiehs as Polizist
|
[
"Traude Krappl-Maass",
"Kurt Nachmann",
"Karl Schneider (art director)",
"Corinna Genest",
"Petra Esser",
"Max Mairich",
"Gerhard Acktun",
"comedy film",
"Werner Twardy",
"Harald Vock",
"Karin Heske",
"Joachim Hansen (actor)",
"art director",
"Willy Schultes",
"Edda Seippel",
"Klaus Hoeft",
"Lisa Film",
"Roy Black (singer)",
"Helga Weigmann",
"Gerhart Lippert",
"Georg Thomalla",
"Christiane Schmidtmer",
"Peter Weck",
"Maria Brockerhoff",
"Gloria Film",
"Sissy Löwinger",
"Karl Spiehs",
"Wilma Landkroon",
"Helga Anders",
"Günther Eulau",
"Kurt Junek",
"Käthe Haack",
"Karl-Heinz Peters",
"German language"
] |
62,111,929 |
Module:SimpleDebug/doc
|
Contains a functions to help debug the lua modules. It allows to collect and view the values of several variables and/or points in your lua program, from a module (which is usual) or in several modules (which are required from the main module).
It is designed so that its functions are called from within the module that is to be debugged, calls that will have to be part of the code (of the module that you have designed, or that you want to improve or adapt) until you decide to delete them (when you already have determined the bug). Thus, you do not have to call any of its functions from an invoke.
==Uses==
==Examples==
===One point to watch ===
==== Following the flow ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
return SD.v ('Here is reached')
returns:
Here is reached
==== Number of decimal places and value of a variable ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
SD.dec = 2
return SD.v (1/3)
returns:
0.33
==== Nohtml ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
SD.nohtml = true
return SD.v ("bold")
returns:
"⪡b⪢bold⪡/b⪢"
==== Plaintext ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
SD.plaintext = true
return SD.v ("bold")
returns:
"bold"
==== The value of several variables ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
local a = 12
local b = 'Hello'
return SD.v (a,b)
returns:
12 • "Hello"
==== Non-assigned variable detection ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
local a = true
return SD.v (a,b)
returns:
true • nil
====The value of a table====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
local a = {1, tab='a', 'b'}
return SD.v (a)
returns:
{ 1, "b", [tab]="a", }
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
local a =
return SD.v (a)
returns:
{
[1] = {1, 2, 3, },
[2] = {4, 5, 6, },
[3] = {7, 8, 9, },
}
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
local a =
return SD.v (a)
returns:
{
[1] = {2, 3, [First]=1, },
[2] = {4, 6, [Second]=5, },
[3] = {7, 8, 9, },
}
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
SD.tab.allidx = true
local a =
return SD.v (a)
returns:
{
[1]={[1]=1, [2]=2, [3]=3, },
[2]={[1]=4, [3]=6, },
[3]={[1]=7, [2]=8, [3]=9, },
}
Usually, you implement these functions with error function:
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
local a =
error (SD.v (a))
displays:
[1] = {1, 2, 3, },
[2] = {4, 5, 6, },
[3] = {7, 8, 9, },
}
==== All values of a table in multiline ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
SD.tab.oneline = false
local a =
return SD.v (a)
retorna:
{
[1] = {
[1] = 2,
[2] = 3,
["First"] = 1,
},
[2] = "Middle",
[3] = {
[1] = 4,
[2] = 6,
["Second"] = 5,
},
}
==== The value of several variables with their name in a point ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
local a = 12
local b = 'Hello'
return SD.nv ('a',a,'b',b)
returns:
a: 12 • b: "Hello"
===Several points to watch===
==== Following the flow ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
local tab = {1,12,7}
function p.CheckValues ()
local function LittleNum()
SD.wtos ('little number')
end
local function BigNum(num)
SD.wtos ('big='..num)
end
for i, num in ipairs(tab) do
if num > 9 then
BigNum(num)
else
LittleNum()
end
end
error (SD.s)
end
returns:
====With counter====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
function Increm()
local n = 0
for i = 1, 3 do
n = n + 2
SD.vtos (n)
end
end
SD.counter = true
Increm()
return SD.s
returns:
1 • 2
2 • 4
3 • 6
==== Monitoring of several variables ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
a = 12
b = 'Hello'
SD.vtos (1,a,b)
a = a + a
b = b..' world!'
SD.vtos ('Finally',a,b)
return SD.s
returns:
1 => 12 • "Hello"
Finally => 24 • "Hello world!"
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
SD.breakline ()
a = 12
b = 'Hello'
c = false
SD.nvtos (1,'a',a,'b',b,'c',c)
a = a + a
b = b..' world!'
SD.nvtos ('Finally','a',a,'b',b)
error (SD.s)
displays:
==== Variables and their presentation with conditions ====
local SD = require "Module:SimpleDebug"
SD.breakline()
SD.enabled = false
SD.maxlines.num = 3
local a = 'AA'
for i = 1, 10 do
a = a + 'AA'
if i == 3 then
SD.enabled = true
end
SD.nvtos (i, string.len(a), a)
end
displays:
|
[] |
62,111,943 |
Template:File extension
|
[] |
|
62,111,953 |
Penguin One, Us Zero
|
"Penguin One, Us Zero" is the second episode of the first season of the American supernatural drama television series The Leftovers, based on the novel of the same name by Tom Perrotta. The episode was written by series creator Damon Lindelof and supervising producer Kath Lingenfelter, and directed by executive producer Peter Berg. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on July 6, 2014.
The series is set three years after the "Sudden Departure" – an event which saw 2% of the world's population (approximately 140 million people) disappear and profoundly affected the townspeople. The characters of police chief Kevin Garvey and his family (wife Laurie, son Tom, daughter Jill and father Kevin Sr.) are focal points, alongside grieving widow Nora Durst, her brother Reverend Matt Jamison, and the mysterious cult-like organization the Guilty Remnant (GR), led by Patti Levin. In the episode, Kevin questions his sanity as he starts dreaming about Dean, while Meg joins the Guilty Remnant, trying to understand what she wants.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 1.55 million household viewers and gained a 0.7 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received positive reviews from critics, who praised the performances (particularly Liv Tyler), lingering questions and directing, although some expressed criticism for its pacing.
==Plot==
Two Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, Explosives, and Cults (ATFEC) agents investigate Holy Wayne (Paterson Joseph), deeming him a threat to the country based on his profile, with possible indication of sex offenses. An ATFEC team raids Wayne's compound, killing many of its members. Just as an agent prepares to execute Christine (Annie Q.), Tom (Chris Zylka) kills the agent and takes her to an underground hideout.
Kevin (Justin Theroux) is haunted by a dream where he sees Dean (Michael Gaston). He is also reprimanded by Lucy (Amanda Warren), as some civilians saw him shooting dogs the previous night. Kevin dismisses it, but is confused when a bagel he placed on a toaster disappears. Later, he finds that Dean's truck has been parked in his driveway, with a dead dog on the trunk. While at a coffee shop, Jill (Margaret Qualley) and Aimee (Emily Meade) notice Nora (Carrie Coon) carrying a gun in a bag, before intentionally spilling her cup, breaking it. As they follow her, they see her hugging Reverend Matt (Christopher Eccleston). They follow her in a car, eventually deducing that she is Matt's sister.
Tom and Christine escape to a gas station, where they are reunited with Wayne. Wayne congratulates Tom for protecting Christine, although the murder he committed may have "poisoned" him. He offers to hug him to hug his "pain" away, which Tom declines. Wayne decides to go on the run, telling Tom to protect the pregnant Christine and to go off the grid. At the Guilty Remnant's pledge house, Laurie (Amy Brenneman) has been assigned as a mentor to Meg (Liv Tyler). They make Meg chop a tree with an axe. This frustrates Meg, as she feels there is no purpose in this. Her fiancé issues a missing report on her, prompting Kevin to visit her. Meg claims that she wants to stay with Guilty Remnant, although she still keeps his contact card. Later, seeing the sacrifices that Laurie made, she surrenders her departed mother's sweater.
At night, Kevin is visited by Dean, who claims that they could go shooting dogs the next day, also telling Kevin to keep his truck. The next day, Kevin visits his father, Kevin Sr. (Scott Glenn), who has been committed to an institution. Kevin is questioning his sanity, but his father states he can't help him. He goes back to the station where he opens the toaster, discovering the burned bagel inside. Back at the Guilty Remnant, Meg finally decides to stay, emotionally chopping the tree.
==Production==
===Development===
In June 2014, the episode's title was revealed as "Penguin One, Us Zero" and it was announced that series creator Damon Lindelof and supervising producer Kath Lingenfelter had written the episode while executive producer Peter Berg had directed it. This was Lindelof's second writing credit, Lingenfelter's first writing credit, and Berg's second directing credit.
===Writing===
According to co-writer Kath Lingenfelter, the bagel scene was inspired by an experience by series creator Damon Lindelof, who claimed that his bagel disappeared while writing the series.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
The episode was watched by 1.55 million viewers, earning a 0.7 in the 18-49 rating demographics on the Nielson ratings scale. This means that 0.7 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 13% decrease from the previous episode, which was watched by 1.77 million viewers with a 0.8 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"Penguin One, Us Zero" received positive reviews from critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating with an average rating of 7.9/10 for the episode, based on 12 reviews.
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8.3 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "The Leftovers continued to focus on the crumbling mind and spirit this week on and episode that dealt with madness permeating into many levels of society. This show carries with it an addictive angst that's difficult for those like me who are drawn to stories about broken people to resist. Everyone's cracked and creased, but in different ways and for different reasons. The Guilty Remnants, by default, come off as the 'enemy' since they seem to serve the parasitic purpose of 'never fixing oneself.'"
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode an "A–" grade and wrote, "It's beginning to make more sense why the pilot of The Leftovers looked the way it did: 'Penguin One, Us Zero' is a perplexingly titled hour, but it's more satisfying than the show's first episode. In part that's because it's taking the scattered, meandering threads of the pilot and pulling them taut — it's wasted no time in bringing some characters to a position of reckoning, forcing them to make choices that are defining and eventful."
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "One of the most fascinating things to me about The Leftovers is the way that the story is focused on the Garvey family, who lost no one we know about in the Departure, but who have all lost themselves and each other in the aftermath. And while 'Penguin One, Us Zero' starts to open a window on what life is like for someone like Nora Durst, whose whole family vanished, its main focus is on examining how people like the Garveys and Meg Abbott have unspooled themselves from all the existential weight of a world where something like the Departure can happen." Jeff Labrecque of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "It's too early to push away The Leftovers, but the second episode did closely echo the premiere in particular ways, with the payoff being a surprising link between characters. In the premiere, Laurie's relationship to the Garveys was only revealed near the end, and the second episode relied on Lucy and the crazy ex-chief's relationship to provide some oomph. It's a trick that gets less impressive each time — and, in theory, it shouldn't be necessary after the first few episodes — but future installments will need to focus more on the present and future instead of dwelling on the past."
Kelly Braffet of Vulture gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "What we gained in explanation, we lost in momentum. I'm still enthusiastic about the characters and the premise, but more things need to happen now." Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 3.5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "The Leftovers continues to move forward without pouring on exposition too thick. The show lets audiences get acquainted with the program's world on their own, which can be fun for audiences that like to be challenged by art and frustrating for those who want things spelled out for them. No matter what camp you're in, there's no denying the fact that The Leftovers leaves you curious and wondering, but you have to wonder when patience will run out."
Matt Brennan of Slant Magazine wrote, "Stripped of the superegos that maintained the old world now gone, the residents of Mapleton revert to the id of animal instinct. Deep down, perhaps, we're all just feral dogs waiting to be unleashed." Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times wrote, "After two lugubrious episodes of The Leftovers, we've seen two endings featuring the exact same scenario: a tortured character finds solace in a spontaneous act of violence. Garvey exorcised his frustrations in the premiere by unloading a few rounds into a wild pack of dogs. (Who hasn't?)"
===Accolades===
TVLine named Liv Tyler as an honorable mention as the "Performer of the Week" for the week of July 12, 2014, for her performance in the episode. The site wrote, "HBO's The Leftovers has a tendency to put us through a gamut of emotions, and Liv Tyler encapsulated each one of them in her portrayal of Meg Abbott in this week's episode. In just a handful of scenes, Tyler infused in her desperate character confusion, exasperation, sadness and a few fleeting seconds of hope. And considering The Leftovers basic premise is one that we can't fathom happening in real life, Tyler's ability to make Meg relatable deserves the highest praise. As she turned to Amy Brenneman's Laurie and said, simply, 'I don't want to feel this way anymore,' we felt deep compassion for a character we'd only just met."
|
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"Michael Gaston",
"Daniel Ellsworth & The Great Lakes",
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"TVLine",
"Emily Meade",
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] |
62,111,957 |
Two Boats and a Helicopter
|
"Two Boats and a Helicopter" is the third episode of the first season of the HBO drama television series The Leftovers. The episode was written by Damon Lindelof and Jacqueline Hoyt and directed by Keith Gordon. It aired in the United States on July 13, 2014.
Whereas the first two episodes of the series followed protagonist Kevin Garvey, "Two Boats and a Helicopter" shifts perspective to focus on the character of Matt Jamison, an Episcopalian priest causing controversy around the town of Mapleton following the Sudden Departure. The episode follows Matt in his ordeal to save his church from an impending foreclosure.
"Two Boats and a Helicopter" received critical acclaim, with many reviewers calling it a significant improvement over the first two episodes. Particular praise was given to Christopher Eccleston's central performance, as well as the episode's script, pace, and surreal elements.
==Plot==
In the years since the Sudden Departure, Reverend Matt Jamison spends much of his time defaming members of the Departed he finds to have committed sin, placing posters around Mapleton exposing the individuals' sordid pasts. While Matt views this as a noble effort to separate the innocent from the guilty, his actions court frequent controversy from the town's residents, and his church attendance has begun to dwindle. One of Matt's sermons is interrupted by a relative of one of the outed "sinners" who beats him.
Matt's shrinking congregation has hampered his ability to pay mortgage on the church. He learns from the bank that an undisclosed LLC has made an offer of $135,000 on the church, which the bank will accept unless Matt manages to produce the same amount by the next day. Matt requests the money from Nora, his sister, but she accepts only under the condition that he end his public-shaming campaign. Matt is reluctant to do so, and reveals to Nora that her husband (who disappeared along with their two children) was having an affair with the kids' preschool teacher. Nora is devastated and asks Matt to leave.
Matt returns home to tend to his comatose wife, Mary. He remembers that Kevin Garvey Sr., the former police chief, left him $20,000 buried in the Garveys' backyard. While going to collect it, Matt gets the idea to acquire the rest of the money by gambling it at a nearby Indian casino, which was frequented by a "sinful" departed relative of one of his congregation members. He bets the $20,000 at a roulette table and manages to win three rounds in a row, earning him $160,000. Matt collects the money in an envelope and returns to his car, but one of the onlookers from the game attempts to rob him of his earnings. Matt brutally beats the thief in a rage and takes back the envelope.
On his way back to town, Matt sees two members of the Guilty Remnant being pelted with stones by the passengers of a nearby car. He stops to help them, only to be knocked out by a rock himself. While unconscious, Matt experiences a series of surreal visions charting moments of his past: his cancer diagnosis, his parents burning alive in a house fire during his childhood, and the car crash he and Mary suffered on October 14, which left her in a vegetative state. Matt additionally hallucinates himself having sex with Mary, who suddenly reappears as Laurie Garvey, before Matt finds himself and the bed set ablaze, causing him to wake up.
Matt rushes to the bank with the cash in hand, but is told that he is three days late and that the church has been sold. Matt realizes he was hospitalized after his injury and was unconscious throughout his recovery. He returns to the church to find that its buyers were the Guilty Remnant, who have begun painting the walls white and throwing away church items. Patti Levin, the GR's local leader, is seen removing the lettering from the church's sign, and makes prolonged eye contact with Matt.
==Production==
"Two Boats and a Helicopter" is the first episode of The Leftovers that does not focus on protagonist Kevin Garvey (actor Justin Theroux makes only a brief appearance at the beginning of the episode). The character of Matt Jamison has a relatively minor role in Tom Perrotta's source novel, but showrunner Lindelof decided to expand on the character after a conversation with Eccleston, feeling the series needed a more prominent character to represent the role of faith in the narrative. Eccleston had initially auditioned for the role of Kevin, but was turned down; he eventually expressed interest in playing Matt after reading Perrotta's novel, and helped convince Lindelof to give the character a more significant role in the series. In an interview with Rolling Stone regarding the episode, Eccleston elaborated on his interpretation of Matt's character:
Critics noted that the episode's title refers to a religious parable about a man who awaits God's help amidst a flood while refusing help from others, only to die and realize that the offers of rescue were indeed what God had provided.
==Reception==
===Ratings===
Upon airing, the episode was watched by 1.380 million viewers with an 18-49 rating of 0.7.
===Critical reception===
"Two Boats and a Helicopter" was acclaimed by critics, who praised the episode for its themes, heightened pace, and Eccleston's performance. On Rotten Tomatoes, the episode has an approval rating of 92% based on 12 reviews, with an average score of 8.80/10. The critics' consensus reads, "Gripping and unpredictable, "Two Boats and a Helicopter" focuses on a single character for its duration, and the result is one of the series' best episodes to date."
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a 10 out of 10, calling it a "stunning display of short-form storytelling." Fowler compared the episode to the flashback episodes of Lost, Lindelof's previous series, for exploring the backstory of a single character, and praised Eccleston's "wonderful performance" for capturing the many shades of Matt's character. Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode an A, referring to the dream sequence as "masterfully done" and describing the episode overall as having "the unsettled, roiling mood of madness." Saraiya praised the overall episode as "nothing except an exploration of what it means to be inexplicably—indelibly—human. James Poniewozik of Time noted that the episode convinced him to keep watching the rest of the season, also comparing the episode to the flashbacks in Lost, but noting, "The Leftovers is distinctively its own thing: its characters are torn not between faith and science but between purpose and despair."
Alan Sepinwall of Uproxx praised the episode as a "bizarre, marvelous, freaky, abrupt left turn" for the series, highlighting its portrayal of "cosmic forces" affecting the series' world and characters, as well as Eccleston's "knockout performance."). Sepinwall felt that the religious parable providing the episode its namesake was reflected in Matt's series of misfortunes, stating, "Matt, like the man in the parable from the title, either puts too much misguided faith in God, or simply doesn't read the signals correctly."
|
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"surrealism",
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"Tom Perrotta",
"Alan Sepinwall",
"HBO",
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"Rolling Stone (magazine)",
"Marceline Hugot",
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"rapture",
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"Penguin One, Us Zero",
"baptism",
"Episcopalian"
] |
62,111,958 |
B.J. and the A.C.
|
"B.J. and the A.C." is the fourth episode of the first season of the American supernatural drama television series The Leftovers, based on the novel of the same name by Tom Perrotta. The episode was written by series creator Damon Lindelof and Elizabeth Peterson, and directed by Lesli Linka Glatter and Carl Franklin. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on July 20, 2014.
The series is set three years after the "Sudden Departure" – an event which saw 2% of the world's population (approximately 140 million people) disappear and profoundly affected the townspeople. The characters of police chief Kevin Garvey and his family (wife Laurie, son Tom, daughter Jill and father Kevin Sr.) are focal points, alongside grieving widow Nora Durst, her brother Reverend Matt Jamison, and the mysterious cult-like organization the Guilty Remnant (GR), led by Patti Levin. In the episode, the baby Jesus doll goes missing as Mapleton approaches Christmas, with Kevin being assigned to find it. Meanwhile, Tom and Christine go on the run from authorities.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 1.62 million household viewers and gained a 0.8 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received positive reviews from critics, who praised the performances and character development, although some deemed the themes of the episode as too heavy-handed.
==Plot==
At a factory, workers build baby dolls that are packaged and sent to many locations. One of these is sent to Mapleton during Christmas, where it is placed on the local nativity display as the baby Jesus. A few days later, the baby Jesus goes missing.
Kevin (Justin Theroux) warns Patti (Ann Dowd) that the GR are not welcome at a forthcoming Christmas dance, which is a fundraiser for a new library, threatening that he will not protect them as people want to enjoy time with their families. Patti's only response is "There is no family" before leaving. Kevin instructs police officers to arrest any GR who show up at the area, also suspecting that Jill (Margaret Qualley) and Aimee (Emily Meade) were involved with the theft. Meanwhile, Tom (Chris Zylka) and Christine (Annie Q.) are staying at a hostel, with Tom frustrated that Wayne hasn't reached them out through his burner phone. A semi-naked man screaming about a dream tries to attack Christine until Tom hits him, forcing him to take her to a hospital.
Lucy (Amanda Warren) tells Kevin that the public wants the baby Jesus back. Instead of finding the original, she tells him to buy a new one. As he is buying it, he changes his mind and decides to find the original baby Jesus doll. He stops Adam (Max Carver) and Scott Frost (Charlie Carver), suspecting them of being involved and warning them that they should confess if they don't want trouble. That night, the twins meet with Jill, Aimee and other friends by a fire, revealing that they took the baby Jesus. Jill changes her mind about burning the doll. In the hospital, the staff suspects Tom is abusive to Christine, as he is angry that she told people of her pregnancy and connection to Wayne, forcing him to flee the hospital. He returns later and convinces her to leave with him. En route they encounter an accident with bodies in white from a funeral home scattered on the road like in the aforementioned dream.
Kevin is visited by Meg (Liv Tyler) and Laurie (Amy Brenneman) at his house. Meg reads a note from Laurie, stating that she wants a divorce. It's also revealed to the audience that Kevin is not Tom's biological father. Kevin refuses to comply unless Laurie says it. This is witnessed by Jill, who brings a gift for Laurie as Kevin tells them to leave their house. Outside, Laurie opens the gift, which turns out to be an engraved lighter. Meg urges her to keep it and promises she won't tell, but Laurie throws it into the gutter. By the next day, Kevin finds the baby Jesus on his doorstep just as the Frost twins leave in a car. He goes to the dance with the baby Jesus, where he announces it to a confused audience.
As Kevin walks through the school hallways, he meets Nora (Carrie Coon). Nora confesses that her husband was cheating on her, while Kevin confesses he cheated on his wife. Their encounter is short but they are clearly attracted to each other. Kevin goes outside to discover GR members on the edge of the school limits. The officers decide to ignore the protocol and arrest each one of them, including Patti. During this, other GR members break into houses, stealing photos of people who departed. Laurie walks back and tries to retrieve the lighter she threw into the gutter. Kevin goes to place the baby Jesus on the nativity display, only to discover Matt (Christopher Eccleston) placing a wooden baby Jesus figure in the manger. Kevin drives off, throwing the baby Jesus near a forest.
==Production==
===Development===
In June 2014, the episode's title was revealed as "B.J. and the A.C." and it was announced that series creator Damon Lindelof and Elizabeth Peterson had written the episode while Lesli Linka Glatter and Carl Franklin had directed it. This was Lindelof's fourth writing credit, Peterson's first writing credit, Glatter's first directing credit, and Franklin's first directing credit.
===Writing===
Originally, the episode featured more prominently the soldier whom Tom and Christine meet in the bus, which would cover around half of the episode's runtime. Lindelof considered that they made a mistake in giving the character such a big amount of time, feeling that the audience would lose interest in the series. This caused the production to be shut down for two weeks while the episode was rewritten. Due to Lesli Linka Glatter's commitment to Homeland, Carl Franklin directed the new re-filmed episode, earning a co-directing credit. This was a 17% increase from the previous episode, which was watched by 1.38 million viewers with a 0.7 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"B.J. and the A.C." received generally positive reviews from critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 82% approval rating with an average rating of 6.2/10 for the episode, based on 11 reviews. The site's consensus states: "A slight comedown from previous installments, 'B.J. and the A.C.' still contains enough engaging scenes and visual panache to compensate for its heavy-handed plotting."
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8.5 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "While not as potent as last week's single-character study, 'B.J. and the A.C.' opened the show up a bit more by revealing more details about Kevin and Laurie's marriage, Tom's situation, and Kevin's philandering. All while throwing a nefarious coat of 'ick' over the Guilty Remnant, as they invaded people's homes to spread their nihilism. Again, no big answers, but enough engaging moments of coincidence to make you wonder if Tom's 'holy' mission is legit."
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "C+" grade and wrote, "Well, tonight's episode of The Leftovers takes the idea of subtlety and tosses it out the window — along with a baby (and the bathwater, if we want to keep our idioms intact). It is not inherently a bad episode, but girl, it is very heavy-handed. I found myself cringing through a lot of it, even though there were moments that managed to speak to me."
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "Whatever decisions and alterations happened behind the scenes, the finished product is another strong episode of The Leftovers – not as intense as last week's (or, for that matter, next week's), but an effective holiday portrait of the shattered Garvey family." Jeff Labrecque of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Overall, I liked this episode as much as some people are going to be offended by it. It raised the stakes, established the conflict that is now inevitable, and set the course for the rest of the show. Merry Christmas."
Kelly Braffet of Vulture gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "I really want to like The Leftovers. It's not perfect, but it's generally smart, stylish without being slick, and has a hell of a cast. One thing it's not, though, is subtle." Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 4.5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "The Leftovers continues to improve as Lindelof continues to go against his instincts and just let us know things. The show also is utilizing its smaller moments to maximum benefit. Slowly but surely, The Leftovers is becoming appointment television. Let the internet thinkpieces flow."
Matt Brennan of Slant Magazine wrote, "In 'B.J.', The Leftovers finds its firmest footing yet, by dint of the episode's powerful suggestion that 'religion' is just a minefield of ghosts." Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times wrote, "There's a clunkiness here that undercuts the visual smarts — why, for instance, the bluesy soul song played over the doll-making sequence? Sure, it's a jarring aural-visual contrast, but it felt manipulative and a bit smug, as if the show is too enamored of its own capacity to disturb."
|
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"Amy Brenneman",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"The New York Times",
"Slant Magazine",
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"Annie Q.",
"Justin Theroux",
"Lil Greenwood",
"Two Boats and a Helicopter",
"Supernatural fiction",
"Keith Mansfield",
"Prepaid mobile phone"
] |
62,111,960 |
Gladys (The Leftovers)
|
"Gladys" is the fifth episode of the first season of the American supernatural drama television series The Leftovers, based on the novel of the same name by Tom Perrotta. The episode was written by series creators Damon Lindelof and Tom Perrotta, and directed by Mimi Leder. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on July 27, 2014.
The series is set three years after the "Sudden Departure" – an event which saw 2% of the world's population (approximately 140 million people) disappear and profoundly affected the townspeople. The characters of police chief Kevin Garvey and his family (wife Laurie, son Tom, daughter Jill and father Kevin Sr.) are focal points, alongside grieving widow Nora Durst, her brother Reverend Matt Jamison, and the mysterious cult-like organization the Guilty Remnant (GR), led by Patti Levin. In the episode, unknown assailants kill Gladys, a loyal member of the Guilty Remnant. Kevin investigates the murder, despite the police's indifference to her death.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 1.59 million household viewers and gained a 0.8 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised the performances and character development. Gladys' death scene drew polarized reactions, with some deeming it appropriate for the series' tone while others criticized its violent nature.
==Plot==
Hostility between the GR and Mapleton residents has increased after the former broke into their houses to replace photos of their departed familiars. One night, a member of the GR, Gladys (Marceline Hugot), is taken by assailants to the woods. Tying her to a tree, she is brutally struck by thrown stones. She breaks her vow of silence, begging them to stop. The assailants ignore her and keep throwing stones, killing her. The GR searches for her that night, with Laurie (Amy Brenneman) running into Dean (Michael Gaston) killing dogs, before finding Gladys' body.
Kevin (Justin Theroux) is visited by Patti (Ann Dowd), who informs him of her death. The police show no respect to Gladys' death, some mocking her death while others refuse to cooperate and warn GR that their presence is a threat. With very little support among the department, Kevin is forced to investigate on his own. To complicate matters, Detective Louis Vitello (Wayne Duvall) informs ATFEC for investigation. After Laurie leaves a hospital due to a panic attack, Patti takes her to a motel room. The next day, Laurie is instructed to meet her at a diner wearing non-white clothes. Patti surprises Laurie by speaking, inviting her to do the same for the day.
On a suggestion of Lucy (Amanda Warren), Kevin announces a curfew, which angers some of the citizens. The board rejects the petition for a curfew, unwilling to ruin their lives for GR. Kevin decides to visit the GR, suggesting they should use whistles, although they are not interested in his idea. Back at the diner, Patti tells Laurie that they are in the same place where she dined with Gladys, who wanted comfort after her son died. Even when she motivated her to speak, Gladys did not speak, just like Laurie. As they leave, Patti orders a doggy-bag and writes 'Neil' on it, which she leaves filled with something in front of a house.
Kevin decides to visit the morgue to check Gladys' body, bringing along Matt (Christopher Eccleston), who knew her and wants to pray for her. At the morgue, Kevin discovers that ATFEC already retrieved the body, which prevents Kevin from investigating any further. He contacts the agent in charge, who claims that the case is now in the hands of the ATFEC. The agent also offers Kevin a chance in wiping out the GR in Mapleton, which Kevin refuses. A distraught Kevin informs Jill (Margaret Qualley) about his incoming divorce. While Meg (Liv Tyler) is ready to become a permanent member of GR, Laurie interrupts Matt's vigil for Gladys outside with her new whistle. At an ATFEC processing center, agents burn many corpses from a truck, including Gladys'.
==Production==
===Development===
In June 2014, the episode's title was revealed as "Gladys" and it was announced that series creators Damon Lindelof and Tom Perrotta had written the episode while Mimi Leder had directed it. This was Lindelof's fifth writing credit, Perrotta's second writing credit, and Leder's first directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
The episode was watched by 1.59 million viewers, earning a 0.8 in the 18-49 rating demographics on the Nielson ratings scale. This means that 0.8 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a slight decrease from the previous episode, which was watched by 1.62 million viewers with a 0.8 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"Gladys" received generally positive reviews from critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 92% approval rating with an average rating of 7.4/10 for the episode, based on 12 reviews. The site's consensus states: "'Gladys' opens with a horrific gut-punch and concludes with a bitter confrontation, successfully mixing in some familiar themes and surprising moments along the way."
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode an "amazing" 9 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "'Gladys' gave us our most harrowing moment of violence on the show to date while bringing Matt into the main Kevin/GR storyline in a very cool, intriguing way. The show also managed to make the GR sympathetic, though their choices still stand as being ultimately destructive and selfish. Despite all they ostensibly deny themselves. In fact, I wonder what the percentage rate comparison is of people whose families have been ripped apart by the Departure and those who've lost members to the GR. Kevin's been cracking all along, but this episode saw a few more characters - Laurie, Patti, Jill - break down in different ways, crushed under the sheer weight of their current lives."
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B" grade and wrote, "There are a lot of types of religious life out there. A lot of types of people. And a bunch of those people even watch HBO. It's ridiculous that the show isn't trying to reach me — isn't trying to reach across the counter and tell the story of Faisal (which is the credited, never-spoken name of the Indian clerk). There's a bunch of us who understand the world differently. And as the leftovers of Mapleton said in the bar in the first episode: 'We're still here.'"
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "Doing a single-POV story every week – especially one with as narrow a focus as 'Two Boats and a Helicopter' – isn't an easy thing to pull off, nor does it seem like what Lindelof and Perrotta want to do, given the size and scope of the broken world they're depicting. But 'Gladys' does a very effective job of splitting the difference between the tunnel vision of episode 3 and the broader ensemble pieces we've gotten in the other installments. It's a bigger episode featuring most of the cast, but the entire story and every bit of emotional conflict spills out of the single awful act of Gladys from the Guilty Remnant being stoned to death." Jeff Labrecque of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Her murder presented the Garveys-Chief and Laurie-with independent spiritual tests. Each was tempted to abandon the path they've chosen, to relent and take an easier way out."
Kelly Braffet of Vulture gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "This episode, like every episode so far, had some gripping moments. But there's no longer any avoiding it: Not enough is happening in this series. Which is incredibly frustrating, because in many ways it's so damn good." Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 3.5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "This episode of The Leftovers was the first time where the show's pacing felt familiar, along with all of its ugliness. The episode also created some sort of urgency that wasn't quite present before. The show is still not without its problems, it can't figure out what to do with Jill at all and can still seem a little too self-impressed with its symbolism, but it still seems like we're building to something. What that something is just better be worth it."
Matt Brennan of Slant Magazine wrote, "With 'Gladys', an enthralling portrait of what happens when the urge to move on collides with the persistence of grief, The Leftovers joins the ranks of television's must-see dramas." Daniel McDermon of The New York Times wrote, "The Leftovers is clearly a show with a surplus of signs and symbols. Faithful viewers are left to wonder which, if any, they are meant to divine. And to hope that there's a greater purpose."
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62,111,961 |
Guest (The Leftovers)
|
"Guest" is the sixth episode of the first season of the American supernatural drama television series The Leftovers, based on the novel of the same name by Tom Perrotta. The episode was written by series creator Damon Lindelof and supervising producer Kath Lingenfelter, and directed by Carl Franklin. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on August 3, 2014.
The series is set three years after the "Sudden Departure" – an event which saw 2% of the world's population (approximately 140 million people) disappear and profoundly affected the townspeople. The characters of police chief Kevin Garvey and his family (wife Laurie, son Tom, daughter Jill and father Kevin Sr.) are focal points, alongside grieving widow Nora Durst, her brother Reverend Matt Jamison, and the mysterious cult-like organization the Guilty Remnant (GR), led by Patti Levin. In the episode, Nora attends a Departure-related conference in New York City as part of her job at the Department of the Sudden Departure.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 1.47 million household viewers and gained a 0.7 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received critical acclaim, with critics praising Carrie Coon's performance, writing, character development and emotional tone.
==Plot==
Nora (Carrie Coon), working as a fraud investigator for the Department of the Sudden Departure (DSD), interviews a man about a departed relative to know if his claims are true. After grocery shopping, Nora throws away many unopened food items and replaces them with new ones in the event that her family will return. In the evening, she calls an escort. She asks the escort, Angel, to shoot her while she wears a bulletproof vest. Angel reluctantly shoots her and flees the scene. After a few seconds, Nora awakes.
Nora files for divorce from her husband Doug, a Departed who cheated on her with their children's preschool teacher. As she leaves the courthouse, she meets Kevin (Justin Theroux), who is also filing for divorce. In an abrupt moment, Nora invites him to come with her to Miami, confusing him and causing her to leave. As part of her job, she attends a Departure-related conference in New York City. At her hotel, she finds that her ID badge has already been claimed, forcing her to take a "guest" badge. She tries to find the woman who claims to be her, finding she registered her name on a list. She is invited by a man named Marcus (Billy Magnussen) to a party at his suite, which she decides to attend. After heavily drinking, she kisses Marcus's replica, as he makes replicas of Departed for a living.
After waking up from hangover, she is kicked out of the hotel by security, claiming she made property damages during the night. She forges a false ID badge to enter, but is caught again. She convinces security to check the woman claiming to be her, finding that she is giving a talk at the panel. Nora confronts the woman, who rants that the DSD is hiding information from the public. At the bar, she meets Patrick Johansen, a man who lost four members of his family in the Departure and subsequently wrote a bestselling book explaining how he moved on. Nora questions him about his beliefs that it was possible to move on, claiming that it is impossible to do so.
As she leaves the hotel, a man approaches her, having overheard her conversation. He invites her to an apartment, where she meets Holy Wayne (Paterson Joseph). Wayne claims that he helped Johansen in taking away his pain, with his talk causing Nora to cry. Wayne then hugs her, calming her. She returns to Mapleton, where she is visited by Kevin. He asks her out on a date, which she accepts. Later, Nora continues her job interviewing Departed's familiars. She asks her the last question, if the Departed are in a better place. The woman replies no, which contrasts the general consensus of her interviewees.
==Production==
===Development===
In July 2014, the episode's title was revealed as "Guest" and it was announced that series creator Damon Lindelof and supervising producer Kath Lingenfelter had written the episode while Carl Franklin had directed it. This was Lindelof's sixth writing credit, Lingenfelter's second writing credit, and Franklin's second directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
The episode was watched by 1.47 million viewers, earning a 0.7 in the 18-49 rating demographics on the Nielson ratings scale. This means that 0.7 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 8% decrease from the previous episode, which was watched by 1.59 million viewers with a 0.8 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"Guest" received critical acclaim. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating with an average rating of 9.4/10 for the episode, based on 11 reviews.
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode an "amazing" 9.4 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "'Guest' was another fantastic character study. Both mysterious and cathartic, it focused almost entirely on Nora, much like Matt's episode centered on him. But 'Guest' didn't repeat the beats from 'Two Boats and a Helicopter'. It was its own beautiful mess with a surprisingly uplifting outcome. It also gave us a peak at the larger, damaged world outside of Nora's hometown - along with another indication that the larger think tank community still has no idea what the Departure was. They're actively trying to sort it out, but I think watching academics and bureaucrats debate the topic (along with conspiracy theorists) is another signal that we're not supposed to be watching this series for the 'answer'."
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode an "A" grade and wrote, "'Guest' is simply stunning. Carrie Coon's Nora Durst has long been one of the most interesting characters in The Leftovers — occupying a larger role in the season's previous highlight, 'Two Boats and a Helicopter', but otherwise existing largely on the fringes as a kind of cautionary tale. The Leftovers is demonstrably stronger when it plunges into someone's personal life and just follows them around for a few days in this post-apocalyptic landscape of loss and survival — those scenes of immersion are powerful, both recognizable and alien at the same time."
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "'Guest' offers us our second single-POV episode of the season, and if it's not as intense or disorienting a ride as the story of Matt's big night at the casino, it's still a valuable and fascinating portrait of what life would be like for someone who lost so much in the Departure." Jeff Labrecque of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Back home, Nora isn't stalking the mistress at the playground anymore... She saves her brother's voicemail apology. And when the doorbell rings, it's Chief Garvey, who's tracked her down to invite her to dinner. There is hope."
Kelly Braffet of Vulture gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "The Leftovers gave us another single-perspective episode, focusing on Nora Durst. This episode was less tense than Matt's - no beating of thieves to a pulp, no race-against-the-clock climax - but I still enjoyed it more than the recent ensemble episodes." Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 3.5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "I like certain elements and believe that it is at least partially well executed, I just don't know if it all adds up to good TV. Ambiguous loss is a terrible thing to experience, so why subject myself to that theme weekly?"
Matt Brennan of Slant Magazine wrote, "Any optimism I have on this count is mostly for Nora's sake and not my own, because both the starkness and the unexpected cheer in 'Guest' reaffirm my assessment of the series thus far: The Leftovers is great television." Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times wrote, "'Guest' is a revelation. It is sardonic and playful, bleak but parodic, disturbing and deeply moving. For me, it is the moment when the scattered themes and frustrated possibilities of a muddled series finally snapped into a cathartic, cohesive whole."
===Accolades===
TVLine named Carrie Coon as the "Performer of the Week" for the week of August 9, 2014, for her performance in the episode. The site wrote, "Already, we'd been blown away by the actress' understated, naturalistic work as Nora Durst, an object of fascination and pity around Mapleton since losing her entire family in The Sudden Departure. But in this Nora-centric episode, Coon was able to show us more — lots more — and more was even better."
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62,111,963 |
Solace for Tired Feet
|
"Solace for Tired Feet" is the seventh episode of the first season of the American supernatural drama television series The Leftovers, based on the novel of the same name by Tom Perrotta. The episode was written by series creator Damon Lindelof and supervising producer Jacqueline Hoyt, and directed by Mimi Leder. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on August 10, 2014.
The series is set three years after the "Sudden Departure" – an event which saw 2% of the world's population (approximately 140 million people) disappear and profoundly affected the townspeople. The characters of police chief Kevin Garvey and his family (wife Laurie, son Tom, daughter Jill and father Kevin Sr.) are focal points, alongside grieving widow Nora Durst, her brother Reverend Matt Jamison, and the mysterious cult-like organization the Guilty Remnant (GR), led by Patti Levin. In the episode, Kevin's father escapes from the mental institution, forcing Kevin to track him down. Meanwhile, Tom starts to question Holy Wayne's plans while on the run.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 1.58 million household viewers and gained a 0.8 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received extremely positive reviews from critics, who praised the performances, character development, directing and themes, although some still expressed criticism for the pacing.
==Plot==
While taking down posters with Gladys' face, Laurie (Amy Brenneman) sees Jill (Margaret Qualley). They both share a silent look at each other before Jill leaves. At the woods, Jill, Aimee (Emily Meade), Adam (Max Carver) and Scott Frost (Charlie Carver) play a game where each one gets inside a refrigerator. Jill decides to get in to surpass a record. After almost half an hour inside, Jill breaks the record. However, the handle breaks off, trapping her inside. As she panics, her friends desperately try to save her. Suddenly, Kevin Sr. (Scott Glenn) shows up and opens it, freeing Jill. He asks her not to tell her dad, Kevin (Justin Theroux), before running off.
Kevin's date with Nora (Carrie Coon) is ruined when Meg (Liv Tyler) and another GR member stakes her house, although his mood is lifted when Nora sprays them with her water hose, with both agreeing to another date. That night, Jill asks Kevin why her grandfather was institutionalized, to which Kevin explains it was for attacking a person. Jill then informs him that he escaped, prompting Kevin to send units to track him down. He warns Lucy (Amanda Warren), but she makes it clear his father will go find him. That night, Kevin experiences weird visions while sleeping.
The next day, Kevin finds that his father went on a rampage on a library while attempting to retrieve money. Kevin Sr. appears in his house with Jill alone. He talks with her when Kevin arrives home, having been alerted by Jill. He handcuffs him and takes him to the station but Kevin Sr. escapes when they run into a protest of GR members. Later, Kevin finds evidence that his father is staying with Matt (Christopher Eccleston) and angrily calls him to get his location. He meets with his father at a diner, where he arrests him, but not before his father hands him the May 1972 issue of National Geographic, confusing Kevin. After a mental breakdown, Kevin finally arrests his father, sending him back to the hospital. Kevin then visits Nora and they have sex.
Months on the run, Tom (Chris Zylka) is taking care of Christine (Annie Q.), whose condition is worsening. While buying medicine, Tom is called by Holy Wayne (Paterson Joseph), who asks him to take half of his money and place it on a mailbox. He does the task but decides to follow the person who takes the money. He tracks him to a motel room, finding him with a pregnant Asian woman. The man, Bryan, reveals that Wayne used the same words of motivation for him, which makes Tom reconsider his loyalty to Wayne. The woman shoots Tom in the hand, causing him to leave. When he returns to his apartment, he ignores Wayne's call and destroys his phone to avoid any more contact. However, he is shocked when he finds Christine in the bathtub with her newborn baby, a girl.
==Production==
===Development===
In July 2014, the episode's title was revealed as "Solace for Tired Feet" and it was announced that series creator Damon Lindelof and supervising producer Jacqueline Hoyt had written the episode while Mimi Leder had directed it. This was Lindelof's seventh writing credit, Hoyt's second writing credit, and Leder's second directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
The episode was watched by 1.58 million viewers, earning a 0.8 in the 18-49 rating demographics on the Nielson ratings scale. This means that 0.8 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 7% increase from the previous episode, which was watched by 1.47 million viewers with a 0.7 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"Solace for Tired Feet" received extremely positive reviews from critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating with an average rating of 8.3/10 for the episode, based on 11 reviews. The site's consensus states: "'Solace for Tired Feet' features more of the fine acting that The Leftovers is known for - as well as a welcome, and atypical, influx of forward plot movement."
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode an "amazing" 9 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "Directed by Mimi Leder and written by Lindelof and Jacqueline Hoyt, 'Solace for Tired Feet' gelled the series together like never before. The Leftovers has been great on its own as a dizzying portrait of broken people, but now it's deftly teasing us with a 'higher purpose' for those splintered folks. And as Kevin makes big steps in his life to normalize, his sanity is still going to remain a haunting issue. In the world of The Leftovers, there are probably thousands of interesting stories to tell, but this episode seemed to answer, for now, why we might be following these specific people. When Kevin, Sr. said 'This is your invitation', he was inviting us along for the ride as well."
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B+" grade and wrote, "Twice now, The Leftovers has delivered episodes that create an intense sense of identification. We get close to a single character, experiencing a transformative life event alongside them in what have been the series' two strongest hours to date. Those episodes have demonstrated how rich stories in this post-departure world can be, but they've also had the effect of making the other episodes of the series feel like missed opportunities. When The Leftovers dives deep, it transcends; when it drops in, it can feel like aimless, speculative fiction to the point of lacking a point at all."
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "The focus was tight enough on Kevin and the search for his father to work, and it featured excellent performances from both Justin Theroux and, especially, Scott Glenn." Jeff Labrecque of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Last week, on what must qualify as a feel-good episode of The Leftovers, Nora and Kevin had a spark. Though they live in the same small town and Kevin is close family friends with her brother, the minister, they somehow never crossed paths until recently. Both now divorced, they agreed to a promising dinner date. But as Kevin reminded viewers with the above p.s., he hasn't exactly turned the page on his own demons, and the episode 'Solace for Tired Feet' dragged us back into his disturbed psyche, which struggles to differentiate between what is real and imagined."
Kelly Braffet of Vulture gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Suddenly, after weeks of stellar acting, great dialogue, and no forward motion whatsoever - after I had pretty much given up on anything even vaguely resembling forward motion - this week's episode threw it at us left and right." Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Christine had her baby and Kevin's got a May 1972 National Geographic and a new dog. But so what? By no means was this a bad piece of television, it just feels inconsequential, like I could have skipped it and tuned in next week to find everything largely the same, and then figured the rest out on my own. I want to like this show, but they make it so hard."
Matt Brennan of Slant Magazine wrote, "After the powerful one-two punch of 'Gladys' and 'Guest', 'Solace for Tired Feet' is a useful respite, pausing to establish the constellation of conflicts driving the first season of The Leftovers to its conclusion." Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times wrote, "Not bad for Nora, and not bad for The Leftovers, which turned in a solid showing with 'Solace for Tired Feet', an hour that propelled the show's plot into some intriguing corners even as it reminded us that many of its characters remain unknowable, even seven episodes in."
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62,111,965 |
Cairo (The Leftovers)
|
"Cairo" is the eighth episode of the first season of the American supernatural drama television series The Leftovers, based on the novel of the same name by Tom Perrotta. The episode was written by supervising producer Curtis Gwinn and Carlito Rodriguez, and directed by Michelle MacLaren. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on August 17, 2014.
The series is set three years after the "Sudden Departure" – an event which saw 2% of the world's population (approximately 140 million people) disappear and profoundly affected the townspeople. The characters of police chief Kevin Garvey and his family (wife Laurie, son Tom, daughter Jill and father Kevin Sr.) are focal points, alongside grieving widow Nora Durst, her brother Reverend Matt Jamison, and the mysterious cult-like organization the Guilty Remnant (GR), led by Patti Levin. In the episode, Kevin finds himself in the woods with Dean, with no clue to how he got there. He discovers to his shock that he attacked and kidnapped Patti, keeping her in a cabin.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 1.64 million household viewers and gained a 0.8 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received extremely positive reviews from critics, who praised the performances (particularly Justin Theroux and Ann Dowd), character development, pacing and ending.
==Plot==
Kevin (Justin Theroux) invites Nora (Carrie Coon) to dine with him, Jill (Margaret Qualley) and Aimee (Emily Meade) at their house. As Nora explains her job at the Department of the Sudden Departure (DSD), Jill questions her about a gun she carries in her purse. Nora claims she got rid of the gun and allows Jill to check her purse, proving she doesn't carry it anymore. That night, Kevin goes to sleep and by the next morning, he finds himself in his car, without memory of how he got there. Dean (Michael Gaston) appears and takes him to a cabin in the woods, where Kevin finds Patti (Ann Dowd) unconscious and tied to a chair.
Dean claims that it was Kevin's idea to abduct her after he brutally attacked her, also revealing that they are in Cairo, New York, horrifying Kevin. As she awakens, Kevin tells her they could forget about the incident, only to be spat by Patti, speaking to him for the first time to tell him she does not forget. She threatens to go to the authorities, which will cost Kevin his job and Jill. Back at Mapleton, Laurie (Amy Brenneman) leads the GR after Patti's absence, apologizing to Matt (Christopher Eccleston) for a previous incident. Jill and Aimee get into a fight over the dinner scene, with Jill questioning if Aimee slept with Kevin. Aimee claims to have done it and angrily leaves her. Jill and Adam (Max Carver) and Scott Frost (Charlie Carver) search Nora's house to find the gun, discovering it along with her bulletproof vest. Later, Aimee decides to move out of the Garvey house.
Back in the cabin, Dean confronts Kevin for his sudden change in behavior, as he lacks the courage he displayed the previous night. As he goes outside to call Nora, Kevin finds his police uniforms scattered throughout the woods. He returns to the cabin, discovering that Dean is slowly killing Patti by placing a bag over her head. Kevin and Dean fight over the decision, which culminates when Kevin removes the bag, saving her. Fed up, Dean decides to leave Kevin all by himself, also indicating that he met him many times before. In Mapleton, Laurie receives a shipment of Departure replicas at their church, and has the members dress them per Patti's orders. That night, Laurie is surprised to find Jill, who has asked to stay.
Despite saving her life, Patti claims her position with Kevin has not changed. She explains that the GR wants to remind everyone of what everyone wants to forget. She also confirms that Gladys' death was orchestrated by her, with Gladys agreeing to her own death, claiming that something is coming. Kevin deduces that she wants him to kill her, but she refuses, claiming that he will accept the responsibility of his actions, freeing her. However, Patti takes a shard of glass and slits her throat, dying in Kevin's arms.
==Production==
===Development===
In July 2014, the episode's title was revealed as "Cairo" and it was announced that supervising producer Curtis Gwinn and Carlito Rodriguez had written the episode while Michelle MacLaren had directed it. This was Gwinn's first writing credit, Rodriguez's first writing credit, and MacLaren's first directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
The episode was watched by 1.64 million viewers, earning a 0.8 in the 18-49 rating demographics on the Nielson ratings scale. This means that 0.8 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a slight increase from the previous episode, which was watched by 1.58 million viewers with a 0.8 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"Cairo" received extremely positive reviews from critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating with an average rating of 9.2/10 for the episode, based on 11 reviews.
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8.8 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "The Leftovers dropped a wicked and heavy weight on our laps this week with 'Cairo' - where Kevin's sanity and morality were run through a rather diabolical gauntlet. I wasn't immensely satisfied with the reveal of Gladys' true killer, but I was very excited to see some big reveals as far as Kevin's blackouts were concerned. As that's the type of story that shouldn't linger too long on TV, lest viewers jump out ahead of it. Director Michelle MacLaren, along with writers Curtis Gwinn and Carlito Rodriguez, did an expert job with this twisted funhouse mirror episode. If Kevin and Nora's budding relationship was the calm before the storm, then this was the first lightning flash and thunderclap."
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B+" grade and wrote, "My guess is that The Leftovers aim is more about bringing together fantastic ideas than bringing together a fantastic story — because the subtext is way more interesting (and comprehensible) than the basic plot of the text. More than most weeks, 'Cairo' has some compelling underpinnings that make it a solid episode. But especially around Kevin, the storytelling falls short of the mystery."
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "Whether as a ticking-clock thriller or as an exploration of what motivates the series' chief villains, 'Cairo' was just dynamite, and evidence that The Leftovers doesn't have to resort to a strict single-POV angle every week if it wants to achieve its full dramatic potential." Jeff Labrecque of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "After seven careful to the point of being tedious Leftovers episodes alienated some of the show's audience for a stubborn dearth of answers, 'Cairo' was an avalanche of information."
Kelly Braffet of Vulture gave the episode a perfect 5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "What does it mean that the Chief, our Everyman, is working what might be the most nihilistic angle in the show, and working it so secretly that even he doesn't know what's going on? And where the hell is the guy going to go from here?" Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Overall, this episode seemed to really dial things up and also added some clarity to things we've already seen. The show's self-serious tone still takes some getting adjusted to, but I like that it seems like we're going somewhere, and the GR's upcoming plans will push things even further. I'm still not as in love with this show as I should be for something that I view every week, but this is a good step in the right direction."
Matt Brennan of Slant Magazine wrote that the episode "begins with a song, climaxes with a poem, and concludes with a whisper, but it's what each of these leaves unspoken that captures the testy relationship between faith and doubt at the heart of The Leftovers." Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times wrote, "All that is to say that 'Cairo', the eighth installment of this debut Leftovers season, was a busy, twisty hour, packed with more plot surprises than the first few episodes combined. Many viewers will feel relief but also a deep dread, because clearly something very, very dark is coming."
===Accolades===
TVLine named Ann Dowd as an honorable mention as the "Performer of the Week" for the week of August 23, 2014, for her performance in the episode. The site wrote, "Throughout this first season of The Leftovers, Ann Dowd's work as Mapleton's Guilty Remnant ringleader, Patti, has left us as speechless as the character usually is. No matter if the cult leader's just been staring daggers or breaking her vow of silence to utter apocalyptic BS with absolute conviction, her portrayer has made her pathetic, infuriating and scary as hell. And, in her final episode, 'Cairo', the actress really went for broke, throwing herself into Patti's poetic last monologue so wholeheartedly that it was impossible to say whether we were witnessing true faith or real madness (or both!). In either case, we sure witnessed one amazing swan song."
|
[
"HitFix",
"Tom Perrotta",
"Alan Sepinwall",
"Den of Geek",
"bulletproof vest",
"HBO",
"Rotten Tomatoes",
"Otis Redding",
"Cairo, New York",
"Michael Gaston",
"Janel Moloney",
"Ann Dowd",
"Max Carver",
"Emily Meade",
"Margaret Qualley",
"New York (magazine)",
"TVLine",
"Alvin Ailey",
"Odetta",
"IGN",
"review aggregator",
"The A.V. Club",
"Charlie Carver",
"Nielsen Media Research",
"The Leftovers (novel)",
"The Leftovers season 1",
"Christopher Eccleston",
"The Leftovers (TV series)",
"Drama (film and television)",
"Amy Brenneman",
"Michelle MacLaren",
"Solace for Tired Feet",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"The New York Times",
"Slant Magazine",
"Carrie Coon",
"Justin Theroux",
"Supernatural fiction",
"The Garveys at Their Best"
] |
62,111,966 |
The Garveys at Their Best
|
"The Garveys at Their Best" is the ninth episode of the first season of the American supernatural drama television series The Leftovers, based on the novel of the same name by Tom Perrotta. The episode was written by supervising producer Kath Lingenfelter and series creator Damon Lindelof, and directed by Daniel Sackheim. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on August 24, 2014.
The series is set three years after the "Sudden Departure" – an event which saw 2% of the world's population (approximately 140 million people) disappear and profoundly affected the townspeople. The characters of police chief Kevin Garvey and his family (wife Laurie, son Tom, daughter Jill and father Kevin Sr.) are focal points, alongside grieving widow Nora Durst, her brother Reverend Matt Jamison, and the mysterious cult-like organization the Guilty Remnant (GR), led by Patti Levin. The episode depicts the lives of the characters before the Departure as well as their reactions to the event.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 1.85 million household viewers and gained a 0.9 ratings share among adults aged 18–49, making it the most watched episode of the series. The episode received critical acclaim, with critics praising the writing, character development, performances, emotional tone and revelations.
==Plot==
Kevin (Justin Theroux) returns to his house after jogging, which looks different than in previous episodes. He is welcomed by Laurie (Amy Brenneman), revealing that the events are taking place before the Departure. Laurie is preparing for an appointment at her job as a psychiatrist, while Jill (Margaret Qualley) is shown to be more free-spirited and innocent. Kevin wants them to prepare for a birthday party that night.
Laurie tends to a recurring patient, who turns out to be Patti (Ann Dowd). Patti feels a looming sense of dread and suggests that the world could end. Laurie considers that Patti may be the victim of spousal abuse, advising that she can calm herself by placing all her fears in a bag and leave them at her husband's doorstep. Laurie later goes to pick up a dog, with Gladys (Marceline Hugot) as the breeder, although Laurie does not want to make a decision until she discusses it with Kevin. Meanwhile, Nora (Carrie Coon) prepares for a job interview, informing her husband Doug (Sebastian Arcelus) and her children. Her interview proves to be part of the electoral campaign for Lucy (Amanda Warren), who is a city councilwoman. Their interview is interrupted by Kevin Sr. (Scott Glenn), who works as Chief of Police, inviting Lucy to his birthday party, aware that Kevin is planning it.
Kevin is alerted when a deer attacks in an elementary school. Kevin Sr. wants to order officers to kill the deer, but Kevin suggests it might not be the best. Kevin Sr. gives him the chance to calm the deer and return it to the woods before animal control takes care of it. Kevin is also called when Tom (Chris Zylka) is arrested for confronting his biological father, Michael (Scott William Winters). Kevin releases Tom and then punches Michael in front of his young kid. He takes him home, where he bonds with Jill. Laurie also tells Jill that she will be unable to attend her science fair for an appointment, although Jill claims she understands.
That night, Kevin Sr. is welcomed to his "surprise" party. The party is attended by many police colleagues and friends, including Matt (Christopher Eccleston) and his wife Mary (Janel Moloney), who still walks. After Kevin delivers a toast, his father tells him that he lacks a greater purpose and needs to stop pretending some aspects of his life. Before sleeping, Kevin reaffirms to Laurie that he is interested in getting a dog.
On October 14, Kevin once again goes jogging. He witnesses a manhole cover exploding without explanation, prompting him to return home. When he tells Laurie about it, she dismisses it as she confronts him about smoking and the fight with Michael, with Kevin expressing unhappiness with his life. Alerted of the deer's presence, Kevin follows it to a house owned by a family. The deer flees the house and is hit by a car as it exits the house. With the deer wounded, Kevin puts it out of its misery by shooting it. He takes the woman who drove the car to her hotel room, where he has sex with her. Laurie arrives at a clinic, where she runs into Mary, who is waiting for Matt to come out from a scanning session. Matt comes out, revealing that there is nothing wrong with him. Laurie enters the clinic room for an ultrasound, revealing that she is pregnant.
At the moment of the Departure, Nora is unable to answer a phone call from Lucy after her daughter spills juice on her phone. As she takes her frustration out on her family they all vanish. Tom and Jill are part of a human circuit at the science fair, and realise that one of Jill's classmates has disappeared when the light they are powering goes out. The woman Kevin is having an affair with vanishes while they are having sex, and after being distracted by a scream Laurie realises her child no longer appears on the ultrasound scan.
==Production==
===Development===
In July 2014, the episode's title was revealed as "The Garveys at Their Best" and it was announced that supervising producer Kath Lingenfelter and series creator Damon Lindelof had written the episode while Daniel Sackheim had directed it. This was Lingenfelter's third writing credit, Lindelof's eighth writing credit, and Sackheim's first directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
The episode was watched by 1.85 million viewers, earning a 0.9 in the 18-49 rating demographics on the Nielson ratings scale. This means that 0.9 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 12% increase from the previous episode, which was watched by 1.64 million viewers with a 0.8 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"The Garveys at Their Best" received critical acclaim. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating with an average rating of 9.6/10 for the episode, based on 11 reviews. The site's consensus states: "A solid standalone episode in its own right, 'The Garveys at Their Best' effectively sets the stage for an exciting season finale."
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode an "amazing" 9.2 out of 10 and wrote, "The Leftovers took a wise leap backward this week. Initially, when I read the title of the episode, 'The Garveys at Their Best', I assumed it was ironic, as our headlining family is at anything but their best these days. But it was actually meant seriously, in a sort of half-earnest sense."
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode an "A–" grade and wrote, "The Leftovers does not always manage to convince the viewer that the creators know exactly what they're doing. 'The Garveys At Their Best' is in fact a fantastic episode, on its own. But it leads to one very obvious question: Why on earth didn't we see this three, six, or even nine weeks ago? It's been a season of weird hiccups and pauses, punctuated with a lot of questions about who these characters are and why their stories are important. Tonight's episode offers a lot of helpful information in that vein. So what was the point of making us wait to see the backstories of these characters, nine weeks after the pilot, instead of making this, or some version of this, into the pilot?"
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "Great episode, and another example of how well the show excels when it deviates from whatever formula it's established for itself within these first 9 hours of television." Kyle Ryan of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "While the press around The Leftovers has reiterated that explanations will be in short supply, 'Cairo' and 'The Garveys at Their Best' have connected a lot of dots. The slow build of the series to this point has picked up speed, nicely setting up what looks to be an engrossing season finale."
Kelly Braffet of Vulture gave the episode a perfect 5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "Many a time, I've accused this show of holding back, but this episode was a great big gift wrapped in sadness. This is the episode we've been waiting for." Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 3 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "I have no idea where The Leftovers will leave viewers before departing for the year. With season two already a lock, the show will need to hook us hard to get us to want to come back, and right now, I don't know what big revelations could make that happen. Once again, I feel myself saying that this episode wasn't bad, it just wasn't exactly useful storytelling. Don't bore me with where we've already been, boldly take me somewhere new."
Matt Brennan of Slant Magazine wrote that the episode is "principally, a reconsideration of characters we believe we've come to know, and the hour's string of surprises nimbly steers between continuity and change." Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times wrote, "Sunday's episode, as difficult as it was to watch, also struck me as our best insight yet into the inner lives of characters who have been frustratingly opaque for an entire season."
|
[
"Jody Reynolds",
"Chris Zylka",
"David Guetta",
"Daniel Sackheim",
"Scott Glenn",
"Sebastian Arcelus",
"ultrasound",
"HitFix",
"Usher (musician)",
"Tom Perrotta",
"Alan Sepinwall",
"Den of Geek",
"Scott William Winters",
"HBO",
"Young Blood (The Naked and Famous song)",
"Amanda Warren",
"Marceline Hugot",
"Rotten Tomatoes",
"Shotgun (Junior Walker & the All Stars song)",
"Janel Moloney",
"Wayne Duvall",
"Ann Dowd",
"New York (magazine)",
"Junior Walker",
"Margaret Qualley",
"Elizabeth Mitchell (musician)",
"Damon Lindelof",
"IGN",
"review aggregator",
"The A.V. Club",
"Nielsen Media Research",
"The Leftovers (novel)",
"The Leftovers season 1",
"Christopher Eccleston",
"Without You (David Guetta song)",
"The Leftovers (TV series)",
"Drama (film and television)",
"Felicia Barton",
"Steely Dan",
"Amy Brenneman",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"The New York Times",
"Slant Magazine",
"Carrie Coon",
"Cairo (The Leftovers)",
"The Prodigal Son Returns (The Leftovers)",
"Justin Theroux",
"The Naked and Famous",
"Supernatural fiction"
] |
62,111,967 |
The Prodigal Son Returns (The Leftovers)
|
"The Prodigal Son Returns" is the tenth episode and season finale of the first season of the American supernatural drama television series The Leftovers, based on the novel of the same name by Tom Perrotta. The episode was written by series creators Damon Lindelof and Tom Perrotta, and directed by Mimi Leder. It was first broadcast on HBO in the United States on September 7, 2014.
The series is set three years after the "Sudden Departure" – an event which saw 2% of the world's population (approximately 140 million people) disappear and profoundly affected the townspeople. The characters of police chief Kevin Garvey and his family (wife Laurie, son Tom, daughter Jill and father Kevin Sr.) are focal points, alongside grieving widow Nora Durst, her brother Reverend Matt Jamison, and the mysterious cult-like organization the Guilty Remnant (GR), led by Patti Levin. In the episode, GR plans their next move with Patti's plan, while Kevin asks Matt for help in the cabin.
According to Nielsen Media Research, the episode was seen by an estimated 1.53 million household viewers and gained a 0.7 ratings share among adults aged 18–49. The episode received critical acclaim, with critics praising the performances (Justin Theroux), writing, themes, directing, character development and closure.
==Plot==
While on the run, Tom (Chris Zylka) stops their car so Christine (Annie Q.) can feed her baby. Christine laments how all her promises proved to be lies and leaves for the restroom. After a few minutes, Tom finds the baby on her own in the restroom, with Christine nowhere to be seen.
On Memorial Day, GR prepares for a new plan involving the replicas. Laurie (Amy Brenneman) does not want Jill (Margaret Qualley) to participate out of fear for the protests, but Jill comes along. During the day, GR places life-like replicas of the departed civilians on their vanishing point. Nora (Carrie Coon) wakes up to discover replicas of her husband and children, making her cry. After Patti (Ann Dowd) committed suicide, Kevin (Justin Theroux) calls Matt (Christopher Eccleston) for help. Matt is willing to help despite the fact that it could incriminate him, aware that Patti's death was on her own. After burying her, Kevin returns to Mapleton. He experiences a dream where he finds himself at a mental institution with Kevin Sr. (Scott Glenn) and Patti.
Stopping at a diner, Kevin confesses to his infidelity, noting that his relationship with his family feels lost even when they are still here and he still has hopes that they can reunite. Kevin then goes to the restroom, where he discovers Holy Wayne (Paterson Joseph), mortally wounded. Wayne accepts his death and asks Kevin to make a wish, which he can grant. Kevin silently wishes something and Wayne claims to grant it before dying from his wounds. ATFEC agents storm the diner for Wayne, and Matt vouches for Kevin, claiming that he is an innocent person. Matt and Kevin are allowed to go.
Kevin and Matt stumble upon Mapleton falling into chaos, with civilians attacking GR members and burning down their cul-de-sac. Kevin saves Laurie from being attacked by a man and carries an unconscious Jill out of a burning house. The next day, Tom arrives at Mapleton, finding Laurie. Nora writes a letter to Kevin, deciding to leave town. Kevin and Jill walk back home, taking a dog they find on the street. Nora arrives at the Garvey house to deliver the letter, where she finds Christine's baby on the doorstep. As she cuddles the baby, Kevin and Jill arrive.
==Production==
===Development===
In August 2014, the episode's title was revealed as "The Prodigal Son Returns" and it was announced that series creators Damon Lindelof and Tom Perrotta had written the episode while Mimi Leder had directed it. This was Lindelof's ninth writing credit, Perrotta's third writing credit, and Leder's third directing credit.
==Reception==
===Viewers===
The episode was watched by 1.53 million viewers, earning a 0.7 in the 18-49 rating demographics on the Nielson ratings scale. This means that 0.7 percent of all households with televisions watched the episode. This was a 18% decrease from the previous episode, which was watched by 1.85 million viewers with a 0.9 in the 18-49 demographics.
===Critical reviews===
"The Prodigal Son Returns" received critical acclaim. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 91% approval rating for the episode, based on 11 reviews. The site's consensus states: "'The Prodigal Son Returns' balances gripping horror against deeply felt drama, adding up to a white-knuckle season finale that still manages to retain The Leftovers essential humanity."
Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a perfect "masterpiece" 10 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "'The Prodigal Son Returns' was chilling and cathartic, with many tears shed throughout. Some critics wondered why, given the global crisis at hand, we'd be following those in Mapleton. And if the show was being too microcosmal. And I think this episode's climax answered that. And given the news reports and the FBI's stance on cults, you get the feeling like boiling point moments are happening in towns, big and small, all over the world."
Sonia Saraiya of The A.V. Club gave the episode an "A–" grade and wrote, "From a purely cinematic perspective, it's a powerful, gripping conclusion. Mimi Leder directed 'The Prodigal Son Returns', and her work yields masterful stuff: Kevin running into the burning house of the Guilty Remnant to look for Jill elicited the most engagement I've had with the show all season."
Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "This has been a great year of television drama, even if at times we've had the high-class problem of too much of it. The Leftovers has been one of the absolute highlights of this year, and I imagine that this season, and the events of 'The Prodigal Son Returns', will sit with me much longer than so much of what I've been privileged to watch in 2014." Jeff Labrecque of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "In the end, the finale delivered what was promised... It's not a bad place to start season 2."
Kelly Braffet of Vulture gave the episode a perfect 5 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "All of these people that we've been watching and wondering about and caring about for all these weeks, this story that has been sometimes stagnant and sometimes an emotional gut-punch, they all crystallized this week. And, damn, was it satisfying." Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 and wrote, "I'm not sure I cared much about these answers three weeks ago, but after two strong outings in a row, including a finale that didn't rely on a huge cliffhanger to pique my interest in season two, I have to say I'm generally excited to see where this show goes and if it can learn from its strengths and weaknesses. The Leftovers hasn't always been good, but it has been compelling. Kevin Garvey got his wish tonight, season two will show whether he can keep it alive."
Matt Brennan of Slant Magazine wrote, "'The Prodigal Son Returns',' like The Leftovers as a whole, is a primer for all the physical and psychic weaponry we deploy to fill the gulf that opens when what we held dear is gone." Michael M. Grynbaum of The New York Times wrote, "After nearly 10 hours of pain, the series left us with the suggestion that hope and humanity can persevere, even in the cruelest of circumstances."
===Accolades===
TVLine named Justin Theroux as the "Performer of the Week" for the week of September 13, 2014, for his performance in the episode. The site wrote, "By the time Kevin finally excused himself to dry his eyes, we were in tears, too. In part, because his story was so very sad. But also in part because we had just witnessed a performance that felt less like a performance than a confession."
|
[
"Chris Zylka",
"Scott Glenn",
"Sleep Walk",
"HitFix",
"Tom Perrotta",
"Alan Sepinwall",
"Mimi Leder",
"Ne me quitte pas",
"Den of Geek",
"Nothing Else Matters",
"HBO",
"Rotten Tomatoes",
"Ann Dowd",
"New York (magazine)",
"TVLine",
"Margaret Qualley",
"Nina Simone",
"Damon Lindelof",
"Frank Harts",
"review aggregator",
"IGN",
"The A.V. Club",
"Nielsen Media Research",
"The Leftovers (novel)",
"The Leftovers season 1",
"Christopher Eccleston",
"Memorial Day",
"The Leftovers (TV series)",
"Drama (film and television)",
"Amy Brenneman",
"Entertainment Weekly",
"The New York Times",
"Slant Magazine",
"Axis Mundi (The Leftovers)",
"Annie Q.",
"Carrie Coon",
"Justin Theroux",
"Apocalyptica",
"Supernatural fiction",
"Al Green",
"Santo & Johnny",
"The Garveys at Their Best",
"Paterson Joseph"
] |
62,111,972 |
File:Our Doctor is the Best.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,111,975 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Jeopardy! Ultimate Tournament of Champions (3rd nomination)
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was redirect to List of Jeopardy! tournaments and events. After a re-listing, consensus to redirect remains, the most logical being List of Jeopardy! tournaments and events. (non-admin closure) Britishfinance (talk) 19:57, 5 November 2019 (UTC)
===:Jeopardy! Ultimate Tournament of Champions===
AfDs related to this article:Special one-time tournaments:Other tournaments:
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
Special event one-time tournament episodes of a game show. While Jeopardy! is a widely notable television show and part of pop culture, a largely unreferenced article about a single 75-episode tournament held once during a series of 8,000+ episodes does not meet WP:N. Subject is adequately covered in List of Jeopardy! tournaments and events.
Google search produces links back to this article and other Jeopardy!/game show fandom wikis. News search produces results for Ken Jennings and one link about Watson (computer), but no sources applicable to this specific tournament broadcast.
Of the 16 footnotes in the article, 12 are comments within article content about either contestants who didn't make it to Final Jeopardy or why specific contestants were given a bye in the tournament and are not WP:V references to external content. The remaining four references do not meet WP:SIGCOV:
Jeopardy! Seeking Tournament of Champions Alumni is a dead link
The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present is note about $2m top prize for tournament
Jennings has no regrets despite 2nd-place finish is an interview with the second-place finisher
Link to Game Show News Net is a fansite and does not meet WP:V
Result of first deletion discussion was no consensus for deleting but option to merge. Second deletion discussion was withdrawn.
AldezD (talk) 14:02, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Television-related deletion discussions. AldezD (talk) 14:02, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Redirect and protect. What little verifiable content there is can be mentioned on Jeopardy! which is already an extensive GA-class article, or in the articles of the individual participants. The results and byplay of the tournament are not encyclopedic content that was discussed extensively in third-party sources. Ten Pound Hammer • (What did I screw up now?) 17:05, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Relisting comment: Given that the result of the first deletion discussion was keep and the second nomination was withdrawn as a speedy keep, further discussion is needed to establish consensus for any action on a longtime article which has twice been discussed and found to be kept at AfD.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Barkeep49 (talk) 03:42, 28 October 2019 (UTC)
Redirect to List of Jeopardy! tournaments and events per the nominator per WP:FORK and WP:FANCRUFT. There's no need for this elaborate coverage of the topic, which is detailed to the level of fan cruft. The topic is already adequately covered in the List of Jeopardy! tournaments and events.4meter4 (talk) 16:04, 5 November 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:N",
"Ken Jennings",
"WP:SIGCOV",
"List of Jeopardy! tournaments and events",
"WP:FORK",
"Jeopardy! Ultimate Tournament of Champions",
"Jeopardy!",
"WP:FANCRUFT",
"Watson (computer)"
] |
62,111,978 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Editor Retention/Editor of the Week/Hall of Fame/2019-10-20
|
[
"Talk:World War II"
] |
|
62,111,980 |
File:Kalyana Mandapam poster.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,111,992 |
Shera (Indian bodyguard)
|
Gurmeet Singh Jolly (born 19 May 1969), also known as Shera, is an Indian celebrity bodyguard. Shera has been serving Indian actor Salman Khan since 1995.
Shera runs a security firm named Tiger Security,
==Early life and education==
Shera was born on 19 May 1969 in Andheri, Mumbai, India.
He studied at Damodar Das Barfiwala High School. Shera win Mumbai junior title for bodybuilding in 1987, and came second as Mr. Maharashtra junior in 1988. Gurmeet Singh Jolly joined Shiv Sena in October 2019.
==Salman Khan's bodyguard==
Shera has been serving Bollywood actor Salman Khan since 1995, and said "Jab tak zinda hoon, bhai ke saath rahunga" (As long as I am alive I will stay with brother).
|
[
"Salman Khan",
"bodyguard",
"Punjab",
"Bodyguard",
"Dhuri",
"Justin Bieber",
"Shiv Sena",
"bodybuilding",
"Grammy Award"
] |
62,111,996 |
Tell Me (TV series)
|
Tell Me () is a South Korea quiz show program on JTBC starring Jun Hyun-moo, Park Na-rae, Kim Jung-nan, Moon Se-yoon and Lee Jin-hyuk. The show airs on every Tuesday at 22:00 (KST) starting from August 13, 2019.
== Casts ==
=== Current casts ===
Jun Hyun-moo (1 - 10)
Park Na-rae (1 - 10)
Kim Jung-nan (1 - 10)
Moon Se-yoon (1 - 10)
Lee Jin-hyuk (5 - 10)
=== Previous casts ===
Jung Sang-hoon (1 - 4)
(1 - 4)
== Guests ==
== Ratings ==
Ratings listed below are the individual corner ratings of Tell Me. (Note: Individual corner ratings do not include commercial time, which regular ratings include.)
In the ratings below, the highest rating for the show will be in and the lowest rating for the show will be in each year.
|
[
"quiz show",
"Irene Kim",
"Jung Sang-hoon",
"Park Na-rae",
"Yoo Hwe-seung",
"Astro (South Korean band)",
"Kim So-hye",
"Ji Sang-ryeol",
"Boom (entertainer)",
"Kim Jong-min",
"Moon Se-yoon",
"JTBC",
"Cosmic Girls",
"Jun Hyun-moo",
"DinDin",
"Moonbin",
"Ahn Young-mi",
"Time in South Korea",
"Koyote",
"Reality television",
"Shin Ji",
"Bona (singer)",
"Kim Jung-nan",
"Ravi (rapper)",
"Lee Hong-gi",
"N.Flying",
"Swings (rapper)",
"Kim Hee-chul",
"VIXX",
"South Korea",
"Lee Jin-hyuk"
] |
62,112,003 |
Golden Princess (ship)
|
Golden Princess may refer to one of the following ships:
, in service with Princess Cruises between 1993 and 1997
, operated under this name between 2000 and 2009
, in service with Princess Cruises between 2001 and 2020
|
[
"Princess Cruises"
] |
62,112,013 |
Template:Taxonomy/Kembawacela
|
[] |
|
62,112,034 |
Template:File extension/doc
|
Outputs the file extension of the filename indicated by parameter . In the File: namespace, this parameter defaults to . In all other namespaces, the default output is an empty string. Any uppercase letters in the file extension are changed to lowercase.
== Usage ==
|
[] |
62,112,036 |
St. Charles College (Louisiana)
|
St. Charles College was a private Jesuit college in Grand Coteau, Louisiana. Founded in 1837 by Jesuits from France and Kentucky, the school was the first Jesuit college established in the American South. It initially educated lay students exclusively until 1890, when it began functioning as a Jesuit scholasticate as well. In 1922, the college closed, and the campus was used only to train Jesuit novices. Today, the campus continues to be used for the training of Jesuits, as well as a retreat center and a home for elderly Jesuits. The surviving structures date to 1909 and are contributing properties of the Grand Coteau Historic District.
== History ==
=== Founding ===
The earliest effort to introduce the Society of Jesus to the area came in 1826, when Louis William Valentine Dubourg, the Bishop of Louisiana and the Two Floridas, offered an estate in Opelousas, Louisiana to the Jesuit priest Van Quickenborne for use by a group of novices from the Jesuits' Maryland province. This plan did not materialize until one of Dubourg's successors, Antoine Blanc, the first Archbishop of New Orleans, recruited eight Jesuits from the province of Paris and the province of Lyon, as well one from Kentucky, Fr. Nicolas Point, who would be the superior. They were to establish a college in Iberville Parish, Louisiana in 1837. When the superior met the French party upon their arrival in New Orleans, they unanimously agreed that it would be better to establish their school in Grand Coteau, as the Iberville site would be too small to accommodate the school, was located too close to the eroding banks of the Mississippi River, and restoration of the building would be prohibitively expensive. The large Catholic population in Grand Coteau, as well as the presence of the Sisters of the Sacred Heart, who operated the Academy of the Sacred Heart, drew them to Grand Coteau.
Bishop Blanc was in attendance at the ceremonial groundbreaking on the new St. Charles College or a boarding school in Grand Coteau on July 31, 1837. The Jesuits also assumed ownership of the nearby St. Charles Borromeo Church, which had been established in 1819. While many supported the establishment of a Jesuit school in Grand Coteau, some sent letters threatening harm if they did not leave, incited by a local newspaper that opposed the move. In response, the lay parishioners of St. Charles Church took up arms and stood watch twenty-four hours a day to guard the school and the priests. St. Charles College officially opened for its first day of classes on January 5, 1838.
By December of that year, the college had been transferred from the province of Paris to the province of Missouri, and the school was taken over by Jesuits from St. Louis. Fr. Point's administration of the college proved to be dissatisfactory, and he was relieved of office by the Jesuit superiors in 1840. The school was officially incorporated in 1852. St. Charles College closed in 1853, but the Jesuits continued to attend to St. Charles Church; the school reopened three years later. The college was under great strain during the Civil War, as many students withdrew to fight, and it became the last college operating in Louisiana west of the Mississippi River. The school was occupied and guaranteed protection by the Confederate Army during the war.
=== Transformation of mission ===
In 1890, St. Charles College began educating Jesuits in addition to lay students. The original college building was destroyed by fires in 1900 and 1907, and the present building was constructed in 1909. With decreasing enrollment in the early twentieth century due to students choosing to attend state schools, a Jesuit visitor recommended to closure of the school and sale of the campus; this was the proposal for all Jesuit schools in the South, with the exception of Loyola University New Orleans and Spring Hill College. Therefore, in 1922, St. Charles College was permanently closed. The campus was transformed exclusively into a scholasticate for the training of Jesuits. In 1979, the campus was listed as a contributing property of the Grand Coteau Historic District.
E. D. Estilette, politician and Speaker of the Louisiana House of Representatives
Ricardo Lancaster-Jones y Verea, Mexican historian, diplomat, scholar, professor, art collector and sugarcane entrepreneur.
Alfred Mouton, brigadier general in the Confederate Army
Charles Homer Mouton, politician and Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana
Alphonse E. Otis, Jesuit and president of Loyola University New Orleans
|
[
"Antoine Blanc",
"Contributing property",
"Catholic Church",
"René L. De Rouen",
"St. Louis",
"New Orleans",
"National Park Service",
"Catholic laity",
"E. D. Estilette",
"Alfred Mouton",
"List of Speakers of the Louisiana House of Representatives",
"France",
"Loyola University New Orleans",
"Society of the Sacred Heart",
"List of United States Representatives from Louisiana",
"The Times-Picayune",
"Jesuit formation",
"Kentucky",
"Grand Coteau Historic District",
"Opelousas, Louisiana",
"Incorporation (business)",
"Spring Hill College",
"Charles Homer Mouton",
"iUniverse",
"Confederate States Army",
"Goodspeed Publishing",
"Society of Jesus",
"Missouri",
"Maryland",
"Alphonse E. Otis",
"Lyon",
"Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans",
"Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana",
"Iberville Parish, Louisiana",
"Novitiate",
"Mississippi River",
"American Civil War",
"Loyola Press",
"University of Alabama Press",
"Paris",
"contributing property",
"Louis William Valentine Dubourg",
"Superior (hierarchy)",
"Ricardo Lancaster-Jones y Verea",
"Retreat (spiritual)",
"Schools of the Sacred Heart (Louisiana)",
"Google Books",
"visitor",
"Internet Archive",
"Grand Coteau, Louisiana",
"Southern United States"
] |
62,112,053 |
Harald Vock
|
Harald Vock (1925–1998) was a German television producer and television director. While he mainly worked in television, he also directed or scripted a handful of feature films for cinema such as Our Doctor is the Best in 1969.
== Biography ==
Vock began after 1945 as a police reporter at the press and radio. From 1955 until the 1980s he acted as a conversation leader of NDR television. Here he was the founder of television shows music from Studio B. He also wrote scripts and radio plays.
During the 1960s, he actively promoted Anita Lindblom on German television.
Around 1970 he led several times directed in film comedies of the producer Karl Spiehs. He participated as an idea of the author, director, and producer at the emergence of the crime series Special Discussion K1 and the men of K3. For the latter, Vock received the acidic cucumber of the media women's meeting in 1994. In 1981 he was honored for the book on the episode the revenge of the V-Man of the Series Special Decor K1 with the Golden Gong. In 1984 he published the crime novel the V-Man.
In 1985, he quit his job as entertainment director of NDR to focus on screenwriting.
In 1994 he initiated the police and trainer series on behalf of the law, from 1997 he wrote for the series Coast Guard. As head of the NDR television entertainment, Vock has deleted all recordings of entertainment show music from Studio B to a jubilee program. Harald Vock found his last rest on the Hamburg Cemetery Ohlsdorf.
==Selected filmography==
(1968, TV film)
Always Trouble with the Teachers (1968)
Our Doctor is the Best (1969)
(1970)
The Reverend Turns a Blind Eye (1971)
Always Trouble with the Reverend (1972)
Sonderdezernat K1 (1972–1982, TV series, producer)
Crazy – Completely Mad (1973, writer)
(1973)
|
[
"Norddeutscher Rundfunk",
"television producer",
"Our Doctor is the Best",
"Crazy – Completely Mad",
"television director",
"The Reverend Turns a Blind Eye",
"Sonderdezernat K1",
"Hamburg",
"Always Trouble with the Reverend",
"Always Trouble with the Teachers",
"Anita Lindblom"
] |
62,112,062 |
Skeleton at the Winter Youth Olympics
|
Skeleton was inducted at the Youth Olympic Games at the inaugural edition in 2012.
A total of two events are held, one event each for boys and girls, matching their Winter Olympics counterpart.
==Medalists summary==
===Men's===
===Women's===
==Medal table==
As of the 2024 Winter Youth Olympics.
|
[
"Shin Yeon-su",
"Skeleton (sport)",
"2024 Winter Youth Olympics",
"Winter Olympics",
"Carli Brockway",
"International Olympic Committee",
"Stefan Richard Geisler",
"Agathe Bessard",
"Alexander Hestengen",
"Corey Gillies",
"Josefa Schellmoser",
"Hannah Neise",
"Jacqueline Lölling",
"Maria Votz",
"Ashleigh Fay Pittaway",
"Dārta Neimane",
"Robin Schneider",
"Yaroslav Lavreniuk",
"Youth Olympic Games",
"Emīls Indriksons",
"Lukas Nydegger",
"Evgenii Rukosuev",
"Sissi Schrödl",
"Skeleton at the Winter Olympics",
"Sebastian Berneker",
"Carina Mair",
"Livio Summermatter",
"Anastasiia Tsyganova",
"Laura Lēģere",
"2012 Winter Youth Olympics",
"Elvis Veinbergs"
] |
62,112,066 |
Category:Skeleton at multi-sport events
|
[] |
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